Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by michrassena 2918 days ago
Here's what seems to be a chart of the last hundred and thirty-six years of global land-ocean temperature.

https://climate.nasa.gov/vital-signs/global-temperature/

It seems some years are cooler than others, but the general trend is upwards.

I don't see where the last two years indicate much of a temperature drop. Do you have a source of information for your statement?

1 comments

NASA GISS surface temp data [0]. Feb 2016 to Feb 2018. It's a noteworthy occurrence (and not something the news cycle would pick up) since the focus is always on warming. It certainly doesn't refute the short-term trends present.

https://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/

Cherry picking 2 data points is not the right way to interpret a trend. 2016 was a spike, but if you look at the trend over the past 20 years (in the data set you linked) it is clear temperature is trending upwards at an accelerating pace.
You're burying the lede here.

While 2017 was slightly cooler than the year preceding, it was the second hottest year since global temperature records began in 1880.

From the same page you linked. https://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/news/20180118/

We'll see how 2018 compares. Look at the chart and you can see that it's not a straight line, it has ups and downs. I see no reason at all to assume that it's trending downward for the next few decades to erase the increase seen over the last century.