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Norwegian Study: Global Warming Less Severe Than Feared

Numerous news outlets are reporting the findings of a study from the Research Council of Norway — a government agency — which concludes that (in Bloomberg's version) "After the planet's average surface temperature rose through the 1990s, the increase has almost leveled off at the level of 2000, while ocean water temperature has also stabilized." The New York Times' Dot Earth blog offers some reasons to be skeptical of the findings.

468 comments

  1. Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's real! Panic!

    Even if it's not real, the world will be a better place if you panic!

    Frankly, I don't give a crap what the world will be like for my great, great, great, great, great, great grandchildren. If they're too slow to get out of the way of a 500 year long rising tide, screw em.

    1. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if it's a 500 year long rising tide, how could you expect them to get out of its way unless our generation starts trying to quell global warming *now*?

    2. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Move to higher ground? It's not hard, if you've got 500 years to pack your stuff and get in the car...

    3. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we're not talking about a literal tide ...

      or if you we're joking, um, okay. cool joke, dude.

    4. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, it's likely to be quite a bit faster than 500 years. Try 100 - 200 on the outside.
      Second, sea levels are far from the only effects. Perhaps you'd care that here will be a substantial reduction in arable land for crops causing massive, widespread famine.
      Third, who gives a shit if they're related to you? It's sick how callous people are about the future and future generations. You act like you are entitled to all the resources on the Earth that ever have been and ever will be. Grow up and act like a responsible human being.

    5. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Frankly, I don't give a crap what the world will be like for my great, great, great, great, great, great grandchildren."

      Thank you for being honest. There isn't really climate doubt, there's only "fuck the future" disguised as climate doubt.

    6. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The droughts, fires, tornadoes, and hurricanes are for pussies.

    7. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First, it's likely to be quite a bit faster than 500 years. Try 100 - 200 on the outside.

      That's still at least an order of magnitude too slow for rapidly evolving human societies.

      Perhaps you'd care that here will be a substantial reduction in arable land for crops causing massive, widespread famine.

      I don't know about the original author, but sure I'd care if that were happening. But it's not. There's no substantial reduction of arable land since new arable land will be created to replace what might be lost. Even if we were to grant you that claim, we still don't have a cause of massive, widespread famine since we can just use the arable land that is left more effectively. We do have plenty of room for improvement in that respect.

      It's sick how callous people are about the future and future generations.

      Fuck you. You haven't even demonstrated that future generations will be in the slightest, inconvenienced by AGW, much less that there would be those famines and such. And yes, there really is a limit to how responsible we can possibly be for other generations of grown ups.

      It's especially reprehensible to push this generational responsibility thing using the remarkably poor standards of evidence used in climatology. My view at this time is that while there is a bit of merit to AGW claims, most of it is a scam, an attempt to pull hundreds of billions a year in public funds from a hysterical public. Where do you consider the cost of that to your future generations?

      My prediction is that around the time of the Warsaw, Poland climate conference (as well as many other future conferences in the years beyond) in November, 2013, we'll see the same propaganda pattern we saw in the climate conference at Doha, Quatar. Alarmist studies will show that AGW (and other bits of "climate change") are worse than feared in the weeks ahead of the conference (even when there's no evidence to support those claims), while more reasonable studies will show that AGW is less harmful than feared in the months after the conference is over.

    8. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 2

      Similarly, there isn't legitimate concern for the well being of those future generations, but just a bit of theater. Else you wouldn't have posted that. You played your little meaningless role. Let's cue the hollow applause.

    9. Re:Cue Alarmists by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1

      new arable land will be created to replace what might be lost

      That's a new one on me, and how exactly will this occur?

      The God of the climate deniers will wave his hand and say "Let there be arable land"?

      Or are you going to just redefine the expanding deserts as "arable land"?

    10. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just as the righteous God AGW has declared that all temperature increases of 4 degrees in 100 years shall turn the land to desert, so does his nemesis, the dark god Skeptic, declare that He shall interfere with AGW's plans and shall instead cause the excessive amounts of CO2 to improve the healthiness and well-being of plant-life the world over, such that it would increase the amount of water vapor and create a situation of unparalleled humidity. And lo, Skeptic would see to the deserts and bring rainfall, and rainfall shall bring greater biodiversity, and greater biodiversity shall spawn forth arable land. So it was written, thus it will be.

    11. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's real! Panic!

      Even if it's not real, the world will be a better place if you panic!

      Frankly, I don't give a crap what the world will be like for my great, great, great, great, great, great grandchildren. If they're too slow to get out of the way of a 500 year long rising tide, screw em.

      HEY! We've all seen the documentary film The Day After Tomorrow, and are well aware of the gravity of our situation!

    12. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Climate denialism at +5, really? When did Slashdot become an anti-science conspiracy rag?

    13. Re:Cue Alarmists by IrquiM · · Score: 2

      Let me guess - republican?

      --
      This is blinging
    14. Re:Cue Alarmists by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's no substantial reduction of arable land since new arable land will be created to replace what might be lost. Even if we were to grant you that claim

      You're the one making wild, specious claims. There is no evidence that more arable land will be "created" to replace what "might" be lost on any time scale that will benefit us, but you state it as a given.

      Fuck you. You haven't even demonstrated that future generations will be in the slightest, inconvenienced by AGW,

      No, Fuck You. Present generations have already been more than inconvenienced by it, and you're ignoring this so that you can justify not doing anything about the ongoing collapse of the global ecosystem because it would be an inconvenience. You're a willful killer for convenience, as are all of us in the developed world, but then you're also lying to yourself about it, and that's not just sad — it also justifies not changing anything, because you deny that there's a problem simply so that you can continue to be part of it.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    15. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about the original author, but sure I'd care if that were happening. But it's not. There's no substantial reduction of arable land since new arable land will be created to replace what might be lost. Even if we were to grant you that claim, we still don't have a cause of massive, widespread famine since we can just use the arable land that is left more effectively. We do have plenty of room for improvement in that respect.

      New arable land won't just crop up, pardon the pun. You also see to have no grasp of how hard industrial agriculture already pushes the existing land we have to produce as much food as we do today. We do not have a magic fairy improvement wand.

      Fuck you. You haven't even demonstrated that future generations will be in the slightest, inconvenienced by AGW, much less that there would be those famines and such. And yes, there really is a limit to how responsible we can possibly be for other generations of grown ups.
       

      When the US military, the insurance industry, and the mother effin' Maldives are looking at mitigation plans for this generation, I'm of a mind to think it's demonstrated. Contrarian forum nerdrage is hardly a counter argument.

      It's especially reprehensible to push this generational responsibility thing using the remarkably poor standards of evidence used in climatology. My view at this time is that while there is a bit of merit to AGW claims, most of it is a scam, an attempt to pull hundreds of billions a year in public funds from a hysterical public. Where do you consider the cost of that to your future generations?

      'hundreds of billions'? No. That's just wrong. At it's peak in 1995, climate funding in the US was $2.4 billion, and that included NASA's work in supporting satellite observation. It has gone down ever since. If it's a scam, it the world's worst ever.
       

    16. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 2

      You're the one making wild, specious claims. There is no evidence that more arable land will be "created" to replace what "might" be lost on any time scale that will benefit us, but you state it as a given.

      What do you mean by "no evidence"? The greatest predicted temperature increases are in the northern taiga forests and tundra. That would make a lot of arable land. As to the "time scale", we move pretty fast on transforming land to farming use when it suits us.

      Present generations have already been more than inconvenienced by it

      Get back to me when you have evidence for your opinion. This is really one of the more ridiculous claims made by some on the pro-AGW side. There's no evidence that anyone has been inconvenienced by AGW.

      and you're ignoring this so that you can justify not doing anything about the ongoing collapse of the global ecosystem because it would be an inconvenience

      What collapse? You mean the usual stuff that's been going on for centuries like habitat destruction and industrial pollution? What does that have to do with AGW?

      You're a willful killer for convenience, as are all of us in the developed world, but then you're also lying to yourself about it, and that's not just sad â" it also justifies not changing anything, because you deny that there's a problem simply so that you can continue to be part of it.

      I can make this even simpler. There's cost and benefit. The costs of AGW mitigation are pretty big. We'd have to restructure our transportation and energy generating infrastructure. And it's already costing some countries considerable wealth and competitive advantage to do so. The costs are also up front. We pay them now, not in a century.

      And what do we get for this huge, upfront cost? Some vague opinion that future generations might be better off. There might be more arable land, a little cooler temperatures, or slightly less acidic oceans. These nebulous benefits are also long down the road, should they actually happen at all.

      My view is that we'll probably as a society never notice the changes from AGW. They'll be so gradual and slight that we'll instinctively adapt to them over the centuries. But made some big, fast changes in our energy and transportation infrastructure now? We'll notice the poverty, the economic decline, and the mockery from the parts of societies that didn't slit their throats.

    17. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 1

      Climate denialism at +5, really? When did Slashdot become an anti-science conspiracy rag?

      Crude, anti-scientific name calling in the first sentence and a whine about how Slashdot has become "anti-science" in the second. I guess you never thought you were part of the problem.

    18. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 1

      That's a new one on me, and how exactly will this occur?

      The God of the climate deniers will wave his hand and say "Let there be arable land"?

      Or are you going to just redefine the expanding deserts as "arable land"?

      Well, where do most of these temperature change predictions claim that temperatures will rise the most? In the taiga forests and tundra which are places where temperature is the biggest reason the place isn't arable land. It'll still need work, such as draining, transportation infrastructure, etc. But it's just not that much work.

      Or are you going to just redefine the expanding deserts as "arable land"?

      Well, that is a possibility with our ever improving technology. A place needs water and soil. That's something we can make even in the driest and harshest of deserts. If desert terrain become just slightly more expensive to operate as farms than more lush terrains, then they will be considerable arable at some point.

    19. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 1

      New arable land won't just crop up, pardon the pun. You also see to have no grasp of how hard industrial agriculture already pushes the existing land we have to produce as much food as we do today. We do not have a magic fairy improvement wand.

      Why not? There's a lot of land in the northern hemisphere that's just too cold to grow things. Warm those places up and you remove the primary obstacle to farming.

      And we do have a magic fairy improvement wand called "modern technology".

      When the US military, the insurance industry, and the mother effin' Maldives are looking at mitigation plans for this generation, I'm of a mind to think it's demonstrated. Contrarian forum nerdrage is hardly a counter argument.

      I fail to be impressed. The insurance industry is milking the climate change cow in order to generate a pretext to raise rates and increase its profits. I see no evidence that they will experience in the next few decades higher costs from AGW or any other sort of global climate change. The US military's boss, President Obama is a guy who's pushing the climate change meme for his benefit. Maldives might have a reason to care, but if things flood out, they can always move with plenty of time to spare.

      'hundreds of billions'? No. That's just wrong. At it's peak in 1995, climate funding in the US was $2.4 billion, and that included NASA's work in supporting satellite observation. It has gone down ever since. If it's a scam, it the world's worst ever.

      You also have to include renewable energy and the recent and very expensive fad of reparations. The EU, for example, has huge funds committed to solar and wind power, carbon emissions credit markets, and foreign aid to help third world countries adapt to "climate change". So does the US and Japan.

      Consider also the currently poorly funded "Green Climate Fund" which some are trying to get funded at $100 billion a year. They aren't going to get squat, if people think that AGW is a problem that we don't have to start to deal with for a century.

      And don't forget those insurance companies who are looking for any excuse to increase their profits. Being forced to charge higher premiums for non-existent climate change costs is quite their speed.

    20. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, they will also rise in the EXISTING arable land which will become less arable. The tundra and taiga is unlikely to be terribly fertile, as nutrients have been leached from it for millennia and not replaced. It could take more millennia for them to become sufficiently arable to replace the lost land.

      As for your "improving technology", that's utter crap. There is a reason why soil erosion is important, it reduces the carrying capacity of fertile land. This is already a major problem in areas which are IDEAL for crops temperature wise. One might be able to increase the amount of water to a desert, but it will again be to utterly infertile soil. Again, it will take millennia for the soil to become fertile.

      If climate change is correct, the consequences are horrifying and cannot easily be solved, even with massive improvements in technology.

    21. Re:Cue Alarmists by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Fuck you. You haven't even demonstrated that future generations will be in the slightest, inconvenienced by AGW, much less that there would be those famines and such. And yes, there really is a limit to how responsible we can possibly be for other generations of grown ups.

      You sound like a seedy lawyer.

      "First, I would like to state that my client was nowhere near the scene of the crime, and could not possibly have killed the Mr X, and that therefore these charges should be thrown out of court. But, even if he was there, I further submit that he only accidentally shot Mr X. And, further, Mr X should have taken more care not to stand in the direct line of fire of my client's machine gun."

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    22. Re:Cue Alarmists by sunnydaz · · Score: 1

      Let me guess - left wing intolerant radical being the ineffectual elitist.

    23. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it a bit hipocritic that the same people who say we should panic over global warming because of concern for future generations, seem not the least bit concerned about the current massive government spending that will impoverish our future generations.

    24. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or more likely get out of the way of advancing glaciers

    25. Re:Cue Alarmists by cenerentolo · · Score: 1

      worth mentioning the farmers almanac reports for the past 4 years and the global cooling trend, too..... nice empirics actually.... love to see someone ready to deny with reason, instead of the red flyover state general knee jerk thingy. NOW, that doesnt mean that every effort shouldnt be made to reduce pollution as much as possible, and i hope you have a much different attitude about nuclear war (also known as nuke 'power') for the same influences that say that climate change is a horror are in place to shove it down our throats, and a 200 year tide is one thing, a 5 billion year radiation burn is another. pax et bonum (feast of st. thomas aquinas, ''13)

    26. Re:Cue Alarmists by cenerentolo · · Score: 1

      awwwww arent you QUAINT!!?!??! bitchy and wrong at the same time.. IF we are warming, then latitudes further north are arable, BUT THANKS FOR PLAYING, EINSTEIN! AND THAT IS A really nice sleight of hand: poke fun (god of climate denial) at a reasoned argument cause you cant refute with reason, so refute it with the same thing you accuse the other person of doing... ostrich much, speaking of deserts? one should never educate themselves beyond their intelligence PAX ET BONUM (you need it) (st. thomas aquinas, ''13)

    27. Re:Cue Alarmists by DJohnsonCA · · Score: 1

      Exactly this. It's not about hating future generations and wanting our kids to suffer, it's about making the smartest decisions with our limited resources. Hundreds of billions of dollars spent on labour/production focused on reducing greenhouse gases may be better spent and preventing poverty, increasing education, investing in safe nuclear or fusion, etc. We are spending a lot of our limited resources on AGW for the reductions(?) in greenhouse gasses we are seeing.

    28. Re:Cue Alarmists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, what a truly horrible human being. Just wow.

    29. Re:Cue Alarmists by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      The greatest predicted temperature increases are in the northern taiga forests and tundra. That would make a lot of arable land.

      If it's warmer, will it be usable farmland? Have there been any studies?

      Usable farmland has to have halfway decent soil, not-too-awful soil chemistry, reasonable amounts of water, that sort of thing. Has somebody done a study on random taiga, to see if all it needs is to be warmed up?

      There's no evidence that anyone has been inconvenienced by AGW.

      All over the world, we've been having a large amount of weird weather, some of it destructive. Hurricane Sandy is a good example, and the flooding was exacerbated to some extent by rising sea levels, which are due to global warming. Now, we can't definitively point to any given incident and say it's because of global warming, but the theory predicts wonky weather, we get lots of wonky weather, and some of it has been pretty darn inconvenient. All together that amounts to evidence of inconvenience.

      One problem with the climate change going on is that we don't know what specifically is caused by global warming and what's just flukes (until, of course, it's Too Late). That means that people who have some interest in denying its effects have no difficulty in doing so.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    30. Re:Cue Alarmists by mk1004 · · Score: 1

      I agree that you can find usable land in wherever the temperate zone shifts to. The biggest problem with raising food/feed crops is access to fresh water. If AGW is real, significant, and does indeed cause more extreme variation in weather, that could be a problem. You get enough, or even too much rain--direct on crops and for irrigation via rivers and lakes--some years, and almost nothing other years. Ask farmers in the Midwest: Rain at the wrong time is as bad as none at all. Muddy fields can't be harvested. Dry, baked fields have dead crops.

      --
      I can mend the break of day, heal a broken heart, and provide temporary relief to nymphomaniacs.
    31. Re:Cue Alarmists by smg5266 · · Score: 1

      And we do have a magic fairy improvement wand called "modern technology".

      You've got to be shitting me

    32. Re:Cue Alarmists by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1

      You're confusing "good temperature range" with arable. And, yes I did poke fun, because people who (like yourself) clearly don't understand the first thing about the effects of AGW love spouting nonsense like you have above.

    33. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 1

      Umm, they will also rise in the EXISTING arable land which will become less arable.

      Already taken into account. Most of that warming is in the places I already noted.

      The tundra and taiga is unlikely to be terribly fertile, as nutrients have been leached from it for millennia and not replaced.

      By what mechanism? We aren't speaking of rain forest which is pretty much the only terrain type aside from human farms that actually experiences significant nutrient leaching. There would be no leaching of nutrients during glacial periods and interglacial warming just seems to add nutrients (nitrogen and carbon) from plant life growing in the tundra.

      As for your "improving technology", that's utter crap.

      Then come up with a reason why you have that opinion. There are a variety of known methods for building and maintaining soil. It just isn't that hard.

      One might be able to increase the amount of water to a desert, but it will again be to utterly infertile soil. Again, it will take millennia for the soil to become fertile.

      Something that has been done in the US and elsewhere for many decades now. Merely plowing in vegetation, particularly "green manure", helps build soil. Adding soil organisms like earthworms and nematodes quickly builds up soil. If it weren't for these methods, then most farmland would already be completely infertile.

      If climate change is correct, the consequences are horrifying and cannot easily be solved, even with massive improvements in technology.

      "IF".

    34. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 1

      Why? The remarkable extent and power of modern technology, especially in agriculture, is apparent to anyone who bothers to look. I tire of people telling me what's impossible when they don't have clue what's already been done.

    35. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 1

      Usable farmland has to have halfway decent soil, not-too-awful soil chemistry, reasonable amounts of water, that sort of thing. Has somebody done a study on random taiga, to see if all it needs is to be warmed up?

      Just look at land that's a few hundred miles to the south. Similar chemistry and terrain ten thousand years ago. Now, a bunch of it is among the most fertile land on the planet.

      All over the world, we've been having a large amount of weird weather, some of it destructive.

      So what? We would have a large amount of weird weather even if nothing was going on. What's special about this "weird weather" that can't be explained easily by confirmation bias?

      Hurricane Sandy is a good example, and the flooding was exacerbated to some extent by rising sea levels, which are due to global warming.

      A "good example"? You do realize that the area in question gets such hurricanes on a regular, if infrequent basis. There's nothing unusual about Hurricane Sandy aside from the attempts to tie it to AGW.

      One problem with the climate change going on is that we don't know what specifically is caused by global warming and what's just flukes (until, of course, it's Too Late). That means that people who have some interest in denying its effects have no difficulty in doing so.

      So why are you pushing the theory so hard in the absence of evidence? Even you had to admit implicitly it's unscientific to do so.

    36. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 1

      And you sound like you don't have anything to contribute to the discussion. There were multiple flaws to the post I was replying to and I merely was being thorough in addressing those weaknesses.

    37. Re:Cue Alarmists by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Usable farmland has to have halfway decent soil, not-too-awful soil chemistry, reasonable amounts of water, that sort of thing. Has somebody done a study on random taiga, to see if all it needs is to be warmed up?

      Just look at land that's a few hundred miles to the south.

      So, the answer is no. Come back when you have peer-reviewed science on your side, right now it says you're a liar and an idiot, and morally bankrupt besides.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    38. Re:Cue Alarmists by smg5266 · · Score: 1

      I'm not implying it's impossible, but assuming modern technology is going to come down and wave itself like a wand, magically fixing all our problems sounds pretty naive to me.

    39. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 1

      I have evidence. That is sufficient.

    40. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 1

      but assuming modern technology is going to come down and wave itself like a wand, magically fixing all our problems sounds pretty naive to me.

      That depends how hard the problem is. Most of the AGW problems just aren't that tough and happen over pretty long time frames.

    41. Re:Cue Alarmists by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I have evidence. That is sufficient.

      You lack credible evidence. That is sufficient to invalidate your argument.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    42. Re:Cue Alarmists by khallow · · Score: 1

      What makes it unbelievable? The last glacial period happened. Very similar climate changes happened which are comparable to what is forecast over many centuries in climate models now. The fertile lands of Saskatchewan and the Dakotas of the US, were both under ice and later transitioned through tundra. This was at one point completely unproductive due to having a huge layer of ice, perhaps as much as a kilometer thick, on top of it.

      And most of the work to make it productive farm land happened in a few short years.

      Now, Saskatchewan (as well as Manitoba) is just south of part of the Canadian Shield, a huge nearly monolithic block of geology.The parts of the Shield which run through Ontario and Quebec (which are much further south) tend to be quite fertile as well. So that "not-to-awful" soil chemistry is there.

      You can choose not to believe my evidence, but I think it's silly to do so.

  2. Based on an almost true story by durrr · · Score: 5, Funny

    DENIERS, BUUUUUUUURN THEM!
    Wait wait. How do we know they are deniers?
    Because they look like it!
    Yes, but, we have to prove it.
    Uuuh... they're made of oil... so they float?
    Yes, and what else floats?
    Ducks?
    Yes, so fetch me a duck and I get my scales out....

    1. Re:Based on an almost true story by Razgorov+Prikazka · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yes! And they turned me into a newt! ... I got better...

      --
      rm -rf --no-preserve-root / ...and let /dev/null sort them out...
    2. Re:Based on an almost true story by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2

      "DENIERS, BUUUUUUUURN THEM!"

      I know this was tongue-in-cheek.

      But even so, if you take another look at the article in OP's last link, it was updated yesterday. Their "reason to be skeptical" was a case of jumping the gun; it no longer exists.

    3. Re:Based on an almost true story by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

      So?

      I lit a fire.

      Isn't it good?

      Norwegian wood.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
  3. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    But they're Europeans so they have to know better than us. No, no, it is even worse--they're Scandinavians, the only people who have formed perfect governments on Earth that maximize the potential of every citizen. How can we dump apes criticize them?

  4. Re:Surprise by aurispector · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The simple fact that anyone who produces evidence to the contrary is automatically suspect is perhaps THE biggest problem with the entire climate change debate.

    --
    I have mod points. The reign of terror begins now.
  5. Re:Surprise by KiloByte · · Score: 1

    Correction: an oil-producing country that's cold like hell, and can gain a lot from both its land getting more habitable and from it's main competitors' land getting less habitable.

    If Earth got 40 degrees warmer, people at the south pole wouldn't complain.

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  6. Wouldn't it be good news? by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For god's sake, it's just one more piece of analysis. If true, it will be followed up on, if not, it will be followed up on with corrections.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    1. Re:Wouldn't it be good news? by ath1901 · · Score: 0

      Exactly. It has not been published yet so we don't know if it is the best thing since sliced bread or just another ham sandwich (tasty, but not better than any of the other sandwiches out there).

      I'm guessing it's just a grab for media attention. They issued a press release before publication, the study has an eye-catching title and they claim it is the "most detailed" study yet without going into details.

      Personally, I think it is very un-scientific to issue a press release before publishing (or before the claims have been validated by other scientists). Science isn't news, it's a much slower process. Scientific studies are almost always complicated and full of assumptions. The results must be independently validated, discussed and validated again before any claims can be made. Ideally, newspapers should not write about new scientific results until at least two independent groups have verified the claims. That would stop most of the "Cell phones cause cancer" headlines.

      It is way too early to tell what this study actually means.

    2. Re:Wouldn't it be good news? by terjeber · · Score: 2

      It has not been published yet

      Published and peer reviewed.

    3. Re:Wouldn't it be good news? by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      If true, it will be followed up on, if not, it will be followed up on with corrections.

      Yes, after the XL pipeline is approved, after most countries use it as an excuse to avoid committing to reducing carbon output, after legislators, lobbyists, and the conservative biased media have declared global warming to be a hoax, there may be a correction. And then there will be some other reason, quite possibly "Okay, yes, it's going to happen now, and is going to be bad, but we may as well keep using coal. And you can't possibly hold the people who made those decisions responsible! They've retired to mountaintop mansions!"

    4. Re:Wouldn't it be good news? by ath1901 · · Score: 1

      So, why does the Research council of Norways own article say (close to the bottom, UPDATE in bold):

      "All research results in this news brief have not yet been published. The research has been completed, so this news brief is a synthesis consisting of both published and thus far unpublished findings. In consultation and collaboration with the researcher, the Research Council has chosen to release this news at the completion of the research project because the project is of general interest. However, the Council releases this news with the caveat that the findings outlined in this news brief have yet to be verified and that the results will only become significant once they are confirmed by other studies. For further information please visit CICERO"

  7. Re:Surprise by LordSnooty · · Score: 2

    Moderating as +0 a bit kooky.

  8. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    They're Norwegians, a country who at the first opportunity will tell you that if they stop whale hunting the entire planets ecosystem will collapse.

  9. Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A peer reviewed study that doesn't quite jive with the prevailing line of thinking appears in the prestigious journal Nature.

    But don't worry, some blogger says it may not be correct. Alarmist Rejoice!

    1. Re:Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A peer reviewed study that doesn't quite jive with the prevailing line of thinking appears in the prestigious journal Nature.

      "Jibe". The word is "jibe".

    2. Re:Nature by ceoyoyo · · Score: 3, Funny

      How do you know? It's quite possible this study refuses to dance at all with the prevailing line of thinking.

    3. Re:Nature by HiThere · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      I don't think you read, or perhaps understood, what the blogger was saying, *OR* what the original report was saying. They don't appear to be in actual disagreement.

      The original paper was reporting on how a particular climate model responded to the data. The blogger was criticizing that class of models. They may well *BOTH* be correct.

      Personally, I don't really have an opinion on that particular issue. I'm more focused on different kinds of evidence, and I'm also not a climate scientist. To me it appears that the current evidence indicates that lowball estimation of the amount of climate chage are wrong, basically because the ice has been melting faster than predicted even by most "alarmists". But I'm willing to admit that I have a high degree of uncertainty. Someone who convinced me that they had a reasonable explanation AND that global warming was slowing would be possible. I just haven't encountered any such.

      Additionally, I'm well aware that the politicians censored many of the more extreme predictions out of the official report as being too alarming. So I'm dubious about how accurate it's "conservative" predictions are. Some of the excluded predictions have already been shown to be more accurate than the included ones. (Mind you, there's a wide variation. E.g. I don't really expect the sea level to rise by 500 meters.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    4. Re:Nature by IRWolfie- · · Score: 1

      It wasn't published in Nature from what I can see.

    5. Re:Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And actually, it has NOT yet been peer reviewed.

    6. Re:Nature by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

      This is quite incorrect. Granted, the press release was positively horrid. Here's the basic gist of the findings: our current understanding of the effect of CO2 on the climate is between 2C-5C temperature forcing per doubling of CO2 (with 3C being the most likely). This new study claims a result closer to 2C.

      So basically, the predicted claim of this study is that global warming should progress along the lower limit of current projections. Except that in reality, warming since 2000 has progressed very close to the middle of projections. That makes the results suspect, to say the least.

      Furthermore, here's a presentation of the results:
      http://www.newton.ac.uk/programmes/CLP/seminars/120812001.pdf

      As page 24 shows, they rather dramatically underestimate the recent Northern Hemisphere warming, so that's another reason to doubt their results. My bet is that their "simple climate model" was too simple, and their data may have been impacted by using lots of data from before there was enough CO2 for it to be a major climate driver.

    7. Re:Nature by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      One thing not to forget does what is the impact of global warming on Norway. Is it positive, neutral or negative and would say a 'Positive' outcome taint climate research from that country, even, if just a subconscious level.

      The only real measurement values that count are average satellite readings, any surface readings are tainted by the focus of measuring equipment at specific locations and not being uniform across the whole planet. It will never be a smooth graph, it will always be in spits and spurts, real bad ones will always be associated with major flooding events due to substantially increased methane output and be calmer with a repeat on the next cycle.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    8. Re:Nature by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Now that was handled with "tact"... ;-)

    9. Re:Nature by Jawnn · · Score: 1

      A peer reviewed study that doesn't quite jive with the prevailing line of thinking appears in the prestigious journal Nature.

      But don't worry, some blogger says it may not be correct. Alarmist Rejoice!

      You keep using that word. I don't not think it means what you think it means. The "alarmist" view is not the one that has the overwhelming consensus.

  10. We have a disbeliever who beliefs in a disbelive ? by burni2 · · Score: 1

    Stop believing, start judging facts,

    and the best thing:
    ASK people who work for insurance companies, then they will tell you a story about their one century spawning statistics and how close many predictions match our climate situation of today. And why they predict that the climate change is real and well 90% is man made, and well some is cow made.

  11. I'd be more comfortable if... by DerekLyons · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the 'reasons to be skeptical' weren't by a journalist and had a bit more meat than "doesn't *quite* fit the received wisdom and thus is fodder for the deniers".

    1. Re:I'd be more comfortable if... by scsirob · · Score: 1

      Journalist: "So why are you skeptical about this apparent good news"?
      Eco-alarmists: "Because it scr*ws up our entire business model made of subsidies, taxes and levies!!"
       

      --
      To Terminate, or not to Terminate, that's the question - SCSIROB
    2. Re:I'd be more comfortable if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You certainly do not hide your bias. That's a good thing. That's also the only good thing I've found about you.

  12. Re:Surprise by Aglassis · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The simple fact that anyone who produces evidence to the contrary is automatically suspect is perhaps THE biggest problem with the entire climate change debate.

    Debate? You see, that is the problem. Climate change is an event, like earthquakes, the sun rising, and cargo ships running into a pier. It is not like a gun control debate or an abortion debate where opinions matter. Climate change simply happens.

    The reason people are suspect when they criticize the overwhelming evidence that exists right now is because there are substantial political and corporate interests that support framing it as uncertain or as a debate. There is also a very noisy group of lunatics who deny all evidence and make up conspiracy theories. We can't prejudge this study, but that doesn't mean that we have to accept it prior to it being thoroughly reviewed by the international scientific community--not corporations or politicians. Science self-corrects, which means that there are occasionally flawed studies and occasionally revolutionary studies. I hate to break it to you, but flawed studies outnumber revolutionary studies by orders of magnitude. This is why the scientific process is so rigorous. Science is hard.

    --
    Suddenly, the hairy finger of a familiar monkey tapped me on the shoulder. It was time.--G. T.
  13. Re:Surprise by DigitalSorceress · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Since the vast majority of people at the South Pole are Scientists and support staff, I'd guess they would be pretty upset if temperatures rose by 40 degrees.. especially since if "Earth temp" rose, that would be average temp and the poles would get a significantly larger share of that than the equator.

    I'm guessing they'd be upset because some of them are there to actually study ice and cold and glaciers.Also, the vast majority of scientific opinion is that climate change IS happening and it's man-made, and I'm guessing that they're going to have the general opinion that it's "not a good thing".

    That much warming and everyone within ~50 miles of the current shoreline of the oceans of the world would need to start commuting to work in scuba gear. (With exceptions for some local geography that can handle a 200' rise in sea levels that would happen if the South Pole and Greenland ice sheets got hit by that much warming (pretty much a total melt of all the glaciers and ice caps).

    Maybe a few mountain climbers wouldn't mind... would maybe make Everest a bit more comfortable to summit - then again, such drastic change would likely F*** up the world's weather patterns so much that it's hard to tell what the result would be.

    I seriously wouldn't want to take the chance.

    And yes, I know that a 40 degree warming is NOT on even the most dire climatologist predictions - I was just extrapolating on your example.

    --

    The Digital Sorceress
  14. How is this "contrary"? by grimJester · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are probably hundreds of studies that try to estimate the climate sensitivity. Most get numbers between 2 and 4 degrees per doubling. This one got 1.9. So?

    1. Re:How is this "contrary"? by bunratty · · Score: 1

      But 1.9 is not between 2 and 4, so those dumbass scientists have no idea. They just keep changing their minds and can't agree on anything, so obviously they have no idea what they're talking about!

      Yes, it's ridiculous, but if you need any excuse not to believe in AGW, it will do just fine.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    2. Re:How is this "contrary"? by budgenator · · Score: 1

      The point is the estimates previously made by the Alarmists have included the recent natural cyclical temperature increases of the nineties, which were exagerated by poorly documented adjustments and thermometer siting issues, while minimising historical temperatures. This has lead the Alarmist's to much gnashing of teeth looking for missing Heat, which hasn't been found simply because they are looking for twice as much as actually exists because they grossly over-estimated climate sensitivity.
      Because of this more realistic climate sensitivity level, future warming wouldn't even make it into the minor inconvenience level, even with a big push from natural variability. Looking at the current trends, not only has there been no statistically demonstratable temperature increase for the past 16 years, there is a decline over the last 5 years. The Cult of Apocolyptic Global Warming just isn't ready for primetime and no amounts of croney-reviewed journal articles or Glieck-esque wire-fraud and forgeries are going to change reality.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    3. Re:How is this "contrary"? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      It's "contrary" to the IPCC's mean extrapolation and the even more dramatic predictions on the high end that get all the publicity and people seem to think are "fact."

    4. Re:How is this "contrary"? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I'm glad to see that you now accept there is Anthropogenic Global Warming. Now you're only quibbling about it's size.

    5. Re:How is this "contrary"? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      You mean "It's towards the bottom of the IPPCs predicted range". It's not contrary to it at all.

      A "mean" does of course imply that some are above and some are below.

    6. Re:How is this "contrary"? by grimJester · · Score: 1

      Looking at the current trends, not only has there been no statistically demonstratable temperature increase for the past 16 years, there is a decline over the last 5 years.

      If you use only the last 16 years you can't reject the idea it's just short term noise, but there's obviously more data than that. Claiming the last 16 years is not enough to show there's warming in the same sentence as you claim the last five years is enough to show cooling is just absurd.

      If you look at the data it's easy to see the amount of years have been cherrypicked to coincide with a peak in temps anyway.

    7. Re:How is this "contrary"? by ballpoint · · Score: 1

      There are probably hundreds of studies that try to estimate the climate sensitivity. Most get numbers between 2 and 4 degrees per doubling. .......... So?

      These studies are falsified by recent observations, and so far as they did so correctly (they were peer reviewed, right ?), so are the theories they rely on. So.

      --
      Flourescent (adj): smelling like ground wheat.
    8. Re:How is this "contrary"? by semi-extrinsic · · Score: 1

      So, the main finding in this study is that incorporating new data from the past ten years into an existing model significantly lowers the estimated climate sensitivity. The obvious implication would be that previous studies which used data sets ending around 2000 are likely to be overestimating climate sensitivity.

      --
      for i in `facebook friends "=bday" 2>/dev/null | cut -d " " -f 3-`; do facebook wallpost $i "Happy birthday!"; done
    9. Re:How is this "contrary"? by khallow · · Score: 1

      I'm glad to see that you now accept there is Anthropogenic Global Warming. Now you're only quibbling about it's size.

      I agree that there is some degree of AGW. But the problem here is that size really does matter since it is crucial to arguments for AGW mitigation.

    10. Re:How is this "contrary"? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I agree that there is some degree of AGW.

      And I'm glad to see you've seen the light too.

  15. Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This study finds warming at the low end of the IPCC projections. Other studies find warming at the high end of IPCC projections. There is uncertainty, and that why the IPCC publishes a range - but this study is not outside the published range. If this study is right then we will be committed to 2C of warming by 2050. We are trying to stay below 2C to avoid hitting some of the more worrisome tipping points and impacts.

    Hopefully this study is right. If so then there is a chance that we can get off of carbon based fuels before we hit the tipping points. I wouldn't bet my kid's future on this one study though.

    1. Re:Poor summary by terec · · Score: 0

      We are trying to stay below 2C to avoid hitting some of the more worrisome tipping points and impacts.

      You use "the tipping points" and "the impacts" as if they were scientific certainty. In fact, they are just speculation at this point.

    2. Re:Poor summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      So has the IPCC stopped taking talking points from environmental groups at face value yet and publishing them as scientific fact? My bets lay to no. And until that stops it's not a credible organization.

      captcha: airlocks

    3. Re:Poor summary by am+2k · · Score: 1

      We are trying to stay below 2C to avoid hitting some of the more worrisome tipping points and impacts.

      You use "the tipping points" and "the impacts" as if they were scientific certainty. In fact, they are just speculation at this point.

      Yes, additionally Celsius/Kelvin is an arbitrary scale (even when it's based around water properties at some specific pressure), so there's no physical meaning to a 2.000000000000000K difference as opposed to 1.999999999998K or any other value in that general area. It's just more convenient to quote a short number, since it's not that exact anyways.

    4. Re:Poor summary by phantomfive · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If so then there is a chance that we can get off of carbon based fuels before we hit the tipping points.

      Which of course is making the assumption that there even is a tipping point, which isn't clear.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:Poor summary by Luckyo · · Score: 4, Informative

      Tipping point is typically considered to be the point when waters get warm enough for methane emissions increase from sediment becomes self-sustaining. We have significant evidence from excavations that suggests that once methane saturation in the air reaches certain point, it will become a self-sustained and very fast paced acceleration.

      This is known because we can assess methane content from excavating ground layers. In other words, we know that this has happened in the past, several times. We also know that sediment contains high amounts of methane that is currently not being released into atmosphere in significant amounts and we know that warming water on top of that sediment will cause these emissions to increase rapidly.

    6. Re:Poor summary by terec · · Score: 2, Informative

      Huh? Tipping points at any temperature within a few degrees of current temperatures are pure speculation, and actually quite unlikely given climate history

    7. Re:Poor summary by thoughtfulbloke · · Score: 2

      I would regard an extinction level event to ocean acidification as a tipping point, and based on the geological record we seem on track for that.

    8. Re:Poor summary by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That's definitely a hypothesis.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    9. Re:Poor summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tipping points have happened before. The tipping point of permafrost melting and releasing methane is already happening. You need to read more widely.

    10. Re:Poor summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Troll huh? Am I factually incorrect? No, I am not.

    11. Re:Poor summary by sg_oneill · · Score: 1

      The "tipping point" people refer to is the point where methane calthrate is being released at a higher rate from cryotic soils than CO2/Methane/etc can be sunk. Once this happens, to put it bluntly, we're fucked. The last time we believe this happened on a major scale was te he permian-triasic exctinction event that nearly ended life on the planet. This was caused, it is believed, by a 4c rise in temperatures which tipped a calthrates defrosting event, and the 4c turned into a 10c+ global warming which is enough to potentially end life on the planet.

      We know the temperatures from this:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Methane_Hydrate_phase_diagram.jpg

      Its very simple science, and you can "model" it on a pocket calculator. No speculation required. If 4c is enough as it was in the permian-triasic event (remember that was 4c over about 1000 years, not 4c in 100 years, a much more dramatic event) to set off a full blown calthrate melt-off, to put it mildly we are fucked and then some.

      --
      Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
    12. Re:Poor summary by jafac · · Score: 1

      some recent observations (since 2010) of massive arctic methane releases are very worrysome.

      These will necessarily have to be validated by satellite lidar measurements when a german mission with the proper instrumentation flies in 2014. Until then, we are basically blind and speculating on the matter. But it does not look good.

      If there are, indeed, massive methane releases going on, there is a pie-in-the-sky shot at geoengineering using 13.56 MHz transmitters to try to break-up the methane molecules before they rise higher than 50km in the atmosphere;

      http://arctic-news.blogspot.com/2012/10/radio-and-laser-frequency-and-harmonic-test-ranges-for-the-lucy-and-haarp-experiments-and-their-application-to-atmospheric-methane-destruction.html

      But if that doesn't work, I would expect things to go downhill fairly rapidly in the next 20 years.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    13. Re:Poor summary by terec · · Score: 1

      You moved the line from 2C (where the original post put the threshold) to 4C. Do you have any evidence or even plausible argument for a tipping point at 2C, as the original post claimed? If not, just admit that there is no evidence.

    14. Re:Poor summary by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      I scanned that article and found no reference to why 13.56 MHz is a 'magic frequency' with regard to methane. With a wavelength of 22.1+ meters, it wouldn't have any sort of resonance with methane. In fact, the article goes on to talk about bond lengths and distances on the 10^-10m range, which is more like laser frequencies. My bet is that 13.56 MHz was chosen because it is a very popular ISM frequency for which there is plenty of COTS hardware.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    15. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Which of course is making the assumption that there even is a tipping point, which isn't clear.

      There are many tipping points. We are teetering on the fulcrum of one in the Arctic. As Arctic summer ice extent decreases the earth's albedo decreases and less solar energy is reflected. Once this occurs (and it is already occurring) even if we found a way to reduce atmospheric CO2 to pre-2012 levels we would still not manage to lower the Earth's temperature. The added solar energy would offset any gains made by reducing CO2. This is well established and basic science.

    16. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Tipping points are a certainty. We can observe them in the paleoclimate record, and we observe them occurring today. For an example see the effect of shrinking summer Arctic ice extent on albedo. This is already occurring. You can read more on tipping points here: http://www.pnas.org/content/105/6/1786.short

      Impacts are also a certainty. For examples review the following 1.6 million papers: http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=impacts+of+climate+change&as_sdt=1%2C5&as_sdtp=

    17. Re:Poor summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So has the IPCC stopped taking talking points from environmental groups at face value yet and publishing them as scientific fact? My bets lay to no. And until that stops it's not a credible organization.

      captcha: airlocks

      And have you stopped beating your wife yet?

      You probably don't see the logical fallacy in both those questions.

    18. Re:Poor summary by terec · · Score: 1

      Yes, tipping points and serious impacts are a certainty, but not at 2C.

      Come back when you have a rational and coherent argument.

    19. Re:Poor summary by phantomfive · · Score: 1
      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    20. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      We are already hitting tipping points. See Arctic summer ice extent. We are already seeing impacts. See U.S drought of 2012 which is clearly exacerbated by record temperatures.

    21. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Some things to consider:

      1) This chart does not include albedo change due to Arctic ice extent change. Likely because this is from the 2007 IPCC report - which probably means the data is from 2006 or earlier. Ice loss has been dramatic since then: http://scienceblogs.com/illconsidered/files/2012/10/201209-record-low-monthly-arctic-extent-590x441.png

      2) For this comparison you would need to look at albedo change due to decrease in Arctic summer ice extent vs radiative forcing of CO2 added in a single year. This will give you a good approximation of how many years worth of CO2 you would need to put back in the ground to address the forcing added by the albedo loss.

    22. Re:Poor summary by terec · · Score: 1

      You can't be hitting "tipping points" like milestones; it doesn't make sense. A "tipping point" is when the global climate changes irreversibly and strongly from one stable state to another. If we had already hit a tipping point towards a warmer climate, we wouldn't have to talk about climate change at all anymore, because it would be getting warmer no matter what we do with CO2 emissions.

    23. Re:Poor summary by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      If the forcing from the albedo were enough to be a tipping point, that is, if receding ice changed the temperature enough to keep the ice from coming back, then the ice would be gone already. So we can know it is highly unlikely that the albedo will cause some irreversible tipping point.

      Also, worrying about the changes in the low arctic extent is a bit curious considering the change from winter to summer is an order of magnitude larger.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    24. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      if receding ice changed the temperature enough to keep the ice from coming back, then the ice would be gone already.

      I'm not sure that follows - especially since the ice didn't recover from the drop in 2007 which was quite a bit below the (then moderate) trend. We have now had another drop (below the 2007) level of equal magnitude in 2012.

      worrying about the changes in the low arctic extent is a bit curious considering the change from winter to summer is an order of magnitude larger

      There is no sun in the Arctic in the winter so winter extent doesn't impact albedo. Summer extent is important because the summer sun never sets in the Arctic.

    25. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Not so. See Lenton, Held 2008 for example.

    26. Re:Poor summary by terec · · Score: 1

      Why don't you read what you cite:

      Our synthesis of present knowledge suggests that a variety of tipping elements could reach their critical point within this century under anthropogenic climate change.

      I.e., even the authors of that rather shoddy paper only say that these "tipping elements" haven't reached their "tipping point" yet, and they "could reach it" under current projects.

      And there is little actual science in that paper. They just sat down, drew up a list, and then asked a bunch of their friends what they thought ("expert elicitation").

    27. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      The point is that you are wrong when you say: A "tipping point" is when the global climate changes irreversibly and strongly from one stable state to another.

      That is not true. That is only a subset of the common usage of tipping point. As the paper states: In discussions of global change, the term tipping point has been used to describe a variety of phenomena, including the appearance of a positive feedback, reversible phase transitions, phase transitions with hysteresis effects, and bifurcations where the transition is smooth but the future path of the system depends on the noise at a critical point.

      All of these are tipping points. Some of these are already occurring. It is only possible to say that we are not hitting tipping points if you narrow the definition - as was done in this paper.

      It is certainly valid for a paper to narrow the definition. We want to understand what exact conditions they are looking at. It is not valid on a blog to say "we are not hitting tipping points" unless you add something like: "and by tipping point I mean everything that we are not already hitting."

    28. Re:Poor summary by terec · · Score: 1

      That is not true. That is only a subset of the common usage of tipping point. As the paper states

      The term "tipping point" clearly implies a strong, irreversible change by its very imagery. If climate activists start using it in a different sense, then they are being manipulative and dishonest.

      All of these are tipping points

      If you call these events "tipping points", then we have been hitting "tipping points" constantly for the past 20000 years, so we obviously don't have to worry about them.

    29. Re:Poor summary by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Summer extent isn't a single number.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    30. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      so?

    31. Re:Poor summary by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Ice extent changes dramatically during summer.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    32. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      I couldn't say what activists are using the term for. This is from the scientific literature braniac. Also, I'm not sure that loss of arctic summer ice is anything to scoff at. It already appears to be responsible for blocking patterns that have caused severe weather around the globe -and once gone it ain't coming back.

      So now that we understand that we are heading towards tipping points (and have likely already toppled one), are there worrisome tipping points that we might hit at 2C? The IPCC predicted that a warming of 1.9-4.6C would cause radical shrinking or complete melting of the Greenland ice sheet. Newer research by Füssel, H. (2009) estimated this to be closer to 1.5-2.5C. This would radically accelerate sea level rise (which is already accelerating). Again, the resulting loss of albedo would mean that we would have to bury more carbon to reverse it than it took to cause it. On top of that there is no economical way to bury carbon.

    33. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      So? We are talking about summer minimum extent. If you are suggesting that because ice returns in the winter then it will be able to recover to historic levels in the summer then I think you are missing a few bricks. Forgive me if I've misunderstood your position.

      Arctic summer temperatures will not return to historic levels just because it is cold in the winter. The carbon that has caused summer temperature records survives winter. On top of that you have the albedo loss. Even if we found a way to bury the carbon we would still have to find a way to compensate for the albedo loss. We would have to bury more carbon to reverse the effect than it took to cause the effect. This is not complicated.

    34. Re:Poor summary by terec · · Score: 1

      Newer research by Füssel, H. (2009) estimated this to be closer to 1.5-2.5C.

      AFAIK, Füssel has conducted no research that would allow him to reach that conclusion. Which paper is that supposed to be.

      Furthermore, the Greenland ice sheet melting might be a dramatic event, but it is not a "tipping point" by itself (since there is likely little positive feedback). And no matter how warm it gets, it would take more than a thousand years for it to melt.

      So now that we understand that we are heading towards tipping points (and have likely already toppled one), are there worrisome tipping points that we might hit at 2C?

      Just changing the definition of "tipping point" like you try to do doesn't change the facts: there is no evidence that there are any dramatic or irreversible changes happening within 2C of current temperatures.

    35. Re:Poor summary by wisdom_brewing · · Score: 1

      Argh, more science please.WE DO NOT KNOW. WE BELIEVE THE MOST LIKELY SCENARIO GIVEN THE AVAILABLE KNOWLEDGE is that... There is no - Scientists say X is the case. There can be a case of most scientist agree that X is the most likely case. We have no PROOF of evolution. We have EVIDENCE that suggests that it is the most likely progression of life through the ages. I BELIEVE in evolution. That does not mean that, as a scientist, I would completely discount an different theory if there were facts (observable or otherwise) to strongly support such a theory I would completely disregard is. Confirmation bias is a bitch. I constantly have to force myself to read articles/papers on theories that I suspected were a shut case. Please. We do not KNOW anything.

    36. Re:Poor summary by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Stupidity reigns supreme. You do not know that you exist. You merely believe that you do given the available knowledge.

      As a result, I present on the same merits as you that as there is no confirmation as to do you exist or not, your opinions do not exist either.

    37. Re:Poor summary by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The albedo change from minimum to minimum is negligible compared to the change that happens every summer.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    38. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      It is not my definition. This is from the literature. Both the IPCC and more recent studies potentially have this tipping at 2C. The writing is already on the wall for arctic sea ice minimum. Clearly we are already hitting tipping points and there are more worrisome tipping points just over the horizon.

    39. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Ce? The minimum occurs in the summer....

    40. Re:Poor summary by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The minimum doesn't last all summer long; the ice extent changes quite a bit during summer.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    41. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      ... And therefore... ? Just stating obvious facts doesn't a compelling argument make. Where are you going with this? As near as I'm able to tell your argument is still akin to "It is cold in the winter so clearly summer ice will recover to historic levels." I have to presume you are going for something more sensible but I can't figure out what that might be. Throw me a bone here!

    42. Re:Poor summary by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      So if the change in albedo alone were enough to cause a runaway effect that was unrecoverable, then it would have already happened. The change in albedo is a feedback surely, but it's not a tipping point.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    43. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      So if the change in albedo alone were enough to cause a runaway effect that was unrecoverable, then it would have already happened

      Do you have anything to back that up? That doesn't even seem intuitively correct, let alone something that you could show.

      Look at the area between the climatalogical average ice extent curve and curve for any year in the 80's or 90's. (see the bottom left quadrant of http://arctic-roos.org/observations/satellite-data/sea-ice/ice-area-and-extent-in-arctic). Sometimes the area is positive, sometimes negative, but always it is small. The albedo change year to year is negligible.

      Now look at the difference for any year this decade compared to climatology. Extend solar irradiance (1365.5-1366.5 W/m^2 depending on the year) over that area. Now extend that over the part of the year with arctic daylight. Big number eh? Now compare that to CO2 (5.35 x ln (C/C0) W/m^2) over the surface of the Earth 24x7 for a year. How much CO2 do you need to bury to compensate the change in albedo (solve for C0)? Now do you get it?

    44. Re:Poor summary by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Oh, here's you're problem, you're using the solar constant (1360 W/m^2) to calculate the solar forcing on the surface, in the arctic. The arctic never gets anywhere near the full 1360 W/m^2. Consider the difference between the sun at noon, and the sun at 5:00PM. In addition sea ice doesn't reflect the full spectrum of light. You are also ignoring clouds, which (obviously) have a huge impact on temperatures in the arctic. Your calculation is so wrong I'm not even sure whether you were purposely being deceptive. The glaciologist towards the bottom of this page predicts that the loss of the entire ice cap would be equivalent to 1.3 W/m^2 globally (he also predicts that will happen within 3 years, so we'll see on that one).

      You do bring up a good point though, that arctic ice albedo does seem like it would have an important effect. It seems like something you might want to put on this chart from the IPCC report (chapter 2) Why didn't they? In fact I can't find where they address the topic at all; chapter 2 seems like the reasonable place to put it. That seems like an important thing to miss.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    45. Re:Poor summary by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Yup. You need to adjust for angle of incidence. As you note we are not far now from a collapse. If you want to use 1.3W/m^2 globally, that's fine, though I'm not sure why you would prefer it. How does that compare to 1.78W/m^2 for carbon? Solving for C, it looks like we would need to bury all the carbon released in the last 20 years just to cover for the loss of albedo. There is no cost effective way to bury carbon. Now do you get it?

  16. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The simple fact that so many people who oppose addressing environmental concerns have produced false evidence and fraud to support their agenda, to the point where they even manufacture similar accusations based on similarly shoddy evidence against those with environmental concerns, is a far bigger problem with the entire climate change discussion.

    It's not a debate, it's a discussion.

    That distinction is important. But don't pretend that your "contrary evidence producers" are the persecuted victims. That's just a false martyrdom meant to exploit people's emotions.

  17. Average all by Ateocinico · · Score: 0

    Norwegian study vale + French study value + German study value + Australian study value + .....
    Then divide by N and you have the "truth".

    1. Re:Average all by KiloByte · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So let's divine the number of gods that exist by averaging the number of gods that world's religion claim to exist.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    2. Re:Average all by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2

      So let's divine the number of gods

      No need for that. The number of gods already is divine by definition. ;-)

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    3. Re:Average all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The answer is "42"

    4. Re:Average all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      old, tiresome joke. please mod down.

    5. Re:Average all by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a more reasonable approach than has been used so far.

    6. Re:Average all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      for my alternative math axioms 2+2 is infinity, therefore from now on for the rest of you 2+2 is no longer 4. Please update your math coprocessors accordingly.

    7. Re:Average all by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      for my alternative math axioms 2+2 is infinity, therefore from now on for the rest of you 2+2 is no longer 4. Please update your math coprocessors accordingly.

      Sorry, but I calculate the mean value with my math axioms, where the mean value of 4 and infinity is 4. Therefore there's no need to update my math oprocessor.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    8. Re:Average all by Ateocinico · · Score: 1

      So if the study goes in line with my beliefs, then it's ok. No? The point really is that this days anyone has a study that fits his (her) agenda. That the temperatures are going up is a fact. But no interpretation or hypothesis is a fact yet. In any case, ask a geologist when the earth has been a isothermal process. And I don't buy that a pre-human nirvana was harmed by the evil industrial civilization, like some luddist and gnostics preach us.

    9. Re:Average all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better yet, let's multiply the god-count from each religion to get a total product. I'm fairly sure that will give the correct answer, as long as you don't exclude any religions.

    10. Re:Average all by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Personally, I'd say that quality of life went down when we invented farming. Our industrial civilization has generally raised it, but has other large effects on the world.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  18. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Dump apes" sound like they would be messy to keep in a zoo.

  19. Climate change is longterm by Hentes · · Score: 1

    Ten years is too short time for any conclusion.

    1. Re:Climate change is longterm by serviscope_minor · · Score: 3, Funny

      My god those scientists must be idiots. Thank the very same god we've got Hentes to clear things up for us!

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    2. Re:Climate change is longterm by superwiz · · Score: 1

      Not really. Not when studying a trend in which the main conclusion was drawn based on a jump during a 20 year period. Plateauing for 10 years is actually quite telling about the overall trend..

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    3. Re:Climate change is longterm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are fucking idiots. Don't be fooled, these are still normal human beings. They aren't super-geniuses that crap Einstein and piss Hawking.

      They're throwing statistical correlations out like it's science, performing experiments on very specific areas of carbon dioxide emission and then applying their results to the entire world's ecosystem, they add forcing to their calculations both before and after an experiment in order to massage their values into the accepted projection range, and they go back and forth on the validity of various time periods (100,000 years is too much because our situation is different now that humans are involved, an off-year that doesn't match isn't a credible data point, 10-100 years is perfectly acceptable but not the preceding thousand years, and there's those extinction events that we don't really know what caused them but we're just going to go ahead and say rising temperatures due to climate change even though none of the other much bigger extinction events were from non-ice age climate change events and did I mention we still don't have a credible cause for it anyway so it would really be a shame to continue on without blaming something, amirite?), and they tell people that a 4-8C average rise in temperature will kill everyone when we haven't even begun to see the upper limits of human climate adaptation while plants and animals have historically survived better in higher average temperatures.

      Meanwhile, any sort of discrepancies are hidden behind the forcing, anyone that disagrees is immediately labelled a denier or a moron and religiously persecuted, and any studies that show differences from the accepted projection range are immediately and ceremoniously disputed and buried in counter-studies.

  20. Re:Global Warming and The Sky Is Falling by etash · · Score: 2, Insightful

    you forgot to mention that...elvis still lives and americans didn't land on the moon.

  21. As if it matters by segfault_0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not like we have world or national governance that can do anything about it.

    The US government can't make a budget or run a money system of their own creation -- yet you think they can absorb science, understand it, and react to it in an effective fashion?

    Such things only exist so that there can be sides for people to join and so there can be issues to argue about.

    And we should all piss our pants if someone publishes that its slightly higher or slightly lower than expected? Laughable.. argue on children.

    --

    I was crazy back when being crazy really meant something. (Charles Manson)
    1. Re:As if it matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US might do something if China and India come to the table.

      China is opening a new coal-fired electricity plant every week. If they keep doing that, it doesn't matter what the US and Western Europe do.

      And don't start about per capita. The planet doesn't care about per capita. All that matters is tons emitted.

      If we do something and China doesn't, all carbon-heavy production (cement, paper, etc.) will move to China and we will import it exporting carbon (and jobs) by proxy.

    2. Re:As if it matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US government can't make a budget or run a money system of their own creation

      Thats funny... just today I exchanged paper money for goods and services!

    3. Re:As if it matters by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 1

      Not like we have world or national governance that can do anything about it.

      The US government can't make a budget or run a money system of their own creation -- yet you think they can absorb science, understand it, and react to it in an effective fashion?

      Such things only exist so that there can be sides for people to join and so there can be issues to argue about.

      And we should all piss our pants if someone publishes that its slightly higher or slightly lower than expected? Laughable.. argue on children.

      But the Govts of the world are doing something about it. Science or Religion (or both for some) have been manipulated by Govts for ever to 'control' the masses. I'm not a tin hat wearer, but I can understand the reasoning. The reason some folks don't want to have a changing environment, be it naturally or man-influenced, is because it can have a great affect on global or regional power. But guess what, there is little we can do to stop it. Can it be slowed? Perhaps, but only time will tell on that one.

      --
      There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
    4. Re:As if it matters by segfault_0 · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between taking action and making a difference. I was suggesting that they could not be effective, not that they couldn't act out.

      Also, I think the Buddha had the last meaningful word on a human beings ability to stop change, and that was a few thousand years ago.

      --

      I was crazy back when being crazy really meant something. (Charles Manson)
  22. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Climate change simply happens.

    Nice thought-terminating clichee you got there.
    How conveniently it wipes away all rational thought and “but”s.

    PROTIP: While what happens is fixed, that which is perceived by our senses, minds, and from our state in space-time, is not. And it's not easy at all, to determine what happens just from that. That's call science.

    There is also a very noisy group of lunatics who deny all evidence and make up conspiracy theories.

    And you don't even seem to realize, that with your rigid ignorant mindset and dismissal of the scientific method, that includes you.
    It's just that your conspiracy theory is that everyone who doesn't blindly follow your mindset and dares to question anything, is an evil lunatic conspiracy theorist. ... Mixing people who ask valid questions in with the actual ignorant deniers/lunatics of both "sides" (including yours).

    Like the ones you criticism, you have to right to speak in the name of science. Your mindset is the opposite of a scientific one. It is one of boneheaded stubborn belief. Yes, you believe in the right view, from what I can tell. But you do not think . You believe. And that's where you're a complete fucking nutjob too.

  23. Re:Surprise by loufoque · · Score: 2

    Norway and Sweden are very different; some conflicts even exist between the two.
    Norway has a bigger territory, and has control over all the areas where there are natural resources.
    Norway has a much smaller population.
    Sweden has a more vibrant society and prettier girls.
    Norway is much more rich thanks to all the oil.

  24. Re:Surprise by loufoque · · Score: 1

    I forgot to say the obvious: Sweden is in the EU, Norway isn't.

  25. Re:We have a disbeliever who beliefs in a disbeliv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So 100% is man made. Since those are not free cows. They are man-owned, man-bred, mad-used cows.

  26. So let me see if I have this... by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1, Troll

    The so-called "global warming deniers" are to be scorned, ridiculed, and otherwise have their professional reputations destroyed by any means necessary but it's just fine and dandy to be skeptical of this study.

    1. Re:So let me see if I have this... by Luckyo · · Score: 2

      Study in a nutshell:

      "By taking in account a best case scenario, our number just barely miss the 2.0-4.0 increase prediction by 0.1 degree. We agree with the fact that global warming is man made and happening but we think that numbers should be lower then expected if best case criteria are met".

    2. Re:So let me see if I have this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reality in a nutshell:

          Global warming has never been proven to be man made and the predicted warming effects are not adding up, either. Of course, the scientific community has thrown about reckless alarmist nonsense supposedly in a bid to get people to act and the politicians have seized upon the "crisis" to push a redistributionist agenda. The liberal crowd loves to throw around insults and elitist remarks but their evidence is slowly crumbling out from beneath them despite their best denials.

  27. Re:Surprise by KiloByte · · Score: 1

    Merely "a bit"? You hurt me! :p

    I was aiming at "some insight, lots of WTF". The former is: even with such a massive warm-up, some places today inhabitable would become comfortable to live; as for the latter, DigitalSorceress' post nearby is exhaustive enough. Outlandish hyperboles aside, my point is that there's a massive tolerance, both ways, before traditional ways of human life would become impossible. Being able to sustain a large population or avoiding hardships of migration are another story, though.

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  28. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    +1 Funny

  29. AWGers have lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    Quickly looking at the story, the conclusion I HAVE to come to is AWG proponents have lost. Their viewpoint is either AWG is so horrible and so far along that there is nothing we can do about it, so why would we even bother? Or, if they become reasonable at this point and say, like this article attempts to, that it isn't so bad that there is something we can do about it, the anti-AWG people will destroy them with pointing out their previous lies (Gore's hockey stick graph comes to mind).

    So its either unavoidable, or the AWG people lied to the point where no one will ever listen to them again. Either way we do nothing. Let this be an object lesson, but really you should have learned this in elementry school with "Peter and the Wolf". I guess that just shows AWG people are unable to be reasonable and have pushed everyone who isn't a wacko like them so far against them they will never become mainstream.

    Congratulations on defeating yourselves.

    1. Re:AWGers have lost by ballpoint · · Score: 1

      Let this be an object lesson, but really you should have learned this in elementry school with "Peter and the Wolf".

      At this point, we don't know whether the boy who cried wolf was called Peter. Could be, but the story doesn't say so explicitly.

      --
      Flourescent (adj): smelling like ground wheat.
  30. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is ultranova's comment rated as a 'troll'? The fact is that Norway is among the top oil suppliers of this planet.

  31. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The reason people are suspect when they criticize the overwhelming evidence that exists right now is because there are substantial political and corporate interests that support framing it as uncertain or as a debate

    Do you know what the problem with that argument is? The problem is that regardless of what the magnitude of anthropogenic global warming actually is, it *started* with substantial political and corporate interests framing it as certain and apocalyptic. In addition, while the scientists of the IPCC may actually be neutral parties, the fact that the IPCC is a UN organization doing research on a subject that blocs of countries could leverage into significant economic advantages at the very least suggests conflicts of interest. And it's a legitimate question to ask what research has been suppressed or minimized as a result of the initial politicization of the issue. (Quite frankly, I'm surprised that Slashdot even decided to report this one, since they have generally missed or skipped peer-reviewed research contradicting the apocalyptic GW scenarios for the past five years.)

    This is why the scientific process is so rigorous. Science is hard.

    Quite right, but in ways you didn't think of. Because of the politicization of climate science, individual scientists now have to eliminate personal bias, politics, and economics from their research. There are suggestions that scientists on both sides are unable to do this, which makes finding out the "truthiness" of climate science very difficult.

    Debate? You see, that is the problem. Climate change is an event, like earthquakes, the sun rising, and cargo ships running into a pier. It is not like a gun control debate or an abortion debate where opinions matter. Climate change simply happens.

    And here is the irony in your post. Based on this statement, you're what neutral parties call a "believer." Neutral parties generally accept that there probably is some anthropogenic global warming going on. Neutral parties are also smart enough to still ask what that rate of change is, if the climate models are correct enough, what the error bars are on those models, *before* asking if there is anything we should do about it.

    The OP asked a perfectly valid question; unfortunately, it was answered by you, a zealot.

  32. Re:Surprise by Shaman · · Score: 0

    This. Wish I could upvote, despite the inflammatory nature of it.

    --
    ...Steve
  33. Petroleum bias by jurgen · · Score: 0, Troll

    Norway is one of the richest countries in the world... it has the second highest GDP per capita. Norwegians enjoy an incredibly high standard of living across the board... there is very little wealth-disparity and almost no poverty. Education is free and health-care is universal. It's a good life! And it's all largely thanks to oil, of which Norway has lots. Over 55% of Norway's GDP comes directly from petroleum. Imagine if you and all your fellow citizens had half of your assets invested in oil companies and depended on those investments for half of all your income and half of all your future retirement... in Norway that's the reality.

    I wouldn't accuse the scientists of Norway's research council of fabricating data or anything, but they can't help but have a strong bias.

    1. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ad hominine attacks help no one. Most scientists don't give a shit for political, corporate or government motivations, if you have something that says their numbers are fudged then point it out rather than making irrelevant statements trying to imply they have bias.

    2. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't accuse the scientists of Norway's research council of fabricating data or anything

      Then why did you? ..or was everything you just said just 'informational' and shit?

    3. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, it's ad hominem.

      Secondly while most scientists don't give a shit, petroleum and climate change research are interesting areas where corporate funding can and does have an extreme influence on what kind of research is conducted (and published). This is not to cast aspersions on the Norwegian researchers who wrote this study - I have no idea whether they receive funding from petro interests. But GP has a point - conflicts of interest might be something to at least look into here.

    4. Re:Petroleum bias by jurgen · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'm not saying their numbers are "fudged". But science isn't as objective as scientists would like us to believe, especially when it's about systems as complex as the earth's climate. Scientists's subconscious biases affect their results... there has actually been a bunch of research showing THAT in recent years. In this particular case I think the scientists in question saw what they wanted to see in the uncertainties inherent in the data.

    5. Re:Petroleum bias by jurgen · · Score: 2

      I *didn't* accuse them of fabricating anything. I just pointed out ("informationally" if you like) that they have an inherent bias. If they were perfect scientists that bias wouldn't affect their results, but nobody is perfect. Because of this bias, even if it be subconscious, they are more likely to draw certain conclusions from the same set of data than other scientists with less or different biases.

    6. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bullshit, if science is done right it most definitely IS objective. If they are doing something that is somehow affecting their results then it will be obvious for you to find and point out, after all it is maths, these are not fuzzy numbers, either their maths is right or wrong, I don't know which but I do know that if your personal bias is affecting your results you are doing something incredibly wrong with your scientific methodology.

    7. Re:Petroleum bias by jurgen · · Score: 2, Informative

      Your understanding of the scientific method is a bit naive. Lots of incorrect results pass peer review even in the most prestigious journals and sometimes are discovered as being incorrect only years later (or never)... because there is always some "fuzziness" in real-world experiments or data analysis. Were the experiments designed correctly? Was the data read correctly? Were there any errors in the analysis (mathematical or otherwise)? Is the logic leading to the conclusions correct? Peers who read the papers may or may not spot the errors... sometimes because the errors are subtle, and sometimes because even the smartest peers don't fully understand the research in the first place. (And with regard to the this Norwegian government research... well it hasn't even been peer-reviewed yet.)

      There are a lot of steps in research and in each of the stops bias can creep in even if the researchers are honest and well-intentioned.

      For more about this see, i.e.:
      http://www.nature.com/news/beware-the-creeping-cracks-of-bias-1.10600
      http://www.niam.scarp.se/download/18.71afa2f11269da2a40580007299/Huesseman%2B-%2BBiases.pdf
      http://radiology.rsna.org/content/238/3/780.full
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experimenter's_bias

      ...and lots more. In some areas of research (specifically bio-medical) there have been estimates (based on meta-analysis) that as much as half of all published results are wrong, and mostly along the lines of the researchers inherent biases.

    8. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucking racist.

    9. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are many middle eastern countries without all of the benefits you just described...
      I'm fairly confident it has more to do with politics than oil... Having politicians with the balls to say in public that they want a social welfare state, is what makes the difference...

      Taxes might be slightly lower than other comparable nations in Europe: Sweden, Denmark, Finland... But these other nations without significant oil reserves have the same benefits as they do in Norway.

      It isn't oil, but social politics that makes the difference!

    10. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      She asked me to stay and she said I could sit anywhere
      Then I looked around and I noticed there wasn't a chair
      And when I awoke I was alone, this bird had flown.
      I turned up the heat, isn't it cool, Norwegian Fuel.

    11. Re:Petroleum bias by ballpoint · · Score: 1

      I'm Norwegian and I can inform you otherwise. What you're describing was before islam arrived (2nd generation fanatics) and helped throw massive amounts of grit into the system, a system of homogeneous societal trust that was never built to survive massive intentional abuse and violence. Now we're as fucked as everyone else even though the numbers on paper look prettier than elsewhere (as long as you squint just right and pretend not to know this or that). The last two years it has started to become plainly visible to just about any and all Norwegians and even the mainstream media is writing about the serious deficiencies (but not yet the root causes).

      Some people have even stopped caring enough about their own well-being to bluntly admit to their own "nasty" thoughts! Even among the socialists! Ten more years of this and Europeans will make Hitler look like a lackadaisical pansy (I can't decide whether that's for better or worse but it would be nice to avoid it and still get rid of all the "cultural enrichments").

      Anders, is that you ?

      --
      Flourescent (adj): smelling like ground wheat.
    12. Re:Petroleum bias by Albinoman · · Score: 0

      Climate science does not do "scientific methodology" though. Where is your control, and where is your experiment? Because both warming and cooling is being attributed to global warming it is not falsifiable. How often do we see news articles that say about models being revised? What gets glossed over is the fact that it means previous models are wrong. Its also not as simple as 1 + 2 = "hot planet" either, so saying its either right or wrong means that it is without out a doubt, wrong. You can argue that its just innacurate, but its still very certainly still wrong.

      When quantum physics does the math, they also have been finding ways to prove it (LHC).

    13. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then how come our government is pro global warming??
      If there is a bias then it is towards warming and not the other way.

    14. Re:Petroleum bias by TangoMargarine · · Score: 1

      You'll have to excuse me if I don't take you seriously as you A) are using an ad hominem argument in the first place, and B) can't even spell it correctly.

      --
      Unity? Screw that: XFCE. Slashdot Beta? Screw that: SoylentNews. Australis? Screw that: Pale Moon. UX developers DIAF
    15. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also: Norway is quite cold country. GW is probably welcome there.

    16. Re:Petroleum bias by terjeber · · Score: 2

      I wouldn't accuse the scientists of Norway's research council of fabricating data or anything, but they can't help but have a strong bias.

      Problem with your logic is that it runs counter to observable facts. Norway has a very, very strong AGW leaning. Politicians, people in general etc. We have an ex-prime minister who said that AGW skeptics are evil (a word right out of religious debate). So, looking at what is the actual mindset of Norwegian scientists, you are dead wrong.

      Funny enough, even if Norway was concerned with the market for its petroleum products in the future, they'd still probably be advocating the reduced use of oil as a fuel. Even if we stop burning oil tomorrow, the market for petroleum based products is going to rise significantly in the years to come. Norway wins out, whether we go all electrical and sustainable or not. In fact, more so if we do.

    17. Re:Petroleum bias by terjeber · · Score: 1

      This is not to cast aspersions on the Norwegian researchers who wrote this study - I have no idea whether they receive funding from petro interests

      They do not. Question answered.

    18. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The above poster is going full retard and just applying his own prejudices on the Norwegian society.

      It is actually because we are so wealthy and protected from economic instabilities that we have the leeway to be honest about climate change, and the idea of denying climate change is seen by pretty much everyone as a fringe thing. You'd actually be hard pressed to find that many other governments that are as serious about pushing the climate change 'agenda'.

    19. Re:Petroleum bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't agree with the results?

      Attack the source.

      Got it.

  34. Re:Surprise by terec · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The reason people are suspect when they criticize the overwhelming evidence that exists right now is because there are substantial political and corporate interests that support framing it as uncertain or as a debate.

    The "evidence" that exists is that it has been getting a bit warmer; few people disagree with that. The "debate" is about what that means. Is it going to continue to get warmer? Is there anything we can do about it? Should we? What are the costs?

    There are a lot of people who like to confuse the little bit of scientific fact we have with issues of extrapolation, prediction, and policy. That is not science, it is just dishonesty.

  35. Re:Surprise by rubycodez · · Score: 1, Interesting

    you commit the fallacy of "asserting the consequent". Overwhelming evidence? you mean like the claimed "record high temperatures" in Australia which actually are just a cyclical repeat of 1972, but for a fraction of a degree difference that is only due to more sensors and heat islands? Or the temperature rises and melting in western antartica which are more than offset by the increased formation in the MUCH LARGER east?

  36. Re:Surprise by foniksonik · · Score: 1

    Actually they are great, they eat all the wasted food thrown into the trash. Natural habit is garbage dumps. One of the great adaptations of the world after man arrived. Probably last longer than us (with the cockroaches).

    --
    A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
  37. The leveling off was predicted by Burz · · Score: 2

    due to solar and (lack of) el nino cycles coinciding. Its quite temporary and we're already coming out of it.

    1. Re:The leveling off was predicted by djKing · · Score: 1

      I'd love to see a source for that prediction.

      --
      Free as in "the Truth shall set you..."
    2. Re:The leveling off was predicted by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      Except for the El Nino conditions in 2006. And in 2009. Other than that we haven't seen El Nino conditions. Of course 2007 saw a strong La Nina event.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    3. Re:The leveling off was predicted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet another global warming denier. Take a look at the global temperatures between 2010 and 2012 and you will see a drastic increase. Capitalistic greed has finally caught up with us and more wild fires are the result. This has drastically increased the levels of Co2 and soon methane ice will melt which will greatly increase the global temperatures even more. We may very well be at the tipping point and it may not be too much longer before AGW becomes unstoppable and the Earth will have an atmosphere very similar to Venus, unable to sustain any life at all.

    4. Re:The leveling off was predicted by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 1

      And 2012 was the warmest La Nina year ever recorded. Obviously the planet has stopped warming!

      --
      "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
    5. Re:The leveling off was predicted by jafac · · Score: 1

      actually, here in California, we're currently seeing the effects of a weak El Nino since late 2012. But it was very brief, and seems to be fading. NOAA was talking about it in November. They seem to avoid using the politically charged term "El Nino" now. . .

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  38. Granted it's a scientific study... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    and not news reporting, but in journalism it's a truism that anytime a title ends in a question mark, the answer is "no."

    The title of the paper in question: “Global warming less extreme than feared?”

    1. Re:Granted it's a scientific study... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      And the title of one of Einstein's papers was:

      Does the Inertia of a Body Depend upon its Energy-Content?

      So maybe it just doesn't apply to scientific papers?

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:Granted it's a scientific study... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Slashdot readers: Do they get humorous observations?"

  39. Re:Surprise by ilguido · · Score: 1

    Debate? You see, that is the problem. Climate change is an event, like earthquakes, the sun rising, and cargo ships running into a pier. It is not like a gun control debate or an abortion debate where opinions matter. Climate change simply happens.

    True, now tell that to all those lunatics that say it is human made for certain, and never debate (oh well, there should be a debate) how to deal with a natural climate shift, but just say we must do this or that to prevent it (like it was assured that we can prevent it).

    The reason people are suspect when they criticize the overwhelming evidence that exists right now is because there are substantial political and corporate interests that support framing it as uncertain or as a debate.

    The same reason goes for all those mediocre scientists (the vast majority of them) who could never dream of topping the bill if there wasn't some heavy controversial and popularized debate like this. If there is no debate, it is because every thing that happens is dismissed as "it's all according to the models", yeah, how could it be differently? There are literally thousands of different models, predicting all and its contrary. But, yes, it is an event and there must be no debate, because it is certain and all according to the models. Mind you, I believe (that's the correct term) that there is a climate change, but everything beyond that is just to early to call.

  40. Re:NYT reaction by maxwell+demon · · Score: 0

    I think the NYT's reporting is very telling here. His first reaction on January 26th is that it's not peer-reviewed, and therefore must be treated skeptically.

    Of course the NYT could just have waited with reporting until it is peer reviewed ...

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  41. Doesn't pass the sniff test by Xyrus · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's doubtful their study will hold up to scrutiny. After reading the actual study, they're using a simple climate model to feed a Baeysian statistical model to generate their results, which fails to take into account numerous factors. This seems exceptionally weak, especially since a few years of data can drastically alter the results. For example, if the last ten years had a few strong El Ninos that gave a warming signal stronger than the expected signal, their model could be made to show warming beyond even the worst IPCC projections. And if you applied their methodology to a decade where some slight cooling took place (like the late 60's to early 70's), it would appear that by this time we would be well on our way to an ice age by now. That's an incredibly wide error margin, and more than enough to cast doubts on their results.

    --
    ~X~
    1. Re:Doesn't pass the sniff test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sniff test? Is that some of that hard science I keep hearing about around here? Sounds a lot like denial to me.

      See? How does that make you feel? Does it make you give a shit about what I may say next?

      Take a long look yourself and your peers if you want the answer to why so many people won't listen to you.

  42. And yet ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the paper makes no challenge to the proposition that GW is occurring and is indeed anthropogenic, only that it us perhaps somewhat less severe than other recent estimates indicate.

    So why again are the climate change deniers crowing in "vindication?"

    1. Re:And yet ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why again are the climate change deniers crowing in "vindication?"

      Because it makes the sensitive, tree-hugging, latte sipping, simpering, limp-wristed, "enrivormentally responsible" claiming, recycling, Prius driving, Daily Kos posting, Whole Foods shopping, New York Times reading, NPR listening, PBS totebag toting, cum guzzling, Mitt Romney mocking, gun banning, tax raising, Obama voting homos mad. Duh.

    2. Re:And yet ... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1, Troll

      And why are the climate change alarmists vilifying this study?

      Because both groups are driven by political agendas and personal beliefs that are largely unconcerned with science or figuring out what is actually going to happen or how best to fix it.

    3. Re:And yet ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      love that "denier" bit, the term purposely chosen by the green stalinistas for its "holocaust denier" connotations.

    4. Re:And yet ... by roky99 · · Score: 1

      And why are the climate change alarmists vilifying this study?

      And where exactly is this being 'vilified'? All I see is a study that accepts mainstream climate science and offers another data point about climate sensitivity. It's at the lower end of the range accumulated from previous studies but nevertheless consistent with that range. It remains to be seen whether this is more accurate than the 2.5 degrees often assumed as the most likely climate sensitivity value. If it is, then that's a bit of good news but we're not off the hook by any means.

    5. Re:And yet ... by superwiz · · Score: 1

      And where exactly is this being 'vilified'?

      Slashdot (the headline of this post, for one) felt the need to counter Bloomberg's summary with NY Times summary.

      All I see is a study that accepts mainstream climate science and offers another data point about climate sensitivity

      You must be talking about something else then. The study claims the data shows plateauing since the 2000. It doesn't directly conclude that the previous conclusions (that GW is anthropogenic) were wrong. But it does provide evidence to support investing such a possibility.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    6. Re:And yet ... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      love that "denier" bit, the term purposely chosen by the green stalinistas for its "holocaust denier" connotations.

      While people like you don't stop at connotations, but just make the blatantly silly claims ("stalinistas") directly.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    7. Re:And yet ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sensitive, insensitive
      tree-hugging, willfully destructive
      latte sipping, beer swilling
      simpering, oafish
      limp-wristed, thuggish
      "enrivormentally responsible" claiming, needlessly polluting
      Recycling, wasteful
      Prius driving, oversized visibility-blocking pickup driving
      Daily Kos posting, stormfront posting
      Whole Foods shopping, Piggly-wiggly shopping
      New York Times reading, illiterate
      NPR listening, Rush listening
      PBS totebag toting, Fox beer foam holder using
      cum guzzling, cum guzzling
      Mitt Romney mocking, invented claim about Obama perpetuating
      gun banning, school shootin'
      tax raising, budget deficit runnin'
      Obama voting, tea party votin'
      homos, homos

    8. Re:And yet ... by roky99 · · Score: 1

      And where exactly is this being 'vilified'?

      Slashdot (the headline of this post, for one) felt the need to counter Bloomberg's summary with NY Times summary.

      I see. The problem is that you don't know what vilified means. Fair enough.

      All I see is a study that accepts mainstream climate science and offers another data point about climate sensitivity

      You must be talking about something else then. The study claims the data shows plateauing since the 2000. It doesn't directly conclude that the previous conclusions (that GW is anthropogenic) were wrong. But it does provide evidence to support investing such a possibility.

      You seem to be a bit confused. The whole point of the study is to estimate climate sensitivity - how much the atmosphere warms for a doubling of CO2. How on earth does that provide evidence against AGW?

    9. Re:And yet ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because that's what theyve been saying all along that the IPCC overestimated the effects. You are incorrect if you think that "deniers" don't deny that CO2 has an effect, just that the effect is far smaller than has been predicted. I would say that even 1.9C is a big gamble. If you look at the last 100 years the temperature has never moved at a rate greater than about 0.2C/decade. The 1.9 for this century (assuming doubling co2 by 2100) means that we will have to get that maximum rate ever seen of increase for 9 uninterrupted decades in a row + a little more. Well, we get about a decade or two of warming and then a decade or two of flat or cooling, then a decade or two of warming. We've never had 9 decades or 10 decades of continuously +0.2C increase ever. There is good reason for this. Many people believe the sun and ocean currents have a cycle that drives natural variability in cycles which would prevent a continuous climb like would be needed to achieve 1.8C by 2100. So, it is more likely unless we start seeing 0.3 or 0.4C/decade decades that we will get closer to 1C change by 2100 not 1.8 or 1.9 or 3 or 4.5C. In other words it is improbable that unless we see things never seen yet that we will get anywhere near even what these people say is going to happen and therefore the IPCC, scientists who say these things have not considered that the environment doesn't seem to act the way their models behave. The temperature doesn't go up continuously. It pauses or even falls for decades before continuing up. The period 1945-1975 being a case in point where temperatures actually fell for 3 decades even as we were in a massive buildup of co2 in the atmosphere after WWII. It was only until 1978 we started to see this "rise" and then it more or less pauses again after 20 years and has continuid pausing for 16 years continuously. Some think this pause will go on quite a bit longer because the most likely causes of the pause which is lower solar activity and a move to a negative PDO/AMO cycle will continue for another decade or more. Others say the sun is potentially in a longer term quiescent period which would keep temperatures down or even declining for the rest of the century potentially, i.e. meaning 0C change for the whole century. The question is will co2 overpower the sun and ENSO phenomenon? Well, clearly for the last 16 years NO, co2 hasn't overpowered other effects. That means that since these effects were in a positive phase (contributing to warming) during the period 1979-1998 it is likely that a large portion possibly the majority of the heating in that period was not due to co2 at all in which case the effect of co2 is much less than this study projects. We were told this was all setlled. Clearly it isn't. Therefore they were wrong or lied. That means if you are a rational person you take with a grain of salt future projections from the same people who were obviously wrong and thought they were certain before.

  43. Re:Surprise by jopsen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Norway and Sweden are very different; some conflicts even exist between the two. Norway has a bigger territory, and has control over all the areas where there are natural resources. Norway has a much smaller population. Sweden has a more vibrant society and prettier girls. Norway is much more rich thanks to all the oil.

    Well, they're both former Danish colonies :)
    Okay, joke aside (I'm a Dane of course).
    Sure they are different in many aspects (language is just one), but when it comes to having a democracy that works and is trusted by the people, which is what GP talks about, Scandinavian countries aren't that different.

    So whilst, Norway is an oil producing country, I seriously doubt the Norwegian government faked a study about global warming...
    Anyways, maybe we should read the article and see if the summary is even right... I mean the conclusion of the study might very well conclude that we'll be cooked at a slightly lower temperature, but still very much cooked :)
    (I'm just saying doesn't trust the media, especially not Slashdot, read the study).

  44. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, climate change is a continuum, not an event. It has never stopped changing

  45. Re:Surprise by serviscope_minor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How conveniently it wipes away all rational thought and âoebutâs.

    Things do simply happen. The evidence is now very strong, though not as strong as evolution, relativity, QED or QCD. I can't remember the last time I saw a "but" that actually stood up to inspection. So rational thought says now that unless you have some really strong evidence then the rational thing to do is assume global warming is happening.

    Rationality doesn't mean challenging everything all the time.

    Rationality means accpeting things as facts until further notice when the evidence is strong enough. I accept the existence of gravity as a fact. I now accept climate change as a fact because the evidence is strong enough.

    All your sophistry does not change that.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  46. Proving the Parent Post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You aren't thinking, as your parent post asserted would happen.

    Sun.

    It isn't a *debate* as to whether it rises in the morning.

    It rises.

    Ships.

    It isn't a *debate* as to whether it crashed into the rocks.

    It did. Or not.

    But idiots (such as yourself) think that there MUST BE debate.

    Titanic had officers who "debated" whether there was a risk of crashing into an ice floe. Look what happened when they "debated" this...

    But you don't care for the actions required.

    Therefore, because you know you're on a loser with the idea of "disproving" climate science, demand a "debate".

    Fiddling with yourself while Rome burns, as it were.

    Rather odd that you sign off with "you do not think" when that's precisely what you displayed in that post.

    1. Re:Proving the Parent Post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Titanic had officers who "debated" whether there was a risk of crashing into an ice floe. Look what happened when they "debated" this...

      Get your facts straight. Titanic had officers who turned the wheel the wrong way in a panic (because the rudder system was a new design), and turned the ship into the iceberg instead of making a glancing blow.

      The "Must DO SOMETHING Now!" crowd is like this. I'd rather have a warmer planet because we failed to do something than a cooling (iceball) planet because we mis-corrected.

    2. Re:Proving the Parent Post by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

      There is always debate welcome to science.

    3. Re:Proving the Parent Post by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I'd rather have a warmer planet because we failed to do something than a cooling (iceball) planet because we mis-corrected.

      There really is no danger of that happening unless the Sun does something it's never been know to do before. According to a study released a couple of years ago we've already upped the CO2 level enough to prevent the next glaciation from happening.

  47. Re:Surprise by Redmancometh · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Agreed! But I also think it's ridiculous that people say they have proof either way. The models arent old enough yet to have realized concrete predictions. The models old enough are from the "global cooling" era. I think it's obvious climate change is occurring. The question is how much of it is a result of geological processes? Deforestation messing up the water cycle, nitrogen cycle, and carbon cycle? Plants reflect infared light like a mirror could that be a factor? Ocean pollution killing off plankton and algae could have an impact! We're ALSO at the 11 yr peak of the solar cycle which seems as if it could have an effect. I dont think think I need to give evidence for the other side. I believe most of us are intimately familiar with it. Isnt that enough to at least say its a debate?

  48. Re:Surprise by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

    The problem is that regardless of what the magnitude of anthropogenic global warming actually is, it *started* with substantial political and corporate interests framing it as certain and apocalyptic.

    [citation needed]

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  49. Re:Surprise by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

    The simple fact that anyone who produces evidence to the contrary is automatically suspect is perhaps THE biggest problem with science.

    FTFY

    --
    Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
  50. Take an arbitrary set of points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And they WILL "appear" to have leveled off despite CO2 increasing the whole time.

    See "Going down the up escalator" on SkS:

    http://www.skepticalscience.com/still-going-down-the-up-escalator.html

    1. Re:Take an arbitrary set of points by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      The data shows that temperature rises *precede* CO2 rises. We would expect it the other way around if human-released CO2 was causing the rise, but the data shows the *opposite*. Citation:
      http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/07/23/new-research-in-antarctica-shows-co2-follows-temperature-by-a-few-hundred-years-at-most/

    2. Re:Take an arbitrary set of points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. http://www.skepticalscience.com/co2-lags-temperature.htm

    3. Re:Take an arbitrary set of points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the person that wrote that article should be informed that preceding is not "higher on the chart at the same point". In fact, you can check any historical temperature/CO2 graphs you want, and you will always find that sometimes temperature changes direction before CO2, and sometimes CO2 changes direction before temperature. Sometimes it takes on the order of over 1000 years for one or the other to change to the same direction. They are far from rising and falling in tandem, which rather points to some other third source causing the actual changes.

    4. Re:Take an arbitrary set of points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not a good thing.
      If we are causing the global average temperature to go up by releasing excess CO2 (and we are) then the natural feedback to that temperature rise (100 year lag) will drive temperatures even higher.

  51. Gentlemen, let me be the first to coin the term by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    GLOBAL BAKING, which seems to be more to the point.

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  52. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because Norways oil supply is under water and a sea level rise would mean that they would have to scrap all their oil rigs and start from scratch and their entire habitable area is along the coast line and they will be utterly screwed by a sea level rise?

  53. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My mother with Alzheimers used to say daily the weather is changing all over the world. Like that was something profound and I would always reply, that's right. And of course it is.

    The World climate is also always changing, right now it appears to be warming. That is probably not debatable.

    But what is causing the change and whether it will continue endlessly in one direction is debatable. The geological and even the historical record shows global temperatures warming and cooling over time and that is likely to continue. While we may think we do, actually we just don't know enough to predict when this warming trend will end or whether the world is going to get so hot we won't like it. Too many variables and unintended consequences.

  54. Re:Surprise by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

    Being able to sustain a large population or avoiding hardships of migration are another story, though.

    And that's the big issue. If there were one or two billion reasonable, intelligent humans on the planet instead of 6 billion crazy assed members of Homo Industrialis then we'd be OK pretty much anything this side of a giant asteroid strike.

    We're pushing the envelope at present. We've had and are having resource wars with just tiny decrements of a couple of major inputs - oil and water as an example.

    Squish agriculture. Squish transport. Worsen our silly reliance on constant growth as an economic model and you have trouble.

    We're doomed.

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  55. Re:Surprise by phrostie · · Score: 1

    just saying,

    http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/04/23/11144098-gaia-scientist-james-lovelock-i-was-alarmist-about-climate-change

    "James Lovelock, the maverick scientist who became a guru to the environmental movement with his “Gaia” theory of the Earth as a single organism, has admitted to being “alarmist” about climate change and says other environmental commentators, such as Al Gore, were too.
    Lovelock, 92, is writing a new book in which he will say climate change is still happening, but not as quickly as he once feared."

    everybody chill.

  56. Re:Surprise by Aglassis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You have constructed one hell of a strawman here. And I must say, you have masterfully taken down an imaginary argument. I can only imagine that you somehow interpreted my post to mean that anyone that questions climate change is a lunatic and that questioning climate change is questioning science. And if that was what I wrote, then your post would be insulting, but correct. But it wasn't what I wrote. There really isn't much of a way for me to respond to your argument since it is based on a false presupposition. I can only reiterate my argument and hope that your reading comprehension is stronger this time around: the evidence for climate change is overwhelming, but not popular with certain groups. For this reason, there are a lot of bullshit arguments and conspiracies thrown at it. These bullshit arguments and conspiracies are then labelled 'debate'. Now a new study comes along that partially contradicts several other studies. Should we have a 'debate' about this before the international scientific community can respond?

    --
    Suddenly, the hairy finger of a familiar monkey tapped me on the shoulder. It was time.--G. T.
  57. Sulphates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While I don't necessarily doubt that the action of sulphates on condensation could mitigate global warming it should be noted that that action would most likely produce more acid rain.

  58. Ice melts. Tipping point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    they are certainly scientific facts.

    Methane Clathrates exist and it is a scientific CERTAINTY that they will create a tipping point.

    Don't you know what "conditional stability" means? Scientifically?

    No, you're just SPECULATING that it's all a big con, therefore all the problems are nonexistent, so you can forget it all.

    1. Re:Ice melts. Tipping point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Methane Clathrates exist and it is a scientific CERTAINTY that they will create a tipping point.

      Nobody knows whether there are enough clathrates to create a tipping point at any temperature. It is extremely unlikely that a 2C warming (which is where the GP claimed "tipping points" would happen) would cause any significant release. Any other "tipping points" you'd care to mention?

    2. Re:Ice melts. Tipping point. by wisdom_brewing · · Score: 1

      Can you please stop. Seriously. This is science. In science there is no such this as something which is definitely true. You can only disprove a hypothesis. There is no such thing as a CERTAIN proof. That only happens in mathematics.

  59. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    True, now tell that to all those lunatics that say it is human made for certain, and never debate (oh well, there should be a debate) how to deal with a natural climate shift, but just say we must do this or that to prevent it (like it was assured that we can prevent it).

    The problem with that discussion is that it's used as an excuse to avoid doing anything about any human action at all. It's like fires. No matter how many fires are caused by natural events, like lightning strikes, or wind-driven branches creating friction, it won't change the fact that humans also have responsibilities.

    But when those things are used to justify ignoring human-caused fires, then that's a problem.

  60. Re:Surprise by Aglassis · · Score: 1

    Just to be clear, since I was misinterpreted earlier in this post, when I wrote "questioning science" in the above post, I meant questioning science philosophically, or questioning the scientific method as a valid method.

    --
    Suddenly, the hairy finger of a familiar monkey tapped me on the shoulder. It was time.--G. T.
  61. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Kind Sir may I also draw notice to the fact that magnificent fjordly Norway is the home, source, and origin of trolls?

    Sincerely,
    Herr Underbro / Mr. Underbridge
    Oslo, Norway

  62. Re: Surprise by Da_Biz · · Score: 0, Troll

    I love how you ask the same, hackneyed "questions" that climate change deniers have been trotting out for a while now. But keep going...

  63. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1) No such thing as "global cooling era":

    http://greenfyre.wordpress.com/climate-denial-crock-of-the-week/#love

    2) Those models got pretty damn close. Hansen's 80's model would, if given the actual emissions scenario that took place, would have gotten a 3.4 C per doubling climate sensitivity to CO2 rather than the 3.2 that would have been spot on.

    http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2007/05/hansens-1988-projections/

    3) We're NOT at the 11yr solar cycle peak. We're at one of the lowest levels of solar activity for a hundred years

    http://www.skepticalscience.com/solar-activity-sunspots-global-warming.htm

    Now given your premises are incorrect, do you think you may go back and check to see if you've been led astray?

    Maybe there's no debate, but to the OPPOSITE conclusion you took because of your faulty reckoning?

  64. Re:Surprise by budgenator · · Score: 1

    Correction: an oil-producing country that's cold like hell, and can gain a lot from both its land getting more habitable and from it's main competitors' land getting less habitable.

    If Earth got 40 degrees warmer, people at the south pole wouldn't complain.

    I don't think that,

    January 27, 2013 weather report for
    LONGYEARBYEN, SVALBARD

    Weather report as of 72 minutes ago (15:50 UTC):
    The wind was blowing at a speed of 6.7 meters per second (15.0 miles per hour) from Southeast in Longyearbyen, Svalbard. The temperature was -15 degrees Celsius (5 degrees Fahrenheit). Air pressure was 1,005 hPa (29.68 inHg). Relative humidity was 71.3%. There were a few clouds at a height of 213 meters (700 feet), scattered clouds at a height of 488 meters (1600 feet) and broken clouds at a height of 1524 meters (5000 feet). The visibility was >11.3 kilometers (>7 miles). Current weather is Light Shower(s) Snow .

    a couple degrees one way

    HAMMERFEST, NORWAY

    Weather report as of 15 minutes ago (16:50 UTC):
    The wind was blowing at a speed of 1.0 meters per second (2.3 miles per hour) from variable directions in Hammerfest, Norway. The temperature was -10 degrees Celsius (14 degrees Fahrenheit). Air pressure was 994 hPa (29.35 inHg). Relative humidity was 85.2%. There were a few clouds at a height of 335 meters (1100 feet). The visibility was >11.3 kilometers (>7 miles).

    or the other is

    January 27, 2013 weather report for
    TROMSØ, NORWAY

    Weather report as of 17 minutes ago (16:50 UTC):
    The wind was blowing at a speed of 6.2 meters per second (13.8 miles per hour) from Southwest in Tromsø, Norway. The temperature was -7 degrees Celsius (19 degrees Fahrenheit). Air pressure was 996 hPa (29.41 inHg). Relative humidity was 85.6%. There were a few clouds at a height of 244 meters (800 feet) and scattered clouds at a height of 914 meters (3000 feet). The visibility was >11.3 kilometers (>7 miles).

    going to impress the Norwegians

    January 27, 2013 weather report for
    NARVIK, NORWAY

    Weather report as of 21 minutes ago (16:50 UTC):
    The wind was blowing at a speed of 2.1 meters per second (4.6 miles per hour) from East/Southeast in Narvik, Norway. The temperature was -8 degrees Celsius (18 degrees Fahrenheit). Air pressure was 995 hPa (29.38 inHg). Relative humidity was 85.4%. There are no clouds below 1,524 meters (5,000 feet). The visibility was >10 kilometers (>6.2 miles).

    very much.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  65. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you for a sane post!

  66. Re:Surprise by budgenator · · Score: 1

    Maybe a few mountain climbers wouldn't mind... would maybe make Everest a bit more comfortable to summit - then again, such drastic change would likely F*** up the world's weather patterns so much that it's hard to tell what the result would be.

    Probably not much, elevation effects trumps sealevels temperatures at that elevation

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  67. Re:Surprise by Skvate · · Score: 3, Informative

    The lead in this project - Terje Berntsen, says that the variation from '90s and in the '00s could be explained by natural variations. In the 00' the natural variations is canceling out the rise in CO_2 emissions, and in the '90s it was amplifying it. I still hope that the worst case scenario(a 4 degree rise) will be the "working scenario" for the solutions that will be used.

  68. Re:Surprise by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    The simple fact that anyone who produces evidence to the contrary

    Except this isn't evidence to the contrary. This report still says that there is Anthropogenic Global Warming. It just found that it's at the lower end of the IPCC projections, not that it doesn't exist.

  69. Re:We have a disbeliever who beliefs in a disbeliv by budgenator · · Score: 1

    You say that like an Insurance Company doesn't have a financial incentive to raise rates to compensate for imaginary risks.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  70. Friedrich Goltz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet he's just spinning in his grave right now, he used the wrong animal to experiment with, and what's more he wouldn't have had to remove the brain.

  71. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If this comment was associated with the United States it would have been +5 insightful. Shame on the hivemind for modding it Troll.

  72. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah we're doomed so please everybody else: stay away! And leave if you don't belong here.

  73. Re:Surprise by Luckyo · · Score: 2

    They already are making tons of money on global warming. They can drill and maintain their oil platforms and tanker routes for far less money during winters, they're signing deals with Russia to develop Shtokman field and so on.

    The money is already in motion.

  74. Re:Surprise by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    The problem with your argument is that you assume that global warming simply means everywhere gets proportionally hotter, all year round. It doesn't.

    Some places will get colder, and everywhere will experience more extreme weather events. I don't know about Norway in particular, but a likely outcome for the UK is that it will get colder, due to the breakdown of the gulf stream, which currently brings it's temperate weather from the Caribbean.

  75. Re:We have a disbeliever who beliefs in a disbeliv by Luckyo · · Score: 1

    If there was one global Insurance Company monopoly, sure.

    There isn't one. And competition in insurance industry is one of the fiercest in the world. Especially for major projects that also need most insurance against weather issues.

  76. Look at the data by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Until recently I believed the human-induced global warning narrative. On closer inspection of the data there are several aspects that need to be examined:

    • * is the World is warmer than it has been for the last two thousand years?
    • * is the warning of the last three hundreds years (which is undeniable) human induced?
    • * why are scientists who use the Scientific Method and go against the narrative being vilified? and
    • * global climate models

    Global temperature increase data: The data shows that global warming is correct at least since the 17th Century (when there was a 'mini-ice age', possibly due to volcanic activity). This is undeniable. However, if you go back to data from two thousand years ago it appears that the climate is actually cooler than it was two thousand years ago. Please look at the data (and note that the trend is a very slight cooling over 2000 years):
    http://phys.org/news/2012-07-climate-northern-europe-reconstructed-years.html

    Human induced warming: The narrative given to us is that human activity in the form of burning fossil fuels has caused the supposed warming. If this was the case then we would examine the data and expect to see a carbon dioxide rise (CO2) from humans burning fossil fuels and then the temperature would rise as a result. In fact we see the opposite, we see that the CO2 rise *follows* the temperature rise, not precedes it. This means there is something wrong with the narrative that human-induced CO2 emission is causing global warming because the data does not support this. Here's the data
    http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/07/23/new-research-in-antarctica-shows-co2-follows-temperature-by-a-few-hundred-years-at-most/

    Global warming models: Much of the global warming information is based on 'extrapolations' (projections) of short-term trends. Looking over the last hundred or two hundred years and projecting will result in temperature rise estimates that are alarming. Looking at the long-term data results in projections that are far less alarming (which this Slashdot thread is talking about; and I am also trying to inform you about). The other thing about models is that they are iterative and are subject to all sorts of instabilities. From what I know some of the models also were rather crude in the fact they didn't take into account many significant effects, like the eccentricity of our orbit etc, which results in periodic changes in solar radiation levels. Having a model is always better than no model - but that doesn't mean the model you have corresponds to reality, it only corresponds to our best guess. I know, as a astrophysicist turned IT guy used to make scientific models all the time - they are tricky beasts and most people (even those graduate students making them) don't always understand their limitations very well.

    Vilification of scientists: scientists who where skeptical of the data are being vilified. Their careers are being destroyed and they are ridiculed for saying, "Hey, the data suggests something else than the human-induced global warming narrative" despite this being not only consistent with, but *required by* the Scientific Method. These scientists are labelled by the media as "climate change deniers" when in fact they agree with recent climate warming, disagree that human-released CO2 as the primary agent for the warming, and disagree that the climate has gotten warmer over the last two thousand years. All of these positions are supported by the data (as far as I can see). The media is especially bad at mocking the scientists who "don't follow the (Liberal) Party Line" despite the courage of those scientists to not cave in (which would be easier) and follow the scientific evidence as they see it. The US mainstream media

    1. Re:Look at the data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Burn the witch!

    2. Re:Look at the data by phantomfive · · Score: 0

      You have some good points, but there is one thing that it's not clear you understand:

      All else being equal, adding CO2 to the atmosphere WILL increase the temperature. This has been demonstrated through multiple experiments, and is generally accepted by scientists.

      The only question is how much warming. Alarmist scientists say the warming will be significant, to the point of perhaps destroying civilization. Skeptical scientists say the change will be negligible, and is not worth worrying about. That is where the entire debate lies.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    3. Re:Look at the data by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2

      Note, however, that from the data of the last 2000 years as shown by the first link, one finds that even the 1.9C raise predicted by the study this story is about would still go clearly outside the previous temperature fluctuation range and result in temperatures much higher than the temperatures 2000 years ago.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    4. Re:Look at the data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If these are the questions that you're asking now that you don't believe the "global warming narrative," you clearly didn't have a very thoughtful basis for your original belief either, if you're indeed being truthful about your personal conversion, which I must say that I found doubtful. Honestly, I would have expected a heck of a lot more thought out of an astrophysicist.

      What is of concern is not prehistoric change and long-term trends. There are many ways to influence a physical system and the concern is about very recent, very rapid change that is human-induced. It doesn't matter if there have been different past driving forces, or that there is a very slow, long-term trend. If we're causing a much larger, much faster change with our present activity, none of the distractions that you mention are particularly relevant.

    5. Re:Look at the data by clarkie.mg · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Your first link point to very local data - northern Europe - but your paragraph about it is titled, in bold Global temperature increase data *FACEPALM*
      Here is some real data you might want to consider and inspect closely.

      Secondly, you point to the fact that, quote, In fact we see the opposite, we see that the CO2 rise *follows* the temperature rise, not precedes it.. Well that is simply not true concerning the contemporary climate events, the temperature rise is extremely well correlated to the human output of co2 in the atmosphere. Now, correlation being not causation, it is possible that another cause - which one, you never say - would make the temperatures rise. However it is extremely unlikely that another natural cause would magically correlate with human activity of the last 200 years.

      But maybe you meant the co2 rise of the past climate events ? That must be that, because it's a common meme through the deniers' sphere. It's funny that you fail to reproduce the basic non-scientific mantras of the deniers and you want us to believe that your post is of any significant value. *FACEPALM*

      Concerning the delay between temperature rise and concentration of co2 rise in the past warming events, it correctly is of about 800 years on a total warming phase of around 5000 years. However, considering that this means that the present climate event has nothing to do with human output of co2 is a lack of the most basic knowledge of climate science.

      Here is how it worked - short version : the earth changes orbit periodically - milankovitch cycles - and the amount of energy received by the earth increases a little bit. This drives global temperature up, 1 or 2 degrees, not more. This, in turn, induces changes in the biosphere : more vegetation in short. Slowly, that vegetation dies and releases co2. The co2, in turn, drives temperature up with the greenhouse gas effect. But much higher than the effects of the initial perturbation, 8 to 12 degrees more ! This is called a feedback. But that doesn't mean that co2 cannot be the initial perturbation if we release enormous quantity of it as is the case in the present climate event.

      In fact, the delay in the paleolithic events and the no delay in the present event is another proof by simple logic that the humans are the cause of the imbalance.

      Also, this shows how worse the situation can become as past climate changes lasted hundreds or thousands of years when this one would be much shorter. Guess in which case the biosphere adapts better ?

      I could go on answering your nonsensical post but i stopped reading after that second paragraph that shows you lack even the most basic knowledge on the subject.

      I suggest that you educate yourself, for example with "Climate Change Science: A Modern Synthesis" Farmer, G. Thomas, Cook, John published by Springer. Then maybe you can tell the world to look at the data.

      --
      Men are born ignorant, not stupid; they are made stupid by education. Bertrand Russel
    6. Re:Look at the data by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      All else being equal, adding CO2 to the atmosphere WILL increase the temperature. This has been demonstrated through multiple experiments, and is generally accepted by scientists.

      That's true. But if we are not causing the initial temperature rise then CO2 will rise whether or not we do anything about it. Yes? What is the natural mechanism that stops this process running away? We've see that process operate every thousand years.

    7. Re:Look at the data by riverat1 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Responding to your points:

      Global temperature increase data: Don't make the mistake of extrapolating the results of one study from Lapland to the whole globe. Unless you can present corroborating evidence from reasonably globally spread sites it's more about local conditions than global conditions.

      Human induced warming: Of course there is nothing "supposed" about the warming. It has been measured. Where is your evidence that CO2 rise has to follow the rise in temperature? If that it true then where is the temperature rise that caused the current rise in CO2 to a level 40% greater than has been seen for at least 800,000 years (from ice cores) and probably greater than it has been for over 15 million years (from other CO2 proxies)? Are you confusing correlation with causation?

      Global warming models: If you think global warming models are just based on curve fitting extrapolations of "short term trends" you really have no idea of what they do. They are fundamentally based on the physics of the climate system. Observational data such at temperature trends are only used to compare to model output. See the FAQs here and here for more information about how climate models work. Since the period of the eccentricity of the Earth's orbit is approximately a 100,000 year cycle it is not a significant effect on a scale of a few thousand years let along a couple hundred years. Other elements of the Milankovitch cycles have periods as short as around 25,000 years, still not particularly significant on century scales.

      Vilification of scientists: Here you just start making political arguments that don't have much to do with science. Well known skeptical scientists such as Roy Spencer, John Christy, Richard Lindzen and Judith Curry have not lost their positions because of their views. Once you get outside of scientific circles there is vilification going on but it occurs on both sides of the argument. Examples on the "global warming side": Michael Mann, Phil Jones, James Hansen.

      The reason CO2 followed temperature in past deglacitions is because CO2 is a feedback of warming. I believe the primary source of CO2 during these periods is outgasing from the oceans. Colder water holds more dissolved CO2 and as it warms up it will release it*. Another smaller factor could be CO2 trapped in the continental ice sheets that is released as they melt. None of this means that CO2 can't also force changes in temperature. In fact the temperatures reached during interglacial periods can't be fully explained without including the added warming from increased CO2 and methane.

      * The reason oceans are still absorbing CO2 despite the fact that they are warming is because the dissolved CO2 in water is a function of both temperature and the partial pressure of CO2 in the atmosphere above it. We've added enough CO2 to the atmosphere that the oceans are still sinking it but that can't last forever.

    8. Re:Look at the data by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your points. As I said, I have an open mind on this and will investigate them.

      Here's an interesting statistical discussion that appears to have trouble with the Tamino link you gave.
      http://rankexploits.com/musings/2010/comparing-proxy-reconstructions/

      The link you gave [from 2010] as: http://www.skepticalscience.com/co2-temperature-correlation.htm also appears to look at short-term CO2 correlation (starts in 1900) rather than the much larger timescale given by the Antarctic ice cores as found by the 2012 Copenhagen study. Please take a look at the more recent study when you have the chance.

      With regard to the Southern Hemisphere (where I live). I would expect the man-made CO2 concentration and man-made temperature rise to be lower. There is simply a lot more ocean, a lot fewer people/vehicles, and a lot less industry than the Northern Hemisphere, yes? I would expect the Southern Hemisphere to drag the global warming value down since it is not the origin of the man-made atmospheric CO2/greenhouse gasses. Yes? I'm speculating here, because I haven't seen the Southern data against Northern data (just the Antarctic ice core records where the temperature rise precedes that CO2 rise).

      Once again, thanks for taking the time to make your points.

    9. Re:Look at the data by riverat1 · · Score: 2

      The process doesn't run away because each increment of CO2 causes less warming than the previous increment so the curve asymptotically approaches zero. If each increment caused the same or greater warming than the previous then it could run away.

      As far as CO2 following temperature, where is the evidence that CO2 levels significantly changed because of periods like the Roman or Medieval warming periods? The evidence suggests that CO2 levels has remained near 280 ppm for the past 8,000+ years. Shouldn't there have been significant bumps from the RWP and MWP? Ice core evidence shows that CO2 levels have not been above about 300 ppm for at least the past 800,000 years. If CO2 rise is caused by temperature rise (and not possibly the other way around too) then where is the temperature rise that caused CO2 levels to rise to the current ~400 ppm, a level not seen for probably over 15 million years?

    10. Re:Look at the data by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 2

      one finds that even the 1.9C raise predicted by the study this story is

      I don't disagree with this. What I'm saying is how do we know that human activity is the significant cause of this? If temperature's appear to be leveling off at 2000 levels but human activity has not then what is going on? That's the question to be answered, IMHO.

    11. Re:Look at the data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The only question is how much warming. Alarmist scientists say the warming will be significant, to the point of perhaps destroying civilization. Skeptical scientists say the change will be negligible, and is not worth worrying about. That is where the entire debate lies."

      I was not aware of any real debate going on. Instead what I see is a group of people who include our media screaming that burning "fossil fuels" is warming the planet, and shouting down anyone who does not agree.

    12. Re:Look at the data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " If CO2 rise is caused by temperature rise (and not possibly the other way around too) then where is the temperature rise that caused CO2 levels to rise to the current ~400 ppm, a level not seen for probably over 15 million years?"

      Maybe there is no such correlation. Does that prove some point that 400ppm of CO2 would cause the warming we are seeing in any large part? Is the amount of warming caused by a given concentration of CO2 accurately predictable?

    13. Re:Look at the data by jcupitt65 · · Score: 1

      On your southern / northern point, CO2 mixes rather evenly throughout the atmosphere in only a few years.

      Here's a great animation from NOAA showing global CO2 distribution and putting recent changes in the context of the last million years or so. It takes a few minutes to watch, but it's worth seeing to the end, in my opinion.

      http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/trends/history.html

    14. Re:Look at the data by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      The proof that CO2 concentration affects temperatures is in the physics of its radiative absorption. You have to get around the fact that those physics say an increase in the concentration will lead to an increase in temperature. In the real world there are other factors that complicate the picture but I haven't seen anything yet that would completely negate the effects of CO2. Even such notable contrarians as Richard Lindzen and Roy Spencer admit added CO2 will cause warming. They just say it's not as powerful as other scientists say or that there are other factors that counter it more completely than is found in the main stream.

    15. Re:Look at the data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure you used to believe the human-induced global warning narrative?

      You mention vilification of scientists but only mention the one side when it's clearly been happening to both. You lost me there. The rest seemed to be rehashed old discussion of which I am tiring of. Please get off my lawn and make room for someone with actual knowledge to report ( pro or con ).

    16. Re:Look at the data by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link.

    17. Re:Look at the data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TL;DR.

      My retort: Burning things is bad. Better safe than dead.

    18. Re:Look at the data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is just simplification to absurdity.

      1. *Global temperature increase data.*

      Whether the world was hotter or cooler thousands of years ago does nothing to prove or disprove whether a current rise in temperature is caused by human activity. Yes, maybe the world will be fine even if it is hotter, but so what? It has nothing to do with proving or disproving the theory.

      2. *Human induced warming.*

      Your link shows that "it's complicated", because the sea is a reservoir holding CO2. Again, does nothing to prove or disprove the theory. At least your way of presenting this comes through as incredibly weird/naive.

      3. *Global warming models*

      You are right that the models are complex, and might not account for everything. This does not prove nor disprove anything. It just confirms that "this is hard".

      4. *Vilification of scientists*

      When did anything the media had to say about science change the scientific truth? The media is always looking for a good story. You're talking about the media as if they are running the show in deciding what the scientific consensus is. That is just way too alarmist. Do you really think the scientific method has broken down because of some crazy politicians and media outlets in the US. You should really start traveling and see the world. I suggest visiting a Norwegian fjord.

      There are different truths. There is a political truth, a truth in the media, and a scientific consensus (truth). Don't get them mixed up.

    19. Re:Look at the data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is plenty of critism of what's posted at WUWT see http://tamino.wordpress.com

    20. Re:Look at the data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have an open mind. That is why I have changed from a "global warming proponent" to looking at the data far more closely and now and somewhat of a skeptic as to the degree of *long-term* rise that the cause is the "greenhouse gases" of CO2.

      No you don't. If you did, you'd know that the science that establishes CO2 as a greenhouse gas is over 100 years old, and can be done in your kitchen. You wouldn't need to scare quote the phrase 'greenhouse gases' in reference to it.

      The rest of your screed is a bunch of semi-conspiratorial smears of the scientific community and paranoia of the media, with a healthy dose of misunderstanding what data and models are for. You are not rigorous. At all.

      Every time someone opens their pie hole and says they have an open mind, they're about to tell you how they've closed it to the facts in front of their face. Now I know how Jor El felt.

    21. Re:Look at the data by Layzej · · Score: 1

      The only question is how much warming. Alarmist scientists say the warming will be significant, to the point of perhaps destroying civilization. Skeptical scientists say the change will be negligible, and is not worth worrying about. That is where the entire debate lies.

      In the middle lies the consensus view, which predicts a worrisome and expensive amount of warming.

    22. Re:Look at the data by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      In the middle lies the consensus view, which predicts a worrisome and expensive amount of warming.

      Consensus isn't science.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    23. Re:Look at the data by MuffinSpawn · · Score: 1

      Your first citation only says that temperatures are lower in the area that was tested. This says nothing about the average temperature of the globe as a whole. I thought this went through the media and was straightened out 6 months ago.

      Your second citation, if I'm reading the graph correctly, only lists CO2 levels up until 10,000 years ago! As far as I know there were no industrialized nations 10,000 years ago that were putting unprecedented amounts of CO2 into the air artificially. It is well known that rising temperatures can cause out gassing. That's all this study shows, really. If anything it warns us that if we artificially increase the temperature then there will be a positive feedback loop that will make things worse.

      Your third point, though appreciated for it's words of caution, is basically suggesting that computer models are useless because they are tricky. That's ridiculous. It's like saying predictions made by scientific theories are useless because we're not sure that the predictions will be true. The models are made to fit past data and have been tested since they were written and found to be reasonable at least for the short term. You can scoff at that, but there's really nothing else you can ask of these models.

      Finally, give me one example of a credible scientist (i.e. not being payed by fossil fuel companies) who has published a peer reviewed article that directly contradicts the general consensus and who has had their career destroyed.

    24. Re:Look at the data by Layzej · · Score: 1

      You know what the scientific consensus is built upon? The science of course. There will always be special interest groups who filter facts that don't confirm to their preconceivednotions. Some will only trust papers that find > 6C warming for a doubling of CO2. Some will only believe papers that show 1.5C to 2C warming for doubling of CO2. The consensus opinion is about 3C for doubling of CO2.

    25. Re:Look at the data by Spock627corfu · · Score: 1

      * is the World is warmer than it has been for the last two thousand years? Why is the answer to this question relevant? There are many variables that affect climate (forcing factors). It's entirely possible that we've experienced cooling over the first 1700 of the last 2000 years; that has nothing to do with what degree (ha!) of change we should expect from our cranking CO2 up past any level we've seen in the last 15 million years. http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/last-time-carbon-dioxide-levels-111074.aspx * is the warning of the last three hundreds years (which is undeniable) human induced? You quote Watts. He (unsurprisingly) gets the science wrong: http://grist.org/climate-energy/co2-doesnt-lead-it-lags/ * why are scientists who use the Scientific Method and go against the narrative being vilified? and 1. Who is being vilified? Names, please, of climate scientists who have been vilified for arguing against AGW. I know of very few -- Lindzen and Singer, perhaps, the latter being entirely deserving of vilification to the point of outright dismissal from the conversation, given his enthusiastic and utterly disingenuous defense of the asbestos and tobacco industries and the former appearing to simply be a contrarian in general. http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2012/03/misrepresentation-from-lindzen/ Meanwhile, climate scientists who report that we're headed in a dangerous direction are receiving death threats. No, really: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2012-06/battle-over-climate-change 2. Controversial research results are a dream. Anybody who could come up with a data-driven defensible argument disproving AGW would have their career made for them. * global climate models "Much of the global warming information is based on 'extrapolations' (projections) of short-term trends." Hm. Seems like lots of folks are running tests of current GCMs against paleo data, which undermines if not invalidates your point. http://www.research.noaa.gov/climate/t_modeling.html#figure4 http://www.giss.nasa.gov/projects/gcm/ http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-report/ar4/wg1/ar4-wg1-chapter6.pdf I know that climate change, as a global problem, is painful for libertarians to consider. However, as Feynman said, nature cannot be fooled. In a battle between physics and philosophy, I bet on physics. Apologies if the formatting is broken in this post; apparently Safari on a Mac doesn't want to insert line breaks.

    26. Re:Look at the data by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      You know what the scientific consensus is built upon? The science of course.

      No, no it's not. Often it is.

      There will always be special interest groups who filter facts that don't confirm to their preconceivednotions. Some will only trust papers that find > 6C warming for a doubling of CO2. Some will only believe papers that show 1.5C to 2C warming for doubling of CO2.

      And true scientists, the ones who do science, will look at the data and understand that sometimes you only know a range, choosing an exact number is not possible.

      The consensus opinion is about 3C for doubling of CO2.

      How did you come up with that consensus? Did you just average a lot of different estimates or something?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    27. Re:Look at the data by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      Interesting stuff. I was mostly asling questions so appreciate the links.

      I usually post from a Mac too, although I don't use Safari. I find that I can put in HTML <p> tags as well as <br> and <UL>/<LI> and get it broken up a bit. I hope that helps you in future posts.

    28. Re:Look at the data by crdotson · · Score: 1

      Sure, let's stop that. You first.

    29. Re:Look at the data by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1

      Don't feed the troll. I've tangled with this guy in other threads. He is dense as a neutron star and utterly unwilling to learn anything no matter how much evidence is shown to him. He hasn't a clue about science or it's methods, witness his fake signature quote as an example.

    30. Re:Look at the data by Ferretman · · Score: 1

      Superb summary sir! Well done.

      Good to see not everybody buys the party line.

      Ferret

      --
      Sic gorgiamus allos subjectatos nunc
    31. Re:Look at the data by Layzej · · Score: 1

      And true scientists, the ones who do science, will look at the data and understand that sometimes you only know a range, choosing an exact number is not possible.

      Right! So we know that the range is between 2C and 4.5C with a most likely value of 3C. It could be as low as 1.5 or as high as 6 - but these are considered very unlikely. If we ignore the fringe values we clearly need to plan for as high as 4.5C warming. If we are interested in accepting fringe values then we need to plan for as high as 6C for a doubling of CO2. Since we will likely double CO2 by 2050 we should plan for much more warming by the end of the century. Anything over 2C is considered dangerous. At the low end of the range - best case scenario - we will hit 2C by 2050. Now do you see why we are worried?

    32. Re:Look at the data by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Right! So we know that the range is between 2C and 4.5C with a most likely value of 3C

      Where are you getting these numbers?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    33. Re:Look at the data by Layzej · · Score: 1

      IPCC AR4 - which is itself just a survey of the literature prior to 2006. Not much has changed on this in the literature since 2006 so these numbers are still valid.

    34. Re:Look at the data by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Which section says that the range is between 2C and 4.5C, with a most likely value of 3C?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    35. Re:Look at the data by Layzej · · Score: 1

      You really need to read section 10.5, but here is a quote from the summary for policy makers (cleverly hidden under the section called Climate sensitivity and feedbacks): Progress since the TAR enables an assessment that climate sensitivity is likely to be in the range of 2 to 4.5C with a best estimate of about 3C, and is very unlikely to be less than 1.5C. Values substantially higher than 4.5C cannot be excluded, but agreement of models with observations is not as good for those values. {WGI 8.6, 9.6, Box 10.2, SPM}

      But you could have found that with a simple search. I'm not sure why you are asking me to spoon feed you, or why you have taken a strong position on this without understanding the basic science. The IPCC AR4 has been out for 5 years. At least read the summary.

    36. Re:Look at the data by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      But you could have found that with a simple search. I'm not sure why you are asking me to spoon feed you,

      Yeah, I know, I'm sorry; normally I would but the IPCC report is so long that I didn't want to have to search through it to find what you are referring to. I appreciate you being so good as to find it.

      You really need to read section 10.5, but here is a quote from the summary for policy makers (cleverly hidden under the section called Climate sensitivity and feedbacks): Progress since the TAR enables an assessment that climate sensitivity is likely to be in the range of 2 to 4.5C with a best estimate of about 3C, and is very unlikely to be less than 1.5C. Values substantially higher than 4.5C cannot be excluded, but agreement of models with observations is not as good for those values. {WGI 8.6, 9.6, Box 10.2, SPM}

      That's not talking about consensus though, that's talking about the results of some climate results. Consensus would imply that something like a survey was done, or a vote was taken, to see what most scientists think.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    37. Re:Look at the data by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Dang it, I'm not typing straight, that sentence should have been:

      That's not talking about consensus though, that's talking about the results of some climate simulations

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    38. Re:Look at the data by Layzej · · Score: 1

      That's not talking about consensus though, that's talking about the results of some climate results. Consensus would imply that something like a survey was done, or a vote was taken, to see what most scientists think.

      Oh my god no! We're not going to vote for the truth. We need to review the literature to determine the consensus. You get to cast a vote by submitting research. It's not "this is what I think" but "this is what I've found".

    39. Re:Look at the data by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      What exactly do you think consensus means? lol

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    40. Re:Look at the data by Layzej · · Score: 1

      You think that scientific consensus is reached by vote? Interesting. This explains some of your earlier comments.

      I think this conversation has run its course. To summarize your position:

      1. You believe that "True" Scotsmen /// scientists will look at the data and understand that sometimes you only know a range, choosing an exact number is not possible.
      2. You recognize that the scientific consensus as outlined in the IPCC AR4 finds sensativity to be between 2C and 4.5C, with a most likely value of 3C - but...
        1. you would prefer that the consensus was developed by vote rather than by a thorough review of the literature.
      3. You understand that the lowest end of the range (and the result found by this latest Norwegian study) puts us at the 2C threshold by 2050. Anything but the lowest value in this range puts us in considerably more danger.
  77. Re:Surprise by segfault_0 · · Score: 1

    I find it strange to see someone discount the idea of debate calling it "the problem", and the in the same breath talk about the rigorousness of science.

    A scientific treatment of these papers would include taking each at face value -- not conferring those that agree with the status quo with a special status.

    I think you are part of the problem as much as anyone else.

    --

    I was crazy back when being crazy really meant something. (Charles Manson)
  78. Here's a reason to not be skeptical. by Ragingguppy · · Score: 1

    " The New York Times' Dot Earth blog offers some reasons to be skeptical of the findings."

    Why is it that everyone seems to accept the findings that man is doing all this harm to the planet people tend to accept it. When someone says oh we aren't doing as much damage to the planet as we thought then there is someone right there saying oh there is reasons to be skeptical of the findings. Give me a break. At this point the people who are pushing the whole man made global warming argument are sounding like the guy on the street corner with the sign that says "Jesus is coming are you ready?" There have been people predicting the end of the world for a millennia now. When is it that we started listening to them and ignoring the facts?

  79. Re:Surprise by sg_oneill · · Score: 3, Interesting

    [quote]Do you know what the problem with that argument is? The problem is that regardless of what the magnitude of anthropogenic global warming actually is, it *started* with substantial political and corporate interests framing it as certain and apocalyptic.[/quote]

    Actually when scientists first started warning that the consequences of CO2 could be extreme and dire there where no political interests interested at all in the topic. Fouriers warnings in the 1870s about the greenhouse effect where pretty much ignored until the early 1900s when data started to come in that the infrared absorbsion properties of CO2 he had observed in the laboratory and he postulated would affect the atmosphere where turning up localized around roads and automobile heavy areas. From that point CO2 climate change was pretty much confirmed in theory and observation but still a bit abstract until later in the 1900s when new data found that some of the droughts and changes in arctic and oceanic conditions where directly caused by it.

    Unfortunately the other thing that happened in the 1900s was a growth of anti-science activism around creationism and various health kookery, and some of this bled over into physics denialism which found an apreciative audience amongst conservative audiences who had decided that tempering the carbon economy was "socialist". And now here we are with half the planet insistent on denying the evidence in front of their eyes.

    We've had nearly a 150 years of physics to get here, and now its "political interests" that are making the carbon molecules absorb infra red.

    Well congratulations conservatives, it wasn't us scientific folk that decided atoms have a liberal bias, you goons.

    --
    Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
  80. Re:Surprise by Vintermann · · Score: 1

    The problem is that regardless of what the magnitude of anthropogenic global warming actually is, it *started* with substantial political and corporate interests framing it as certain and apocalyptic.

    This is simply wrong. In the early years, many climate scientists (like Revelle, still quoted for it today, although he absolutely took it more seriously later) didn't think there would be so much warming, and could even speculate (like some modern denialists) that maybe it'd counteract an ice age, maybe it'd be a net positive, etc. The climate scientists (and eventually, some politicians) grew gradually more alarmed as the evidence grew, not least the direct evidence of the thermometer.

    --
    xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
  81. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No true scientist will say that gravity doesn't exist...that doesn't mean there is no debate about gravity: how does it work is a huge issue, our to be more precise why and how are very hotly debated topics.

  82. Re:Surprise by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

    That's pretty standard behavior when a specific set of events has been documented at nauseam. If someone says that gravity is weaker in NYC than in San Francisco, there's a good amount of skepticism that has to be overcome. Same with anyone who argues that Global Warming isn't taking place. They better have some real good data collection and a real good explanation at hand.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  83. Why we should doubt this by argStyopa · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why to be skeptical of the findings?

    The main reason they doubt it is because it contradicts quasi-religous dogma.

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:Why we should doubt this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason to be sceptical is that you should always be sceptical of new findings whatever they are, when the results have been thoroughly examined and replicated then they can be accepted.

      Personally, I would love for this to be true because it would mean we aren't quite as screwed as was previously thought, but I will remain sceptical of the findings until other qualified climate scientists have examined it and failed to find problems with it.

      Another reason be wary of accepting these results on face value is that it is coming from Norwegian scientists and Norway makes a LOT of money from oil, so reduced oil consumption could financially affect these scientists and their families. That doesn't mean the research should be dismissed out of hand, but it does mean you should look extra carefully for ways these scientists might have consciously or unconsciously biased the results.

  84. Not "Less Severe" but "Slower" by clarkie.mg · · Score: 2

    This study doesn't say anything about the "severity" of the phenomenon but is a statistical modelling of the sensitivity of the surface temperature to the concentration of co2. In other words, the rate of the warming. However, it is written : "When the researchers at CICERO and the Norwegian Computing Center applied their model and statistics to analyse temperature readings from the air and ocean for the period ending in 2000, they found that climate sensitivity to a doubling of atmospheric CO2 concentration will most likely be 3.7C, which is somewhat higher than the IPCC prognosis. But the researchers were surprised when they entered temperatures and other data from the decade 2000-2010 into the model; climate sensitivity was greatly reduced to a “mere” 1.9C." That doesn't look to be a very solid model ...

    --
    Men are born ignorant, not stupid; they are made stupid by education. Bertrand Russel
    1. Re:Not "Less Severe" but "Slower" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the models are flawed including the IPCC models and this one talked about here. Depending on anyone given the state of the science is pointless exercise in religion or something. Any scientist would say these models (all of them including the one by these guys on this thread) is purely speculative. We really don't have "setlled science." Anyone who suggests we do is simply a political person. There is no "science" there. They can't outline any experiments, long repeated experiements and proven data that suggest we know any of this.

  85. BLASHPEMERS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How DARE they suggest such a thing??!!?!?!?

  86. Global Warming might not be bad for Norway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have been to Norway (January). They could use some Global Warming.

    1. Re:Global Warming might not be bad for Norway by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      I have been to Norway (January). They could use some Global Warming.

      I'm not sure about that. If, as some predict, the gulf stream breaks down due to global warming, Norway probably will actually get colder.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  87. Re:Global Warming and The Sky Is Falling by nomadic · · Score: 1

    Are you schizophrenic?

  88. "Dump Apes"? - "Democrats" - FTFY by littlewink · · Score: 0

    WTF else could a "Dump Ape" be?!!

  89. Re:Surprise by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The problem is that regardless of what the magnitude of anthropogenic global warming actually is, it *started* with substantial political and corporate interests framing it as certain and apocalyptic.

    Actually, it started with a good chunk of scientists in the 70s and 80s saying that "hey, it seems temperatures are trending upwards. Can we cross-check that and see where this might lead?"

    . In addition, while the scientists of the IPCC may actually be neutral parties, the fact that the IPCC is a UN organization doing research on a subject that blocs of countries could leverage into significant economic advantages at the very least suggests conflicts of interest.

    Ok, so the UN is comprised of bodies that might have some ulterior motives. Instead of asking you to prove your point that they have ulterior motives (you know, innocent until proven guilty, etc), I'll give you the much easier job of just giving me one example of an entity that is not only completely disaffected from any conclusion drawn, but also 100% incapable of being biased. Not that I'm holding my breath, btw. We haven't seen any aliens yet, and even they might have some ulterior motives.

    And it's a legitimate question to ask what research has been suppressed or minimized as a result of the initial politicization of the issue.

    And it's a legitimate question to ask what bodies you're hiding in your backyard that might be uncovered as a result of a police action in your backyard. Oh, it isn't? Yeah, didn't think so.

    Because of the politicization of climate science, individual scientists now have to eliminate personal bias, politics, and economics from their research.

    Now you're getting hilarious. I'd like you to demonstrate a single action that was taken by anyone anywhere at any time that had no personal, political or economical bias, and didn't even have the chance to appear as such. What I'm getting up: you're setting up an impossible scenario, and then acting surprised that no one can complete it. That's dishonest arguing 101.

    Based on this statement, you're what neutral parties call a "believer." Neutral parties generally accept that there probably is some anthropogenic global warming going on. Neutral parties are also smart enough to still ask what that rate of change is, if the climate models are correct enough, what the error bars are on those models, *before* asking if there is anything we should do about it.

    You mean, like the climate scientists doing the actual studies? No? You mean, like random people on the Internet like you? Oh, I see where this is going. Since skeptic has been so utterly tainted by people like Watts and Monckton, you're tried to frame yourself as a "neutral" party just asking some questions. Here's what I know: every one of your questions has already been answered, if you'd just bother to read the scientific articles. Since you aren't, I can only assume that you're trying to throw out random words to derail the discussion.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  90. my fear by circletimessquare · · Score: 3, Insightful

    sunspot activity indicates we're in for some global cooling

    which will counteract the obvious global warming our CO2 output is producing

    so the debate will get shattered

    then, in a decade or two when sunspot activity picks up, the temperature and violence of the atmosphere will shoot back up, and we'll be totally caught by surprise

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:my fear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      then, in a decade or two when sunspot activity picks up, the temperature and violence of the atmosphere will shoot back up, and we'll be totally caught by surprise

      Don't worry. Dennis Quaid will save us.

    2. Re:my fear by nadaou · · Score: 1

      > sunspot activity indicates we're in for some global cooling
      > which will counteract the obvious global warming our CO2 output is producing

      and yet, we're just coming out of a sun spot minimum, and temperatures didn't cool at all. It may be that one is balancing the other right now. The thing to watch is what happens during the next sun spot maximum?

      > then, in a decade or two when sunspot activity picks up, the
      > temperature and violence of the atmosphere will shoot back up,
      > and we'll be totally caught by surprise

      FFT tells us it's an 11 year cycle. No need to wait a decade or two, just for the next big El Nino year when we aren't in a sun spot minimum.

      --
      ~.~
      I'm a peripheral visionary.
    3. Re:my fear by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      so what you are saying is global warming is already dampened, and we're already coming out of the dampening

      shit we're in for some fucking scary hurricanes

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    4. Re:my fear by Muad'Dave · · Score: 2

      According to NOAA, we should be nearing the peak of a solar cycle. Sadly, it's been a terrible 'peak' for radio propagation. I've only got so many 11 year cycles left to live - come on, Sun, give me a break!

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    5. Re:my fear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might want to check your facts. We're currently in a solar minimum, but we've been in it since around 2005. it most likely is going to swing toward a solar maximum over the next decade compounding the problem, not relieving it. The upswing is supposed to start this autumn.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_maximum

      I wish people would research a claim before moderating something up as insightful.

    6. Re:my fear by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      maybe the insightful is the thought of the effect of the sun cycles on our current situation, even if i was off a few years

      so the upswing will come fast and furious any year now?

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  91. Re:Surprise by ultranova · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The simple fact that anyone who produces evidence to the contrary is automatically suspect is perhaps THE biggest problem with the entire climate change debate.

    No, the biggest problem is that there are economic interests involved. The "debate" is between evidence and special interests, in the same way as, say, the evolution vs. creationism "debate". The main difference is that accepting the evidence with regards to climate change implies a need to concrete action - specifically, giving up fossil fuels, which is going to be very painful - which is why more people are willing to delude themselves there.

    Norwegian studies about global warming are as credible as tobacco company funded studies about the effects of smoking, and for the same reason.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  92. Re:Surprise by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Welcome to stage 3 of AGW denial: It's taking place, it's us, but we don't know how bad it is. You're about in the middle of where the US is, and ahead of a few stragglers like Watts who still vacillate between stage 1 and stage 2. Questions 1 through 3 have been answered at nauseam, so I'll leave you to google that for about 30 seconds. As for question 4, here's a more recent study on it: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/21/curbing-climate-change-world-economic-forum_n_2521275.html. There are a number of different studies on this, including some done by the US and the UK government, all of which come to different numbers as for cost. All of them pretty much agree though that it is cheaper to mitigate CO2 emissions than to just continue with our current approach.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  93. Norway ya say? by jeff13 · · Score: 1

    You mean a climate study (that is critical of aaalll the other scientists in the world who have been screaming things have, thanks to VERY recent evidence in the last few years not to mention last year which saw huge droughts, storms, and heat (Australia had to come up with a new colour for their frickin'
      weather map it was so hot), gotten far, far worse), from the Norway who's entire economy derives from oil?

    What a co-inky-dink.

    1. Re:Norway ya say? by ballpoint · · Score: 1

      Australia had to come up with a new colour for their frickin' weather map it was so hot

      Wrong. They just had to use the same color they used in the seventies, when it was equally hot.

      --
      Flourescent (adj): smelling like ground wheat.
  94. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Keep in mind that the evidence is FAR FAR FAR more extensive than just, "getting a bit warmer." Even with the study that is the focus of this slashdot posting, there is NO debate at all in the way that you describe.

    From the F'n article:

    Climate issues must be dealt with
    Terje Berntsen emphasises that his project’s findings must not be construed as an excuse for complacency in addressing human-induced global warming. The results do indicate, however, that it may be more within our reach to achieve global climate targets than previously thought.

    Regardless, the fight cannot be won without implementing substantial climate measures within the next few years.

    So we know what it "means", we know it is going to get warmer, we have to do something about it, cost isn't the issue. At least that is what the authors of THIS study think.

    So, tell me again, where the debate is?

  95. Re:Surprise by Pino+Grigio · · Score: 2

    Very insightful. Look at the headline and paragraph for this story. Firstly, Andy Revkin as cited to cast doubt on the findings. Revkin is not qualified to comment on this, and he certainly wouldn't provide you with a disinterested and bias-free analysis in any case. Secondly, the article points out these findings are from a "government agency". Well, how much climate science is paid for through government agencies? Almost all of it! So if the fact that the government paid for the research is somehow going to bias the conclusions, one could ask the same question about what, precisely, the billions of dollars of government money is paying for in our academic institutions.

  96. Re:Surprise by superwiz · · Score: 0

    An oil-producing country says that burning oil is okay. News at 11.

    You probably meant oil-exporting. Most countries in the world are oil producing. Only the oil-exporting ones can be argued to have an interest in selling oil.

    Oh, and that aside, you are an unbelievable tool. The likes of you were the ones running the inquisition... not arguing for it, not providing the philosophical basis for it, not the ones paying for it. You are of the ilk that took the pleasure in just being a part of it.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  97. Re:Surprise by terec · · Score: 1, Troll

    Welcome to stage 3 of AGW denial: It's taking place, it's us, but we don't know how bad it is.

    That's the scientific method: we don't accept things as fact until they have been convincingly proven through reproducible experiments and logical arguments.

    And it's not a question of "how bad it is" (global warming is obviously not very "bad" so far), it's a question of "how bad will it become".

    Questions 1 through 3 have been answered at nauseam, so I'll leave you to google that for about 30 seconds

    I don't have to "Google it", I've read many of the papers.

    All of them pretty much agree though that it is cheaper to mitigate CO2 emissions than to just continue with our current approach.

    Even the last IPCC report didn't reach that conclusion. Furthermore, all those studies have methodological errors. And, finally, agreement is irrelevant in science; what matters is sound, logical arguments and reproducible experiments.

  98. yet another variable by fullmetal55 · · Score: 2

    the problem with climate study in general is there are literally millions of possible variables to affect global climate. are there things we can do to prevent it? possibly, it's also entirely possible that there is nothing we can do to stop it. it all depends on the variables a study takes into account. I'm not a denier, and I do think there are things we should be doing to lessen our impact on the environment. Climate change is a very new science, there are a lot of factors we don't know about, and new factors come into play in each new study. It's still science, proving and disproving hypotheses is the foundation of the scientific method. Shutting down the findings of a study because you don't believe in it is as short-sighted and self-serving as creationists denying the evidence of evolution.

    I actually like seeing more studies being done on this, rather than just towing the party line...

    frankly...

    the more studies the better.

    1. Re:yet another variable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Toeing the line. Not towing the line.

      I don't understand your remark about millions of possible factors. How is that different from any other field of study?

    2. Re:yet another variable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      towing the party line

      toeing the party line

    3. Re:yet another variable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anthropogenic vs "natural" climate change is a massive distraction. It doesn't matter which it is.

      Human activities contribute C02 (and other gases) to the atmosphere, which contribute to the greenhouse effect, that's scientifically-established fact. Although we may not know for certain whether anthropogenic effects are causing climate change or just adding to and amplifying natural cycles, there is no scientifically sound reason to believe continuing our current habits will be good for us (large mammals who can only survive within a relatively narrow band of possible Earth states). I don't care whether the current climate change trends are "natural" (whatever that means), the only rational way to respond is to reduce emissions, and sequester carbon, to avoid contributing more blankets to the bed.

      That said, not every proposal for doing that is a good one. I'm suspicious of the increasingly narrow focus on climate change by governments, corporations and global NGOs. Mainly because it allows them to offer a set of narrow "solutions" which not only fail to address the full range of interconnected problems human activities have caused to the biosphere which supports us (deforestation, mass extinction, waterway pollution, landfill leaching and waste mountains, plastic islands and algal blooms in the ocean, topsoil erosion etc), but in some cases make them worse. Many of the "solutions" favoured by state/ corporate/ NGO talking heads ignore or even deny the approaching peaks in availability of everything industrial society depends on, from its main energy sources (fossil fuels including nuclear fuels) to the minerals it makes everything out of (metals, phosphate for fertilizers, rare earth elements for portable electronics etc). More importantly, state-corporate-NGO solutions usually involve eroding personal freedom and community/ bioregional autonomy (in other words democracy), and increasing the same centralized control of people's time and the earth's resources which has led us down this path of unsustainable growth, and short-term selfishness which in the long term is not in anyone's self-interest (unless they hope to die rich before the shit hits the fan).

      The solutions we need are those which help to regenerate the biosphere and make it more habitable to humans, organised in a way which gives people their power back; plant more trees (or at least avoid cutting them down unnecessarily), grow organic veges in living soil (which itself absorbs and holds surprising amounts of carbon in the form of microbial life), making things out of wood instead of plastic, or durable bio-plastic instead of disposable plastic made from crude oil. Permaculture, biotecture/ earth ships, regenerative agriculture, Transition initiatives, intentional communities, and many other social movements are developing the tools independently, using many of the same open source community strategies and tactics which continue to produce or improve on GNU, Linux, Mozilla, Libre Office, Wikipedia, CreativeCommons, OpenStreetMap and so many others. OpenSourceEcology.org is an excellent example of the interface between 'free culture' and 'slow culture'. More of this please, and less "alarmist" vs "denier" flamebait.

  99. Re:Surprise by Donwulff · · Score: 1

    Perhaps, but when the government of the third largest oil producer in the world finds out against scientific consenus that consuming oil is, in fact, good for you it should perhaps, just perhaps, be approached with a little bit of scepticism rather than touted as incontrovable evidence.
    And in fact, the claim that global warming has stopped has been refuted again and again in the past. There is far too much noise in climate to make such a determination based on only a decade of data. At some point we'll reach a point where such a determination could be made, but my prediction is the claim will just morph to the form of "But global warming stopped in 2010!".
    Further, many claims like the Norweigian ones aren't really claiming what most global-warming deniers seem to think they are. Bloomberg quotes the researchers; “The Earth’s mean temperature rose sharply during the 1990s,” said Terje Berntsen, a professor at the University of Oslo who worked on the study. “This may have caused us to overestimate climate sensitivity.”
    In other words, they're saying the science is fine and the predictions were correct until 1998, but then for a reason they don't know and can't even guess, global warming suddenly stopped happening. And they're counting on this condition to last indefinitely, or at least for their lifetime, so people don't have to cut down on buring fossil fuels until they run out. But basically, they're only squabbling about the rate of global warming.

  100. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And when all scientists agreed that the world was flat did that physically make the world flat, or is actual fact independet of scientific consensus?

  101. Re:Surprise by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

    1) Not an era of the globe cooling. An era where the general population was panicked about global cooling. I stated that poorly. They were trying to use their models to prove the opposite conclusion, and looked at somewhat different factors. There are several FAR better studies than Hansen's. Plotting "temperature anomalies" is simply not enough. Also read the entirety of Hanson's study not a pundit-analysis of it from 1995-present. The people presenting his data have cherry picked some of his strongest statements. But yes the conclusions are certainly supported by his study. I can't argue with that. 2) Yes CO2 is a greenhouse gas. Yes it heats things up, but we're at least trying to cut down. My point wasn't that it's not happening, as I said, it is. My point was there are a lot of factors that cannot or have not been taken into account. If we found OTHER causes that can be addressed in a more direct, cheaper, or easier method we can mitigate the climate change. For example deforestation causing issues with the carbon, nitrogen, and water cycles. If we find out this is a factor we can pass EPA regulations (I'm a social liberal/fiscal conservative so...a moderate? I'm liberal on anything green (the environment, pot laws) but the PC stuff is getting on my nerves...this was ineveitably gonna come up) to plant certain species of trees that perform best in the specific role we need. We can create provisions for protected areas (areas with certain soil/water profiles) and the like. My plankton argument is actually in favor of global warming. Due to chlorophyll phytoplankton the reflect near-infared visible light very well (like plants.) You might recognize this as the wavelength area the sun radiates most of it's energy on. A lot of plants have markings to reflect UV light. I don't know it's relevance here, but it might be important. What I KNOW is important is that plankton process more CO2 than classical plant matter. This makes sense due to the surface area of the ocean, and the small size of plankton enabling massive surface area. Ocean pollution kills them which weakens the Earth's ability to process CO2. I've spent too much time on this post already, I don't feel like grabbing sources. I don't think I've heard that disputed before though? 3) I don't think you understand how the sun works. Every 11 years it flips it's poles in what's known as the "solar maximum." This is a period in which extremely large CMEs and solar flares are most likely. We have had several X class solar flares hit us in 2012. True there seems to be less sunspot activity right now, but they seem to be FAR more energetic. Then there is a consistent increase in X-class solar flares which is consistent with the solar maximum. " The most recent solar minimum occurred in 2008, and the sun began to ramp up in January 2010, with an M-class flare (a flare that is 10 times less powerful than the largest flares, labeled X-class). The sun has continued to get more active, with the next solar maximum predicted for 2013." From http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/sunearth/news/solarmin-max.html. The people saying "this is the weakest solar cycle" have been misled by a single piece of data. It IS the weakest cycle since 1903 if you look at solar flare/sunspot/cme activity. Unfortunately solar flares aren't even remotely (well maybe remotely) important in this debate. In fact the more sunspots there are the lower the average temperature is. What IS important is that the suns irradiance increases .1+% during the solar maximum. .1% of that kind of energy seems like it could have an impact! There is probably some effect on the solar wind as well. Also obligatory wikipedia quote: "Correlations are now known to exist with decreases in luminosity caused by sunspots (generally - 0.3%)" In other words you're supporting my argument. Less sunspot activity = higher luminosity and higher irradiance. Irradiance is important because the "braids" of mag

  102. Re:Surprise by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

    Isn't all of Antarctica technically the Northern parts?

  103. Re: Surprise by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

    And? Even a broken clock is right twice a day (right to ask the questions not deny climate change.)

  104. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quite right, but in ways you didn't think of. Because of the politicization of climate science, individual scientists now have to eliminate personal bias, politics, and economics from their research. There are suggestions that scientists on both sides are unable to do this, which makes finding out the "truthiness" of climate science very difficult.

    Surely we want to find out the actual truth of what is happening and not the "truthiness".

    According to the definition given to the word "truthiness", finding that out should be easy, whereas finding out actual truths often isn't.

  105. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lovelock says the real cause for concern is not humans but the alarming spread of black daisies.

  106. ENOUGH! by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am just going to say this every time global warming is discussed from now on:

    The climate change debate is a giant distraction that only serves the interests of those destroying the environment.

    At first it was 'is it happening?' then it was 'are we causing it?' and now we have discussions about the magnitude and the exact quantification, about whether it is a debate or not, about whose fault it is.

    Scientists have been saying for decades now 'we are destroying the environment we live in, it is unsustainable and if we don't curb this trend it will become critical.'

    Finding a new way to argue about one specific element of this problem is just another way of avoiding discussing the many things we already know are a problem, and finding solutions. The debate used to be about deforestation, fish stock depletion, groundwater and ocean pollution, unsustainable farming practices etc. After the climate debate is done and settled someone will come up with a new thing to argue about, maybe radio frequency or visible light pollution, or whatever, who knows. The point is we know we are doing things wrong, we have known for ages, why are we still arguing about it?

    These are the facts: The proliferation and industrialisation of the human race is having massive consequences for the earth and the environment, the changes are cumulative and usually either detrimental or unpredictable in their effects. These changes are greatly exacerbated by the unsustainable, greedy and ultimately unnecessary excesses of our consumerist society.

    Does anyone want to dispute these facts? Does anyone wish to make the claim that it would be better to exactly quantify in perfect detail every aspect and facet of each of the ways in which we are causing harm before taking any steps whatsoever to rectify any of them?

    Can we start doing something about it some time soon, please?

    1. Re:ENOUGH! by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Better get used to it cupcake. The BRIC nations have a taste of western prosperity, and they want in on the action too. You think it's a warm party now... My advise to you and everyone on Slashdot. Warship the Sun and bask in its divine heat! Other then that, STFU about AGW because nothing is going to be done about it. And frankly, I don't give two shits either way. I have no dog in this fight.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    2. Re:ENOUGH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does anyone want to dispute these facts?

      What facts? Introducing words like "greedy" and "consumerist" clearly indicates a values-driven discussion, not facts. You didn't even fucking define your terms because you're such a fuckface asshole.

      As to, "only serves the interests of those destroying the environment." Their interests are generally money - not planetary destruction - which is more easily achievable with centralized power to "fix" these problems.

      Start with facts, then we can discuss facts. Start with bullshit and claim that as facts and you expose your gaping asshole, asshole.

    3. Re:ENOUGH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That sure was some solid reasoning there. I'm impressed by your intellectual honesty. Really. Promise.

  107. New York Times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So does this make the New York Times a Global Warming Stabilization denier?

  108. Re:Surprise by semi-extrinsic · · Score: 2

    What's your problem with whale hunting when it is done in a well regulated way on a population which is large enough to sustain some predation? How is it worse than, say, deer hunting? Or keeping cows stowed up for their entire life just to be killed? Is it worse because you don't do it in your country?

    Disclaimer: Am Norwegian, but I've never hunted whale. Asking question out of genuine interest.

    --
    for i in `facebook friends "=bday" 2>/dev/null | cut -d " " -f 3-`; do facebook wallpost $i "Happy birthday!"; done
  109. Re:Surprise by superwiz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The reason people are suspect when they criticize the overwhelming evidence that exists right now is because there are substantial political and corporate interests that support framing it as uncertain or as a debate.

    The reason that proponents of the anthropomorphic theory are much, much more suspect is that they refuse to admit that there is more money on the side of that GW camp. It's just not money coming from private hands. This theory is widely seen as a way to increase government power through arbitrarily-applied regulation and equally arbitrary government subsidies. As much money as the oil industry has, the governments get to print money, so they have more.

    Science self-corrects

    Only when there is no outside bias. Given the tremendous pressure applied on the scientific community by the government and the media to comply with the AGW agenda or be labeled a pariah, and given how vitriolic and visceral the attacks on skeptics are (even going so far as to relabeling them "deniers" so as to pull their credentials as thinking individuals), there is no credible way to claim that there is no outside bias. Any claims to the contrary are down right insane.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  110. Re: Surprise by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I love how you ask the same, hackneyed "questions" that climate change deniers have been trotting out for a while now.

    Read his post carefully. He is not "denying climate change" as you claim but is acknowledging that it is an established fact. What he is asking is how much of the current change is due to man-made influence. Frankly as a scientist (though not in climate change) I have the same question. The debate is not about climate change - that is a fact established so well that even recorded human history provides clear evidence. The debate is about how much of recent change is due to us burning fossil fuel, killing forests etc. and how much we should do to stop this.

    My own opinion is that it seems plausible that we could be having an effect on the climate and, since we don't yet understand what that is, we should take steps to lessen our impact and research not only ways to do this but also how to better understand what impact we are having as well as understanding the natural forces which change the climate. If you want to argue for a wholesale dismantling of the economy you need to have some really hard evidence that this will prevent global warming...showing that this dismantling will be less disruptive than the global warming that would otherwise be caused would also be a bonus.

  111. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Substitute "Scientists have data that strongly indicates" for "scientists say".

    See, the whole point of this science thing is that it's empirical. Feel free to look up what that means.

    This is also a nice little ad hominem. And no, we're not really interested in what you think about the data or theories -- clearly you're unqualified for the discussion.

  112. Re:Surprise by semi-extrinsic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think we all agree that CO2 is a greenhouse gas. The key question is the magnitude of the climate sensitivity to a doubling in CO2 concentration. Is it 1 degree C? 5 degrees C? Somewhere in between? I think that the "mainstream" answer right now is "We don't have enough data to tell for sure, but we're confident it is between 1 and 5 C. But we should be doing something about it right fucking now, so say it's going to be 3 C, and then work out the consequences."

    --
    for i in `facebook friends "=bday" 2>/dev/null | cut -d " " -f 3-`; do facebook wallpost $i "Happy birthday!"; done
  113. Re: Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think you love questions actually. Like everyone with a brainwashed agenda, you are inherently afraid of any questions, legitimate or not.

    You are completely right to question corporations, however you fail rational logic when measuring arguments by unscientific prejudice rather than real investigation.

  114. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Substitute "Scientists have data that strongly indicates" for "scientists say".

    What "scientists have (somewhere)" doesn't matter. Either the data is public, the arguments are logical, and the experiments are repeatable or they are not. And if you're going to base major economic and social policies on scientific results, the results better be bullet-proof.

    See, the whole point of this science thing is that it's empirical. Feel free to look up what that means.

    Why don't you take your own advice and look up "scientific method".

  115. Re:Global Warming and The Sky Is Falling by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

    you forgot to mention that...elvis still lives and americans didn't land on the moon.

    Almost right: Americans still live, and Elvis didn't land on the moon.

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  116. Re:Surprise by superwiz · · Score: 1, Troll

    The "debate" is between evidence and special interests

    That is an outrageous lie. Given how often the counter position is stated, there is no way that you are now aware of it. So you must be telling what isn't truth despite the fact that you know that it is false. That's a lie. The interests on the side of AGW theory are much better funded and have much more at stake than the skeptics. So as far as the funding is concerned, it is the skeptics who have an uphill battle. As far as calling the collected data "evidence", that is also a lie, because most of the skepticism is of the conclusions drawn from the collected data. You don't need evidence to counter a bad conclusion if you can show that the interpretation mechanisms are flawed.

    specifically, giving up fossil fuels

    How do you fail to grasp that this is a multi-trillion dollar endeavor and an unprecedented power grab? How do you shill for a study which might even slightly question the extremes of AGW predictions. AGW is a theory which is used to make calls for drastic dystopian change to the world. How do you possibly ask to do that without at evidence even when it is presented?

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  117. Re:Surprise by sosume · · Score: 1

    .. you assume that global warming simply means everywhere gets proportionally hotter, all year round. It doesn't.. Some places will get colder ...

    The term is Global Warming. A combination of "global" and "warming". Which obviously means warming on a global scale. That's what the '"global" means. Globally so to speak. And no cooling either, just warming. Otherwise it'd be be called "global warming and cooling". Or local warming.

  118. Some explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is one study showing that there is a discrepancy between simulations and reality. However, the variations defined together with the simulation make current predictions and current results still match. The difference has already been discussed by many scientists (not only by that Norwegian report), it can be caused by several different temporary effects. First, at certain increase of temperature the ration between melting ice and new snow can change. This results in more liquid water. If you have ice t 0C and you want water at 0C you have to add a lot of energy. Second, air pollution of certain developing countries increased much more than predicted (actually pollution changes where not added to the models so far, as human pollution in the past was never that massive on a global scale). Third, men made changes in land use where also not considered in the present scale. All these effects can add up to a temporary stop in increase.

  119. Re:Surprise by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    The term is Global Warming. A combination of "global" and "warming". Which obviously means warming on a global scale. That's what the '"global" means. Globally so to speak.

    Correct so far. You understand the meaning of two common words.

    And no cooling either, just warming. Otherwise it'd be be called "global warming and cooling". Or local warming.

    And there you are wrong. Because you made the mistake of thinking that the entire topic is contained in two words. It may have been for idiots like you that the term "climate change" was created.

  120. Wrong Facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, you're really out there. Where do you get your data?

    . Imagine if you and all your fellow citizens had half of your assets invested in oil companies and depended on those investments for half of all your income and half of all your future retirement... in Norway that's the reality.

    - Norway has invested its savings abroad to avoid any oil related flukes. That's why Norway now owns 1% of the world's shares!

    - The oil & gas sector represented 25% of Norway's GDP in 2011.

  121. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Correct about everything except prettier girls. Norwegians are the prettier.

  122. The study referenced hasn't even been officially published. Perusing the comments, I see is religious zealotry from both sides. You don't need a college degree to understand the reasons that climates (plural) are changing and that, globally, it's getting warmer. Educate yourself.

    While the public argues, science goes on. Researchers aren't wasting time addressing whether climate change exists, they are focused on understanding and predicting its effects as well as developing mitigation strategies.

    Is anyone here old enough to remember the ozone hole? CFCs? Well, that problem was (mostly) fixed despite the inconvenience of finding new refrigerants. Switching energy platforms will also be inconvenient but I, personally, hope the public just gets the fuck with it and does so soon.

    Disclaimer: I am an instrument technician & integrator for an atmospheric research laboratory. (read: I know what I'm talking about.)

    --
    Howdy howdy howdy
  123. I can't understand this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was told that the science was settled, and that we were going to fry very shortly . Does this mean that it isn't?

  124. Re: Surprise by ameen.ross · · Score: 1

    This is exactly my opinion on the matter. I'm also a person who tries to be more "green" despite moderate scepticism.

    --
    $(echo cm0gLXJmIC8= | base64 --decode)
  125. Re:Surprise by sortius_nod · · Score: 1, Informative

    Because the whales being hunted for "research" are not only endangered, but are being fished on a commercial scale.

    I'm dubious of this research as it goes against nearly every other peer reviewed paper I've read recently, which all state climate change is observably worse than predicted. I'm not sure where they get the info that temps have leveled off post-2000, but GISS, NOAA, etc, data does not show this.

  126. Re:Surprise by sstamps · · Score: 2

    The "evidence" that exists is that it has been getting a bit warmer; few people disagree with that.

    A lot more than a few people disagree with that, including a significant number of people who have the authority and responsibility to actually DO something about it.

    The "debate" is about what that means.

    No, we KNOW what it means; we have known for decades what it means to have global temperatures get "a bit warmer". Just like we have known for decades what it means to have global temperatures get "a bit colder". The only serious debate left is what we need to do about it. Not when, because the when is NOW, but what.

    Is it going to continue to get warmer?

    Yes. The science is VERY solid on this point.

    Is there anything we can do about it?

    Yes, of course. There are many things we can do about it, but realize that even if we did everything we could, right now, the warming trend will continue for some time due to the enormous inertia of the climate system. What we would be doing right now is reducing the future peak and extent of the warming that will occur for the next few hundred to few thousand years.

    Simply put -- we need to STOP putting more excess CO2 in the atmosphere (I use the term "excess" as a pre-emptive anti-stupid-response for those who would counter with trollish strawmen like "ok, let's all stop breathing, then!"). It isn't going to happen in one day, but we need to make a sincere and concerted effort to make it happen as quickly as possible. We need to start looking towards CO2 sequestration technologies to remove the excess CO2 that we've already put into the atmosphere. We need to make plans for the changes that are going to happen anyway from all the past emissions excesses. Is it a big challenge? Yes, enormous; as enormous as the problem itself. Can we do it? I think we are capable; we have mobilized ourselves as a nation for other important tasks in our history.

    Should we?

    Should we wash our hands after handling fecal matter and before handling our food? Should we purify drinking water? Should we rotate crops? That's the kind of common-sense question that really doesn't need to be asked, does it?

    What are the costs?

    Indeed. What are the costs of NOT doing something about it, and now? Are they far greater than the costs of doing something about it? Well, see, there are some really smart people who have been working on this particular question -- insurance actuaries -- and we already know their answer. People who are experts in risk management are well aware that the costs of doing nothing on climate change are catastrophic, far more so than most practical abatement and mitigation plans combined, and they are already adjusting insurance plans and premiums to take it into account. I think we should take a cue from them as to what the costs are very likely to be and make decisions to do something NOW.

    There are a lot of people who like to confuse the little bit of scientific fact we have with issues of extrapolation, prediction, and policy. That is not science, it is just dishonesty.

    "Little bit of scientific fact" You're kidding, right? There are LIBRARIES full of scientific research on this subject. If that is to be considered "a little bit", perhaps we should start questioning the confusion related to the "little bit of scientific fact" we have with things like gravity, biology, chemistry, evolution, etc.

    One of the main principles of science involves extrapolation and prediction. That's what the scientific method is all about. How do you think we got to the moon? We didn't have previous attempts by ancient civilizations to guide us, we extrapolated and predicted. We did so smartly and very carefully, but that's what we did.

    When the weatherman predicts a big, dangerous storm heading your way, do you think it is a good policy to ignore it and do nothing to prepare for it until it is blowing your house down?

    Do you really consider that *dishonest*? Really?

    --
    -SS "Teach the ignorant, care for the dumb, and punish the stupid."
  127. Re:Surprise by budgenator · · Score: 1

    I am an environmentalist and founder member of the Greens but I bow my head in shame at the thought that our original good intentions should have been so misunderstood and misapplied. We never intended a fundamentalist Green movement that rejected all energy sources other than renewable, nor did we expect the Greens to cast aside our priceless ecological heritage because of their failure to understand that the needs of the Earth are not separable from human needs. We need take care that the spinning windmills do not become like the statues on Easter Island, monuments of a failed civilisation. Statement for the Torridge District Co, James Lovelock

    The sad part is what the billions that have been squandered at the Alter of Apocalyptic Global Warming could have done if spent wisely on real ecological problems.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  128. Re:Surprise by nusuth · · Score: 2

    If most scientists agreed that world was flat, and you were to somehow decide what to do on that information, the rational course of action would have been assuming the world is flat. The rational course of action does not depend on the physical reality but on the best available information. By definition, that information is judged to be better than its rivals. Whether a theory is better than its rivals is the pertinent question, whether it is actually true is not. "The truth" cannot be known as such, as is the "actual fact."

    --

    Gentlemen, you can't fight in here, this is the War Room!

  129. Re:Surprise by TapeCutter · · Score: 1, Insightful

    it *started* with substantial political and corporate interests framing it as certain and apocalyptic

    Why do people believe this shit when it is so fucking simple to refute. Also you have got the various organizations all muddled up. The IPCC is purely for scientific review, it does not "do science", it does not have it's own scientists, nor does it pay a dime to any of the ~2500 scientists who donate their time to write the reports. Their budget is available on their site, it's a modest $5-6 million a year sourced from over 100 nations of all political colours, most of this is spent on airfares and conference rooms and salaries for 3-4 full time admin staff.

    Just to be clear, the UNFCCC is where the political haggling takes place.

    All of your suggestions of how they should conduct themselves before doing anything have been done to death, you simply have not been paying attention. Your sense of fair play has allowed vested interest to pull the wool over your eyes and insert FUD into your brain.

    they have generally missed or skipped peer-reviewed research contradicting the apocalyptic GW scenarios for the past five years

    Despite the fact you leave the word " apocalyptic" undefined could you link to what you consider the best three example of this hidden treasure trove?

    Neutral parties are also smart enough to still ask what that rate of change is

    Currently 0.14degC/decade, however the rate of change itself is also accelerating.

    what the error bars are on those models

    You mean like this?

    I find it very hard to believe you are making these basic mistakes and have also researched the subject for yourself. Forget the idea that you are neutral, your not and I'm not. Question your own assumptions and use reputable sources, then come back and look at your post. When you figure out who has been misleading you will probably get very angry, I know I did. Fool me once shame on you and all that...

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  130. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Correct about everything except prettier girls. Norwegians are the prettier.

    Forget Norway. Only in Kenya.

  131. Re:Scientific Method by WoOS · · Score: 1

    There seem to be quite some studies lately showing that temperate increase "had leveld off". E.g. German Sueddeutsche Zeitung recently cited an English Institute with such a study.

    Criticism of other climate scientist seems to be that the used intervall is too short to make any statements on speed of change, especially since 1998 had been an extremely hot year globally due to El Nino (see second page of above article). Longer term trends seem to be steady at 0.16 C per decade. So don't get your hopes too high on being able to continue driving SUVs along the coastline.

  132. Re:Surprise by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

    The reason that proponents of the anthropomorphic theory

    You mean the anthropogenic theory. Unless you mean a theory which claims the climate doesn't like what we do and therefore punishes us with more heat. :-)

    --
    The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  133. Re:Surprise by semi-extrinsic · · Score: 4, Informative

    Because the whales being hunted for "research" are not only endangered, but are being fished on a commercial scale.

    That's Japan. It's in Asia, not in Europe, you know. I specifically said "in a well regulated way on a population which is large enough". Try answering the question.

    To be specific, the quota for Norwegian whale hunting has been between 500 and 1000 whales per year for the last decades. This is of a species called "common mink whale", estimated global population 184 000 individuals, being cited as "of least concern" on the IUCN Red List for endangered species. That's the same "endangeredness" category as Alaska Moose. Should we stop hunting that as well?

    And regarding the temperatures leveling off post-2000, that's fairly easy to find data for (GIYF): here's a plot showing the global temperature anomaly from Hadley data, NOAA data and NASA data. All are roughly flat for the ten years following 2000.

    --
    for i in `facebook friends "=bday" 2>/dev/null | cut -d " " -f 3-`; do facebook wallpost $i "Happy birthday!"; done
  134. Re:Surprise by omglolbah · · Score: 2

    Norway != Japan

  135. Re:Surprise by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just some nitpicks.
    Fourier died in 1830, he predicted the properties of C02 in 1824 while developing spectroscopy.
    Tyndal confirmed the prediction by experiment in the 1850's
    The first mention of AGW was in 1896 by a guy called Arrhenius, he woefully underestimate the growth in emissions and estimated it would take 3000yrs for CO2 to double.
    Arrhenius was largely ignored for 50yrs, it was believed that the spectrum of H2O overlapped and overwhelmed that of CO2. The "problem" during those 50yrs was explaining the ice ages.
    In the 1950's work on heat seeking missiles improved spectroscopes to the point it could be shown that the two spectra were interleaved not overlapped.

    In 1958 the national academies first warned the US government that CO2 was warming the earth, their confidence in that warning has done nothing but strengthen since that time.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  136. Welcome to Australia by bigtreeman · · Score: 1

    Two weeks ago we had massive fires across about a quarter of the continent.
    But that's alright because the fires are being put out by a cyclone/rain depression.

    We're in Brisbane surrounded by flooding which has gone from the top of the cape
    and is now going down into N.S.W.

    For you small minded people that's over 3000 Km in a week.

    http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/charts/synoptic_col.shtml
    http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/charts/viewer/index.shtml

    and it's still going down the coast probably run out to sea tomorrow
    down N.S.W. south coast, but it's still pissing down here.

    If you have your head where the sun don't shine,
    I don't expect you will notice the drastic weather.

    The only good thing about global warming is the surf is only going to get better.
    Cyclone swells.

    --
    Go well
  137. Re:Surprise by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    Even the last IPCC report didn't reach that conclusion.

    Well duh, the IPCC do not provide any economic calculations or conclusions. They provide the best available reports on what is happening and what the trends are doing, they then advise policy makers what problems are likely to occur and what can be done to mitigate or avoid them.

    Furthermore, all those studies have methodological errors.

    So where are the studies refuting the likes of Stern, the IMF, and other hard nosed bean counters?

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  138. Re:Surprise by terec · · Score: 0

    Wow, so many words, so few facts. FWIW, I actually think we should switch to nuclear as soon as possible. But scientifically and economically illiterate blow-hards like you are dominating the discussion and proposing hare-brained economic schemes that will only prolong the burning of fossil fuels.

  139. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Climate change simply happens.

    Yup, with or without human influence. It's been just-happening since before the days when archaea ruled the Earth. And frankly, I think a warming trend is nicer than a cooling trend. Assuming we have to have one, I wouldn't want to support any super-science that posits to cool the Earth.

  140. Quite the predicament by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right ringers in the US will wanna pounce on this screaming SEE I TOLD YOU SO, but then they will have to embrace a "European" idea, and they all hate European things. What do?

  141. You're confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Arctic, North Pole, Ocean, Covered with Ice. Antarctic, South Pole, has a continent called "Antarctica" covered with ice.

    1. Re:You're confused by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      you are confused, we are talking of alleged "overwelming evidence" of global climate change

  142. The relativity of wrong by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    is actual fact independent of scientific consensus?

    The problem with this common question is that way too many people do not understand what the word "fact" means in a scientific context. Outside of axiomatic systems we don't have any "facts", we only have observations, also note that the fundamental axioms of mathematics are assumptions agreed by "consensus", not fact.

    "Scientific consensus" is just the modern term for what Karl Popper called "the republic of science". It means that no single authority/observation/calculation has the strength of "scientific fact" (or "well established science" if you prefer). At no point in the process of strengthening a "scientific fact" does it become "actual fact", but that's ok because we do not pursue science as a path to absolute truths, we pursue it because of its track record of utility to mankind (and the 'fact' that humans are more curious than the proverbial cat).

    As for the "flat world" canard, the well known skeptic Asimov had something to say about that in his short essay The relativity of wrong.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  143. Re:Surprise by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

    .. you assume that global warming simply means everywhere gets proportionally hotter, all year round. It doesn't.. Some places will get colder ...

    The term is Global Warming. A combination of "global" and "warming". Which obviously means warming on a global scale. That's what the '"global" means. Globally so to speak. And no cooling either, just warming. Otherwise it'd be be called "global warming and cooling". Or local warming.

    That fallacy is why the scientific community was forced to start using "climate change" instead of global warming. Joe Public just can't (or refuse to) grasp the concept of averages.

    Yes, it means warming on a global scale. But the global scale means the *average* goes up. There may be areas that get cooler, but they are outweighed by the number of areas that get warmer.

    Put it in computer terms (only to illustrate the "global scale" fallacy, not how global warming happens): say your CPU has 8 logical cores. All 8 cores are being used moderately by a multithreaded process, but you suspend it when you start running a more demanding process that only uses 6 cores. A monitoring tool will note that 2 cores cool off but the other six get much warmer. The tool's ninth temperature reading, the average of all cores, will obviously report that the temperature of the whole CPU has gone up.

  144. Re:Surprise by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

    What's your problem with whale hunting when it is done in a well regulated way on a population which is large enough to sustain some predation?

    Population of whales was more than an order of magnitude (two, perhaps? two and a half) greater a century ago, and population of humans was an order of magnitude smaller, and it *still* didn't save the whales. That "some predation" would have to be very tiny indeed nowadays.

    I'd be for absolute ban until the population of whales reaches at least pre-1900 levels. Hunting whales now would be like eating the seeds you have to sow for the next year!

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
  145. Re:Surprise by sstamps · · Score: 1

    Except that I didn't propose ANY particular scheme, hare-brained or otherwise. That wasn't the point of the argument. So go prop up your strawman and sodomize it somewhere else.

    You are correct that reason and critical thinking are taking over and dominating the discussion now, and they should be. Go figure. Too bad you failed to participate in any meaningful capacity, but thanks for outing yourself as someone who isn't interested in such in the first place; it is most appreciated. :)

    --
    -SS "Teach the ignorant, care for the dumb, and punish the stupid."
  146. Re:Surprise by Qzukk · · Score: 1

    it's a question of "how bad will it become".

    The answer is "it depends on what we do now".

    I'm tempted to say that what will happen is that emissions will be cut through heavy-handed government interference, global warming won't be so bad after the cuts, and we'll have people saying that there was never a problem in the first place. Much like how in 2000 the y2k deniers were claiming that there was never a y2k problem despite the millions of dollars and man-hours going into making sure there wasn't a y2k problem (and yet I was still getting groceries marked "Best By 19100")

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  147. Billionaires fund attacks on climate science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    1. Re:Billionaires fund attacks on climate science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Billionaires also fund studies to support the climate change movement. What's your point?

  148. Re:Surprise by Muros · · Score: 1

    Accidentally moderated redundant, mouse playing up. Post to undo.

  149. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bah! Climate change is a process not an event.

    There is room for debate, debate on the accuracy of models, debate on the underlying mechanisms, debate on the filtering of data inputs. All of these are valid things to discuss in a scientific context. Political debate, NO. There is room for political debate in the remedy though. My view on the scientific aspect can be summarized as not proven, GW almost certainly true, AGW likely true. Regarding actions, I don't like running an open ended experiment on the only atmosphere I can reach so I think we should be trying to minimize further inputs and looking for effective ways to reverse GW in case we need to in the future.

  150. Re:Surprise by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

    Since everyone sees fit to purposely misinterpret my posts I'm going to preface this. I BELIEVE IN EVOLUTION. I BELIEVE IN EVOLUTION. I ALSO BELIEVE IN GRAVITY. BUT Our understanding of gravity is actually extremely flawed. Everyone on here knows this. Sure we know it's a thing, but there are a lot of grey areas. Dark matter and WIMPs ring a bell? And that's just scratching the surface. At a quantum level gravity is still extremely unknown. Also with evolution there are some somewhat serious questions. The only really "interesting" question is the timescale issue. When dating something carbon-14 dating produces a result that sometimes wildly varies from uranium:thorium ratios. Apparently it can be as far off as 3500 years: http://www.nytimes.com/1990/05/31/us/errors-are-feared-in-carbon-dating.html. I think uranium's decay rate is something ridiculous, and there are a bunch of different ones to use. I don't have the patience to wade through all the fundamentalist garbage to find more valid sources and problems. Anyways I'm just saying even things are practically scientific law have a little mystery left in them. That's the cool thing about science! You find out something is a little bit broken, you tweak it a little, check out the results, rinse, repeat. While pursuing those questions we (the human race I'm not a scientist) tend to stumble across really weird things that lead to more questions or discoveries. Like cellphones being a result of black hole research. Even the most esoteric seemingly asinine questions can have dramatic far-reaching consequences.

  151. Re:Surprise by terjeber · · Score: 1

    Because the whales being hunted for "research" are not only endangered

    They are not endangered. In fact, the scientific consensus, also in the IWC, is that culling the population is the rational thing to do. Sadly, the political wing of the IWC is not going to allow whaling until we can walk from Norway to New York on the backs of whales.

  152. Re:Surprise by terjeber · · Score: 1

    Hunting whales now would be like eating the seeds you have to sow for the next year

    That's like saying we have to stop eating cows since the White Rhino is threatened by extinction. There is no such thing as "whales" that are either threatened or not threatened. There are large numbers of whale species, some which are still far too low in numbers, and other who have re-bounded nicely and of which hunting should take place. If sustainability is what we are looking for. We created an un-balance, by not managing the re-bound, we'll do even more damage. The Minke, for example, competes for resources with species of whale that are actually threatened by extinction. We created the imbalance, now we have to manage the re-bound. That means culling the ones that re-bound the fastest.

    Oh, and don't worry about the future. People are never going to be big whale eaters again. Due to the toxicity, eating only moderate amounts of whale meat once every blue moon is a health risk.

  153. Re:Surprise by terjeber · · Score: 1

    I feel sorry for you that you react so violently to someone pointing out that your religion is based on nonsense. Now go play with the rest of the jihadists.

  154. Re:Surprise by terjeber · · Score: 1

    Climate change simply happens

    Yes, and Jesus simply rose from the dead. I mean, could you get more religious?

    The saddest part of the AGW lunatic lobby (which is not the same as the serious scientists researching Climate Change) is that they have made "skeptic" a bad word. The only people who view skepticism as bad are religious nuts.

  155. Volcanoes, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Any study of climate change that doesn't take into account the effect on ocean temperatures caused by about 5000 active underwater volcanoes is flawed from the beginning.

    Know of any?

  156. Re:Surprise by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    What does the age of a model have to do with anything? Why would you expect a model from the 1970's to have "realized concrete predictions" more than a newer model? They all can be run to cover any time period. Wouldn't you expect as time goes on that models would get better, more refined and we'd be able to throw more computing power at them?

    All those other things you mention have been and are being studied by scientists. They are not being ignored by climate scientists but there has to be a plausible link for them to take it into account. Climate scientists certainly factor in changes in solar output and large volcanic eruptions already. They point to deforestation, particularly burning as a factor in CO2 levels. So scientists are incorporating those and other things into the theory as they become more known and so far none of them has been shown to be anything more than a vernier dial compared to the "Human caused emissions of CO2 are the major factor in global warming." dial. Debate is fine but it has to be scientifically based.

  157. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the point the GP was trying to make was that Mother Nature doesn't give a rat's fart what we humans think is happening, will happen, or should happen. She can not be reasoned with. She can not be debated with. She's going to do her thing regardless and must be feared.

    mwuha ha ha ha ha

    dem'd da breaks kid.

    Personally I'm putting my money on what the laws of thermodynamics and chemistry predict will happen. They've been pretty accurate so far. You can put your faith in those laws being partially or wholy wrong, but you'll have to forgive me if I think you are either ignorant or insane to continue along those lines.

  158. Spot The Shill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The DefCon folks have the right idea. Although with discussions of global warming, as with anything political, sometimes it's almost too easy.

  159. Lost In Horizons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looks like Pres. Obama is the first Slave To Service the Global Ponzi Scheme.

    And a card caring participant.

    I will not be jumping in line.

    XD

  160. When ice melt is absorbs significant heat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When ice melts, it absorbs as much energy as it would take to heat an equivalent mass of water by 80 C. During the melting process, the temperature remains constant at 0 C. While melting, any energy added breaks the hydrogen bonds between ice (water) molecules. Energy becomes available to increase the thermal energy (temperature) only after enough hydrogen bonds are broken that the ice can be considered liquid water. The amount of energy consumed in breaking hydrogen bonds in the transition from ice to water is known as the heat of fusion.

  161. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > That's Japan. It's in Asia, not in Europe, you know.

    But as a Norwegian you'll know that both Norway and Iceland have thumbed their noses at the IWC's rules. What makes Japan the worst is that they're doing in a sanctuary zone and hunting fin whales too.

    > To be specific, the quota for Norwegian whale hunting has been between 500 and 1000 whales per year for the last decades. This is of a species called "common mink whale", estimated global population 184 000 individuals, being cited as "of least concern" on the IUCN Red List for endangered species.

    talk about your rationalizations! hey we're the least worst nature-rapist on the street! cut us some slack!

    > That's the same "endangeredness" category as Alaska Moose. Should we stop hunting that as well?

    If the Alaskan Moose is being thinned by 1 out of every 184 individuals each year, then fuck yeah yes we should stop that as well.

    > And regarding the temperatures leveling off post-2000, that's fairly easy to find data for (GIYF): here's a plot showing the global temperature anomaly from Hadley data, NOAA data and NASA data. All are roughly flat for the ten years following 2000.

    climate requires you to look at more than a 17-20 year time period. but of course you knew that and are just being a dick cherry picking the 1998 El Nino as your starting point.

  162. Wait, what's this fine print? by RevWaldo · · Score: 1

    "This study was sponsored by the... Norwegian Orange Growers Council?"

    .

  163. Re:Surprise by khallow · · Score: 1

    The problem with your argument is that you assume that global warming simply means everywhere gets proportionally hotter, all year round. It doesn't.

    I think a bit more nuance is necessary here. Everywhere on the surface of Earth would experience some degree of warming from the AGW effect. It really is a universal heating effect at the surface of the Earth. Not everywhere may experience net warming as a result due to secondary climate effects which cool the area more than AGW heats it up.

    This is why I think terms like "climate change" are inherently very deceptive.

    As to your claim that everywhere will experience more extreme weather events, it's worth noting that is an opinion not based on fact. To prove evidence for such an assertion, one needs a lot more statistical evidence than has been gathered to date.

    As to your claim that the UK will cool down due to the shutdown of the Gulf Stream, this is based on the assumption that a lot of low salinity surface water will come from the Arctic Ocean. We haven't established that degree of melting nor considered how much of such low salinity water may escape through the Bering Strait (obstruction of which appears to be the big driver of geologically recent glaciation).

    There might even be simple mechanical means for preventing such climate issues such as an array of floating buoys mechanically mixing sea water from different depths.

  164. Re:Surprise by khallow · · Score: 1

    I think the primary effect would be to push atmosphere up about a hundred meters or so. In a marginal environment like Mt. Everest it probably would save lives on occasion from oxygen deprivation.

  165. S@#$t !!!! by jacekm · · Score: 1

    What a shame. I'm freezing here and no warming ? Come on people. Global warming was my last hope !!!

    JAM

  166. Re:Surprise by khallow · · Score: 1

    I still hope that the worst case scenario(a 4 degree rise) will be the "working scenario" for the solutions that will be used.

    Would you mind explaining that? I guess my concern here is that our solutions for AGW seem to be unusually expensive given the problem. I guess the problem here is that the temperature sensitivity of carbon dioxide is inversely proportional to time. And the cost of a solution is inversely proportiona; to the inverse of the exponential of the time over which it has to be implemented (this is "time-value"). One gets a superexponential relationship between temperature sensitivity and the cost of solutions to that temperature sensitivity.

    It doesn't show up on short time frames, a solution that is paid for in two weeks costs pretty much the same as one paid for in one week. But over long time frames, it's quite relevant. For example, harm that occurs in 50 years is going to be somewhere around three times as costly in inflation adjusted money as if it happened in 100 years (my assumption here is that money in hand today is about 2% more valuable than that same money, adjusted for inflation in a year's time). Similarly, if it happens in 100 years instead of 200 years, that's a factor of ten roughly in cost difference just from the difference in time.

  167. Re:Surprise by jhol13 · · Score: 1

    Every single nature program on TV at least once claims some "huge problem" (coral dying, amount of rain increasing or decreasing, species die or spread[1], ...) due to global warming. But this far the warming has been so small that is is hugely overwhelmed by random fluctuations so the *major* cause for the "huge problem" cannot be global warming - as of now. Still as a fact they say "due to GW huge problem". There likely are some problems *due to GW* in 100 years, but not today.

    This kind of dishonesty must be stopped. It does a big disservice for you. For example I don't give a shit about GW as I am confident "cheaper to mitigate" actually means "more subsidies" to you, i.e. more taxes to me.

    Besides, during my remaining life the GW won't have any effect on my daily life. None whatsoever.

    [1] Somehow always those spreading are "harmfull" and those dying are "cute". Without a single exception (I know there are, but they are never mentioned).

  168. Re:Surprise by jhol13 · · Score: 1

    Are you really claiming there is no economic interest in the "alternatives"? They see an immense amount of subsidies to mitigate the "pain". That is why they are willing to delude themselves at believing GW is going to kill us all. Unless of course we pay the ransom ... I mean subsidies to save the Earth as we know it.

    This is why you never see a single advantage of the GW mentioned anywhere. Are you really claiming there is no advantages? Or that the advantages are so small as to be totally ignored?

  169. Look at the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't call it global warming anymore, because that term misleads one into thinking that the planet is just getting hotter. I call it climate change, but even that's not a really good term.

    Warming is a secondary problem to what is actually happening. If the temperature was just rising slightly everywhere species and ourselves could adapt [plants will have a harder time because the temperatures get hotter at higher latitudes while the photoperiod (hours of sun) stay the same].

    If we accept the premise that CO2 emissions are causing more of the sun's energy to be trapped in our atmosphere (the greenhouse effect - I believe this to be true), then what this amounts to is a physics problem. More energy is being transferred(captured) into a chaotic system of weather (hot and cold fronts).

    If you inject energy into a system, up to a point that system will absorb the energy. At some point however, it will start to destabilize, it will need to get rid of that excess energy. How we will see that manifest is probably as extremes of weather: more intense hurricanes (hi Sandy), monsoons will drop more rain, cold fronts will also get colder (we are melting ice at the poles), and chinooks will happen with more frequency/intensity. The last two of these are particularly troubling... last year there was a week in the middle of winter where the weather warmed up significantly in Michigan, the grapes started to thaw and grow leaves thinking it was spring time, and then old man winter returned with a vengeance and wiped out the entire state crop for the year.

    My opinion is my own, based on deductive logic... I don't care what studies say and I don't know what it will mean for us in the near and long term (maybe higher food prices, maybe people have to move inland a bit)... But we can't continue to cause the capture of energy into a chaotic system and expect that the output to be the same or inline with historical values.

    -G

  170. I don't care. by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

    I'd like to say something.

    I don't care.

    I don't care if the globe is getting warmer or colder, I don't care if humans caused it, I don't care if CO2 forcing is greater or lesser than guessed, I don't CARE.

    I want enough solar panels on my roof to power my whole house. You know why? Because I want to be energy independent. REAL energy independence. Not this fake "independence" they talk about when they're talking about countries. Real independence, free of privatized utility companies who will jack up rates whenever they can beg, borrow, or bribe a public utilities commission into letting them do it.

    And here's the worst part of the whole mess: the technology required is available, right now. It's not some lab bench curiosity. It's off the shelf. Real, manufactureable, see it, touch it, lick it if you want, carry it home hardware. The only problem is the high cost per watt.

    They tell me that cost is dropping. Call me when it reaches parity (or just a little more) with what I pay now.

    Until then, SHUT THE HELL UP ABOUT THE CLIMATE.

  171. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's your problem with whale hunting when it is done in a well regulated way on a population which is large enough to sustain some predation? How is it worse than, say, deer hunting?

    Because, unlike deer, whales can't help being overweight. It's high fructose corn syrup and McDonald's to blame, whereas deer have only themselves to blame for being hunted (you know, for being made of meat, and for posing a threat to human safety by hurling themselves into traffic constantly.) That's why, you insensitive clod. Hunting whales is WRONG! Instead, you should offer them a gallon of chocolate ice cream and a couple of pepperoni pizzas, look them in the eyes and tell them how beautiful they are, so they feel better about themselves.

    What's more, you should make everyone in society feel bad for preferring women who are of a more normal weight; especially those unfortunates^h^h^hlucky people who married what turned out to be a whale in sheep's clothing. END WHALE PREJUDICE NOW!!!

    This Public Service Announcement brought to you by BURP SLAP, Big Ugly Repulsive People Standing Lamely Against Prejudice.

  172. Re:Surprise by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

    Age is very important when taking into account predictions. If the period of time is too small it could just be a coincidence. Sample size is important in any scientific study is it not? I'm not saying that invalidates results I'm just saying I'd feel they were more concrete over 30-100 years. Primarily since in geography and climate science the time scales are at least 100s of thousands of years if not millions. If you pulled an arbitrary 30 years out of the ice age, or the heating period after...well...you get the idea. There are several extremely long periods of cooling and warming that have taken place on the earth. I have even heard the theory (I think it's wrong) that global warming killed the dinosaurs. In my view (MY personal view) there is no way 10 years of data could reach a "concrete" conclusion. It can reach a fairly well-supported conclusion, but it's just not enough time to say entirely. Hell that's not even an entire solar cycle! You're right the models have probably gotten better, but 10 years of data just isn't enough for even a 3 sigma standard of evidence. There ARE models from the 70s, but none of the predictions are perfect, or near-perfect. They are in the ballpark. As I said I believe (I said BELIEVE) that this is because they were trying to prove "global cooling" at the time. I remember watching the debates, and being bored to death as a child. Of course they are incorporating those things into their models. I'm not the only one to have those thoughts. I'm sure each of those thoughts was derived of, if not entirely of something said by someone else. It's pretty rare to have a "truly original" thought in human society I believe. I'm not saying you're wrong. However I would need to see a link to these studies before I'm convinced. That being said I can definitely be convinced. I believe my points were scientifically supported. I did after all have fairly good sources for any of my points yes? I was just trying to point out how ridiculous the people that say there "isn't even a debate" are. That concept in *anything* is entirely contrary to the scientific method. What it really comes down to is that I don't like people being dismissive about anything. I'll listen to an "ancient astronaut" theory all day, and I won't outright dismiss it. Sure it's pretty crazy, and it's probably not true, but why not at least listen to the evidence? That was my whole point. People kept going on about how I had an agenda and was some kind of climate change denialist nutjob, so I had to keep going on and on.

  173. if your great, great, grandchild... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... is so stupid he cannot deal with a half-inch rise in sea level using 22nd century technology.... he deserves to suffer; Darwin at work.

  174. Gee, I wonder what "warming" means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a new one on me, and how exactly will this occur?

    If some areas right now are too COLD to grow crops, I wonder what effect global WARMING might have?

    cough *retard* cough

    1. Re:Gee, I wonder what "warming" means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a new one on me, and how exactly will this occur?

      If some areas right now are too COLD to grow crops, I wonder what effect global WARMING might have?

      cough *retard* cough

      Cold or hot, you won't get much corn out of sand, rock, or peat bog. There's more than temperature to crop growing.

    2. Re:Gee, I wonder what "warming" means by khallow · · Score: 1

      Cold or hot, you won't get much corn out of sand, rock, or peat bog.

      Peat bogs should be pretty good for farming actually. Just drain them first. Lot of farm land in the US used to be wetlands.

    3. Re:Gee, I wonder what "warming" means by Sean+Hederman · · Score: 1

      Do you have lots of peat bogs? Because here in South Africa we've got very few wetlands. We've got a few deserts which will get bigger. No tundra, not much rain forest. So, the basic point seems to be "the already hot parts of the Earth will just have to starve, and those of us in the temperate latitudes will be alright Jack". Short sighted,immoral, as well as flat out wrong.

    4. Re:Gee, I wonder what "warming" means by khallow · · Score: 1

      And I see no actual disagreement with my point. Just some pointless whining. As to South Africa, you're going to lose more land to bad farming practices than you will to AGW. Maybe you ought to work on the bigger, more important problems first.

    5. Re:Gee, I wonder what "warming" means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your point is idiotic. It will take hundreds of years to make the peat bogs fertile enough to replace even a part of what is lost by AGW. You will lose far, far more than can be replaced by peat bogs in any case. The fact that you show so little care about the impact on the rest of the world classifies you as downright psychopathic.

      Also, we actually have good farming practices in South Africa, in fact we have some of the most sophisticated agricultural systems in the world. Of course someone as ignorant as you wouldn't know that, would you?

      Our problem is that much of our farming is in or near semi arid areas which will grow. Wine farming is already being affected, areas that have provided some of the best wines in the world are now becoming too hot to produce quality, and the winelands are, in essence moving, towards the coastal areas with cool breezes. But even that won't last long. It's possible the 300 year old wine industry in our country will not last out the century.

      Now take your sneering ignorance, and shove it.

    6. Re:Gee, I wonder what "warming" means by khallow · · Score: 1

      It will take hundreds of years to make the peat bogs fertile enough to replace even a part of what is lost by AGW.

      That hasn't been true in practice. There have been similar bogs throughout the US, for example, and they were drained and farmed much quicker than that, usually well within a human lifetime.

      Also, we actually have good farming practices in South Africa, in fact we have some of the most sophisticated agricultural systems in the world. Of course someone as ignorant as you wouldn't know that, would you?

      You mean, you used to. The desertification problem you allude to is an indication that things have changed.

      Our problem is that much of our farming is in or near semi arid areas which will grow. Wine farming is already being affected, areas that have provided some of the best wines in the world are now becoming too hot to produce quality, and the winelands are, in essence moving, towards the coastal areas with cool breezes. But even that won't last long. It's possible the 300 year old wine industry in our country will not last out the century.

      It's also possible that your claims are based on a few decades of data that don't properly reflect how climate is actually going to change.

      But let's suppose you're correct here. You've already mentioned the adaption-based solution. Move the vineyards to where they are still producing quality grapes. If that's no longer in South Africa for some reason, then grow something else.

      Now take your sneering ignorance, and shove it.

      Oops, guess I didn't follow orders this time. Maybe you'll have better luck making silly demands some other time.

  175. Re:Surprise by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    Again, what does the age of anything have to do with it? What makes you think a 10 year old climate model is limited to 10 years of data? Climate models can be fed with data of any age and they'll calculate based on what you give them and run as long as you let them go. Typical climate model runs are for periods of 100 years or so (accomplished in about 1 month of model run time). And let's be clear, climate models are never fed temperature data except maybe as a starting point, that is part of their output. What they are fed is things like changes in insolation, CO2 levels, the occasional major volcanic eruption, ENSO data etc. I'm just confused that you think age has anything to do with it.

    The "global cooling" myth needs to die. A search of the scientific literature from 1965 to 1979 found 44 papers on global warming and only 7 papers on global cooling. The cooling papers got a lot of publicity when Time and Newsweek used them as cover stories but they were never the mainstream view. At least a couple of the cooling papers were examining what could happen if humans continued increasing the level of aerosols and SO2 at the rate they were up to that time. Continuing increase would have caused more cooling. Of course we implemented pollution controls and pretty much stopped that problem although it's growing again because of the industrialization of SE Asia. I was in my 20's back then and I don't remember any televised debates. Maybe on PBS I suppose.

    I'm happy to have a debate as long as it's done on a scientific basis. But to debate things scientists have already examined and come to conclusions on is pointless unless you have new information. You owe it to the person you're debating to be knowledgeable about subject you are debating including the current research in the field.

  176. Re:Surprise by Grayhand · · Score: 1

    The simple fact that anyone who produces evidence to the contrary is automatically suspect is perhaps THE biggest problem with the entire climate change debate.

    That's not the problem it's the anti global warming people latching onto any study that supports their claims and focuses on it and assumes all other studies are biased. Other studies are showing last year was a full degree warmer than previous records so who is right? I see evidence on the news practically every night. Not because I'm cherry picking but because I've been around more than a half a century and I've never seen weather like this. Also remember the real issue isn't warming it's more radical weather. Warming deniers always pick unseasonably cold days to claim as proof warming is a hoax ignoring that the science talks averages and radical shifts so cold weather is part of the pattern. We had pipes freezing for the better part of a week here in Phoenix but before that it was unseasonably warm. Weather tends to be like a rubber ban and warm weather can result in a sudden cooling in the winter. The real point is I've read multiple articles on warming trends worldwide literally from Antarctica to the North Pole and everywhere in between and they all show a warming trend. Droughts to dying corals to vanishing glaciers. Collapsing ice flows that scientists literally thought were impossible should give everyone pause. I recently saw a Nova episode on Greenland glaciers that was jaw dropping. The amount and form of the melts was shocking. The experts all appear to be stunned by what they are seeing so my question is if the experts are shocked and concerned then why aren't the deniers? FYI There are slowly "scientists" coming out against global warming. Most are backed by conservatives and many by the Koch brothers themselves. If the Koch brothers pay for the education of a person in climate science and that person went in believing it's all a hoax then came out of college claiming it's all a hoax then I think it's reasonable to call that person biased. The goal of people like the Koch brothers is keep doubt alive to avoid regulations that will decrease their profits.

  177. Re:Surprise by superwiz · · Score: 1

    Obviously. This isn't the only mistype in my post, btw.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  178. Re:Surprise by Genda · · Score: 1

    I don't know, could it be I'm against whaling because it involves the wholesale slaughter of the largest brained animal on the planet, an animal with a complex language, an animal with an extended lifespan and race memory and almost certainly sentience? I dunno, I'd say that puts it above a deer, an animal just only slightly more consciousness than a rutabaga. See, I'm good with agriculture, have no problem with utilizing life on the planet to sustain our life. That said, we have a bunch of close primate relatives, whose intelligence demands we consider them as having every bit as much right to be here as we have. In fact there are a significant number of animals, certain parrots and crows, higher primates, cephalopods, cetaceans and a smattering of other critters who've demonstrated by remarkable intelligence, that we should be showing these creatures some respect and perhaps as we evolve ourselves, help them reach their own escape velocity as well. Of course you could just turn them all into dog food. Its not like we have any formal obligation to preserve the miracle of sentience in other species... it just makes us seems like a bunch of self absorbed, misanthropic, unevolved, evil monkeys, but who cares, if we blow the whole damn thing up, or burn it all down, as long as we get ours, screw the universe... right?

  179. Princess, aged 17, still believes in miracles. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Norway circa 1900: pisspoor country of fishermen struggling to feed their families through the freezing winters
    Norway circa 1990: largescale underseas oil and natural gas field drilling brings in revenue in excess of what oil sheiks see

    Therefore, I would guess norwegians are HONESTLY saying global warming is a hoax, a non-issue and green wet dream. They have no vested interest in spinning the hydro-carbon market at an even higher RPM...

  180. Mitigation studies and cost = bunkum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I may not be a climate scientist, but I'm a fully trainined Operational Researcher and cost accountant. The UK Stern review is a travesty of a good economic analysis; there are serious methodological flaws, starting with the discount rate.

    What I found most distressing is that these cannot be explained away as "accidental" errors. Stern is not an idiot, but makes so many trivial "mistakes"; many hidden quite deeply, and always in one direction. I'm good enough to tell the difference between errors and subterfuge in this field; and Stern follows pretty much how I would do it, if that was my brief. Stern is clearly attempting to mislead, and the dishonesty makes me question the ethics of the rest of the AGW crowd in areas outside my discipline.

  181. Re:Surprise by terec · · Score: 1

    I'm tempted to say that what will happen is that emissions will be cut through heavy-handed government interference, global warming won't be so bad after the cuts

    Merely "cutting" of carbon emissions isn't going to change anything significant, it's just going to delay things by a few years. To stop CO2 growth, all major industrialized nations have to become carbon neutral. The only way to do that with today's technologies is to switch to nuclear on a grand scale. That doesn't require "government interference", it requires less government interference.

  182. Re:Surprise by terec · · Score: 1

    Well duh, the IPCC do not provide any economic calculations or conclusions.

    But it does. Go look at it.

  183. Re:Surprise by terec · · Score: 1

    So where are the studies refuting the likes of Stern, the IMF, and other hard nosed bean counters?

    Have a look here, for example: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stern_Review

    Methodological errors include the use of incorrect discounting rates, ignoring technological uncertainties, ignoring the feedback of climate change on growth, and ignoring opportunity costs. And Stern's conclusion that CO2 levels can be stablized at an annual cost of (only) 1% GDP doesn't even make sense.

  184. Re:Surprise by terec · · Score: 1

    Except that I didn't propose ANY particular scheme, hare-brained or otherwise.

    Reading isn't your strong point either: "but scientifically and economically illiterate blow-hards like you are dominating the discussion".

  185. Re:Surprise by sstamps · · Score: 1

    Apparently, thinking and writing aren't your strong points. Try reading your own words a few times; maybe their ambiguity will sink in. Probably not, though.

    --
    -SS "Teach the ignorant, care for the dumb, and punish the stupid."
  186. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The simpler fact is that the climate skeptics have produced a relentless stream of crap on a daily basis. So much so that the conditioned response is what bit of crank science have those monkeys found now.

    Having looked at the way the skeptics presented this paper I would say that it is crap. There are certainly some oddities. But maybe I am being unfair and should look at the source paper and not the press release.

  187. STOP! STOP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    STOP! STOP! We're making the world a better place for the wrong reason!

  188. Re:Surprise by drinkypoo · · Score: 0

    I am right there with you. Personally intelligence IS what matters to me and Whales have clearly got it. Deer are damned dumb. Humans are a separate issue, I support laws against killing them (for food or otherwise) because I am one.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  189. Re:Surprise by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

    I'll agree with most of what you say as long as you don't try to take away my intelligent, tasty bacon.

    --
    Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
  190. Re:Surprise by pastafazou · · Score: 1

    Yes, we can all agree that CO2 is a greenhouse gas. But we don't all agree on it's effects. Water vapor is also a greenhouse gas, and it absorbs the same spectrum as CO2 and is much more prevalent. There are several basic questions still not answered about how the entire process works. For instance, how long does the CO2 hold any radiation it absorbs vs how long water holds it? How much radiation does the CO2 absorb given the variable content of water vapor in our atmosphere? There are many others too, and the worst part about this whole debate is that the UN IPCC got involved and politicized it. So now the scientists are caught in the middle of a political war, and instead of information flowing freely, they're bottling it up.

  191. Re:Surprise by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

    And you just entered stage 1 scientism.

    Science concludes global warming is occuring.... therefore disagreeing with government policies on how to combat at make you anti-science.

    Study shows transfats are bad for your health.... therefore if you disagree with banning transfats you are anti-science.

    Study shows wearing bicycle helmets reduces head injuries while cycling... therefore being against mandatory bicycle helmets makes you anti-science. ....

  192. FR22? by AndyKron · · Score: 1

    OK, so when do we get our Freon back?

  193. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The simple fact that anyone who produces evidence to the contrary is automatically suspect is perhaps THE biggest problem with the entire climate change debate.

    Not at all. Extraordinary claims should probably get extraordinary scrutiny, thus the requirement for extraordinary evidence when support said claims.

    You might call it disputing orthodoxy, but I'd call it analyzing evidence. This is not a debate, but science. Save a guaranteed 7 minute rebuttal for debating the policy that the science drives, instead.

    It's like the military, who are here to protect democracy, not practice it.

  194. Re:Surprise by DarenN · · Score: 1

    Wait, you're dismissing it because it's from Norway? First of all, two of the institutes which are most associated with the theory of anthropogenic global warming are GISS, and UEA CRU. The first is in the US funded by the government, and you cannot tell me that the US administrations are all anti-oil greenies. The other is in the UK, which *gasp* is also an oil producer. Don't tar the Norwegians with your prejudices.

    Second, read the damn paper. It doesn't say that there isn't warming. It doesn't claim that there's no anthropogenic effect. It merely attempts to explain something that's bothered the hell out of the CC research community for the last decade - why is it not still warming? Their conclusion is that the forcings in the model overestimated climate sensitivity so we have a bit more time before it's catastrophic (if you believe it will be).

    So, this a paper which tries to explain something that is a known problem without actually challenging anything about the underlying theories. And you're attacking it because of your mental problems which see conspiracies everywhere? One of those shadows behind your door or maybe the monster under your bed should whisper the answer to this in your ear - who makes and runs all the green technolgies and generators that will replace the carbon spewing monstrosities we have today? You'd find some familair names and logos in there.

    --
    Rational thought is the only true freedom
  195. Re:Surprise, YOU ARE HERE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://imgur.com/s19MOMd

  196. Re:Surprise by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    I'll take the opinion of the climate scientists rather than some random person off the internet, thanks.

  197. Re:Surprise by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

    Paragraphs, what the fuck are they for.

    --
    Watch this Heartland Institute video
  198. Re:Surprise by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

    For instance, how long does the CO2 hold any radiation it absorbs vs how long water holds it?

    What?

    How much radiation does the CO2 absorb given the variable content of water vapor in our atmosphere?

    Huh?

    --
    Watch this Heartland Institute video
  199. Re:Surprise by kelemvor4 · · Score: 1

    Norway and Sweden are very different; some conflicts even exist between the two. Norway has a bigger territory, and has control over all the areas where there are natural resources. Norway has a much smaller population. Sweden has a more vibrant society and prettier girls. Norway is much more rich thanks to all the oil.

    If all those things are true, then Sweden needs a new government to properly exploit the rich natural resources you mentioned.

  200. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if it's 1C then everyone agrees no consequences that are negative particularly. At 5C there are probably substantial negatives some places. At 3C I don't know if it's positive or negative. So, on the face of it your logic makes sense. Study 3C impact and see if really this is something we should worry about and if there are easy fixes for those negative things that might happen.

    The problem is that all the studies are biased to looking at the negatives. I have never seen a study which says there will be a positive impact on anything. That seems unlikely. It's obvious that you're not going to get a study financed if you say the result is benign. So, there is a bias in any study to be dealing with "disaster". You won't get your biology study funded if it doesn't support cancer or heart disease. In my view whatever negative things that happen from a temperature rise will probably be offset by positive things. I can go into detail why I believe that. Even the IPCC says that for a small temperature change the effect is positive but of course that's why they will never admit the change is going to be small. They desperately need us to be alarmed to continue funding this. Everyone knows it which is why the thing has become enormously political. Just think for a second. Temperatures have been going up for 200+ years since the LIA and they have been higher 1000, 2000, 3000 years ago than today. Societies at those times had reached peaks as we have today. We have no reason to believe that the temperature today or in the last 200 years has been "ideal". We have no idea what the ideal temperature is. I wouldn't even know how to judge what is the right temperature of the earth or what is the best for what? So, if temperatures rise 1 degree, 2 degrees, 3 degrees or more how do we know this is less ideal? If it is because we are worried about having to move some buildings off coast land we have now that seems a poor rationale for determining optimum temperature for all living things. Is it to minimize the inconvenience of specific plants and animals, to create maximum biodiversity by what measure? How do we have any idea what the temperature should be or the sea level should be 100 or 1000 years from now? This is stupid discussion without the context of understanding what we are trying to achieve.

  201. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To quote Family Guy: "Japan... they kill things we like!"

  202. Re:Surprise by pastafazou · · Score: 1

    Do you not understand the basic principle of how CO2 is supposed to work? Sunlight comes down, strikes earth. Some is reflected, some is absorbed. The portion that is absorbed is radiated upwards as heat (infrared). CO2 and water vapor both absorb this reflected radiation, and then in turn re-radiate the energy, again in the infrared. Only this time, it radiates it in all directions, not just up. Thus, much of the original infrared that was radiating up, is diverted back down by CO2 and water vapor. That's the principle. However, water vapor has a much greater heat capacity than CO2. What hasn't been determined is how much radiation CO2 is actually able to absorb given the prevalence of water molecules in our atmosphere, and how quickly is it re-radiated when compared to water molecules re-radiating. And while your video is quite accurate in terms of what we're doing wrong to mitigate the situation, it doesn't address the fact that the basic mechanism of CO2 in our atmosphere isn't completely understood yet.

  203. Re:Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    whose intelligence demands we consider them as having every bit as much right to be here as we have.

    There is no such thing as a "right to be here". We're just lucky. The dinosaurs? Not so much.

    Not saying you shouldn't try to preserve life, but it's not a "right". You have to fight for it.

  204. Re:Surprise by loufoque · · Score: 1

    The resources are in the North and Norwegian Seas. Sweden has no coasts there.

  205. Re: Surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Honestly with the level of deforestation still going on even if we suddenly stopped all emissions for "fossil fuels" we'd most likely still have a significant problem. The key is do we bankrupt the gloabl economy to try to drastically reduce emissions and make a handful of people absurdly rich trying to rapidly launch other energy production methods? Or do we take the approach of reasonbly cutting back on emissions while also reigning in the wholesale destruction of a very critical part of the environment's way of helping handle that CO2????

  206. Re:Surprise by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1

    There was a right to be here.

    It's just that "Here" is Pangaea...

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  207. Re:Surprise by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

    1) Confirmation bias, confirmation bias, confirmation bias. It is more than enough grounds to invalidate conclusions of "predictions" if they can even be called that. You notice the word pre in the word predictions? It means BEFORE. Of course the conclusions of a '08 model are going to be right for '99 they knew what was going to happen! No matter what you say about a computer being "unbiased" a human wrote the formulas based on bias. In psychology studies a psychologist can't even administer the study to make up for confirmation bias. You can't predict things that have already happened. Period. 2) There were several debates broadcast in CBS in '75 I remember my father calling them "stupid hippies" rather vividly. The data was both heavily flawed, and heavily biased. As a 15 year old the paper in time (Idk about newsweek, we were forced to read time in class) was excessively biased. 3) You obviously aren't studying or working in a scientific field. There is no such thing as a "true" conclusion. If you can name 1 theory that hasn't radically evolved since becoming "accepted" much less since inception I'll be extremely impressed! 4) If you don't think I'm knowledgeable on the subject I encourage you to find the post in this thread written by me which talks about an increase in irradiance/luminosity in the solar maximum. It also mentions the reflectivity of algae and plant matter (in the near-infared visible light spectrum IE where the sun radiates most of it's energy) which seems important. Every aspect of our environmental impact is important in this. It is FAR more than just an emissions problem! 5) What about the article recently posted here talking a bout cities affecting temperature for 1000+ miles? I didn't even talk about that and my arguments are pretty strong. Calling me unscientific is what's known as a "claim" in debate. You're missing both the "warrant" (how am I unscientific) and the impact (why that matters) in your response. You're being dismissive, and that is almost never positive.

  208. Re:Surprise by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

    I swear to Allah this had formatting until I hit submit :(. I don't know why it keeps taking away my paragraphs. Still that's a pretty scientifically supported post with valid sources is it not?

  209. Re:Surprise by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

    Oh and the post I was referring to is here: slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3411745&cid=42709147

  210. Re:Surprise by metrix007 · · Score: 1

    Yes. The science is VERY solid on this point.

    I'd appreciate it if you could enlighten me. My understanding is that groups of scientists argue for either side, albeit with a majority on the it's happening side.

    There are accusations of incomplete data, data not going back far enough and flawed models that have changed numerous times. What makes the science solid?

    Why should I not still be on the fence?

    --
    If you ignore ACs because they are anonymous - you're an idiot.
  211. Re:Surprise by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    So you think they build the results into the models but you don't really present any evidence other than saying humans are always biased. That may be true but how do we get any science done if it's not possible to overcome that? What makes you think climate scientists are worse than any other scientists? Maybe you have some confirmation bias of your own.

    Most models do a decent job, better than any other method so far. Here is a comparison of model results to observations (the 2012 update will be out shortly). Here is a discussion of Hansen's 1981 results compared to observations. As you can see it actually underestimates what has been observed and what later models project.

    Yes, you can't predict things that have already happened but you can certainly start any model's run at any point in time and let it run then compare the results to the observations. The only thing you would need to feed them is the observed changes in CO2 and other greenhouse gases (except water vapor which is a feedback of temperature changes and built into the models), changes in solar radiation and major volcanic eruptions. The output would be mostly temperatures.

    My point about the global cooling thing still stands, far more scientists were looking at global warming even back then.

    I am a computer programmer/sys admin but I took through 200 level courses and some 300 level courses in college for physics, chemistry and biology. Science is something I've had a lifelong interest in and I think I know a thing or two about how to conduct it. Science is always subject to revision pending new results but someone has to come up with the new results first. If climate scientist are so biased that their results are wrong it shouldn't be that hard to come up with those new results but no one has so far.

    Einstein overturned Newtonian physics but didn't prove them wrong, just a special case of the Einsteinian universe.

    I read that other post and debated responding. I'll just say you bring up a lot of things like deforestation that scientist are not ignoring. It looks to me like you haven't read deeply enough in the literature to know what they've already covered on those subjects. One error you made is that the polarity of the Sun's magnetic field flips at the solar minimum, not the maximum. Also, sunspots, total solar irradiance and solar flares all track together fairly well. You seem to be saying that maximum luminosity occurs when the sunspot count is lowest. That doesn't give me confidence in the rest of what you say.

    On the reflectivity of plants, that is easily measured with a spectroscope and it has been. Another thing that has not been ignored. In fact they measure the spectrum of the incoming solar radiation in orbit and at the surface and the outgoing radiation at the surface and from orbit. All of that constantly to see how it's changing.

    I saw the article about cities downwind temperature effects but from what I've read so far it appears that it is at best a minor factor in the overall equation and is unlikely to overturn the larger picture.

    I don't think I said you were unscientific specifically and apologize if you think I did. But as I have pointed out you've said a lot of things that don't fit well with what I know about the subject. I'll continue to believe what climate scientists say until someone comes up with a better explanation and I don't think they are ignoring things because they don't fit with their narrative. Time will certainly tell whether they are right or not but so far they've done pretty well.

  212. Re:Surprise by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

    Still that's a pretty scientifically supported post with valid sources is it not?

    Fuck knopws. It's unreadable.

    Seems to be full of irellevant shit about the sun, which we know is not the cause of the trend.

    --
    Watch this Heartland Institute video
  213. Re:Surprise by sg_oneill · · Score: 1

    Ah ok, my bad. Going from memory there. What was the 1870s era stuff about? Maybe it was some other experiments?

    --
    Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.