The next para: Another consequence is that water requires much more energy to heat it up than does air. On a volume/volume basis, the ratio of heat capacities is, of course, 3,300 to 1. One practical result of this is that it is almost impossible for the atmosphere to exert a significant heating effect on the ocean, as is often asserted to by promoters of global warming alarm. For to heat one litre of water by 1oC will take 3,300 litres of air that was 2ohotter, or one litre of air that was 3,300oC hotter, neither of which is a common scenario within our every day weather system. Instead, it is the ocean that controls the warmth of the lower atmosphere, in three main ways: namely, through direct contact, by infrared radiation from the ocean surface and by the removal of latent heat by evaporation.
Would you like Prof. Carter's email so you can correct him? I have it.