14 Pages Essay 2009
in PDF
A Large-Scale Experiment with
Climate
– The Extreme Winter of 1939/40
and Climate Research –
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About the importance
of the three war winters
of 1939/40, 1940/41 and 1941/42
to understand climate change
as primarily an
oceanic issue
A1.
Introduction to climate change and man’s contribution
The Second World War stands
for the criminal madness of the German Nazi government. Less known is their responsibility
for the only climatic shift from warm to cold in an otherwise constantly
warming world over the last 150 years. The three war winters of 1939/40,
1940/41 and 1941/42 mark the change. The regions that had been closest to
intense naval war activities, Baltic and North Sea areas, immediately
experienced the coldest winter in one 100 years. For this to happen, man needed
only four months since commencing the Second World War (WWII) on September 1st
1939 not only during the first but also the second and third war winter.
Europe ’s winters were back in the Little Ice Age. After Japan had attacked
Pearl Harbor on December 7th 1941 the naval war became a global
affair lasting until August 1945. In close conformity with the naval war in
European seas, and globally subsequently, a pronounced world wide cooling took
place, which lasted over three decades until about the mid 1970s.
Not one weather forecast
had expected an exceptionally cold winter. Since the middle of the previous
century the winters had gradually become milder. The Englishman A.J. Drummond expressed his astonishment
in 1943: “The present century has been marked by such a wide-spread tendency
toward mild winters that the ‘old-fashioned winters’, of which one has heard so
much, seemed to have gone for ever”. At the same time the Swede G.H. Liljequist ascertained that such a
series of three consecutive cold winters in Stockholm had never been observed,
while the German M. Rodewald (1948)
wondered that the pronounced, 'secular heat wave' since the 19th
century had been interrupted so suddenly by three consecutive severe winters.
However, a connection with the war at sea had never been recognized. Neither
the three mentioned experts, nor their colleagues, nor the ten thousand
climatologists of following generations noted the connection. The biggest
climatic change since the industrial revolution, its debut in the winter of
1939/40, and the subsequent three decades lasting cold period are still a
mystery in climatology.

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Fig.A1-1;
Three consecutive extreme winters 1940-42 in Sweden
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There are plenty of signs
of a close timely correlation between the naval war and the three extreme
winters. Many observations, whether concerning rain, wind, temperature, and the
sea ice formed in the North Sea and the Baltic, indicate answers for its cause,
like the fact that for the first time since 1883, the Baltic was fully covered
by ice. Temperatures plunged very deep particularly in regions, which were
covered by the most intense naval warfare. The "naval war effect" is
clearly visible during the winter because the seas and coastal waters north of
the English Channel exchange the heat they have stored during the summer season
with the atmosphere. North of the Bay of Biscay the influence of the sun on
winter weather in Northern Europe is low, that of the ocean and seas comparably
mighty.
Actually, the effect of
warfare in the oceans on weather and climate should have been investigated and
understood long ago. A thorough analysis of the effect of the two naval wars
during WWI and WWII could have contributed important insights into manmade
climate change. Available aret the
meteorological data for the three extreme winters of 1939/40 to 1941/42 and the
several years long naval warfare in the Atlantic and Pacific, but there are
also numerous facts available for comparison with the First World War from 1914
to 1918 (WWI). It seems utterly unacceptable that science ignores observations
that were made 70 years ago. Here are two examples:
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__Drummond (1943): "Since
the beginning of comparative observations in 1871, there have been only three
consecutive winters (1939/1940, 1940/1941 and 1941/1942) that were as snowy as
this, i.e. 1915/1916, 1916/1917 and 1917/1918. "
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__Oestman (1941): "Very
rarely are two severe ice winters directly followed one after the other - since
1870 when regular ice observations started in Sweden . Except for the last two
winters, these are -1939/40 and 1940/41 the only other cases are 1915/16 and
1916/17."
How would Mr. Oestman have expressed his astonishment, if he had also written
the next sea ice report for the Swedish weather service? Instead of that the
already mentioned G.H. Liljequist who
was in charge, noted that the third war winter 1941/42 was colder than the
previous two winters, and the coldest in Stockholm since 1756. The reason is
not too difficult to identify: The German invasion of the Soviet Union since
June 22nd 1941, which included a seven month battle for supremacy in
the eastern Baltic between the German Navy and the Soviet Baltic Fleet, until
heavy sea ice prevented any further naval activities by the end of January
1942. …..
If a period of four months full
of naval activities in autumn 1939 shows sufficient interrelations on its
contribution to an extreme winter in Europe , what further evidence is needed
to go for a painstaking analysis of the impact of two World wars on
climatological changes? The general public and the international community can
require from science that it is able to understand and explain the two most
serious climatic changes that occurred 70 respectively 90 years ago, and to
what extent they have had an anthropogenic component due to naval warfare
during WWI and WWII. A positive answer would underline the book’s subtitle:
“Oceans make Climate” This extract is from the 2012-Book
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