Scientists Respond to Gore on Global Warming
ArthurDent writes "For quite a while global warming has been presented in the public forum as a universally accepted scientific reality. However, in the light of Al Gore's new film An Inconvenient Truth many climate experts are stepping forward and pointing out that there is no conclusive evidence to support global warming as a phenomenon, much less any particular cause of it."
Wow. This is a bold line from the article:
Carter does not pull his punches about Gore's activism, "The man is an embarrassment to US science and its many fine practitioners, a lot of whom know (but feel unable to state publicly) that his propaganda crusade is mostly based on junk science"
Strangely enough this is from a website that is sporting anti-bush t-shirts, buttons, and bumper stickers
Windows Admin Tools
I don't consider any site that has over 50% of the page content taken by ads as an authority in the matter. Especially dancing cursors. Yuck.
Why Exxon Mobile of course!
p hp?id=1134
http://www.exxonsecrets.org/html/personfactsheet.
The website he writes for also did a great piece on how McDonalds was good for you, after they took a bunch of cash from McDonalds.
As was pointed out in the Digg discussion, Bob Carter gets his funding from Exxon...
p hp?id=1134
http://www.exxonsecrets.org/html/personfactsheet.
There's lots more in the actual article.
And this is the guy who wrote the above entry:
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/200
Look at who is the basis for the article, Professor Bob Carter. This man is effectively a spokesman for the energy industry. He gets support from the Australian Institute of Energy. The membership of this agust body is a who's who of the oil, gas, coal, and power companies in Australia. No wonder he thinks the global climate is doing just fine.
Exxon pays his salary. Here's another of his gems: Global warming is good for plants!
It's funny how I get a hopeful feeling when I see that there may still be some credible debate on this topic. Sadly the truth really is inconvenient, and depressing.
-Ryan C.
Be aware that the website hosting the article is a far-right broadsheet, the Canadian equivalent of Free Republic. Their agenda is strongly anti-global-warming, which doesn't necessarily discredit the article, but does suggest that one should view it with the same scepticism as one views the recent 'ads' by the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
Find it here. Google is our friend.
You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!
Bruce Perens pulled the same story over at Technocrat because the author is "from a paid political PR agency." link
Read, but read with caution. The author is paid to have his opinion.
a quick google for the researcher the article focuses on shows that he doesn't publish. his main credits are online opinion pieces, and the closes thing to a publication i found (the second page of the google) is a .doc file on his labratory's webspace
if anyone can find anything peer-reviewed by this guy, i'd be keen to see it
You judge for yourself: http://www.exxonsecrets.org/html/personfactsheet.p hp?id=1134
Carl P. Corliss
I always find it helpful to track the sources of information they are siteing. For example, there's Professor Bob Carter. This is a professor who claimed that global warming stopped in 1998 when it turns out that 2005 was the hottest year on record (since we began tracking such things).
I saw a similar article making similar claims yesterday and the "experts" they sited weren't even in the field of climatology, and had gone so far as to fake a letter from the National Academy of Sciences to give their position a supposed credence.
Show me one peer reviewed scientific paper that says anything other than global warming is happening and it's caused by human emissions of CO2. To my knowledge, this does not exist. I recognize that peer review is somewhat prone to group think, and in that you might expect a leaning one direction or another. But to have ZERO? That seems rather dramatic to just be a group think issue.
A lot of the "scientists" that I've seen taking a position on this are clearly hucksters working for the likes of Exxon Mobile, etc. I have little doubt that there are some scientists who are legitimate who don't buy into the common thinking, but that doesn't mean the common thinking is wrong. They need to back up their beliefs with sound evidence and method. But they don't.
This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
Other articles from this website:
- Christianity under Attack: Assault against America's Christian traditions continue
- The ultimate epithet in the liberal lexicon
- Throw the U.N. on the Ash Heap of History
Do I need to continue? Jesus Christ, Slashdot! Do you do any sort of editorial fact checking before posting a story - under Science!
No Digg.
X
Check out the Union of Concerned Scientist website. The Union's members are from varied fields of science, but many of its members are atmospheric scientists. The Union concludes that global warming is strongly support by available evidence. http://www.ucsusa.org/global_warming/
Gore based his claim on a survey done by UCSD Science Studies professor, Naomi Oreskes. She summarized her findings in a Washington Post editorial that can be found here:
0 65-2004Dec25.html
/ 5702/1686
e ws/2005/05/01/wglob01.xml
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A26
From her editorial:
There have been arguments to the contrary, but they are not to be found in scientific literature, which is where scientific debates are properly adjudicated. There, the message is clear and unambiguous.
The Journal of Science paper in which she details her survey can be found here:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/306
Naturally, claims of bias in the right-leaning popular press have followed. See this U.K. Telegraph article for an example:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/n
Innovation makes enemies of all those who prospered under the old regime... -- Machiavelli
Why are we talking to someone from 'James Cook University' about global warming? In my parallel computing class at Berkeley we have had scientists from LBNL come and talk to us about simulations, the math behind them, and results from various teams. There was only one major simulation that said there was no global warming, and it was from the University of Alabama at Huntsville, headed by this guy named John Christy. Too bad his tropospheric data was wrongly interpreted in the simulation code (which LBNL at one point demanded that it be turn over for inspection) due to a wayward negative sign, and the re-run with the new code showed global warming. I can't find the very detailed article on the simulation, but the Wikipedia entry on him mentions a little about the data fiasco:
5 /08/the-tropical-lapse-rate-quandary/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Christy
Real Climate also has more on it:
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/200
The speaker ended his presentation to our class by saying that his generation would have to spend their whole lives convincing others that there is a problem and that it would be up to us to come up with solutions to it. But by then it might be too late. So let's stop listening to random scientists from random institutions (UAH, JCU, or Carleton, or what have you) that are of little scientific repute and think about reducing vehicle emissions. If anything we will have better air quality so there is no harm in trying except that a few higher-ups in major corporations make less money.
This one was torn a new one on Digg this morning. I thought the /. editors had more sense.
What's next? Stories pointing to junkscience.com?
The obscure we see eventually. The completely obvious, it seems, takes longer. - Edward R. Murrow
We'll know if the alarmists were right in 30 years.
We already know the alarmists from 30 years ago were wrong.
Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
And here is a chart of carbon dioxide going back several million years. And, oh look, the planet is just as cool now as it ever was before. And when we hit levels of 4500 ppm back in the Silurian era, we were colder then any other time on the planet.
r ticles/V4/N8/EDIT.jsp
Sheesh. The largest increase in CO2 emissions by humans was between 1900 and 1940. Yet, the Earth somehow responded with a massive wave of cooling from 1950-1980 that caused many scientists to worry we were plunging into the next ice age. You are extrapolating 30 years of data out by a century or more. Bad Science! No Doughnut!
The fact is that we are in a period of CO2 starvation on the planet. Recent estimates have suggested that the increase in CO2 in the modern era is responsible for as much as 30% of the "extra" food that has helped to feed more than a billion people in the last 50 years. If Gore had his 280 ppm, we might be able to lay one billion people who starved to death at his feet. The law of unintended consequences runs rampant in this "catastrophe". http://www.co2science.org/scripts/CO2ScienceB2C/a
And it's not like the Earth hasn't been warmer before in human history. In the 12th century there were orange groves in Berlin and vineyards in England. http://www.john-daly.com/hockey/hockey.htm
Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
I've my own doubts about global warming, but it does seem that the "con" side are often folks who are paid to have those opinions.
Bruce
Bruce Perens.
The debate is nowhere near as two-sided as you make out. In Europe, global warming is the accepted view and it has been for at least a decade. The only place it's in any way controversial is America. The fact that the US produces 1/3 of the world's CO2 and can't afford to clean up its act has more to do with this viewpoint than any actual science.
The Clinton administration did not ratify the Kyoto protocol. It never intended to. Gore signed it "symbolically", whatever the heck that means, but they never actually submitted the protocol to the Senate. More here. Gore might have been a big fan of Kyoto, but his administration never was.
Seems to me you've got three outright lies, and one complete irrelevancy
Seems to me you've got one piece of non-truth there.
Web2.0: I love when people Flickr my cuil and digg my boingboing until my google is reddit and I start to yahoo
Here's a link to the clip http://www.pistolwimp.com/media/45688/
Why should I argue rationally with someone being irrational? I'll just mock them instead.
There is only one other article by Tom Harris at CFP, but I found another at National Post, both attacking climate change. Canada Free Press and National Post are both conservative newspapers, particularly the latter. According to the byline, Tom Harris is mechanical engineer and Ottawa Director of High Park Group. And what is the High Park Group, seeing as how their web page say absolutely nothing of substance? Why it's an industry shill.
Dig a little deeper and you'll find this from way back in 2002. It has quite a bit more to say.
If you know more say so.
Of course, articles about "scientists" refuting global warming are a dime a dozen, and go against the plain fact that the vast majority of climate scientists are firmly convinced of its existence.
And for the record when I looked at the article before it was running an ad pushing Condaleeza Rice for president... in a Canadian newspaper no less.
---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?
Of course they were:
http://rondam.blogspot.com/2006/04/global-warming
http://timlambert.org/category/science/bobcarter/
http://johnquiggin.com/index.php/archives/2005/04
http://www.exxonsecrets.org/html/personfactsheet.
http://www.exxonsecrets.org/html/orgfactsheet.php
Furthermore, even though the FCP article tries to paint Carter as an independent, ExxonSecrets.org links him to "Tech Central Science Foundation or Tech Central Station". Here's what the site lists as their details:
The entire Canadian Free Press article loses credibility because of this line:
A non-industry expert who works for a place that's paid for by Exxon.
I can't believe this article got posted on the main page. I guess since Al Gore's in a movie, posting some already-been-written article quoting a few paid shills who say he's lying had to be done to keep things politically balanced. I personally think news links should only be posted if they actually represent reality.
We all know that you can find any opinion on any topic on the internet and that you have to be more careful then ever about your sources. So, if slashdot is going to refer to articles on controversial issues, shouldn't it stick to sources that have some authority or respect?
I wouldn't be surprised if Gore did go to far - few things are as certain as they are presented to us by either side. However, the article goes way too far and ignores the fact that the general concensus of the scientific community is in line with what Gore is saying.
So, it makes me wonder what this strange website is? It is run out of my city (Toronto) and yet I've never heard of it. I don't see a bio of the author on the website, but I note that the two main authors involved in this website are from the Toronto Sun and Fox News. I don't need to say anthing about FOX, but you might not have heard of the Toronto Sun. It is a right wing tabloid, featuring girly pictures on page 2. You probably have one in your city, so you know what I mean.
Welcome The High Park Group (HPG) is a public affairs and policy consulting firm, with offices in Toronto and Ottawa. We work in a broad range of areas, with core practices in energy, environment, and ethics. Our dedicated team of advisors is committed to providing timely, customized services that provide maximum value to our clients. --- QUOTE FROM AUTHORS SITE--- Ahh I see... Why is this even under discussion? Obviously this man is a completely unbiasd individual *sarcasm*. Lets not forget where the term "Public Relations" comes from. It comes from the word "Propaganda". Now lets also not forget why it's called Public Relations rather than Propaganda. If you do some reading, you will note that the nephiew of Sigmond Fraud made this field using his uncle's theories but because of the "bad rap" the term "Propaganda" got with the Nazies they needed something a little less emotion stirring. Anyways, free speach and all...good on ya
Huh? [devShell.org]
Page with details about Oreskes' original claim, Peiser's attempt at replication, and some Googler's attempt at replication:
http://www.norvig.com/oreskes.html
Judge for yourself.
this
CFP is an ultra right wing blog and has an anti global warming science agenda. The have no balancing articles.
u te_of_Public_Affairs
3 813
But hey, the maybe posting a valid article. Let us see who wrote it.
Tom Harris wrote the article. He is a PR person working for PR/Lobby firm High Park group. They don't say who they are working for, but this guy is paid to have this opinion. I suppose it is possible that he was paid by some concerned for the environment corporation, but I have my doubts.
http://www.highparkgroup.com/services.htm
How about the Scientists:
Bob Carter. First "Scientist" quoted. Known climate change skeptic, Member of Institue of public affairs: Lobby group.
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Instit
Funded by Oil/Gas/Mining/Pesticide/Logging corporations.
Bob wrote this Gem of a piece about protectin Austrailians from the dreaded disease "Mother Earhism":
http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=
"Compare these tiny changes with the experience of an Australian citizen who moves from Hobart to Darwin to live. Such a person experiences a change in annual average temperature of 18C, which is accommodated quite happily by wearing fewer clothes, drinking more beer and trading in one's heater for an air conditioner."
There you go folks, just wear less clothing and global warming will be a non issue.
I really have to wonder who falls for this stuff.
Not to mention wondering about the sellouts who write this stuff.
Both articles were written by the same author (Tom Harris), who is a director at a public relations firm "High Park Group" ( http://www.highparkgroup.com/tharris.htm ).. Some may call such a business a lobby group.. others may call it an industry-friendly strategic consulting firm. A very trust-worthy source, especially when it comes to public interest.
High Park Group's is proud to offer our clients a wide range of services, including:
- policy and strategic consulting
- project development
- project management
- issues management
- research initiatives and analysis
- economic analytics
- direct lobbying
- event planning
- media relations
- fundraising
Sure, he made that comment when he was running for President in 2000, but realize he had left the Senate 8 years prior. So sure, you might've been using the Internet for 9 years, but any biils he championed in Congress undoubtedly came about before you got online. And the Internet of 1991 was quite a bit different than the ARPANET that was around when Gore was first elected Senator in 1984.
I'm inclined to believe the guys who actually designed the Internet's infrastructure (such as Vint Cerf) when they agree publicly that Al Gore had a strong positive impact on the Internet we know today. He was, after all, on the Commerce, Science and Transportation committee in the Senate, and eventually became chairman of that committee.
--JoeProgram Intellivision!
Tim Patterson http://http-server.carleton.ca/~tpatters/publicati ons/2002_04.html
Bob Carter http://www.es.jcu.edu.au/research/msgbs.html
Timothy Ball http://www.envirotruth.org/drball.cfm
Boris Winterhalter http://www.kolumbus.fi/boris.winterhalter/papers.h tm
Wibjörn Karlén http://www.misu.su.se/research/reconstruction_nh.h tml Look the graphic of the papaer
Dick Morgan http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=Dick+Morg an+site%3Aexeter.ac.uk&btnG=SearchHe don't even have a page on Exeter
I think they are a sample of the unqualified scientist the article talks about.You seem to be implying that all Al Gore did was go to Congress sometime in the 90's and say, "Hey guys, this Internet thing is really cool!". As other posters have pointed out, some of the core innovators in what we now call the Internet credit Gore for his work at making the Internet what it is. I trust them more than I trust you.
Let's get specific, though. According to Did Al Gore Invent the Internet?
That bill passed in 1988, several years before you started using the net (not that your personal experience matters at all on this issue).Some nice things that that bill did, besides sponsor Andreesen? It set up a national computing plan, it linked research centers and universities across the country, and it funded a lot of other important research.
Did Al Gore invent the internet? No. He did sponsor the bills that provided funding and vision for some key components of it, though.
BTW, to say you were there to see the Internet created, and then say you've been on the Internet since 1990 is idiotic. The net's been around a lot longer than that. The ARPANET, which is what evolved into the Internet, has been around since 1969. Email came along in 1972. TCP/IP a year later, and things just grew from there. Let me quote from A Brief History of the Internet
What is probably true is that your first exposure to the Internet came because of a project that was made possible by the bills that Al Gore sponsored. So, think of it from your own point of view - you got to use the Internet in 1990 because of Al Gore.My initial reaction to this article is that it looks like propaganda. If you read each of the quotes from the scientist in it, you'll noticed that the qualifying adjectives around each of the stated facts in quotations minimize the importance of any observable facts that can't be denied, and the attributive verbs for the quotes are chosen to slant the reader's perception as well.
s tory.html?id=d0235a70-33f1-45b3-803b-829b1b3542ef
e -skeptic-response.html
Climate change experts, like most scientists, tend to be pretty circumspect with their public statements and avoid hyperbole, so the quotes calling Gore "pathetic" and "an embarrassment" are a red flag as well.
Any "feature" article is going to have something of a slant--and there's nothing wrong with that--but the words in article seemed so consistently well-chosen that they seemed vetted by some PR flack versed in the art of using words to sell your opinions to stupid people.
While that's not enough, in itself, to make me disregard the article, it did make me want to see what I could find out about this "Tom Harris" guy who wrote it. Turns out this guy has made something of a cottage industry out of "debunking" global warming, and in at least one case has co-written an article with the Patterson he quotes in this article. He doesn't disclose this fact, although, in fairness, it was written for a "journal" that, amazingly for 2006, has no web presence.
Harris also wrote another article along the same lines as this one, entitled "The Gods Are Laughing", which you can find here:
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/financialpost/
This one starts out with a lead paragraph that points out that *real* scientists disagree with "liberal arts graduate" Gore about global warming. More red flags here, because people with a good case to make generally don't have to resort to challenging the scientific credentials of their opponents.
The fact that Gore has no PhD in climatology isn't really germane to the debate, although it seems to be a major focus of these pairs of articles. Although once certainly needs some advanced training to conduct climatology research, one would hope that you wouldn't need to go to school for eight years just to be able to read the conclusions section of a peer-reviewed paper. Else, what's the point of doing research, if your findings can only be conveyed to other scientist who are already working from 99.9% of the same knowledge base as you? And one certainly doesn't need a PhD to talk to climatologists and build a consensus view of their opinions.
The director of the atmosphere and energy bits of the Sierra Club of Canada wrote a missive below that explains in more detail a few of the shady rhetorical tricks Harris uses, and which I have alluded to above:
http://www.sierraclub.ca/national/postings/climat
Personally, I'm starting to lean toward the this-guy-is-a-shill theory, myself.
-k. ^-^ ^D
More important that all of that, of course, is the fact that while the arctic ice pack sits on water, the antarctic one sits largely on land ... and that Greenland also supports a significant ice pack. Since these are supported by the land (not buoyant force), when they melt, they would significantly raise the waterlevel globally.
The Mongrel Dogs Who Teach
Al Gore has been pounding away at this issue since the 80s. This isn't a new thing for him. Claiming that he is untrustworthy because he is a politician is nonsense. He has been an environmental advocate longer than he has been a politician. Also, you can certainly trust the judgement of organizations like the National Academy of Sciences, The American Meteorological Society, the American Geophysical Union and its parent organization, the American Institute of Physics, the national science academies of the G8 nations, Brazil, China, and India. and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, all of which endorse the notion that human activity is probably responsible for most of the observed warming over the last 50 years. Why would they want to take a controversial position on something as important as this?
You don't know what you're talking about.
There's a huge amount of non-US scientists working this stuff. Many employed by european governments.
From the Science article:
So they just grabbed everything, and evaluated the papers' position on the consensus view of global warming. 75% Implictly or explicitly supported it, 25% did not offer a position (mostly these were methods papers detailing a method not a result, or paleoclimate papers that did not deal with current climate issues), and 0% disagreed with the consensus view.
And to be specific, the consensus view is "Human activities
The fact that you can find a small number of cranks to claim that global warming is "debatable" really means very little, see Flat Earth Society, etc etc. The scientific community as a whole has made up their mind, and it is clear that global warming caused by humans is occuring.
-Ted
-=-=- Quantum physics - the dreams stuff are made of.
See his web site : http://www.highparkgroup.com/
If you pay his company enough, he will represent whatever view you need. What to chip together and make him pro-global warming?
Of the hundreds of comments attached to this story, yours is by far the most insightful and informative. I disagree with your polite "none very impressive", and think you're wrong about "none in global warming" and "unqualified scientist". That panel is composed of professional Greenhouse deniers. They are "impressive" and "qualified" to testify before a Canadian fake "Conservative" government that's hired by polluters to protect Canada's giant fossil fuel exports to the US (our #1 supplier). And probably dreams of a "warm Canada" their vast real estate holdings can finally cash in on as people "migrate" from uninhabitable regions to the south, while finally getting a year-round passage between East and West hemispheres across the Arctic.
Just look at their actual resumes, of course not quoted by "Canada's Fastest Growing Independent News Source", probably also funded by the Canadian Greenhouse industry and their global Murdoch partners.
Tim Patterson is a geologist, not a climate scientist - exactly the kind of scientist the BS article excludes to fake its conclusion that most Greenhouse scientists aren't qualified.
Boris Winterhalter is also a geologist, not a climatologist.
Geologists mostly work for the oil business, which is where most of the money for the entire science comes from, their peers who review, their "next gig pool".
Bob Carter doesn't even rate a page at his tiny Australian department where he's just an "Adjunct" professor.
Timothy Ball's "EnviroTruth" org is a division of the National Center for Public Policy Research, an front for Exxon Greenhouse denial propaganda and other Vast RightWing Conspiracy players.
Wibjörn Karlén's research supports Gore, but he signs the BS letter anyway.
Dick Morgan doesn't have an Exeter page, nor does he have ">any recorded association with the World Meteorological Association, so he has no credentials whatsoever, apart from lying.
These people are professional Greenhouse deniers. That Canadian panel and its Canadian tabloid (an obvious rightwing rag, just looking at its front page) are cheap fronts for the polluters responsible for the Greenhouse. They're not even trying to hide it more than a couple of googles and clicks deep, they hate us so much. And judging from the hundreds of posts in this story falling for it, we are that stupid.
--
make install -not war
For your information, Gore was elected to the House in 1976, and, for further enlightenment, the House of Representatives is the other branch of, yes, Congress, where Gore said he was. Congress!=Senate. But it's fun to watch that little same factoid of misinformation about 1984 get repeated over and over, I guess you're all using the same talking points.
And, yes, ARPAnet already existed then, although I have to point out it didn't use TCP/IP until 1983, and that is the earliest traditional point that 'The Internet' started. Nothing before that can be called 'The Internet', and many people date it even later.
However, the ancestory between ARPAnet and 'The Internet' is almost entirely false. The actual links that the internet evolved from were made from NSFNET, which was made in 1986, linking five high speed computers operated by the NFS with high-speed T1 connections. It was hooked to ARPAnet via gateways, as were JANET and HEANET, but those were not 'ARPAnet'. ARPAnet was old and slow and essentially useless by the time it was shut down in 1990.
NFSNET continued to operate and everyone linked to it, until 1995 when the last link was sold off to private industry. And it became 'The Internet', along with some other networks it managed to pull along.
To put it another way: No organization still has IP numbers that were routed over ARPAnet. People do still have NFSNET-assigned ones that have been routed continually since 1987 or whenever, although obviously other organizations have been in charge over the years. This current internet is the NFSNET's child, not the ARPAnet. The ARPAnet was just a prototype. Yes, the technology was developed there, and yes Gore had nothing to do with it.
However, he had everything to do with funding NFSNET, which actually provided free fast servers and a fast enough connection made the whole thing useful, and let commercial organizations connect to it, which they couldn't do with ARPAnet.
In otherwords, he not only did what he said, he did exactly what he said. It's other people who have conflated 'The Internet' with TCP/IP or the web or ARPAnet that have it wrong. He didn't invent, or even fund, any of that. Before Al Gore, everyone had to use slow links and awkward multiple gateways that were mostly email and usenet. Then he funded 'the network of networks', and quite knowingly opened it up for everyone to use and hook to, and that thing became The Internet. He passed a law that created the network we would come to call 'The Internet'.
If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
I lived next door to one of the leaders in the ice core project in Greenland. The goal was to drill down and get a "map" back in time looking at the ice.
n g.htm
Several conclusions came of this project and more will follow, but in regards to global warming he told me the following (in my own words):
"The ice core showed that we have seen several very cold and warm periods in the past, and none can be conclusive about our weather today."
and
"The measurements we have today, of temperature dates back about 150 years. That was a very cold period according to the ice core. So that the weather is getting warmer could be an obvious thing from that point."
So basically he says the data is inconclusive... but in the end he stated:
"When we look at CO2 and other green-house gasses in the ice core, we see a jump in the last few decades. I geological terms this increase is so significant that the only word we use for such a geological event is: Disaster or catastrophe! Its way off scale compared to any other event in time. What the effects are or will be I can't tell..."
Their site is here http://www.glaciology.gfy.ku.dk/ngrip/hovedside_e
-:) Oh no - not again.
www.rednebula.com
It also inspired one of the best and funniest SciFi novels I've ever read: Fallen Angels, by Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, and Michael Flynn.
The plot: SciFi geeks save fallen astronauts from a tyranically green/luddite government. Oh, and the glaciers? Our greenhouse gasses were holding back the next ice age, but the greens got their way. Most of Canada is already under the ice.
READ the US Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the other amendments! http://lcweb2.loc.gov/const/const.html
The idea that forecast cannot be tested is absurd if you use the scientific method; predict, test, revise & repeat.
The UK Meteorological Office has successfull Forecasts of Global Temperature risk using their climate model for the last six years.
Here is there take on the future : Climate, the greenhouse effect and global warming - is the climate changing?
ExxonSecrets.org
Many articles on Professor Carter's "qualifications"
I'm sure that there are more links about this professor, but even if there are some scientific dispute about a specific study sited about global warming, the bottom line isn't really in dispute: human activity is having and will have for decades to come a noticeable impact on our global environment.
---
"Don't anthropomorphize computers. They hate that."
Despite what the headline article claims, and what some posters here sadly believe, human induced planetary heating (global warming just sounds too benign) is real and there is broad consensus across the scientific community on that. sadly the exxon funded shills are paid good money to add layer upon layer of doubt upon this scientific consensus. Its all handled by the same PR people who worked for big tobacco a decade or two ago.
I used to have a better sig than this, but I got tired of it
We should realize two things:
1. Many global warming deniers are:
a. funded by oil and coal companies that strongly encourage them to try to find anything so that they won't have to actually take action;
b. not peer reviewed; and
c. not supported by the more than 95 percent of climatologists who agree the GW does exist.
2. Global Warming is not what you think it is. It is actually large dramatic changes in the global temperature patterns, and even if the median temperature increases - which it is currently doing at an accelerating rate - it will tend to oscillate and result in massive changes in temperature - both Warming and Freezing - at both a local and global level.
This last point means that you can have some parts of the globe get colder while other parts - like say the Northwest section of the US - have 60 percent of their glaciers that have survived hundreds of thousands of years all melt.
You can also have, in global warming, a period where it gets much much colder for 2-5 years, and then suddenly gets a lot warmer for 5-100 years - in fact, much of our recent history shows this.
What is known is that man-made pollution, heat generation, and deforestation is now a major factor in global warming, and was not so before the 18th century. And it is becoming more and more of a major factor each and every day.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
from http://www.highparkgroup.com/
he gets paid for his opinion to be what it is!
--meh--
The argument that "...many climate experts are stepping forward and pointing out that there is no conclusive evidence to support global warming as a phenomenon, much less any particular cause of it." brings to mind the early 80's when AIDS was starting to spread.
When some some voiced the opinion that it could turn into a pandemic, many "experts" at the time pooh-poohed that view by saying was confined to a small focused population and would never spread.
The experts aren't always right.