You don’t need to “pompously assert “ that Britain has always had a maritime climate, it is just stating a fact!
The odds may have tipped in favour of fewer cold spells in winter and more hot spells in summer and that doesn’t need really to be asserted either as it is apparent from the data.
The medium range output is based on the current input and synoptics and should be viewed accordingly not just through a “climate change lens” as that will already be in the input data. The laws of thermodynamics mean that cold and warm air masses will have the same properties as they did decades ago when they are shown in the models, it’s just the former may be less likely to occur. When they do occur they can deliver big time, like the start of January showed here.
None of this really needs to be stated as the bottom line is that easterly weather has been dominating for a considerable time and cold air has been around it has just not really reached here. A few wobbles and trends have come and gone showing the colder air reaching our shores, and that continues to be the case. It may do, or it may not and the balance of probabilities is probably slightly in favour of colder conditions in the medium term. Will it last? Who knows and I’m not going to try to second guess any tweaks that may occur in coming days. Given the range of options in the ensembles it could once again be close but no cigar, but that’s by no means certain and anyone who suggests otherwise is simply guessing.
Originally Posted by: doctormog