Thought I would bring this back to the top. Just wondering if the MET office is still predicting 2010 to be one of the hottest years. With all the snow and record cold temparatures 
Crikey, of course they will predict this and they will produce the "numbers" to prove it. The only snag is, that they are talking in terms of hundredths and tenths of a degree, averaged out, with large areas of the planet not covered and missing station data guesstimated. Of course the other snag is that over the last few decades, an increasing number of weather stations have been sited, or have grown up in, urban sites. The trouble with that is that NASA now reckons that this so-called "Urban Heat Island" effect can be up to 9 full degrees celcius! So how can this average of averages (day & nght) of widely-differing station data be of much use when trying to work out a trend to two decimal places. As someone once said, the "average" temperature on earth is as meaningful as the average number in a phone book.

Oh, and you mustn't confuse weather and climate. It's only climate when it's hot weather. hen it's cold, it's just weather. OK?

[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-F8EO3qOVk[/media]
