Polar Colding…Antarctica Saw Its Coldest October In 44 Years!

Record cold at the South Pole … Amundsen-Scott Station records -61.3°C … coldest October temperature in Southern Hemisphere since 1981.

The German, realist European Institute for Climate and Energy (EIKE) presents its latest video on the subject of Antarctica and contrasts the new records with mainstream media coverage of climate change.

On October 15, 2025, the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station reported a record low temperature of -61.3 degrees Celsius, marking the coldest October temperature measured in the Southern Hemisphere since 1981.

Built on the Antarctic plateau, 2,835 metres above sea level, the station’s all-time low is -82.8°C. Since the seasons are reversed in the southern hemisphere, the Antarctic continent was already in spring in October and should have  experienced rising temperatures – at least no lower than in the deep southern winter in August.

The EIKE video criticizes German media outlets (such as “Die Zeit”) for focusing primarily on melting ice and rising sea levels while allegedly ignoring current record-low temperatures in their reporting.

Despite the record cold temperatures on land, Antarctic sea ice reached an extent of only 17.81 million km² in September 2025—the third-lowest value since satellite measurements began.

EIKE argues that no clear, short-term conclusions about global climate development can be drawn due to the contradictory nature of the data (record cold vs. low sea ice).





4 responses to “Polar Colding…Antarctica Saw Its Coldest October In 44 Years!”

  1. Polar Colding…Antarctica Saw Its Coldest October In 44 Years! – Watts Up With That? | BBC Record London

    […] From the NoTricksZone […]

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    […] Polar Colding…Antarctica Saw Its Coldest October In 44 Years! […]

  3. From the Man Cave XXV - The New Conservative

    […] keyboard with a half-finished TNC column on the screen. I read this week that Antarctica had its coldest October in 14 years. Again, this will probably be a result of global warming; most things […]

  4. Richard Greene

    CO2 emissions cause a negative greenhouse effect over most of Antarctica due to
    due to a permanent temperature inversion over most of the continent.
    Record cold in those areas is expected and is a symptom of an increasing greenhouse effect. Author knows none of this climate science. … Warmer oceans and changes of ocean currents would affect sea ice near Antarctica. Warmer oceans would also be a symptom of greenhouse warming. … Negative greenhouse effect explains why Antarctica has had so little ice melting since 1975, despite the global warming of the planet since 1975.

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