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Ocean Circulation Doesn't Work As Expected

techno-vampire writes with word that a long-accepted model of deep ocean currents is inaccurate. Deep Sea News has a summary of the research, to be published in Nature. The Woods Hole press release has more details. "A 50-year-old model of global thermohaline circulation that predicts a deep Atlantic counter current below the Gulf Stream is now formally called into question by an armada of subsurface RAFOS floats drifting 700 - 1500m deep. Nearly 80% of the RAFOS floats escaped the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC), drifting into the open ocean. This confirms suspicions that have been around since the 1990s, and likely plays havoc with global models of climate change."

37 of 658 comments (clear)

  1. No, No, now it's worse!!!! by crypTeX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Despite the fact that we didn't have accurate data about the pattern of ocean currents earlier, we can now welcome panicked decrees that we are changing the pattern of ocean currents!

  2. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by BobMcD · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I do enjoy the irony.

    This confirms suspicions that have been around since the 1990's, and likely plays havoc with global models of climate change.

    So, in the AC's world, the entire underpinnings of ocean circulation can be incorrect, yet the conclusions are NOT to be questioned.

    Hence the label, 'denier'.

    That is not what I understand to be science.

  3. what a suprise by wjh31 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    who would have ever guessed that we would have trouble forming an accurate model of a vast, complex, chaotic system

  4. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by tgibbs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The perennial war cry of the crank is "If this one thing is wrong, then nothing they say can be trusted!"

    Of course, in the real world, all data has flaws, and all interpretations are subject to revision. So a demand for absolute perfection gives the crank license to engage in cherry-picking, rationalizing away the data he doesn't like, while accepting that which feeds his obsession.

    Real science doesn't work that way. When new data comes in, or errors are found in old data, the scientist carefully reassesses conclusions in the light of the new evidence.

  5. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by MightyYar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Mod parent up. Global warming isn't science, it's politics.

    No, it's actually science.

    What do you think is going to happen now? Either scientists will ignore this data or they will incorporate it into their models... wanna bet they incorporate it?

    Wanna bet CO2 still warms the atmosphere after they incorporate the new ocean current data? We won't know for sure until they incorporate the new data, but I'll take that bet.

    Unless, of course, your contention is correct and they are not scientists - then they will simply ignore the new data, right?

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  6. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by jhw539 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "That is not what I understand to be science."

    What I see is the scientific establishment diligently working to identify flaws in the existing theory of climate change and freely publishing any flaws found. The FACT is that the scientific community is vigorously collecting data to challenge and correct where necessary climate change theory, and has been for over two decades now. Note this is the same scientific community that has endorsed the current climate change theories and it's predictions - which include pretty fat error bars you know.

    I understand that to be science and is why I respect the consensus of National Academies of Science (or equivalent bodies) across the first world in this matter (and not Mr Gore or Exxon or the headline of the week).

  7. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by FooRat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, in the AC's world, the entire underpinnings of ocean circulation can be incorrect, yet the conclusions are NOT to be questioned.

    Perhaps that's because the fact that the planet is getting warmer is, um, a *fact*. We measure that. This doesn't call that "conclusion" into question; at best it implies we have even less understanding of why the planet is getting hotter, which suggests we need *less* calm, not more. Our temperature measurements aren't wrong, and still remain valid.

  8. Re:The global (computer) models of climate change by N1ck0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ocean current that might vary in flow and not exactly match models that are decades old...sheesh. Don't they teach kids how to do fluid dynamics calculations with billions upon billions of variables all of which change over with time and depend on a multitude of other models which themselves have varying levels of accuracy to their data these days.

  9. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by inviolet · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What do you think is going to happen now? Either scientists will ignore this data or they will incorporate it into their models... wanna bet they incorporate it?

    Wanna bet CO2 still warms the atmosphere after they incorporate the new ocean current data? We won't know for sure until they incorporate the new data, but I'll take that bet.

    That's all well and good, and as it should be. The ONLY problem here, is that some folks want to make trillion-dollar adjustments to industry all over the world based on these models which are still in such a preliminary state.

    (The trillion-dollar adjustments involve increasing everyone's cost of living in order to internalize costs that may not actually be negative externalities, and include the imposition of a very expensive administrative layer atop everything carbon-related.)

    --
    FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
  10. Driving Blind by StCredZero · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In other words, now we don't know what might happen and we're *still* mucking with our climate.

    1. Re:Driving Blind by JO_DIE_THE_STAR_F*** · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No more frozen Canada or Siberia - we can settle those lands...

      As a Canadian I just wanted to let you know that we have already "settled" our land and you can't have it.

      I really hope we don't warm up due to global warming as our climate is what keeps most of the idiots out.

    2. Re:Driving Blind by Bender0x7D1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not to be picky, but how do you know it was a great time to live?

      --
      Reading code is like reading the dictionary - you have to read half of it before you can go back and understand it.
    3. Re:Driving Blind by credd144az · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In 360 million years, you will be ready for their gas tanks.

    4. Re:Driving Blind by PitaBred · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What makes you think we have control over that?

    5. Re:Driving Blind by clarkkent09 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think global warming, if it happens, will be great

      Many of the biggest population centers are vulnerable to being wiped out by the rising sea levels. If the most pessimistic global warming predictions are true it will mean disruption of global economy on a scale far greater than WWII and over far longer period, with all the wars, famines and who knows what else this will bring. In short, yes humans will probably adapt to the changes in climate but the cost will be enormous, so I wouldn't call that "great".

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    6. Re:Driving Blind by The_Quinn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      we're *still* mucking with our climate.

      Being alive requires that we impact the environment.

      Being comfortable requires even more impact.

      I, for one, have no guilt about being alive, and comfortable.

    7. Re:Driving Blind by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So, wait, industry, powered by free market pixie dust, will be able to move us to other planets (and presumably terraform those planets so we actually want to live there) if the world become inhospitable. But confronted with relatively modest regulations, they'll be utterly crippled. How strangely fragile of industry.

      Industry whines and cries about the end of the world whenever regulation is proposed. Industries have wailed about limits on rat droppings in food, lead in paint, asbestos in insulation, minimun fuel efficiency, minimum wages, adding seat belts, banning smoking from restaurants. Somehow the world hasn't ended.

      Of course, I can appreciate the agility of the free market. Take for example all of the freedom the banking industry had to agilely create new derivative securities and self management. That worked out gangbusters!

      I'd have more faith in the free market to solve our problem if it wasn't so easy to turn costs like pollution into externalities, if the stock market didn't demand that companies think no further than a few years into the future. A few percent hit in our GDP today may be a good investment if it will save us from a massive hit in a decade.

  11. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by Bemopolis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's all well and good, and as it should be. The ONLY problem here, is that some folks want to make trillion-dollar adjustments to industry all over the world based on these models which are still in such a preliminary state.

    No, there are TWO problems — the one you mention, and another one, where the people who make their coin on the status quo (and the politicians that they own) will ignore all evidence that the current way of doing business might make the planet unlivable. Or, at a minimum, cost a trillion dollars to adjust to as it changes.

    --
    "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
  12. "The most exciting phrase to hear in science, by idontgno · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the one that heralds new discoveries, is not 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'"

    -- Isaac Asimov

    --
    Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
  13. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by MozeeToby · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That global warming is occurring is based on empirical data I'll grant; but how is the human cause based on empirical data? In order to make an empirical assertion about a cause you would need a control group, which is pretty much impossible with a sample size of one.

    We think that the cause his human activity because its the simplest explanation for such a rapid rise in temperatures, that's not the same as saying we have direct experimental evidence that says the same thing.

  14. The Difference Between Science and Politics by LordKaT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Science: "We've observed that the Earth's climate is getting warmer by nearly a full degree Celsius over a period of observation of around 200 years. We've noticed a correlating increase in CO2 emissions in that timespan."

    Politics: "GLOBAL WARMING IS GOING TO CHANGE EVERYTHING ABOUT OUR LIVES!"

    Science: "But the Earth is 4.54 billion years old, so our dataset is incomplete."

    Politics: "THERE'S NO SUCH THING AS GLOBAL WARMING, WE DON'T KNOW ENOUGH ABOUT THE EARTH!"

    Science: "Of course, we've seen in tests that increasing the level of CO2 in an environment can significantly increase the temperature of an environment."

    Politics: "CO2 CAUSES WORLD OT GET HOTTER!"

    Science: "One of the leading theories we have as to the increase in global temperatures is this so-called 'blanket-effect'"

    Politics: "GLOBAL WARMING IS BLANKET EFFECT! WE ALL MUST USE HYBRIDS NOW OR DIE!"

    Science: "On the other hand, it's still a possibility that we're in a natural cycle of global warming. We saw a similar pattern in history, which occurred right before we experienced a miniature ice age."

    Politics: "GLOBAL WARMING NATURAL CYCLE. ICE AGE IMMINENT!"

    Repeat until you either change the channel or become so psychotic from the endless political bashing that you go out and kill 50 or 60 people, just to relieve the stress.

    1. Re:The Difference Between Science and Politics by whiledo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Very well put. Unfortunately, you find that when you talk to someone who doesn't like the scientific conclusions for political reasons, they'll use any rationality on your part in talking about the inherent uncertainty as weakness and claim it invalidates anything you say.

      --
      Moderators: Before moderating a comment Insightful/Informative, check to see if a child post has already refuted it.
  15. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by Gospodin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, there are TWO problems -- the one you mention, and another one, where the people who make their coin on the status quo (and the politicians that they own) will ignore all evidence that the current way of doing business might make the planet unlivable. Or, at a minimum, cost a trillion dollars to adjust to as it changes.

    You say that like it's a bad thing.

    If we have to choose between spending a trillion dollars now and spending a trillion fifty years from now, which should we do? Personally, I'd rather wait the fifty.

    But more importantly, there's a philosophical point to be made. When faced with a possible problem, should you always make a radical change to the status quo? Well, what do you do in your personal life? Most people don't do this, unless the potential problem is both very serious and has a high probability. The ones who want to effect massive changes know this and want to convince us on both counts.

    Ultimately, though, broken models like this one do damage to the radical policymakers. Those policy choices are dependent on not just climate models, but economic models based on those climate models. If we can't even trust the climate models, where do you think we are with the economic models? And how can we possibly justify spending such massive sums with that much uncertainty as to the outcome?

    We might end up impoverishing ourselves to such a degree that we don't have the technology to handle whatever the climate does throw us. And that would be just as disastrous. So there are risks either way. I say stick to the status quo until we know we can't.

    --
    ...following the principles of Heisenburger's Uncertain Cat...
  16. Sounds like "denier" talk by geoffrobinson · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Being skeptical of scientists giving dogmatic claims of incredibly complex weather systems with billions of variables, known and unknown, sounds like Denier talk to me. Either that or you are obviously under the employ of oil companies, Dick Cheney or you are the guy who controls Karl Rove's weather machine. The one Bush used to destroy New Orleans.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  17. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by Thaddeus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Please. Researchers ignore data that break their theories all the time.

    It may be worst in the medical world. For example, why do you think that cholesterol is targeted as enemy number one for heart health? There is no study that has ever demonstrated causality; 50% of people with heart disease have "normal" cholesterol; nearly all studies on the subject show that all-cause mortality is higher with low cholesterol; much better working theories exist.

    So why is that hypothesis still treated as correct? Because reputations and huge amounts of money would be lost. Prominent people and institutions may even be found liable. Good science goes out the window in the face of that.

    Regarding the subject at hand, you might want to look at what an ad hoc hypothesis is.

    --
    ^X^S ^X^C
  18. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by MadKeithV · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I say stick to the status quo until we know we can't.

    The problem with that is, what if the "oh we can't stick to the status quo" moment is actually a massive human extinction event?
    The risk is that the "bullet has already been fired" so to speak. It won't hit for another 50 to 100 years, but it's on the way, and it'll cause damage when it finally does hit.

    We don't know for sure if that's the case, but there certainly is a risk.

  19. In Short... by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...and likely plays havoc with global models of climate change.

    In short, we don't know what's really happening, but our political leaders are making very expensive decisions based on the belief (of some) that we do.

    That's a great textbook definition of Stupidity!

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  20. Re:The global (computer) models of climate change by Toonol · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So... it's harder to get the right answer than previously though, but the previous calculations done the 'easy' way are still correct?

    I'm struggling to reconcile this...

  21. Re:Nice FUD by commodore64_love · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes but how can you claim to "know" the future environment, if our models are inaccurate? We can't even come-up with explanations for previous warm/cool spells, like the 300-1300 warm spell that allowed grapes to be grown in northern England, or the circa 3000 B.C. warm spell that helped Egypt become a dominant empire of the region.

    I'm skeptical because I studied science and know its history - which is essentially a series of mistakes. For example in the 70s Carl Sagan was telling schoolchildren about dust-in-the-air causing an ice age. And we all know the story of how scientists thought disease was caused by bad air, or bad blood, or "germs".

    I'm skeptical because that's what the scientific method demands.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
  22. So... by copponex · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...when confronted with a choice, you choose money over the only known planet that sustains human life in the entire universe.

    I'm not sure I can get on board with that. And something tells me that using less energy to do everyday tasks will lead to more technology, not less. Sticking with the status quo is the choice that provides no technology, and possibly spends finite resources on luxuries that could be used later for needs.

    But fuck it. Hop in your hummer, crank the AC, and rush to sit in traffic. Buy the house tens of miles away from work so you can have a library and basement bar that get used about twice a decade. Terraform your yard with nice looking weeds, so the neighbors can enjoy it the whole 30 seconds they spend outside their front door.

    Enjoy these pinnacles of human achievement, while they last.

  23. Re:deniers come out in 3 .. 2 .. 1 .. by tmosley · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You're citing stock climate change deniers' arguments. They were refuted looooooong time ago. Do you think all climate scientists are idiots?

    Specifically: http://scienceblogs.com/illconsidered/2006/04/historically-co2-never-causes.php

    http://scienceblogs.com/illconsidered/2006/03/geological-history-does-not-support.php

    From the long list of: http://scienceblogs.com/illconsidered/2008/07/how_to_talk_to_a_sceptic.php

    Ummm, your links agree with me. Temperature rises preceded CO2 increases. It then goes on to claim that somehow the CO2 STILL causes it. Apparently CO2 moved faster than the speed of light and violated causality back in those days. The second link admits that CO2 levels are not well correlated with historical temperature (he blames this on a lack of comprehensive data--meaning that he recognizes that they don't have data, but he's somehow still right).

    There is a lot more to the story of climate change than CO2, but governments around the world would shut down civilization rather than hear that.

    You and I must have wildly different understanding of the word "refute".

  24. Re:The global (computer) models of climate change by imric · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It IS fact. That part's easy. It's what effect it will have that's hard. Considering the implications of climate shift on food and energy supplies, panicked responses are understandable, if not helpful.

    OK now both the so-called 'sides' (the conservative "we can always do what we've always done, no big change to God's earth is possible" partisans and the lefty "zomg humans are unnatural and everything we do that affects the rest of nature is morally wrong" zealots) can come flame away.

    Of course, THAT will not help GW.

    --
    Paranoia is a Survival Trait!
  25. Re:Darn it by wgaryhas · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Heat just one room at a time instead of the whole house. That's how you make a major change to help reduce greenhouse gas.

    I tried that, had the heater turned off at all times except a space heater in the bedroom at bedtime. It ended up being more costly and less efficient than heating the whole house and keeping it heated.

    My theory is that the insulation makes it pretty cheap to maintain the temperature, but the space heater has to work constantly to counteract the heat lost to neighboring rooms. The other possibility is that natural gas (whole house) is really cheap around here and electricity (single room) isn't.

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." - H.L. Mencken
  26. Re:The global (computer) models of climate change by MrHanky · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sure, we can forgive a little cynicism and snarkiness if you can forgive us for not paying too much attention to a group of people who think this kind of rambling and incoherent strawman bullshit is "insightful".

  27. Re:The global (computer) models of climate change by Toonol · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You're right, and if this is just a slightly more accurate but complicated reformulation of the old method, that may be the situation. My skepticism comes from the fact that climate models are simulations of chaotic systems, which often have the effect of amplifying very minor deviations in unpredictable ways.

    In other words, Newtonian physics will allow you to predict a planet's orbit with 99.9% accuracy; but add a bunch of planets that interact in complex ways, and let them orbit for a million years, and see how close your prediction is.

  28. Re:The global (computer) models of climate change by sumdumass · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It IS fact. That part's easy. It's what effect it will have that's hard. Considering the implications of climate shift on food and energy supplies, panicked responses are understandable, if not helpful.

    How do we know it is fact when one of the fundamental premises behind it has changed so deeply? The ocean currents play a very deep and integrated part into the weather/climate of the planet. There was a study done in colorado which claimed that all of earths recorded warming can be attributed to changes in ocean temps. There was another claiming that the decadal oscillations have more of an effect on the climate and temperatures then Co2 has. Then there is the idea that the decadal oscillations have something to do with the solar cycles and the magnetic effects on the earth's magnetosphere and the solar storms we see.

    Now we are being told the ocean currents are completely different then once believed. it's a matter of time before the differences are connected or disconnected to the other works but we are seeing the possibility that Global warming or climate change as they like to call it after the warming stopped, is completely founded in erroneous information and needs to be reexamined. We cannot in good faith claim that global warming is fact today given the severity of this claim. It's simply impossible to do so.

  29. Re:The global (computer) models of climate change by imric · · Score: 3, Insightful

    *sigh*

    The atmosphere IS collecting energy.

    Our climate IS self-regulating, as well - at least within boundary limits. That we don't know what those boundaries are should terrify you. The implications of climate change can de-stabilize the socio-economic patterns we depend on - perhaps not as a species, but certainly as a civilisation.

    I see the disbelief climate-change deniers as being similar to 19th century disbelief that it was impossible for species to go extinct. They all had scientific rationales as to why it simply couldn't happen - until the fate of the Dodo was documented. One difference is that there are fewer GW/AGW deniers in the scientific community than there were extinction deniers, of course.

    Now tell me - how many scientists are saying that the fact that we don't understand our deep-ocean currents as completely as we thought we did means that there is no GW? How many are saying that this invalidates AGW? None? No - there are the fraction of scientists that lobby for fossil-fuel industry, or the specialists in other fields and even non-scientists whose faith in their own opinions _are_ their qualifications to speak up. How many of those who 'doubt' GW/AGW do so out of ideological reasons? At least those who give credit to the idea of GW/AGW have the opinion of most scientists on their 'side'. What do deniers have?

    --
    Paranoia is a Survival Trait!