Sea surface temperature anomalies in the North Atlantic have been consistently above record levels since 1940, indicating a clear overall warming trend. Additionally, the Arctic sea ice extent is currently the highest in ten years, tracking above the 21st-century average. In contrast, there is notably more sea ice around Antarctica compared to 1980.
Arctic sea ice extent continues above the 21st century average. #ClimateScam ftp://osisaf.met.no/prod_test/ice/index/v2p2/nh/osisaf_nh_sie_daily.txt https://t.co/QUPDw8MP9g
There is considerably more sea ice around Antarctica than there was in 1980. #ClimateScam https://t.co/l8NGjrPKLJ https://t.co/kh8Rq3vi6J
April 11 Arctic sea ice extent is the highest in ten years, and continues to track the 21st century average. #ClimateScam ftp://osisaf.met.no/prod_test/ice/index/v2p2/nh/osisaf_nh_sie_daily.txt https://t.co/wam6I6ud4r
Ocean Saw Daily Heat Records for Past Year https://t.co/CBzZ0TwEHM
March sea surface temperature anomalies over the last 100 years through 2024. While there is interannual variability, the overall warming is also clear. Data from ERSSTv5 at https://t.co/V8F2MhaASY https://t.co/TqVEEuOKG8
It’s so crazy how far above record levels the North Atlantic is (the entire Atlantic too actually). This is the sea surface temperature departure from average each March since 1940. https://t.co/i02V4InvT5