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Do We Really Need a National Climate Service?

coondoggie writes "I suppose it's natural for Washington to try and wrap issues up in a tidy legislative package for bureaucratic purposes (or perhaps other things more nefarious). But one has to wonder if we really need another government-led group, especially when it comes to the climate and all the sometimes controversial information that entails. But that's what is under way. Today the House Science and Technology Committee's Subcommittee on Energy and Environment held a hearing on the need for a National Climate Service, that could meet the increased demand for climate information, the committee said. The NCS would provide a single point of contact of information climate forecasts and support for planning and management decisions by federal agencies; state, local, and tribal governments; and the private sector."

50 of 358 comments (clear)

  1. Obviously it's a good thing. by BlackPignouf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Obviously it's a good thing.
    At least always better than letting Halliburton, Enron and Total decide what our future looks like.

    1. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by jellomizer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Or the University System. Who has really lost their way. In a more perfect world the University's who are doing a lot of this research should be communicating with each other and as well with open, non-confrontational dialogs with other companies R&D. As well getting proper funding from these companies and the governments to work on/get better understanding of the problem.

      However real life sets in and Universities need to focus on being grades 13,14,15 and 16 to meet the educational demands for jobs outside. Their research is focused on what can be patented and sold, or breakthrough enough to get public interests. Not a bunch of underpaid grad students looking at a bunch of swirls on a computer screen and predicting that the swirl will go 400 miles North West in 3 days.

      --
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    2. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by polar+red · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There is something terribly wrong with your reasoning: Halliburton, Enron and Total have only 1 objective: their bottom line. That's not true for greenpeace : they want to inspire people to leave this world in a better state than how they got it. The peoples need and the nations need are what define them; in case of Halliburton : their only thing that define them are their shareholders pocket.

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    3. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by dmhummel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1) Haliburton,Exxon... have TRILLIONS of $ to decide what are future looks like.

      2) They will determine that future with the sole intention of immediate gratification of increased (3)profit.

      As much as you don't like Greenpeace et all, they do not have the money nor the intentions to contend with these companies.

    4. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by bsane · · Score: 4, Interesting

      a better state than how they got it

      What if I don't agree with what greenpeace is shoving down my throat as 'a better state'?

      One could argue that all Halliburton wants to do is leave the world in a better state... as defined by them- really the same goal as greenpeace, just different definitions of 'better'.

    5. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by polar+red · · Score: 2, Insightful

      yeah, indeed different definitions : greenpeace's definition is altruistic. Halliburtons' is egoistic.

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    6. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by bsane · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Altruism... yeah, I'm sure thats greenpeace's only motive...

      Even if altruism was their _only_ and _focused_ mission, there is a whole school of thought (I don't subscribe to it, but it exists, and is valid as any other) that contends altruism leads to suffering, and only hurts in the long run.

    7. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by LordKazan · · Score: 5, Informative

      The NOAA and it's subsidiaries (which the NCS would be one) are one of the most effective government agencies ever created. Not only is it filled with competent scientists it's also filled with ones that know how to keep up with technology to disseminate information as efficiently as possible.

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    8. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by WindBourne · · Score: 3, Insightful

      in case of Halliburton : their only thing that define them are their shareholders pocket.
      Actually, that is false. It is NOT about their shareholder's pocket. If so, then they (and all American corps) would be thinking LONG-TERM. Far too many actions are short-term. They are looking only at their OWN pockets.

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    9. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by Enry · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Shouldn't you be moving to Somalia? I hear there's no pesky government or taxes getting in the way of free enterprise there.

      Doesn't that sound just as retarded as your statement?

    10. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by garett_spencley · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Environmental issues are a perfect example of government failing to do it's job.

      We need to ask "what is the role of government?" Classic liberals felt that the only role of government is to protect the rights of individuals. All rights are property rights (I can elaborate on that if you'd like me to but I'll skip it for brevity).

      During the industrial revolution many companies were sued by others who felt that air pollution was a violation of their property rights (not only their land and air but their lungs - ie: bodies - as well). Judges ruled basically that "well, we know these are clear violations but we're going to look the other way because we don't want to hinder economic development" (!!!)

      Now, you can blame the industrialists all you want. But if government were doing it's one, single job then we wouldn't have air pollution. The only way a company can survive is to produce goods and services that benefit the lives of others. When people feel that their rights are being violated and the means they've chosen to enforce those rights is not functioning then you get a case of capitalism deteriorating and externalizing costs ... by using the very institution designed for the opposite purpose.

    11. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by Ash+Vince · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I always find Americans talking about climate change hilarious.

      In my country we are taught the ins and outs of climate change in science lessons. This way you learn the theory behind it in the same way and with the same scepticism that you learn to study all scientific theories. Since this has been this way for decades even people in their 30's like myself gained some exposure to climate change ideas in this way.

      This is very important since if you just relied on soundbites like "Global Warming" you can dismiss climate change as not happening as your part of the world just had unusually cold weather. I have lost track of home many times I have heard this argument. Unfortunately it is based on an over simplification of climate change: that the temperature is getting hotter everywhere. The truth is the the average global temperature is going up, but that might result in your neck of the woods getting colder.

      Like it or not, understanding Climate Change involves understanding some science. In particular it involves an amount of Atmospheric Physics, not one of the friendliest topics to the layman. So with this in mind you can either study the subject for years (or maybe decades) and figure out what is going on or get someone else to study it for you.

      If Greenpeace commission an independent study that they have no editorial control over the Oil companies listed above are still going to dismiss it as propaganda if it suggests things like using less of their products. If the Oil companies commission a study that they have no editorial control over people in the Greenpeace camp still will not believe that they had no editorial control.

      The idea behind this latest government sponsored group being set up is simple: Try and get a group to come out with some findings that are not immediately rubbished by the side that the disagree with.

      This approach has worked in Europe but unfortunately as the studies were all done abroad they are still treated with scepticism in the US. Hopefully this will result in a Government funded, truly impartial report that can be used is impartial evidence in public debate about climate change in the US.

      The problem is that the Oil companies have seen the scientific evidence from a previous impartial studies like this and have come to the conclusion that they would rather this report does not come out until they can realign their core business away from Oil. They will therefore mobilise their considerable influence on Capitol Hill in order to keep government out of research into Climate Change.

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    12. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 3, Informative

      You know, there are whole states that are run "for the betterment of their people". In other words, altruistic states where decisions are not made on economic merit, but on the basis of "justice".

      You're absolutely right that Halliburton is not a company that decides based on justice, it decides based on economic self-intrest.

      And you're completely right that Greenpeace DOES decide actions based on (their idea of) justice (more realistically : on how "righteous" it makes them look to others. Therefore greenpeace is, first and foremost, a media and public relations organization. They do not produce things with the intention of buying land and turning it into a voluntary "sustainable community" : they demand laws to force others to do so). Economic self-intrest is at best a very minute factor in their decision making. Only rich people join greenpeace, people without any financial worries.

      So let's look at some relatively large "justice based" organisations :
      -> North Korea (stealing from the poor and giving to cronies)
      -> Cuba
      -> Iran (we are not to judge other religions, whose essence is other opinions of justice. That their ("allah's" if you're truly naive) opinion of justice includes stoning innocent women "must not be judged", that would be racist. I wonder if you "progressives" consider the stoned victims of muslim "justice" racists. Odds are they do not think very well of that "justice", of that religion)
      -> Saudi Arabia (same goes, except with slightly less official prostitution (also called mut'a "marriage"))
      -> China (stealing from the rich and giving to the politicians *cough* *ahem*, of course, I mean giving to the people)
      -> Soviet Russia (same goes)
      -> ...

      This guy said it best

      Greenpeace consists of individuals, who care, first and foremost, for themselves. There's nothing saintly or even remarkable about greenpeace members, they are perfectly human. And it shows :

      Greenpeace opposes anything with co2 exhaust AND hates the one solution to the co2 problem that might actually work (today, not in 50 years) : nuclear power. They are also already decided : they oppose nuclear fusion, if and when it becomes available.

      Also greenpeace ignores massive co2 exhaust where it is politically inconvenient : ever looked at a wind turbine ? Every last square millimeter you see is reprocessed oil. On the inside, tons of components are made with oil, and the remainder, the steel supports, are made by burning coal (that's how cast iron is still made, coal is just too cheap and convenient. Everywhere you mine iron you will find coal deposits on top of it, between it, ...)

      I hope this post can help you understand : good intentions do not necessarily result in good results. In fact, some very, VERY bad results had very good intentions (like all communist states, most dictatorships, lots of genocides, ...)

    13. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by digitig · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, because we know that Greenpeace, PETA, Nancy Pelosi, the DailyKOS/MoveOn crowd, George Soros, Al Gore, and Harry Reid will make reasoned, informed decisions balancing the peoples' and the nations' needs with the demands of the environmental whack-jobs.

      Nope, they'd be pretty much as bad as leaving it yo the energy companies. Which is why the Subcommittee on Energy and Environment is looking at a National Climate Service rather than leaving it to the partisan groups you mentioned. Whether they'll do a good job or not might be an interesting debate, but saying that one group of people not getting the job would make as bad a job of it as another group of people not getting the job is simply irrelevant.

      --
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    14. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by TapeCutter · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I am not an American but it sure would help if certain American's and their pet lobbyists stopped using psuedo-science and lies to convince small-minded gullible fools that Al Gore has the power and/or charisma to corrupt the members of every major scientific instutution on Earth. I have even had such fools here on slashdot tell me I can't point to the journals Nature or Science when talking about AGW because apparently they too are part of Al Gore's global conspiracy.

      Here are some examples of the lies and lobbying I am talking about, Senator Inhofe who's list of desenting scientists, has as much cedibility as the dicovery institute list of scientists that supposedly reject evolution but that has not stopped a large number of slashdotter's from waving it around like a magic wand that somehow makes facts dissapear. Then there is the "Heartland institute" run by one Fred Singer who was also prominent in the tabacco industry's anti-science propoganda. Another site that has raised it's ugly head and that can also be related to the anti-science lobby of the tabacco companies is called IceCap, this site specializes in conflating various regions of ice all over the planet and is incapable of ditingushing the North pole from the south pole. It is run by a guy who is on the payroll at the "Science and Public Policy Institute", who are in turn funded by the "Frontiers of Freedom" which is the lobbting brain fart of yet another (ex) US senator. Wallop and Singer are mates from the tabacco industries anti-science cmapaign, the major contributors to the Frontiers of Freedom include Philip Morris and ExxonMobil.

      Yep, these anti-science and anti-environment politicians/CEO's have nothing but good intentions, they publish their propoganda to protect you from "environmental whack jobs" and the scientific community who make ludicrous claims such as smoking causes cancer or that a healthy economy and a healthy environment are not mutually exclusive. They have somehow convinced a large chunk of the US that it's not them who are running scams and lying it's the scientific community under the direction of Al Gore who are the liars and scammers.

      "Get real."

      How about you get real, pull your head out of the sand and drop the alarmist hyperbole, nobody is putting greenpeace in charge of anything but there is a problem and the anti-enviroment/anti-science rhetoric/popoganda coming from the US over the last decade is what has perverted any attempt at a real solution.

      "(Yeah, I know. This will almost certainly get modded down to oblivion by KOSdot mods, probably modded "-1 Troll" but screw it. I've got the karma to burn.)"

      I have no idea who KOSdot are and I'm not a fan of greenpeace but I agree that your misguided alarmisim should be moderated into oblivion.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    15. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by SpaceToast · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The edges of American politics can be confusing, especially when one colonizes an apolitical site like Slashdot. You may find my definition of "Libertarian" from the Bestiary of Geekdom helpful:

      While ostensible a political movement -- and indeed a real American political party -- the libertarian's one issue politics and long life at the political fringe places him more comfortably within the bestiary of geekdom than that of Washington. The libertarian is a fierce defender of civil liberties, more liberal than the Democrat in terms of letting the social cards fall where they may, and more conservative than the Republican inre: reducing the size and role of government. Philosophically hindered from mounting collective action, libertarians have been noted of late to be cross-breeding with Science Denialists in order to resist rising levels of climate change research.

    16. Re:Obviously it's a good thing. by TapeCutter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Greenpeace is not, by any stretch of the imagination, a company that works by offering people choices."

      No they are a lobby group that promotes a particular cause, no different to NRA, ACLU or EFF. Greenpeace have not shot anyone but they have rammed a couple of whaling boats and had their own boat bombed and sunk by the French secret service. I for one thank them for their early efforts to stop atmospheric nuclear bomb tests and appreciate their efforts to keep the Japanese whaling fleet out of Australian waters, pity they are now turning their dogmatic eye to nuclear power and have lost many of their founders.

      "Greenpeace is selling the use of military force to advance someone's will, outside of the normal democratic process. That's how greenpeace pursues it's self intrest."

      That's one of the most idiotic claims I have ever read on the internet, were you aiming for humour?

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  2. Yea, why the fuck not? by marco.antonio.costa · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The US gov't already swallows 36% of GDP. What is feeding another couple hundred parasites?

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    1. Re:Yea, why the fuck not? by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 3, Funny

      You cant expect numbers to agree with him. That's just unfair, everybody knows reality has a liberal bias!

      --
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    2. Re:Yea, why the fuck not? by LordKazan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      which every economist that doesn't have their head so far up their arse they can see sunlight would say you're wrong about.

      At the beginning of the depression government intervention did worsen it, because of wrong-headed libertarian/laissez-faire policies combined with economists still stuck on mercantilism. But then along came economists who knew what they were doing and said "the government needs to inject money into the system. Now." and the government did that and things got better. After the great depression we passed numerous banking regulations and other anti-predatory-corporation regulations and everything was fine and Dandy - the boom/bust cycle even stopped and we stayed on a generally upward trend continuously.

      until President Raygun [intentional] with the help of congress in the 80s started pulling strings out of those regulations: almost instantly the S&L crisis hits.. then we started back into the boom/bust cycle. then even more regulations were pulled out by the right-wing-dlc-democrat clinton along with the republican congress in 1998 then a great many more under bush 2000-2006 along with other various bad fiscal policies [lets cut the already unreasonably low* taxes of the rich thereby further subsiziding their excess] and WHAAAM massive stock market crash along with a massive banking shock: just like the crash of 1929.

      [*

      Laffer Curve describes the "maximum utilization" point for tax rates, above that and the tax rate does harm, below that and the tax rate isn't fully utilizing the tax base. Lowest estimate of that t* in the US is 50%, highest 80%. Top flight marginal tax rate for the rich under clinton 36%, under bush tax cuts, 33%. CBO places us clearly on the left side of the curve where tax cuts as a means of economic stimulus are virtually a waste of time. Virtually because cutting them for the bottom wage earners is always effective stimulous, cutting them for the top tier wealthy individuals is ONLY effective when you're on the right side of the Laffer curve]

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    3. Re:Yea, why the fuck not? by OctaviusIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Dude, I think you missed a couple economics classes. Any GDP measure you have of the footprint of government is what proportion of GDP is government-created. That is to say - assuming your numbers are correct - 36% of our GDP is government produced not "swallowed". Our federal tax burden is around 28% of GDP. That means that the government takes in 28% of GDP while providing 36% of GDP, indicating that it actually adds a significant amount of value (28.3%, to be precise). I don't think that counts as parasitic.

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  3. no, of course not by jollyreaper · · Score: 5, Funny

    I mean, the real question is whether or not there's even any climate change going on in the first place! But if we concede the point that it might be happening, is it man-made? Because if it's natural instead of man-made, that changes everything, right? A 10 degree change in average temp may see the polar caps melt and seas rise by 200 feet but if this was going to happen anyway it's no longer a problem, right? But I still say the jury's out on this one. Just like with the addictiveness of nicotine. There's been no conclusive scientific evidence from scientists paid by the tobacco industry to show that there's any addictiveness with nicotine. Oh, and that prison torture in Iraq? Did you not listen to the press conference? Bad apples in the lowest ranks of the military, nothing more.

    I really wish people would pay more attention to the official story. A lot of time and money has been put into getting it down pat and it's incredibly disrespectful to then go and listen to other sources.

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    1. Re:no, of course not by richie2000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I mean, the real question is whether or not there's even any climate change going on in the first place! But if we concede the point that it might be happening, is it man-made? Because if it's natural instead of man-made, that changes everything, right?

      No, it doesn't. It would still flood a lot of major cities in the world, disrupt crops and change weather patterns. I know you were being satirical, but this point seems to be missing a lot on the debates. Earth doesn't care if we're heating her skin or not, she'll just be hot for a while, shed the parasites and try again. If we as a race want to survive, we'd better do something about that shedding. If anything, if it turns out we're NOT doing it, we're in for a much harder job of fixing it than if it's us...

      --
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    2. Re:no, of course not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think we can award an official 'whoosh' here.

  4. The National Academies recommended this by DrJay · · Score: 4, Informative

    This will undoubtedly induce all sorts of railing about both the government and climate, but this step was actually recommended by the National Academies of Science, and I'm happy that it's being seriously considered. The NAS issued in a report that, distilled down, says that we're already paying for climate science, but the info generated by that work isn't reaching the people who need it most, like the ones that have to manage water supplies in the desert southwest. When those people do find the research, it's typically not structured in a way that's especially useful to them. (For a more elaborate summary of the report, see here - full disclosure, i wrote that).

    So, this is largely an attempt to take information we're already producing (the government has paid for climate research for a long time through NOAA and the NSF) and make it useful.

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  5. What about NOAA? by schwit1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I guess they are not political enough.

  6. Big government entity ? by Davemania · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What is with the paranoid underlying tone of the article ? "nefarious", could be "large government entity" ? When you have people that doesn't want the government to work (i.e last 8 year), we saw positions filled by political criteria rather than individual merits. It's time that the federal government have a organized response and start basing their decision based on scientific merits. All this sounds like is an information dissemination service ? Depending on the mandate of this new organization, what is wrong with organizing and have a focused approach on a large global issue ?

  7. Weather is global by slashqwerty · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The weather impacts crops, military operations, flight plans, hurricane preparedness, and countless other things. Weather forecasts require data gathered from all around the world. State, local, and tribal governments don't have the reach to collect this data on their own. That leaves only private industry. Do you really want to pay a private company to know what the forecast is, particularly when the data would most likely be collected at taxpayer expense anyway? If weather services were privatized, would it be legal to share the forecast with your colleagues?

    1. Re:Weather is global by LordKazan · · Score: 4, Informative

      If AccuWeather and Rick Santorum had their way not only would we be paying for the NOAA/NWS to make those forcasts, but then we wouldn't be able to get that data from them without going through a pay-company like AccuWeather.

      AccuWeather wants us to pay for it twice, just so we can pay them for work they didn't do.

      [see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AccuWeather ]

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    2. Re:Weather is global by LordKazan · · Score: 2, Informative

      Whoever -1 flamebaited me needs to read the wiki article. I was talking about something that is ON THE PUBLIC RECORD. Things ON THE PUBLIC RECORD are hardly flamebait.

      Then they need to post an apology in this thread to undo their moderation.

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  8. We already have one by R80_JR · · Score: 2, Interesting

    National Climatic Data Center, Asheville NC The only problem is that the charge $$$$ for the data that has already been collected at taxpayer expense.

    1. Re:We already have one by vastabo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Did you miss the "Free data" link on the website http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/mpp/freedata.html? NCDC tries to limit the charging of "$$$$" to only commercial and private entities in order to help offset the enormous cost of ingesting, archiving, and processing one of the world's largest datasets; we're not fully funded by Congress.

      Charging for data is a touchy subject around here, though--the scientists, developers, customer service people, and management would all love to give away as much of our data as possible (and we give away a lot of it), but the money is always an issue.

  9. Re:Yes by ruckc · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Way to go. We already have a national weather service. Why would you encourage the government to create yet another redundant service.

    I thought tracking weather involved tracking the history of weather, which would lead me to believe that it would take a small investment into the national weather service to create a climate forcasting/monitoring service. Oh wait, NOAA's NWS already tracks climate.

  10. If you'd read the article - this *is* NOAA. by Shag · · Score: 5, Informative

    The NCS would fall under the auspices of NOAA but would utilize the expertise and resources of other federal agencies to meet the growing demand for climate services, the committee stated.

    NOAA describes the NCS as being the nation's identified, accessible, official source of authoritative, regular, and timely climate information. That includes historical and real-time data, monitoring and assessments, research and modeling, predictions and projections, decision support tools and early warning systems, and the development and delivery of valued climate services.

    Which part of this is unclear? This is NOAA (who are good at what they do) getting access to even more "expertise and resources." Sounds cool.

    --
    Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
  11. National Weather Service by TechForensics · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What's wrong with the National Weather Service? Part of NOAA.

    --
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    1. Re:National Weather Service by MadUndergrad · · Score: 2

      Because weather is not at all the same thing as climate.

    2. Re:National Weather Service by khallow · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The difference is merely in time scale. They use most of the same data for starters and the same knowledge and skills. If there is a National Climate Service that is distinct from the National Weather Service, it should be under the NOAA.

    3. Re:National Weather Service by malevolentjelly · · Score: 2, Informative

      What's wrong with the National Weather Service? Part of NOAA.

      Let's be more practical- the NWS is analyzing a lot of radar data and such and running short range models while climate analysts run models of a very different nature that use hundreds of years of data. Since this is all in the same basket, suppose the same people who were looking for data just ran a 10,000 year everything model each time they needed a weather forecast (so we've got our oceanic currents, precipitation, nitrogen cycle, etc.)... it's not the same thing. You need a collection of people who are funded and supported to organize all these models that are coming from various academic and commercial entities.

      Right now, these organizations are trying to share data internationally and fight the government for grant money to keep the research going(so the government already funds this) so they can reach some point of centralization- it's about more than glory. We here in Illinois are trying to figure out how shifting climate and weather patterns will affect our water and nitrogen cycle for crop growing... it's important because we're growing a large chunk of the world's corn and soy... and if you back out into the region, we're growing a large chunk of the world's food. The entire agricultural system here runs like a finely-tuned machine tweaked to follow the yearly weather and rain. When these things change, the side effects will reach the rest of the country. It becomes a national problem.

      For this reason, I believe that national resources should be pooled for climate modeling and the centralization of climate data... if only to provide more iron to process data and more server space for everyone to store our data. Here at UIUC, the NCSA time we have to run these models is not cheap and not sufficient to provide the sort of results the government needs.

      Furthermore, centralization of climate research would better allow research groups to specialize their models so one main organization might have the time, expertise, and funding to unify the results. The clock is really ticking on results, here. The world isn't going to burn up or have its oceans boil over or anything, but if we see crop growth effected by inconsistent and unpredictable weather patterns due to climate change, it's going to become a problem for our market and then the third world market, which eventually becomes geopolitical conflicts.

      Short answer: yes, it is very much the federal government's problem and a keen example of where government centralization would be beneficial. Anyone who says that some other department can just "pick it up" has no idea how complex climate modeling is... you have to model EVERYTHING from the soil to the sky to the estimated economic growth of nations and regions and their carbon impact.

  12. Parent is definition of troll by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    because we know that Greenpeace, PETA, Nancy Pelosi, the DailyKOS/MoveOn crowd, George Soros, Al Gore, and Harry Reid...

    The argument you make is quite dishonest. By conflating activist groups with government leaders, you try to pretend the GP said something that he did not. His point was that history shows that we cannot trust corporate interests to be honest participants in a debate on climate. We cannot trust their data, we cannot trust their motives. They create phony "think tanks" with the sole purpose of obfuscation.

    Yes, we need a National Climate Service.

    You know what? I trust a democratic (small "D") system. If a multinational corporation pollutes a river, causing cancer deaths and birth defects, we can't vote out the corporate officers and their deep pockets protects them from legal recourse (see: A Civil Action). If I hate the way the government's going, guess what? There's an election coming up. There's always an election coming up. And with the exception of a group Slave States that made a very bad decision in the 1860's, power has transferred peacefully in this system.

    You know what's NOT in our Constitution? Capitalism. It's not there, I looked. Not by name, and not by inference. Because capitalism is not the same as "free enterprise" even though people mistakenly think they are synonymous.

    But that's a discussion for another day and there are goldfinches on the tree outside my window and my dog wants a walk.

    But bluestrat, that was just a shitty troll. Ineffective, wrong-headed and stupid. Plus, you wrapped it all in a troll package with your "I bet I'm gonna get modded down" disclaimer, which is a sure sign that you intended your post to be a troll.

    You've got a bit to learn, no matter how long you've been here.

    --
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    1. Re:Parent is definition of troll by shadow349 · · Score: 2, Informative

      We cannot trust their data

      And, for some reason, you think you can trust the government's? How quaint.

    2. Re:Parent is definition of troll by LordKazan · · Score: 2, Informative

      read the entire thread, I've posted a number of pieces of information with source citations.

      like the fact that the atmospheric carbon load is the highest it's been in 20myr and that it's growing at the fastest rate in the last .4 Ma. Oh how about the tidbit that the steady state carbon load in the atmosphere has increased 50% since the start of the industrial revolution.

      The simple fact is you're flat wrong, the evidence is all around you: we could literally beat you over the head with a college-phsyics-textbook sized tome detailing the evidence and you still wouldn't believe it. Because you don't care about evidence, you only care about politics. /Al Gore is a hypocrite.

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  13. Re:Meanwhile by NatasRevol · · Score: 2, Funny

    Apparently, Bush wasn't even very good at getting rid of programs!

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  14. Re:Yes we do. by ahankinson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wow. You're full of hate. The sad part is, I don't think you're trolling - I think you actually believe that stuff.

    You "highly doubt" that man-made carbon output is killing this planet? Take a look at this chart: List of Countries Per Capita Carbon Dioxide Emissions

    After you look at it, tell me that, for the US alone, 20.4 metric tons of CO2 times 300,000,000 people, isn't having an effect.

    Or how about this chart? Greenhouse Gas Emissions Per Capita See how much of an impact deforestation is having?

    These are real numbers. All you have is your pseudo-Ayn Randian Libertarian bullshit. We all went through that phase, and once we realized that it had serious flaws, we relegated it to "interesting, but not viable". The reaction to global warming is regulating our lives because so far we've been incapable of doing it ourselves. Capitalism is so concerned with the short-term wealth of its shareholders that it has failed to see the long-term implications of its actions. Burn another rainforest? Bah! We don't live there. Another Alaskan Oil Field? We'll die rich because of it, and screw the rest of ya.

    Grow up and look around you. We're doing this. You're part of the problem.

  15. Re:Yes by kholburn · · Score: 5, Informative

    Because "climate" and "weather" are different things.

  16. Re:How is hyperbole by LordKazan · · Score: 3, Informative

    1) actually food planet based biofuels (esp soy diesel) just got canned by Obama's EPA - failed some tests that disqualify it from the running for those new green biofuel subsidies. I live in Iowa, our farmers were howling - I told them to go rent space to wind farms ($2k-$5k/year per turbine)

    2) I doubt the administration hates it.. find me cites [Yucca doesn't count, the site was actually found upon further analysis to be unsuitable for long term waste storage - has a semi-active fault line running right under it]

    The problem with Nuclear energy in this country is that it has been demonized - Look at the media reaction to TMI

    3) Prove it. If you mean "the companies will just pass on the cost" you MIGHT have an argument.
    PS I'm hardly some rich elitist
    My parents, combined, made less than $45k/year when I grew up... so I'm not exactly what you'd call "rich" (though I now make that singlehandedly.. 1 year out of college w/ a computer science degree)
    Between my wife and I we have a house worth of college loans to pay back

    4) As for Al Gore and MTBE, he never claimed to be infallible.

    5) No. Shit. A Tank gets .5 MPG Diesel.

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  17. Re:Yes we do. by ahankinson · · Score: 3, Informative
    Nevermind - I googled it.

    Seriously? The top hit for that quote is a website that doesn't cite its sources. Trying to track down the origins of that quote leads to OTHER websites that don't cite their sources either. (c.f. this one, from 2007, this one, which looks suspiciously familiar, from 2005, and this one, which just links back to the first one. You gotta do better than that.

  18. Re:Yes we do. by LordKazan · · Score: 3, Informative

    your "Science" is wrong.

    "The early part of the Carboniferous was mostly warm; in the later part of the Carboniferous, the climate cooled."

    The carbon load in the atmosphere dropped due to significant coral reef activity over a great number of epicontinental sea area fixing that carbon into limestone.

    try this graph:
    http://www.scotese.com/images/globaltemp.jpg

    the Carboniferous started with average around 20C in the Devonian then dropped to 10C by the Early Permian

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  19. Re:Agreed by LordKazan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes because they're too busy believing that it's a "vast liberal conspiracy" since their corporate-fellating information sources feed them that, and since climate science is so complex that things that to a layman seem like counter-evidence actually are evidence.

    Like Antarctica getting more snow a year is actually a sign of a warming climate in Antarctica.

    Henry Wallace was right. The American fascist does work by polluting the streams of information.

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  20. On standing up the NCS by brennz · · Score: 3, Informative

    Disclaimer: I work for the satellite branch of NOAA, NESDIS

    NOAA's current structure is not optimal for executing the climate mission.
    http://www.pco.noaa.gov/org/NOAA_Organization.htm
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Oceanic_and_Atmospheric_Administration
    http://www.ppi.noaa.gov/PPI_Capabilities/Documents/BOM.pdf
    Although many have suggested that the NWS would be the ideal home for this function, NWS is overly focused on operational meteorology in my opinion, and execution of the climate mission is divided between NESDIS, NWS, NOS and OAR.

    NESDIS operates three environmental data centers which are effectively the archive for the climate mission, along with the large array data system.
    NCDC http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/ncdc.html
    NGDC http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/
    NODC http://www.nodc.noaa.gov/
    CLASS http://www.class.ncdc.noaa.gov/saa/products/welcome ).
    Other line offices in NOAA operate systems that are likewise focused on the climate mission, primarily in the NWS, NOS, and OAR.
    Some have suggested it would be ideal to take a small part of the NWS, NOS, OAR, the data centers and CLASS, to stand up a new line office, The National Climate Service. This could be performed more as a reorganization of NOAA internally, without the bureaucratic trappings of another new line office, along with dual-hatting of a CIO and CFO from other line offices in NOAA

    As an alternative, NOAA could use the matrix goal team structure in order to create the climate service. I believe such an approach would be ineffective, due to the lack of decision-making ability at those levels. NOAA, at the top, has an Executive Committee and an Executive Panel, that are crucial for determining budget priorities from NOAA's small budget. A National Climate Service, to be successful, must have representation at that level.

  21. Yes, as long they incorporate the stovepipes by ruheling · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the answer to this is a qualified "yes." Climate data analysis is tough - it takes a long time to collect, coordinate, validate, calibrate - and ulimately analyze - climate data. And that's just to tell WHAT is happening, WHY is even harder. One of the things that the National Academies and the Government Accountability Office have found is that there isn't a "home" for climate, so efforts take place in a million different uncoordinated (Read: disorganized) places. If nothing else, the House hearing highlighted that fact. NOAA may not be the best place for a National Climate Office/Service, but they do already have the National Climate Data Center - and at least have the infastruture and operational (not R&D) enviornment to continue the studies. I'm glad a national effort is being discussed - if nothing else it would be good (and hopefully save us all some money) to group some of the climate-studying stovepipes together.