Yes, as the models are showing the increase in severe storms we have not be encountering. Of course the data will show that. It is easy to do, all you have to do is predict the outcome then find the data that shows that outcome and ignore everything else. Not so easy to do when the prediction is something like increase in severe storms and people can see that not happening. Much easier with sea level rise which no one really can see.
Really? And in your mind there is no other ocean than the Atlantic?
Monster El Nino Hurls Record Barrage of Hurricanes at Hot Blob, Sets Sights on Drought-Ravaged California
A Record-Shattering Barrage of Pacific Cyclones
Late during the evening of August 29th of 2015 something odd happened.
For the first time in the history of modern meteorological record keeping, three category four typhoons simultaneously churned their way northward through the Pacific Ocean. These massive and powerful storms, just one category shy of the strongest typhoons we have a measure for, were hurled out of a region of extremely hot sea surface temperatures near the Equator. A zone, that for late August was also hitting record hot levels amidst a building Monster El Nino. And never before in modern memory had so many storms of such high intensity filled Pacific Ocean waters.
(Signs that powerful Fall and Winter storms are coming for the US West Coast? From north to south, strong cyclones are starting to put the squeeze on the Ridiculously Resilient Ridge. The Central and Eastern Pacific between 10 and 30 North, in particular, shows an eye-widening number of tropical cyclones. As of Tuesday, September 1, a whopping four tropical systems were churning northward out of an extremely hot El Nino zone. Image source:
Earth Nullschool.)
By today, the furthest northward cyclones had vented their fury and dropped in intensity. Meanwhile, a fourth storm —
tropical depression 14-E — was in the process of exploding over the very hot waters of the Eastern Pacific. It’s an unprecedented number of storms flowing out of what may become the strongest El Nino on record as part of a powerful ocean-atmospheric feedback.