We propose a few possibilities: (a) The temperature measurements in polar regions are in error by a few tenths of a degree. (b) The GCM results are incorrect, at least, as far as the latitudinal distribution of the expected warming is concerned. (c) There are some other till now unidentified factors that influence the rate of temperature change in polar regions; we pursue further this possibility.
The recent GCM climate simulation done with only the natural forcing (solar variation and volcanic activity) and with the greenhouse gases kept at the pre-industrial level suggests that the earth's climate should have been cooling since 1940s. Due to the radiative forcing of added anthropogenic aerosols and greenhouse gases this projected cooling trend has been transformed into the observed global warming (with only a slight or no temperature change in polar regions). The analysis of the Vostok ice core data, for the last four interglacial periods, suggests that our current interglacial warm climate has been already lasting considerably longer (about 11,000 years)than a duration of any of the three preceding interglacial period (5,000 to 7,000 years); thus a beginning of a slow cooling trend cannot be ruled out. Consequently, the observed global climate change may be interpreted as the result of an interplay between a cooling produced by a naturally occurring factors and a warming due to anthropogenic (greenhouse gases) influences.