| Icy Start, But 2008 May Be In Top 10 Warmest Years 
    NORWAY: March 20, 2008
 
 
 OSLO - After the coldest start to a year in more than a decade, spring will 
    bring relief to the northern hemisphere from Thursday.
 
 
 Bucking the trend of global warming, the start of 2008 saw icy weather 
    around the world from China to Greece. But despite its chilly start, 2008 is 
    expected to end up among the top 10 warmest years since records began in the 
    1860s.
 
 This winter, ski resorts from the United States to Scandinavia have deep 
    snow. Last year, after a string of mild winters, some feared climate change 
    might put them out of business.
 
 In many countries crops and plants are back on a more "normal" schedule. 
    Cherry trees in Washington are on target to blossom during a March 29-April 
    13 festival that has sometimes mistimed the peak blooms.
 
 "So far 2008, for the globe, has been quite cold, only just above the 
    1961-90 average," said Phil Jones, head of the Climatic Research Unit at the 
    University of East Anglia which supplies global temperature data to the 
    United Nations.
 
 "This is just January and February, so two coolish months comparable to what 
    happened in 1994 and 1996," he told Reuters.
 
 The northern spring formally begins on March 20 this year.
 
 And an underlying warming trend, blamed by the UN Climate Panel on human use 
    of fossil fuels, is likely to reassert itself after the end of a La Nina 
    cooling of the Pacific in the coming months. There were similar conditions 
    in 1998 and 2005, the hottest so far, Jones said.
 
 
 SNOW AND SANDSTORMS
 
 China suffered its worst snowstorms in a century in January and February. At 
    least 80 people died and the government estimated costs at more than 150 
    billion yuan ($21 billion), including animal deaths and crop losses.
 
 Sandstorms hit Beijing on Tuesday and residents rushed to hide from the dust 
    mixed with petals from the city's magnolia trees.
 
 During the northern winter, snows also fell in unusual places such as 
    Greece, Iraq and Florida. Experts say climate change will bring more swings 
    as part of a warming that will bring more droughts, floods, heatwaves and 
    rising seas.
 
 US ski resorts reported above average snowfall.
 
 "We're 90 percent sure we will extend the season for at least a couple of 
    weeks toward the end of April," said Jeff Hanle, a spokesman for the Aspen 
    Skiing Co. in Colorado. The mountain town has had 400 inches (10 metres) of 
    snow, the normal amount for the whole season, which still has a month to go.
 
 Skiers "have got big smiles on their faces," he said.
 
 "It's been a good season all around," said Tom Horrocks, spokesman of the 
    Killington Ski Resort in Vermont. He said meteorologists said more 
    consistent snows were typical for a La Nina season in the northeast.
 
 But not all places have been chilly -- Jones said western and northern 
    Europe were the warmest parts of the northern hemisphere in the first two 
    months of 2008.
 
 NASA satellite data this week showed the thickest and oldest ice around the 
    North Pole has been disappearing.
 
 Finland had its warmest winter on record. High-speed ferries between 
    Helsinki and Tallinn in Estonia, normally halted for months by winter ice on 
    the Baltic Sea, started earlier than ever in mid-March.
 
 In Norway, many ski resorts have deep snow even though the winter has been 
    the third warmest on record -- scientists say a spinoff of climate change 
    may be more precipitation.
 
 "Turnover is 16 percent over the best season of 2004," said Andreas Roedven, 
    head of Norway's Alpine Ski Area Association.
 
 Electricity prices in the Nordic region halved this month to 27.5 euros 
    ($43.48) per megawatt hour from late 2007 highs because hydropower 
    reservoirs were full and warm temperatures curbed heating demand.
 
 Senior officials from about 190 nations will meet in Bankok from March 
    31-April 4 to start work on a new long-term treaty to combat climate change 
    to succeed the UN's Kyoto Protocol.
 
 (For Reuters latest environment blogs click on: http://blogs.reuters.com/environment/)
 
 (Additional reporting by Deborah Zabarenko in Washington, Emily Chasan in 
    New York, Jim Bai in Beijing, Tarmo Virki in Helsinki, Jeremy Lovell in 
    London, Wojciech Moskwa in Oslo; Editing by Janet Lawrence)
 
 
 Story by Alister Doyle
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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