When Irving Berlin wrote “White Christmas” in 1940 in sunny La Quinta
he was a world away from the glistening tree tops and “sleigh bells in the snow” of his festive classic
Yet snow would have been a big part of his childhood winters in Talachyn
where the composer lived before emigrating to the US aged five
In Britain too, snow is a key component of our collective cultural memory of the festive season, even if we’re long used to being without it. Yet the last Christmas Day the UK enjoyed widespread snow was 12 years ago. Indeed, the Met Office is forecasting mild weather for Christmas 2022 at the time of writing
and white Christmases were not such a rarity
the UK experienced a “little ice age” that brought about notably harsh winters
White Christmases were common occurrences in the 18th and 19th centuries
according to data shared with the New Statesman by the Met Office
It is not for nothing that A Christmas Carol (1843) portrays Ebenezer Scrooge in a snowy London on Christmas Day
and the planet suffering catastrophic climate change
the prospects of a UK winter white-out look ever-more remote
But climate change means the world is warming
the temperature has now risen by around 1.2°C above pre-industrial times
and the last eight years in the UK were the warmest on record
The average UK temperature in December last decade was 4.8°C; in the 1890s
Recent years have had considerably less snowfall over the whole winter period than was typical earlier in the 20th century
Five of the six years with the least snowfall in the past 50 years have occurred since the year 2000
Five of the snowiest six years over that same period occurred before 1990
According to a 2020 study from the Met Office, snow could disappear completely from the UK by the end of the century
a small minority (at least 5 per cent) of UK weather stations have recorded snowfall on half of the Christmas Days since 1960
Yet there has only been widespread Christmas snowfall – defined as when more than 40 per cent of stations report snow on the ground by 9am on 25 December – four times since 1960
when snow was recorded on the ground at 83 per cent of stations and snow was falling at 19 per cent on Christmas Day
The year 2021 was also technically a white Christmas
with 6 per cent of weather stations recording snowfall on Christmas Day
The previous year also saw 6 per cent recording snow
while no station recorded any in 2018 and 2019 at all
[See also: This is how you don’t celebrate Christmas]