PERSONAL NOTE: I’ve been unavailable for a while…my oldest daughter was in a bad car accident, will be OK eventually, but won’t walk for about 3 months. So, I might not be answering queries.
The global average lower tropospheric temperature anomaly for January, 2012 took a precipitous plunge, not totally unexpected for a La Nina January (click on the image for the full-size version):

The 3rd order polynomial fit to the data (courtesy of Excel) is for entertainment purposes only, and should not be construed as having any predictive value whatsoever.
Here are the monthly stats:
    YR  MON  GLOBAL   NH    SH    TROPICS
    2011    1  -0.010  -0.055   +0.036  -0.372
    2011    2  -0.020  -0.042   +0.002  -0.348
    2011    3  -0.101  -0.073  -0.128  -0.342
    2011    4   +0.117   +0.195   +0.039  -0.229
    2011    5   +0.133   +0.145   +0.121  -0.043
    2011    6   +0.315   +0.379   +0.250   +0.233
    2011    7   +0.374   +0.344   +0.404   +0.204
    2011    8   +0.327   +0.321   +0.332   +0.155
    2011    9   +0.289   +0.304   +0.274   +0.178
    2011   10   +0.116   +0.169   +0.062  -0.054
    2011   11   +0.123   +0.075   +0.170   +0.024
    2011   12   +0.126   +0.197   +0.055   +0.041
    2012   01   -0.093  -0.059  -0.127  -0.138
Progress continues on Version 6 of our global temperature dataset. You can anticipate a little cooler anomalies than recently reported, maybe by a few hundredths of a degree, due to a small warming drift we have identified in one of the satellites carrying the AMSU instruments.

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