Warmer Oceans linked to Stronger Hurricanes
linguizic writes "According to Scientific American, global warming could be creating stronger hurricanes: 'Since the 1970s, ocean surface temperatures around the globe have been on the rise--from one half to one degree Fahrenheit, depending on the region. Last summer, two studies linked this temperature rise to stronger and more frequent hurricanes. Skeptics called other factors into account, such as natural variability, but a new statistical analysis shows that only this sea surface temperature increase explains this trend.'"
Global warming is a Liberal Myth. Rush and Sean said so!
Ok, well, for some people it was. :)
You are not the customer.
Warmer sea leads to more viscous water, containing more energy. I don't see why it's any suprise...
No sig today.
I wonder how many huracane disasters it will take the US to adopt the Kyoto Protocol they have rejected...
It sure would be nice if people could discuss science and not politics, especially for something so important. But I'm not holding my breath. Not as bad as evolution debates, I suppose.
English is easier said than done.
"Skeptics called other factors into account, such as natural variability, but a new statistical analysis shows that only this sea surface temperature increase explains this trend.'""
Causality,Correlation, nuff said.
Granted the fact that, as someone already mentioned, we already knew this, we still don't have a definite explanation as to why the waters are warming up. Environmentalists say global warming thanks to oil. Oleum (latin for oil... it's where the term "Petroleum" comes from) companies say it's a result of excess water in the atmosphere or that it's part of a constant cycle. Each side needs to defend their cred, but one better turn out to be right, because these hurricanes/cyclones/typhoons are killing more and more people by the year.
Viable Slashdot alternatives: https://pipedot.org/ and http://soylentnews.org/
This article seems far from conclusive. But it certainly doesn't show evidence of absence in determining whether or not rising sea temperatures are contributing to more deadly hurricanes. I would like to see some more people from the field corroborate (by this I don't mean anecdotal evidence, of which I have plenty myself) this simply because it seems like people are ready to hit the panic button on this matter. The article itself says more work needs to be done:
The link between rising ocean temperatures and overall climate change remains murky because of the overlap between natural cycles and any global warming. "But if you buy the argument that global warming is causing the increase in sea surface temperatures--and everybody seems to be buying this--then it's a pretty small leap to say global warming is causing this increase [in hurricane frequency],"
Does this sig remind you of Agatha Christie?
IT'S THE APOCOLYPSE!!!
One of the major origin of hurricanes is the ocean temperature. If enough water is above 27C you are likely to see hurricanes poping on the radar. If some still want to believe that it was bad luck/fate/god's vengeance/*pick dump excuse* that braught the south of the USA to the ground... let them do.
Home of Faramir Paint Shop Pro scripts
The Earth is getting warmer currently, but the primary cause of increased ocean temperatures in the atlantic is from the fact that we're entering the warm part of the 50 year cycle. If you want a very good write up of the study check out this:
http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=031606F
Long term statistics suggest that the number of hurrican strikes is at a cyclic low. Kyotoists tend to use sensational single incidents to bolster their hysterical, political claims. Kyoto was rejected because it is an economic Jonestown that will do nothing to affect global warming.
an ill wind that blows no good
Like, I only had to read the headline.
All I can say is "DUH".
Why do we even have headlines like this?
Few enough humans are concerned about the ramifications of our actions that even talking about it is pointless. we just need the catastrophe and hopefully we will all die.
damn. didn't think I was going to end that so nhilisitic.
I'm cautious reading stories like these. TFA indicates that statistical analysis says the 1 degree warmer water increases hurricane intensity. That makes sense. Now what can they do with that information? Does it help prediction models? Even if we were a totally rational and science-founded world (which we are not), this study shouldn't sway us either way. Obviously we can't directly control ocean temperature. Can anyone quantify changes humanity can make and implement to lower ocean temperature directly? Nope.
Maybe the study answers it, but what does the increased temperature do to other weather? Does it change, speed up, or slow down the oceanic currents and trade winds? Is the water temperature becoming less entropic, with higher temperature but smaller surface area or volume, or more? Is the depth of heating increasing or decreasing? "More hot water means stronger hurricanes" doesn't add much to what we already know.
Obviously more study is warranted before we all go spaztastic.
From TFA:
"and everybody seems to be buying this" Really? Did they happen to discuss this with someone at the National Hurricane Center? See FAQ question G4, Are we getting stronger and more frequent hurricanes, typhoons, and tropical cyclones in the last several years? Which states that "We have not observed a long-term increase in the intensity or frequency of Atlantic hurricanes. Actually, 1991-1994 marked the four quietest years on record (back to the mid-1940s) with just less than 4 hurricanes per year.".
The science seems good, the assumptions relating to global warming aren't.
The wind energy harvesters went back in time and arranged for global warming to occur so windmills would become more economical than oil wells.
"By the time that happens, it would take massive Carbon Dioxide reclamation systems to attempt to turn back the clock."
Something like a...rain forest?
Well, it's a pity the schools didn't brainwash you into believing in "paragraphs".
So many people already knew about this that Hollywood had pumped out a cheesy, un-original movie about it over a year ago!
~~~~ Curry says. Her team will now focus on clarifying the mechanisms at work in the North Atlantic by separating out the 75-year natural cycle and climate change. "The last peak was in 1950, the next is in 2025," she adds. "We're only halfway up [the cycle] and we're already 50 percent worse [in terms of storms]. To me, that's a compelling issue that needs to be confronted." ~~~
..etc that were moving further north.. leaving local indiginous people that had lived in the areas affected for well..... a LONG ASS TIME. for the first time w/out the food recourses to survive as they have for centuries...
as i'm reading this they are saying the storms now are 50% worse than the storms in 1950 (which should have been the high point of storm activity based on natural cycle)... and that the natural cycle would point to natural warming for next 20~years........
I'm honestly starting to wonder if humanity even has time left to get our stuff together or if we've already taken things to far, with our climate impacting activities.
I was reading the other day about artic wild life...seals
human caused global warming is close enough to completely proved for me.
actually I am happy to see you, however that is in fact a banana in my pocket.
The egoistic neocon crowd that built a huge rationalistic edifice around the idea of government sitting around while the world goes to hell, except for strange militaristic adventures which are speeding up the process, would deny our society's role in a thousand Katrina-scale ecological disasters, before giving liberals the gratification of hearing them say "oops, when it came to the big picture I was clueless! Lead me, daddy!"
Obviously all the hurricanes are causing the warmer water. If we want to stop this nasty problem of warm water, then all we have to do is stop the hurricanes and then we can go back to freeze-your-dick-off water, like the good ol' days.
Table-ized A.I.
I see you got your priorities right. Hell, who cares about global warming when you're too shy to go out and get a pizza when drunk...
Yet the article then jumps from there to "It's America's fault for creating all this global warming!!" No real science. Just politics. Why is this even posted on /.?
Because America accounts for 25% of all the world's energy consumption.
May the Maths Be with you!
No shit??? I think I already have my fair share of storms for 2005 and I can't wait for 2006 to start after getting pawned by a giant christmas tree.
http://beta.zooomr.com/photos/michieru
Last time I checked, the viscosity of water decreases when the temp is raised.
Oh well, coming on top of famine, drought, peak oil, bird flu, hiv, cancer, global warming, wars, the North Pole melting, earthquakes, resurgent Islam and thermo-nuclear trouble in Iraq - news always available in a newspaper near you - I guess I'll just have to put this one down to yet another paragraph I failed to read at the bottom of the End User's Licence Agreement called life.
Las qué passoun
tournoun pas maï
I don't have numbers to justify it, but what about everyone complaining about ice caps melting? It would seem to me that warm waters might explain this, but then wouldn't the melting ice cause the ocean to cool? I guess it depends on how much ice is melting and the range of warmer ocean water.
I don't know what stypraphone is, byut Styrofoam has little to do with global warming. The CFCs used to expand styrofoam until the mid-1980s deplete ozone in the stratosphere. This causes an increase in UV radiation at ground level, not global warming.
Recycling reduces the energy consumed in industry. On one extreme, aluminum takes huge amounts of energy to smelt from ore, but relatively little to melt and re-cast. On the other, seperating, transporting, and recycling paper products takes slightly more energy than using new material, BUT reduces deforestation, thus preserving the CO2 absorbtion capabilities of the worlds forests.
Global warming is a global phenomenon, and weather patterns are changing over the whole world. There may be some areas that have lower temperatures, but this does not disprove global warming, since the aggregate temperatures are still higher.
I suggest you go back to school and get brainwashed with grammer, critical thinking, composition, the scientific method, the meaning of a scientific theory and hypothesis, but mostly critical thinking.
Just a guess, but I think what he really means is
"People should not discuss the real-world implications of scientific discoveries when those implications are damaging to my personal politics."
If this is true, it must be real hot on Jupiter....
I can't wait until we get our own red-eye.
how is this a "new" report? this is all we hear about during hurricane season in florida on the radio.
There is no *proof* that climate change is real, and even if it was, there's no *proof* that it's human caused.
Now... back to my cigarette. Just let those greenie-commies try to prove that smoking will kill me. Nope - they can't *proove* that neither... damn hippies..
America accounts for 25% of all the world's energy consumption.
That energy is not all consumed by Americans. Much of it is used in manufacturing products and raising food which is in turn exported all over the world.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
and the energy used in china, malaysia et al to make products that the US imports has to be factored in as well. I cant remember the last time I saw "made in america" on pretty much anything, except software.
DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
"But it certainly doesn't show evidence of absence in determining whether or not rising sea temperatures are contributing to more deadly hurricanes."
Wikipedia:
"Hurricane aka Tropical Cyclone.
"In meteorology, a tropical cyclone is a storm system with a closed circulation around a center of low pressure, driven by heat energy released as moist air drawn in over warm ocean waters rises and condenses. The name underscores their origin in the tropics and their cyclonic nature. "
Alright, calm down, It's going to be O K. Now here's why one degree difference matters, when sea surface temperatures are below 80 degrees Fahrenheit(roughly) hurricanes rarely form. So when the sea surface temperature goes up one degree Fahrenheit this is actually a very big deal. I'm sure that the guys at NOAA are up on their thermodynamics classes.
As far as your theories regarding political motivation, I can tell from your language that you're a God fearing Christian and as such have no political agenda.
How your comment should look:
It's cost me 5 minutes to correct this gibberish. Wasted time, perhaps, considering that all I've ended up with is more grammatically correct gibberish. At least I now know two things I didn't before: a) what kind of person believes global warming isn't happening b) how that idiot got re-electedPenguiNet: the (shareware) Windows SSH client
This is the normal cycle of hurricanes. Many scientists have studied past hurricanes (dating all the way back to ancient China) and have concluded that this is a normal cycle of increasing hurricane activity and strength. There is little to no effect from global warming. The words global warming are now just used for political gain and have little scientific merit.
Looks like you were fortunate and skipped the grammar brainwashing. Thank God!
ratify it.
It's a stupid treaty, whose primary beneficiary would be the suits on the carbon exchanges.
Raise your children as if you were teaching them to raise your grandchildren, because you are.
Stupid Republicans Linked to Warmer Oceans
uuber liberal FTW
Ha ha ha ha haaa! oh hoh hoho ho hohoooooo ha haha hahahahaaa!!!!!
Oceans are really big. Q.E.D.
to make you want to store a few hog heads
human caused global warming is close enough to completely proved for me.
I missed that jump in logic. Sure, it is getting warmer. That's because we're coming out of a mini-ice age.
To think that something's proven is like watching the tides for 3 hours and thinking the earth's going to be underwater in a day. Or that humans continue to grow at an inch per year for life.
I have no doubts that humans can affect local area environments, like mog in LA. But on a grand scale like warming the entire planet? I have yet to see any data that directly implicates man in this.
Would it suprise you that I spell Colour colour too? And pronounce about about, not abaaawht.
Well, it was obvious to some of us. But most people are in denial about this stuff. Hell, most people haven't admitted global warming is a problem yet, due to greed or stupidity or plain old laziness, or probably a hundred other reasons.
The horsepucky in this is the part about stronger and more frequent hurricanes.
It seems like they are getting worse because more people are moving into the areas the hurricanes like to play, so they do more damage.
The data, on the other hand, shows no significant change in the overall hurricane pattern.
I'm a Programmer. That's one level above Software Engineer and one level below Engineer.
Since the hurricanes are to punish sinners, does this mean God's behind global warming, too?
Yep, Global warming is just a myth until a hurricane hit Washington DC or New York City
Then you can bet someone will declare, it is global warming
Well, as a resident of Louisiana, I can attest that more hurricanes are a bad thing. We were not hit by Katrina, but we had the refugees staying in our houses. New Orleans is still on hell of a mess. On the other hand, we did get hit somewhat by the hurricane everyone forgets, Rita. That really trashed our coastal parishes and poisoned the land with salt (for details see here). A warmer Gulf means the risk of more storms and stronger storms. From where we sit, we really do not give a proverbial 'rats arse' about the politics. We just do not want hurricanes. If ANYTHING can be done to lower the temperature of the sea and thereby reduce the risk, I am for it. The politicos like to carp on about the causal link not being proved -- this was the line used by tobacco companies for years. Anyone who knows anything about the philosophy of science knows that it is almost possible to prove causation. What matters is strong correlation. This we seem to have, although I am sure whilst Haliburton runs the Whitehouse, nobody will pay any attention. Sorry, I needed to vent on this...
What a brilliant conclusion... And the nobel goes to....
In what way does the table linked suggest "the number of hurrican strikes is at a cyclic low"? Perhaps you haven't notice that all except the last entry are for 10-years periods, while the last is only for 3?
Because the cummulative numbers rise and fall twice in 150 years, and 2000's number is historically low. Can you read? Before drawing conclusions on the current decade you might let it finish. Ah, but I forget diehard Kyotoists insist that real climate history began when the US opted out of the treaty.
an ill wind that blows no good
It would be far better to have fewer articles, and the articles in question be actually worth posting, rather than this kind of filler material.
When do we get to stop talking about the causes of global warming, and move on to how to fix it. My bet is our last words are something to the effect of "...we figured it out guys. That huge hurricane that has lasted for three seasons was the collapse of the gulf stream." Maybe FEMA will save us :)
Warmer oceans, stronger hurricanes. This is news?
Warmer oceans = more energy for hurricanes to feed off of. This has been known for quite some time.
Sensationalist +1. Obviously, warmer oceans can be effectively called global warming, as the Earth is mostly ocean. However, this is nothing more than a sensationalist attempt at linking evil bad humans omgwtf to evil bad hurricanes omgwtf.
I can't believe somebody like you even exists.
Wow, you are a living, breathing human, yet you managed to type and submit such bollocks? I hope you are either a kid or mentally retarded, because if you are a normal adult then I fear for humanity.
Mother, do you think they'll like this sig?
The Bush Administration is blindly or willfully ignorant of the fact. So what if we lose New Orleans, so long as Crawford, TX and Camp David aren't hit it ain't no big thing.
Right now I'm starting to read "The Republican War on Science" by Chris Mooney. Yep, just pull info out of your ass and propagate it as sound policy. That's the M.O. of this administration.
Sorry for the political rant.
I disagree. I think that it's a literal myth. Blame the Literals!!1!1
I'd like to nominate atarione for NOAA head, so we can stop all the wasteful "science" they do.
... but no shit, Sherlock. That's like saying that we just discovered that severe weather is more likely to occur in zones of low atmospheric pressure. I thought this was supposed to be news for nerds, not news for people that flunked out of middle-school Earth science class.
The topic at hand is hurricanes, Atlantic tropical cyclones, and their frequency through time. If I am not giving equal time to whatever harmful weather strikes your eurotrash location, I do apologize.
an ill wind that blows no good
.....human caused global warming is close enough to completely proved for me...
So when are yu going to get rid of your car and use a bicycle?
All theory is gray
More religious zealotry in the guise of science. I've heard the opposite of that from another source. Can this be moved to the religion section please.
I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
Because America accounts for 25% of all the world's energy consumption.
And amazingly America makes about 28% of the stuff the entire world makes. The GDP of the US is about $13T, the GDP of the world is about $50T.
file this under the "no, duh" category...
There is no global warming.
and the Earth's pollution-free,
and we'll never run out of resources,
and we'll always have energy.
We'll never use up all the space,
and the rich should have more than they need;
poverty is God's just punishment,
visited on the brown and lazy!
Iraq is going well, and Iran wants our freedom!
There was no big bang,
and Earth is orbited by the sun.
Evolution is communist propaganda
and opera and PBS, too
Hilary Clinton is one of them gay commies,
a threat to me and you.
So go out and vote republican,
or else the terrorists win,
and be sure to go to church every week,
or you'll get AIDS to punish your sins.
There is no global warming.
STOP . AMERICA . NOW
Whenever something happens in nature its attributed to global warming. Could it be scientists just looking to grab the next headline to secure a grant? While I believe in global warming and do think we need to take measures to curb it (I think its too late to stop it...just my opinion), it gets blamed every time something happens. In that respect its kinda like smoking. I never realized smoking could cause foot fungus, but I'm sure theres a moron who made that link too.
I'm not trolling, but it seems the cliff has gone off the deep end in this politically correct world.
Lighten up. Its only a post.
I agree. The label "Made in the USA" is a lot more common than "Made in America".
Stupidity is like nuclear power, it can be used for good or evil. And you don't want to get any on you.
You should all go and read Prometheus and in particular, this post.
There are many respected scientists who are not 'sceptics' (as that term is so often used - pejoratively) who doubt the link between hurricanes and global warming. Repeat after me, correlation does not prove causation.
Speak outwards against DHMO before it KILLS OUR PLANET!
But Maaa! Everyone else has a
If we're only halfway through the cycle, and CO2 levels continue to increase, we're going to see much worse hurricanes over the next few years than at any time in history.
Seriously when I was 10 its easy to tell kids, oh don't use styraphone to protect global warming, oh recycle! ...
But now that you are 11, you have clearly got it all figured out.
Would it surprise you to learn that grammar is always spelled with an "a", and that regardless of whether you are british or american or something else you spelt grammar wrong.
What could be better than a jet powered motorcycle? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8l6GTHLSWE
I actually do commute via bicycle frequently... i also use the train to get to work regularly...
..... step the fuck off, I'm doing pretty much as much as i reasonably can to reduce my energy consumption.
the car my g/f and i have is fuel efficent~ish (we're looking at getting a hybrid.... we use energy saving light bulbs and appliances in our house...
in short
actually I am happy to see you, however that is in fact a banana in my pocket.
*rolls eyes*
You do realize that God doesn't have to do anything to "punish" sinners. All he has to do is let sinners continue doing what sinners do best, and let the chips fall were they may. Now the devil is another matter.
"and even if global warming was not mainly caused by human activity, that doesn't mean we shouldn't do everything possible to slow its rate."
Maybe your right, but getting there as a society is a long way off. With ozone layer issues, the fear of excessive sun rays, cancer,etc. was a good motivator for the average joe. Global warming however does not pose much of a danger as a whole to the human race, so therefore, you dont gain such a motivational response.
"and even if global warming was not mainly caused by human activity, that doesn't mean we shouldn't do everything possible to slow its rate."
Maybe your right, but getting there as a society is a long way off. With ozone layer issues, the fear of excessive sun rays, cancer,etc. was a good motivator for the average joe. Global warming however does not pose much of a danger as a whole to the human race, so therefore, you dont gain such a motivational response.
Not to mention "surprise".
Most operational meteorologists I know feel human induced global warming is a bad theory, based on really bad modeling. The equations are incomplete as is the data set. Maybe we're worried because we use numeric weather prediction models on a daily basis and understand we can't always get the temperature right to within 2-3 degree over 24 hours, much less 24 years!
Academicians and theorists seem to support the idea in great numbers. These are people who haven't had to answer for a bad forecast in the supermarket.
Surely, human induced global warming is a political argument. Ask yourself, why have I never heard even one positive influence from global warming? In science, you should hear the good and the bad. In this argument, it's only the bad that gets publicized. If everyone in the Northern Plains, Northern Europe, New England, Canada and other cold weather climates get a longer growing season with lower winter heating costs, shouldn't that be weighed against tidal rises on Vanuatu?
Recently, after Katrina and the others, there has been a chorus trying to connect more hurricanes with global warming. Here's what Dr. William Gray says (he's the guy you hear quoted every year with seasonal hurricane predictions):
You can read more of Dr. Gray's thoughts in this excellent paper "Global Warming and Hurricanes."
I have posted this late. Positive modding to make it more visible would be appreciated.
A simple solution to global warming. /day, starting from the top. So, the first person to go is the leader of the nation, then his/her cronies, then down through the 'better than others' and finally down to the working joes/janes.
Give each person a pollution allotment.
If a nation has 100 million people, they get 100 million units of pollution to use. If they exceed that allotment, they execute people until they balance, 1 person per unit missed
>The CFCs used to expand styrofoam until the mid-1980s deplete ozone in the stratosphere. This causes an increase in UV radiation at ground level, not global warming.
It's a pity most people don't know the difference. Just to add to the confusion, though, CFCs are both catalysts for ozone depletion and greenhouse gases as well. One of the proposals for terraforming Mars is to pump chlorofluorocarbons into the atmosphere in the hope of triggering a self-sustaining runaway greenhouse effect.
My question is: "Where's the missing mechanism?"
We have 30-odd years of data that show a strong correlation between ocean surface temperature and the force of hurricanes. Fine. We also have a very long history of periodic fluctuation in the force of hurricanes over time.
So why does this correlation only work today, as a 'result' of global warming? Why can't we use it to infer the existence of a periodic variation in ocean surface temperatures that corresponds to the observed history of strong hurricanes? More specifically, why can't we use this correlation and the history of strong hurricanes to show that ocean surface temperatures were rising and falling as much as they are today, long before the 150-year period associated with global warming?
If this round of strong hurricanes are the result of global warming, but none of the others in history were, what 'missing mechanism' produced all those previous cycles of strong hurricanes, and why isn't that mechanism working today?
Thanks for stating this -- as far as I'm concerned, there are a lot of places where people simply shouldn't be living. As I understand it (I'm not from the area so correct me if I'm wrong), New Orleans used to get lots of hurricanes similar to Katrina, and there's simply been a remisssion for about 50 years. People became complacent during that time, property near the coast was subdivided, and everyone flocked to it. 50 years later big storms are back. Apparently the solution isn't to move away -- it's to spend tens or hundreds of billions of dollars rebuilding?? Trying to protect a region below sea level?? There are some things that are just ridiculous.
As far as I'm concerned, people whose homes and properties are wiped out like this should be given a chance where appropriate. I live in New Zealand, and while not on as-large-a-scale as some disasters in the US, we do have several places that have been wiped out by serious weather events.
These disasters have resulted in substantial amounts of money that, essentially, comes out of my taxes. I don't mind this the first time, but bailing people out over and over again just because they like to live in a place that's clearly vulnerable to forces of nature seems silly.
We also have plenty of examples of disasters-in-waiting, which are simply being ignored. One of them, for instance, is an expected Tsunami to hit Kaikoura in the near future. There's an underwater landslide down the coast that's just waiting to happen, and almost certainly will cause the place to be at serious risk. The attitude of the locals is to ignore the risk, claim that they'll get through it like any other day, and keep on living there.
I really do sympathise with people who are living in places like this, especially if they have roots there but I also think that governments should be making it very clear about significant danger zones, and if appropriate, preventing people from living in them. I'm tempted to say that people should be allowed to live in such places at their own risk, but I don't think it's realistic to expect that help won't be offered if it's needed. I also think that such a policy would victimise poor people, by making those areas much much cheaper to live in (as well as other areas more expensive).
Its really amazing how the nasty actions of America end up hurting it more. Like how its big companies have gone overseas for cheap, sweatshop labour - and now they've got a job shortage. Like how they supplied weapons to Iraq and then were convinced they needed to invade it. Like how they ignored the threat of global warming and are now getting beat up by nature. And the new issue is how they abused their (mostly innocent) prisioners in Guantanamo bay - what better excuse for future terrorist attacks.
http://developers.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1 80074&cid=14916003
Dont' you realize that according to super-secret reports of studies conducted by paid researchers of Exxon and Castrol that fossil fuels do NOT cause global warming?
Someday washpost and NY times et al are going to shout that Bush had amazing foresight and Vision in fighting this war in Iraq, he was absolutely right in NOT signing the stupid Kyoto treaty, and that there is a new super-secret way where all these hurricanes and global warming crap would be reversed in a decade.
We would forget all these silly mistakes he has done so far (murdering 2383 soldiers is a small price, considering Hitler murdered millions).
Not only that, US would be the beacon of democracy and freedom for all world, while gushing oil reserves from Alaska would bring down oil price to $10 a barrel. Take That You Saudi Arabia !!!
"Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
The sciam article mentions they used a statistical analysis for this conclusion. Samuel Clemmons once stated their are liars, damn liars and statiticians. If you noticed, they only used data from 1970 on. Why not data from 1940 on, it is out there.
This last year we ran out of names for hurricanes. The naming system was based on the maximum number of hurricanes we have had in the past (80+ years ago it seems) in on season. This means that we have indeed had that many hurricanes, when they say it was cooler. So how can that be? I'm not trying to be a troll here, I'm genuinely curious if anyone knows.
The reality that I have seen shows that it has far more to do with a new weather pattern than GW. In fact we are seeing that today with more strong winds in America that have set unprecendented fires in Texas and around the country. Even in places like Maryland that has seen a greater than average rainfall. I have seen a direct coorolation between the Sun's activies and the winds here. I'm not a scientist in this field, however there definately seems to be something there to me. A lot of people don't realize that our star called the SUN is a very well behaved star relatively speaking. It could wipe life out on earth in a matter of minutes and hours otherwise.
The "Scientific American" article doesn't seem to take a new weather pattern into consideration. By the way, weather patterns tend to last 20 years. On the other hand, if they are right then we need to convince our elected officials to allow Nuclear Power plants to be built. One of those suckers takes a lot of the greenhouse gasses away. Also, many people have no idea that coal plants emit more radiation than any other American nuke plant ever has. Turns out coal is often located near Uranium deposits. In fact we have been lied to for years about the dangers of nuclear power. Even in Chernobyl, the dire consequences they told us about haven't come about. Same thing with Three Mile Island. These dire consequenes were once published in the Scientific American as well.
Mostly correct. The additional UV contributes a trivial increase in surface recieved energy, which in turn contributes a trivial amount to retained energy near ground level. The ozone depletion in itself does not make CFC's a global warming concern. The problem of CFC's is that the C-F bond is a better infrared absorber than even the C=O bond, meaning CFC's have a much higher global warming potential (GWP) than CO2: easy-to-find Web page with CFC GWP table.
The good news is that increases in CFC GW contribution are falling since the ban of R-12 and others of the worst suspects; the bad news is that the CFCs put out before the ban will be contributing to global warming for a long time to come. The gripping hand is that the sheer volume of CO2 levels has always made it the #1 global warming contributor.
//Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
[...] The question is what to do about it. We can: (1) Totally ignore it. (2) Put our entire economy on hold.
3)Or anything in between.(my emphasis)
4)To determine what we should do requires a lot more information than we actually have. (my emphasis) [...]
Well ... option 1) is what the US have been doing for the past 10 years or so. Satisfied with the results? Option 2) has been cited all along to argue that it made no sense to a) find out if there really was a danger, b) why actually doing anything about it was out of the question anyway, and c) all this talk about climate was a load of bunkum purveyed by starry eyed doo-gooders and jealous pinko's out to rob us of our economic leadership anyway.
So I'm very pleased to see that the poster actually caught on to option 3) "anything in-between", despite the traditional catch-all excuse for doing nothing voiced in the same breath under 4). Tradition is hard to shake off, I know, but it can be very misplaced. There may be lots of residual questions relating the connection between global warming and catastrophic climate change, but why would we want to wait until all the t's are crossed and all the i's are dotted? What would that gain us? At most it would tell us that some measures would be unnecessary, allowing us to save some effort and some money. Great, but is that worth the risk of missing out on a hard or soft window of opportunity w.r.t. climate change? Personally I think not, but that's just my opinion.
I put it to you that being as energy-efficient as feasible is the obvious thing to do. It may not be a total solution, but it helps. Let others (e.g. the government) worry about the large-scale issues (after all that's what they're paid for) ... but make sure that they _do_ worry about it and don't pass it off as "counter to our economic interest". But being a little more energy-efficient is something that all of us can do, starting today. Both at an individual and at a national level. Not just because it would reduce CO2 emissions that would otherwise take place, and hence contribute to one of the probable causes of global warming, but also because our main energy source, mineral oil, is an increasingly scarce resource. And one which (in my personal opinion) currently is way too cheap in the US.
The only additional information you'd need is: how do I identify and implement measures that make sense from an economic, practical, and technical point of view?
On an individual level there are lots things (ranging from small to ambitious) that can be done in and about the home. Home-owners, renters, and small businesses can find detailed information on how to save energy (and money) here: http://hes.lbl.gov/hes/vh.shtml.
There are government subsidies (see http://www.dsireusa.org/) for energy-saving measures, that can reduce the financial burden of implementing energy-saving measures for businesses and individuals.
What more information would you need to get started?
man trade_deficit
Last summer, two studies linked this temperature rise to stronger and more frequent hurricanes.
Thas basic meteorology. Sicne when do you need a study for that? This is known since > 40 years.
angel'o'sphere
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
Yet you can pick a random person off the street and they'll be able to accurately tell you that the average temperature where they live is going to be warmer in 3 months than it is today (assuming that we're talking about people in the Northern Hemisphere.)
That's the difference between climate and weather. You're either not a meteorologist (if you don't know the different), or not an honest meteorologist if you're knowingly misleading people about global climate change by conflating the two subjects.
Fuckin brit nigger. its color not colOURUROUR, or whatever the fuck you try to say.
Fahrenheit is an obsolete measure. Get with the times.
I live in one of these so-called "dangerous places", the San Francisco Bay Area, and have for my whole life. I've seen a big quake in action, up close and personal, back in 1989 (Loma Prieta). Although it took as long as ten years for full repairs to be completed on every structure damaged in the quake, life was largely back to normal about a month or so after it hit.
Of course, Loma Prieta is not the only big quake to have struck the area, there was the famous quake in 1906 that caused a fire so large it almost destroyed San Francisco. If the people back then had listened to naysayers like you instead of making risk-taking into a way of life, the Bay Area would be a very different place today. The Silicon Valley would likely never have come into existance, and you might well have typed your message on a fine IBM electric typewriter. Intel Corp. may have never invented the 4004 microprocessor. Compaq may have never reverse-engineered the IBM-PC. Apple wouldn't exist. Nor would Sun, Creative Labs, BSD-Unix, or AMD. Do I really have to keep going?
The unique culture that exists in the San Francisco Bay Area helped encourage many people to take some big risks that have changed the face of our planet and the lives of everybody on /. And yet we still have to listen to people tell us that our home is too dangerous, and we should leave. The tax argument isn't even a valid point in this instance, as California pays more federal taxes than the feds give back, so nobody else in the country is subsidising our choice of location.
"Why don't you interface with my ass...by biting it!" -Bender B. Rodriguez
I recognize that the man may be one of the world experts on hurricane skill prediction, but the man clearly needs some basic education in climate physics. To start with, the man doesn't even realize that forcing from increases in CO2 concentration aren't linear!
Quote: "and from 1975 to 2005 it [CO2 energy forcing] was raised by 46/290x4.2 = 0.67 w/m2". Now, the standard CO2 forcing approximation (ideally, you use MODTRAN or the equivalent software package, but this will do) is F = f(c)-f(c0) where f(c) = 4.996 ln (c+0.0005c^2). For the same 330 ppm to 378 ppm increase that Gray claims is 0.67 w/m2 (or, in your excerpt, 0.65 w/m2), I calculate about 0.78 w/m2. So Dr. Gray is off by a whopping 16% on what should be an elementary calculation that I would expect any competent first year grad student to be able to do.
Now of course, CO2 isn't the only greenhouse gas. Other gases have contributed some 1.5 W/m2 forcing increase since preindustrial. Nor does he seem to ackowledge the cooling properties of sulfate aerosols (extremely important when understanding the difference between the 1950 to 1975 period and the 1975-present period), or the fact that climate models do an extremely good job of matching the cooling resulting from volcanic eruptions like Pinatubo that his theories would clearly totally fail on, various fingerprinting routines to look at temperature change patterns, or any one of a hundred other issues.
So how about I don't call myself a weather prediction expert unless I want to do some serious research into your methodology, and you (or Dr. Gray) don't try pretending to be experts on climate science unless you can understand at least the elementary issues?
The numbers you are looking at are too small to make valid statistical claims. That is why real scientists use total hurricanes in the Atlantic Basin, or even better, global hurricanes.
Don't the NOAA statistics I linked go back 150 years. The issue is the frequency of hurricane strikes on the US and how much global warming is supposed to affect it. This is the relevant data that is available. What deep statistical reasoning do you propose? You are not thinking clearly.
Oh - wait, but you are trying to make a hysterical political claim by using data sets that are too small to draw valid conclusions from! mmm, the flavor of hypocrisy...
That the US has been hit by a historically low number of hurricanes in the last 5 years is a simple observation. Observations of 60 previous 5 year periods bear this out. That is a pretty good statistical sample. I draw no conclusion except that the nefarious global warming does not seem to be causing an uptick in hurricane strike in the US. This is why I criticized the initial post and drew the ire of the Kyotoists. If you are a Kyotoist see the bogeyman of global warming in every whirlwind, then you will be disappointed. I can't help that. I can only be honest.
an ill wind that blows no good
Prof. Emanuel, MIT: "Data on U.S. landfalling storms is only about 2 tenths of one percent of data we have on global hurricanes over their whole lifetimes. Thus while we can already detect trends in data for global hurricane activity considering the whole life of each storm, we estimate that it would take at least another 50 years to detect any long-term trend in U.S. landfalling hurricane statistics, so powerful is the role of chance in these numbers."
This is an anecdote. Speculation. Fog. Given your haughtiness I was expecting an argument bolstered by better statistical evidence than I got from NOAA. I would welcome a link worldwide data on the size and duration of hurricanes. This is not it. You are not strengthening your argument. I am still quite content in my original observation that global warming is not correlated with hurricane formation.
an ill wind that blows no good
Thanks for providing a reference, but you have done your argument further harm. You lecture me on the inadequacy of 150 years of regional NOAA data then offer up some spacious, pseudo-statistical conclusions based on 10 years of the *same* data? Perhaps you should get into marketing.
an ill wind that blows no good
It might be that I wasn't clear enough, and it's also that you seem to have misunderstood me to some extent. If this was the case then please accept my apologies.
If you live in San Francisco, then you should know that the 1989 quake, as did the 1906 quake, resulted in some significant changes to building regulations, including highway bridge regulations, after it was noticed that several standard precautions already known about hadn't been implemented properly or effectively. If you live there, you're already paying extra to live in buildings of a higher standard than you might live in elsewhere. Also as much as they demand attention for preparation, earthquakes simply don't occur as often as severe storms. I also live in an Earthquake risk zone, and I pay extra for it too. Will my government bail us out if an Earthquake strikes? Sure, at least I hope so, but the chances of that actually happening are still considerably average over the next several hundred years. We might be hit tommorrow, or not for a thousand years. Like you, we also pay our way, and I'd like to think that a bailout cost every few hundred years would be insignificant compared with the economic return of being here.
It's completely true that sometimes there are very good reasons for living in dangerous places, especially when it's economic to do so. Maybe there's a big and very accessible harbour there, for instance. Alternatively, volcanic ash that surrounds volcanoes is great for producing crops efficiently. I'm not trying to suggest that people shouldn't be allowed to live in dangerous places across the board, or that a fence should be put up to stop people visiting on the off-chance that a disaster will strike. (For hurricanes it's not too difficult to predict their impact in a reasonable time, anyway.) But I think there should definitely be some restrictions on building in the places that are obviously most at risk, and likely to be subject to natural disasters again and again.
But come on, the coast of New Orleans is going to be hammered by big hurricanes over and over again from now on. The only difference between now and 50 years ago is the recent 50 year lapse in the standard weather pattern. During this time people became complacent and started building in places where they really shouldn't have built. Now that the pattern's resuming and they've finally been hit again, the response isn't to say "Oops, we shouldn't have done that.. we'd better pull back to where we were". On the contrary, the response is to spend billions of dollars trying to devise ways to let people continue living in places below sea level that will be repeatedly exposed to severe hurricanes, and that people never would have wanted to live in if they hadn't had an opportunity to establish themselves during an inconsistent patch of climatic conditions. To top it off, the methods being devised are probably not going to work with any certainty or effectiveness, and the area will continue to be a sink for other people's money that could otherwise be spent on much more useful things -- or alternatively given back to them if you happen to think that way.
Really, to be honest, New Orleans is in the US and I'm not deeply concerned about how you choose to run your internal affairs except when they have spinoffs that affect me. If you want to spend billions of dollars on subsidising people's poor choices of living locality, by all means do so and who am I to argue? It's not even my money. I do find it quite perpelexing to look at, though.
Locally, in New Zealand, I am concerned, because the places that cost the most to bail out of disasters are the small coastal towns that are demonstrably in locations subject to severe conditions (between their attractive sunshine). These places don't provide a lot of tax anyway. With a few exceptions, they tend to be full of people living there in retiremen
Umm,no. New Orleans has been hit by ONE hurricane even closely comparable to Katrina since 1900. Betsy, in 1964, also flooded the city.
Since I've been living there, two or three little hurricanes have passed close enough to give us a "Hurricane Day" at work. One of those hurricanes actually caused RAIN in New Orleans. Almost 1/4 inch of it, if you can believe that.
Fact is, any given spot on the Gulf Coast doesn't get hit all that often. And big storms don't happen all that often. So being hit by a big storm is a once-in-a-lifetime thing, usually. Well, twice for older people in New Orleans now, and the Mississippi Gulf Coast.
We're expecting a busier than usual Hurricane season this year too. But the odds of New Orleans being hit by a big storm this year are low. About the same as the odds of Gulf Shore, Alabama being hit twice in a row by monster storms...oh, wait, that didn't happen, did it?
"I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"