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How Well Do Our Climate Models Match Our Observations?

bunratty writes "According to recent articles by Roy Spencer and John Christy, our climate models have done a poor job of predicting warming due to humans burning fossil fuels. They claim that we've observed only a fraction of the warming they predict. But when I look at the source they claim to use, the State of the Climate in 2012, I see that it shows a warming of 0.7 degrees Celsius worldwide since 1980, close to the 0.8 degrees Celsius warming predicted by the climate models. Take a look at the data for yourself. How well do our predictions match our observations?"

396 of 560 comments (clear)

  1. Minor Fluctuation? by tom229 · · Score: 1

    I've always wanted someone to explain to me why 0.7C matters. I know its a measure of average global temperatures. But still, isn't that a very minor fluctuation?

    --
    If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
    1. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by InsertCleverUsername · · Score: 4, Informative

      As the old song goes, little things mean a lot. You couldn't see the difference between a little botulin toxin and a lethal dose without a microscope. And I'm sure you wouldn't notice a 0.7 C difference between one room in your house and another, but multiply that amount of energy to a global scale and it starts to add up. Consider what climatologist James Hansen said about the current rate of increase in global warming: “(it's) equivalent to exploding 400,000 Hiroshima atomic bombs per day, 365 days per year. That’s how much extra energy Earth is gaining each day.”

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    2. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by x6060 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Or the fact that we are still coming off of an Ice Age that lasted for more than 100,000 years, and ended less than 10,000 years ago (Or the little Ice Age that ended in 1850). Several models predict that the average temperature at the END of the last Ice Age was 15-20C lower than today.

      Is global warming happening? Yes. Is the human race a contributing factor? Probably to some degree. Is the human race the only cause? No.

    3. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by riverat1 · · Score: 2

      The difference between the depths of the Little Ice Age and the mid-20th century is only about 1.0C and look at how much of a difference that makes.

    4. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by i+kan+reed · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Natural forcing actually add up to negative changes in temperatures(though at so small a value they wouldn't even show up on a graph of temperature forcing).

    5. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by MoronBob · · Score: 1

      Just go to the website thelistofallscientistsintheworld.com and you can send an email that will allow you to get the opinion of 97% of them.

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      Telecommuting! What about socialization?
    6. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by BasilBrush · · Score: 4, Informative

      No scientist says humans are the only cause. There are other forcings, positive and negative. The very likely (95%-100%) in the IPCC is to the contention that "most" of the rise in temperature is caused by human forcings. Not "all".

    7. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like one heck of an opportunity- start manufacturing thermocouples now, we can solve the energy crisis.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    8. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by gsslay · · Score: 1

      If you gave everyone on the planet a penny, would that matter? The average amount you'll give globally is a penny. A penny is a very small amount, isn't it?

      A rise of 0.7C of everything is a very large amount, just like over 700 million dollars is.

    9. Re: Minor Fluctuation? by jovius · · Score: 1

      0.7 degrees is a lot in terms of extra energy. Think about it this way: how much energy does it take to heat the total atmosphere by 0.7 degrees. On top of that the energy is stored in oceans too.

      Besides 0.7 is the average of -1 and +2.4 as well as -10 and +11.4... It's also not a fluctuation really but a trend.

    10. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by geekoid · · Score: 2

      While there is non human fluctuation in CO2, currently humans put out for 32 Gigatonnes of CO2 per year. Far exceeding the amount can go through the carbon cycle in a year.
      CO2 traps IR.
      Clearly, the current rising trend is due to humans.
      Without the excess CO2 we have been emiting, we would not be experiencing the current temperature rise.

      --
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    11. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Only if you put giant radiators on space, but then, it is easier to just put photovoltaic pannels there.

    12. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by CaptainLard · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Or the fact that we are still coming off of an Ice Age that lasted for more than 100,000 years, and ended less than 10,000 years ago (Or the little Ice Age that ended in 1850). Several models predict that the average temperature at the END of the last Ice Age was 15-20C lower than today.

      Is global warming happening? Yes. Is the human race a contributing factor? Probably to some degree. Is the human race the only cause? No.

      I like this game.

      Do humans have the capability to mitigate their contribution to warming? Yes. Does any other warming phenomenon? No
      Do humans care if these warming effects drastically disrupt the climate that our current society has adapted to so well? Yes. Does anything else? No.

      Also a quick note, 20C over 10000 years is .002C/year. .7C over 30 years is .023C/year

    13. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by jozmala · · Score: 1

      It matters because it means that we are heading even higher temperatures, because atmospheric concentration of CO2 doesn't go down but up. And because it takes time to heat a planet it also means that we have already emitted a higher temperature increase than that. Same models predict a 2.6-4.8 degree increase by the end of century if we continue emitting current amounts of CO2 to atmosphere. 0.3-1.7 degree if greens take over the world this year and we eliminate all emissions faster than reasonably possible. [Those are IPCC ranges for two different scenarios often used by skeptics as 0.3-4.8 range for saying scientist don't know at all.] . The high scenario goes higher than that next century even if it stops emissions late in century.

      It also leads a slight increase in violence, and extreme weather events. Paradoxically it may cause part of a year somewhere in the world being much colder than it has used to by changing wind patterns, while making other places much hotter.
      This is below current inter year variation caused by oceans either storing or releasing heat. But don't forget its just a battery for the energy and not affect the total accumulation of energy in the system. But its increasing the baseline which the variation occurs, so high's will be higher.
        Big impact is more extreme weather phenomenon happening more frequently, so once in a decade storms become once a year storm, once in a decade heatwaves happen every other year.

      As for this year, middle east stole Scandinavian winter weather. They got snow that normally ends up here instead, and all we got was rain for Christmas.

      --
      ©God :Copyright is exclusive right for creator to determine the use of his creation.
    14. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by LongearedBat · · Score: 1

      I'm no expert, but this is my understanding...

      1. Weather

      Higher temperature causes more evaporation from the oceans (which, as everyone knows, cover 3/4 of Earth's surface). This evaporation may be minute in small areas, but when it happens across huge oceans the total effect is... noticeable. After all, that's how storm clouds form over the oceans. And the oceans are vast, and little bits of extra evaporation over vast areas amass to noticeably greater clouds. So a slight increase in temperature over vast areas cause greater storms. These storms might have happened even if global temp stayed low, but with higher temperatures the storms become more violent.

      Now, if a winter temperature "ought to have been" -10C, then the clouds will freeze and fall as snow. If the temperature increases to -9.3C, then the clouds will still freeze and fall as snow, but... because the evaporation over the oceans was greater (water evaporates even when very cold), the clouds will hold more water, leading to more snow falling.

      All these weather events lead to greater hurricanes, greater floods, greater snowfall, etc. All these are costly to humans, and often more so to fragile eco-systems.

      As to why dry areas are expected to become drier, I don't know. Hope someone else can enlighten us on that.

      2. Aggravating factors

      There are large swathes of tundra across northern Asia that is mostly frozen. And if that melts (and some of it already is), then we'll have more fertile land to live on, except... that tundra contains lots of rotting vegetation that, when thawed, releases lots of methane. Methane is a much more potent greenhouse gas than CO2. Luckily methane decomposes after some years, presumably by being combusted into H2O and CO2, thereby still being an unnecessary addition of greenhouse gas.

      The arctic ice can be thought of as a thermostat. In the winter it freezes and grows. One could think of it as "storing cold" (although that idea makes about as much sense as "centrifugal force"). When the summer heat thaws the antarctic ice, cold waters are released which cool the northern hemisphere, thereby evening out summer and winter temperatures. But, global warming causes the freezing zone to shrink. I wonder what will happen the summer when there is not enough ice to even out the summer warmth.

      As you say, it is a minor fluctuation. But the problem is, as you also say, the average global temperature, and it's that which makes all the difference.

      Anyone more knowledgeable willing to weigh in?

    15. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Layzej · · Score: 1

      This is a good question. Some amount of warming may be (have been) good. Temperatures had been dropping slowly for the last 8000 years since the height of the current inter glacial. Reversing that trend was probably a good thing. At some point the consequences of added warming will (or possibly have) become detrimental. Small changes in global temperature can have large impacts regionally. As the globe warms, local climates will change more dramatically than the global mean. There will be winners as well as losers.

      As others have pointed out, 0.7C doesn't seem like a lot, but it represents a rather large amount of energy. Small changes in global temperature have been seen to have drastic impacts - including moving the world between glacialinterglacial states.

    16. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      On average it might be significant. Now, I apparently live in a statistical anomaly since the climate seems cooling since the early 90s and the last summers I had no sleepless nights fighting mosquitoes and the damp heat.

      But I have an idea. Those of you whose observations match the models (well, try to look at predictions and not at post facto rationalizations), please ignore me and believe in AGW and act accordingly. On average, we will be doing the right thing.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    17. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Kaptain+Kruton · · Score: 1

      7 Billion pennies totals 70 million dollars, not 700 dollars. 700 is a large amount... but so is 630 million. :)

    18. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Kaptain+Kruton · · Score: 1

      Doh... I make a error when I correct someone else's error!
      700 dollars -> 700 million dollars.

    19. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Layzej · · Score: 1

      The height of the current interglacial was 8000 years ago. The world has been cooling since then (up until recently).

    20. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Possibly more than all of the recent warming was caused by humans. Natural factors have likely had a net negative impact on global temperatures.

    21. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Kaptain+Kruton · · Score: 1

      Doh! I made an error when correcting someone else's error.
      I said 700 dollars and meant 700 million.

    22. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Layzej · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Also a quick note, 20C over 10000 years is .002C/year. .7C over 30 years is .023C/year

      Also worth noting is that the global temperatures didn't change 20C. The last glacial maximum was only 3C to 5C cooler than the present (http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch6s6-es.html). The height of the current interglacial period occurred about 8000 years ago. Since then temperatures have been dropping (up until recently).

    23. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by riverat1 · · Score: 2

      The temperature difference (on a global scale) between the last ice age and the current interglacial was 4-7C, not your 15-20C.

      The human race is not the only source of climate forcings but lately the effects of the known natural forcings would point to a slight cooling trend but it's been warming so it's probably fair to say humans are responsible for more than 100% of the warming.

    24. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by hey! · · Score: 1

      Well,if everything just got 0.7C warmer everywhere, it wouldn't matter much, but it doesn't work that way. It represents huge amounts of additional energy when summed over the entire atmosphere, which means lots of anomalous weather, both hotter and cooler, wetter and dryer.

      Even these changes by themselves don't result in a dramatically different Earth *on average*. Suppose seasonal rainfall moves from on region of the Earth to another; the world isn't any wetter or dryer *on average*; but the change is experienced as dramatic in both the drying region and the wetting region. Animals, plants and humans don't as individuals live over the entire globe; they live in specific places. So the 0.7 C increase drives changes that wouldn't be much of a big deal if they occurred over five hundred years, but the same change occurring over 30 years they strain the capability of people and the local ecosystems and economies to adapt.

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    25. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Bengie · · Score: 1

      I've always wanted someone to explain to me why 0.7C matters. I know its a measure of average global temperatures. But still, isn't that a very minor fluctuation?

      As the average changes, the highs and lows become more extreme. Back in the 1800s, there was a global cooling for a year caused by a volcano. It caused the Earth's average temp to drop about 0.5c. This small difference meant the ground was still frozen in July and even had snow in Massachusetts, when it's normally 80f and the crops are growing.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Y...

      A 0.5c increase would be the exact opposite.

    26. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      The Hiroshima fireball was 370 metres (1,200 ft) in diameter, with a surface temperature of 6,000 C.

      The surface area of the Earth is 510 million square kilometers.

      It seems to me that 400,000 of these could raise the surface temperature of the earth quite a bit. That's 24,000,000,000 square meters of the surface experiencing a 1 degree temperature raise. 40,000 square kilometers experiencing some 300 meter high heat wave of 1 degree too hot per day. In 13 days, the entire earth's surface has raised by 1 degree. When you account for the oceans, the land, and convection mixing this in, you're talking more like 300 times as much energy needed to get a 1 degree raise--a year to raise the temperature 1 degree, including the temperature of the oceans and upper atmosphere. With no escape to space; this is gain.

      My god. By 2012 the average summer temperature in Baltimore would be 155F.

    27. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by james.m.hiebert · · Score: 1

      Small changes in a global average temperature are extremely important, because we don't ever experience "average" conditions. The frequency distribution of temperature can be roughly approximated by a normal distribution and the full range of the distribution (i.e. "natural variability") is large, relative to projected changes in the mean.

      However, even a small shift in the mean of the distrbution results is much more dramatic changes in the tails of the distribution (i.e. "extreme" conditions). These changes include experiencing moderately hot weather more frequently and having the extremely hot weather be much hotter than it has been in the past. Our organization has studied this in detail for a number years at local scale. We typically see events that were 1 in 30 year heat waves in the historic climate (1970-2000) which are projected to be on the order of 1 in 5 events for the future. The details vary depending on what part of the distribution you're interested in (90th/95th/99th precentile), but the trend is always the same: more hot weather and hotter hot weather.

      See this figure from the IPCC's Special Report on Extremes (SREX) for a good illustration if distribution shifts.

      The last 20 years or so of climate science have focused on means, mostly because we haven't have the computational resources to study climate at high resolution (both spatially and temporally). That has been changing fast in the last few years and we're likely to see a lot more analysis and research on extremes in the future.

    28. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Mashiki · · Score: 2

      My god. By 2012 the average summer temperature in Baltimore would be 155F.

      Ah don't worry, we already hit 250C here this past summer. Pretty sure I saw car tires melting in the parking lots...and people bursting into flames. But we've fixed that problem, with this glorious Canadian invention called..."winter."

      --
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    29. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by gordona · · Score: 1

      The 0.7 deg C is not a fluctuation but a trend. Very different from a fluctuation.

      --
      "Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" -- Dr. Strangelove
    30. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Because the effects magnify themselves. What's the difference between -0.5C and +0.2C? Melting ice. What does more melting ice do? Shrink the polar caps. What do shrinking polar caps do? Reduce the albedo of the surface. Reduced albedo means the earth absorbs more energy.

      If it lasts from year to year then it is not a fluctuation anymore. Ie, if one month I am 2 pounds heavier but I get rid of it the next month, then it is a fluctuation. However if I keep those 2 pounds on all year, and the next year, and the next, then it is no longer a fluctuation and will have a much larger consequence.

      There is a lot of fluctuation in temperatures, however the average is what is important. Ie, sin(t) versus sin(t)+0.7.

    31. Re: Minor Fluctuation? by kwbauer · · Score: 1

      "global evidence" All the areas that warmed up contribute the increase to the average global temperature while all the areas that cooled down contribute zero to the average global temperature.

    32. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      Oh no. The government of the United States, how untrustworthy compared to an anonymous stranger on the internet.

    33. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by budgenator · · Score: 1

      I wish there was a clueless moderation, your saying that increasing the global average temperature from the 20th century value of 287.05K to 287.71K a delta T of 0.229925100157% is a big deal.

      --
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    34. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by BlueStrat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh no. The government of the United States, how untrustworthy compared to an anonymous stranger on the internet.

      With the US government's track record for truthfulness and "transparency", particularly over the last 20 years, I'd be far more inclined to trust Joe Isuzu over the US the government.

      http://youtu.be/nJMq_7alQpU

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    35. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

      One thing I'd like explained is how do climate scientists calculate the Earth's average temperature? I know that it can't be a direct measurement, so I'd expect them to take what they consider an appropriate number of measurements, from various places, and calculate the mean. However, I've never seen the process described, including how they decide which locations to include, which to exclude and why. I'd like to think that the information is out there, but I'm only a layman, with limited time to spend on researching matters of this type. If anybody out there has an appropriate link, I'd be happy to look at it and try to learn from it.

      --
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    36. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      Okay, so alternate data that isn't off either:
      A. An anonymous idiot on the internet
      B. A blog

      (there is none because it's well understood already)

    37. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by maxandre · · Score: 1

      Two bottles of Voss water is in the mail :-)

    38. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Or the fact that we are still coming off of an Ice Age that lasted for more than 100,000 years, and ended less than 10,000 years ago (Or the little Ice Age that ended in 1850). Several models predict that the average temperature at the END of the last Ice Age was 15-20C lower than today.

      Let me get this straight: we are just now getting out of an Ice Age that was warmer than the END of the ICE AGE before? And there also was a little Ice Age that was colder or warmer but a lot nower than the big ones?

      --
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    39. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Depends on what you mean by "big deal", such rapid changes in temperature are very rare in Earth's history, normally occurring as a result of a giant space rock hitting Earth, even the massive volcanism of the Siberian traps did not change things this rapidly.

      --
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    40. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Most of the heat goes into melting the polar caps and into the ocean. It doesn't persist in the atmosphere.

    41. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      thats pretty much the point, climate is changing all over the world. In the UK winters and summers are different to the norm, spring seems to be arriving a lot earlier than it used to but i expect in other parts of the world, its different changes to the normal weather.

      --
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    42. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You don't seem to understand what the guy was saying. Shame. You might have learned something.

    43. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      I assume he was making an appeal to emotion by comparing a large amount of energy to a frightening and destructive force. The same appeal works whether it's accurate or not--in fact, if you say it's like 50 nuclear bombs exploding every hour, it's probably more scary since 400,000 crosses the line twice.

      Think about the imagery of a nuclear bomb. What is it? Destruction. Not worrying, slow change that causes chaos and sweeping environmental changes and loss of species and adaptation up to and including new species eventually. No, destruction. You and I know very well that "global warming" will at worst extinct humans, and introduce new life--just as the Jurassic period had all kinds of critters we don't see today and lacked all of the amazing flora and fauna of modern age, the next aeons will show a world that looks nothing like what we live in today, an alien planet radically different from ours. But the imagery given is mean to emphasize that what will be left is only a burnt, cold rock unhabitable to any life.

      I know very well what the guy was saying; but I've already learned neuroscience and psychology.

    44. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by OneAhead · · Score: 1

      And you're accusing climate scientists of doing crap? You must be that kid in primary school that got all his math problems wrong. Here's a hint:
      A. look up the yield of a Hiroshima-class atomic bomb (in joule)
      B. find or make an estimate of either the total mass or volume of the major constituents of the biosphere
      C. look up the specific heat capacity (if you chose to use mass) or the volumetric heat capacity (if you chose to go for volume) of these constituents
      D. the rough 0th order back-of-the-envelope estimate of the hypothetical temperature rise you're looking for is A / (sum of (B*C) for each of the constituents)

      And sheesh, to avoid further embarrassment, keep your mouth shut about climate science until you can at least get the most basic high school thermodynamics right. The above is child's play compared to all the physical and chemical phenomena that go into climate models.

    45. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      "My god. By 2012 the average summer temperature in Baltimore would be 155F."

      Thank Neptune for the oceans. If they weren't absorbing most of the heat being retained as carbon dioxide builds in the atmosphere. Unfortunately, this also means that we must soon prepare ourselves for alterations of ocean currents over time, which will be tremendous drivers of atmospheric currents and surface temperatures. Because ocean currents are far less studied and understood than atmospheric circulation, much of the uncertainty in modeling of global climate change results from a lack of data concerning the changing patterns of heat distribution of oceanic waters. However, if you look at the distribution and perturbation of marine organisms, there is abundant evidence that the oceans are changing very quickly, as well as acidifying rapidly.

    46. Re:Minor Fluctuation? by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      What other natural causes could explain the rapid increases of ocean temperatures? Variance in solar insolation is far too small. There are not anywhere near enough hidden volcanoes to account for the increases? Why do people say there are other natural causes besides human induced increased of carbon dioxide, yet never provide any credible evidence of such causes?

  2. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  3. Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Kohath · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's pretty easy to "predict" temperature trends in years that have already gone by.

    1. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by MoronBob · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      I am puzzled how the 97% of scientists cant tell me what the weather will be in two months but they can accurately predict the temperature one hundred years from now. Can someone send me the link to the list of 100% of scientists in the world?

      --
      Telecommuting! What about socialization?
    2. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Yes global warming predictions were made in the 1970s.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H...

    3. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Good thing that climate scientists aren't puzzled about that. If they were, they would have wigs (or breast implants these days) and be called weatherman (weather persons?).

      --
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    4. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by MozeeToby · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Small fluctuations in local weather are much, much, much, much more chaotic than large fluctuations in global climate. This is hardly unique to atmospheric sciences.

      Lets us an IT analogy, lets say you manage a large data center and your head of IT comes up and says something like this:
      "Over the next 5 years, 15% of the hard drives in this data center will fail. We need to take these basic precautions."

      Your response would be like:
      "Why on earth should I trust your estimate for 5 years from today when you can't tell me exactly which servers will fail within the next 6 months!?"

      And then you'd get angry at him 5 years down the road when only 14% of the drives failed and be all like:
      "See! I told you there was nothing to worry about!"

    5. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Predicting the weather 2 months from now is easy. Where I live it will be about 10C-15C warmer in April than in February. Predicting the temperature two weeks out - now that is tricky.

    6. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Kohath · · Score: 2

      How many of them predicted zero warming between 1998 and 2013?

    7. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Layzej · · Score: 1
    8. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by MoronBob · · Score: 2

      You sound like you know quite a bit about this subject. When was the decision made to change the term Global Warming to Climate Change? Who made the change and why?

      --
      Telecommuting! What about socialization?
    9. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Bartles · · Score: 2

      Probably the one's that didn't "adjust" the data.

    10. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Not sure, but I think people were predicting many decades ago that statistics would be abused to show an absense of something that actually exists, simply by being selective with your samples. For example, you might choose to pick a 15 year time span of a pattern subject to noise when you know full well that a five, ten, twenty, twenty five, and fifty year time span doesn't show the same thing, and that the only reason that fifteen years shows what you want is because of the noise.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    11. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Anubis+IV · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When it comes to modeling, "predicting" old data is actually an invaluable technique for developing useful models. For instance, if you're working with machine learning algorithms, it's typical to segregate your data into a training set and a test set (sometimes an additional validation set as well). The training set is used to teach the machine learning algorithms, thus establishing a model. You then take that model and run it over the test set to see how well it matches.

      Put differently, rather than creating a model from all of the old data (which, as you said, is trivial and not really that impressive), you put yourself in the shoes of a 1970s scientist and try to use the data from only up to that point to create a model that will work for the next 40 years. You then get to fast forward 40 years and see how you did. If you didn't get it right, you go back and try again.

    12. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by ChromaticDragon · · Score: 2

      There's a very significant difference between accurate prediction of the outcome of a random variable vs. measuring the statistical properties of said random variable.

      Try this analogy to help you understand this...

      Let's play a simple game, called "Pick a Marble". You reach into a bag and pick a marble.

      Today, we'll play with the following conditions... There are 1000 marbles in that bag. 100 of those are red. 900 of those are white. I'm going to "predict" that your marble is white. It ought to pretty clear that I'll be correct 90% of the time.

      Now, let's play every day. But we'll swap a white marble for red each day. It should be clear enough that in a couple of years I my predictions will change because the nature of the random variable changes. After two years, I'll say your choice will be red and I'll be right more often than wrong.

      Weather (i.e. temps two months from now) is far, FAR more difficult than this trivial game. With the most powerful computers imaginable, we cannot predict the outcome of billiard balls past a small number of collisions because the uncertainties in our measurements compound so much over each successive, iterative calculation. Trying to predict weather is far more difficult than that. Even if we had sensors giving us temp, wind speed/direction, humidity, particulates, etc., at every point one-foot apart in a 3D grid of our entire atmosphere, we STILL would not be able to predict WEATHER accurately past about a week... to say nothing of two months.

      HOWEVER, it's far easier to treat the weather as a random variable and categorize the statistical nature of such. In laymen's terms, you may not be able to predict the temperature on Christmas Day six months in advance. But you can be fairly confident in suggesting a range.

      THIS is why it's fairly straightforward to "predict" the temp (CLIMATE, not WEATHER) 100 years from now while not being able to predict the temp (WEATHER, not CLIMATE) two months hence. And like the changing distribution of red/white marbles, what feeds into the calculations of determining climate is known to be changing over time.

      And, though it's a bit harder to understand, this is also why Climate Change doesn't lead to even temp increases all across the planet. The extra energy in the system is monkeying with things a lot turning these nice Guassian variables into weirdness which results in more frequent extremes.

    13. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Well you certainly didn't. Predictions require statements about the future. The selecting of 1998 as a start year by you and the other denialist morons is due to the fact that 1998 was the hottest year on record. Starting from that fact and ignoring all data before is a thing called "cherry-picking" and is only possible in retrospect.

      It also requires complete ignorance of the fact that the normal period of averaging is 30 years. Making it impossible to judge a climate trend on anything as short as 15 (10? 11? 12? 13? 14?16? 17?) years.

      Finally one notes that if you do ignore the definition of climate and just consider a start year and a finish year, all within the last 30 years, nearly all such lines are warming.

      The scientists in the the 1970s were making predictions. You're just being a backwards looking moron.

      http://www.skepticalscience.co...

    14. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by ivano · · Score: 1

      Wasn't that Reagan's administration? His administration forced the UN to create the IPCC mostly political reasons. http://www.aip.org/history/cli...

    15. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      MoronBob,

      There is no such decision and no such change. They are two different phrases, both in long time use, and both still in use.

    16. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by chill · · Score: 4, Informative

      There was no decision to change it, they are two different terms. Global Warming is a subset of Climate Change. The confusion of terms exists only in the reporting of the general, non-scientific press and the minds of Internet dogs who think checking a household thermometer means they themselves are qualified to hold a valid opinion.

      The IPCC was created back in 1988 at the request of WMO (World Meteorological Organization) and the UNEP (United Nations Environment Program).

      The UNEP was formed in 1972 to study man's interaction with and impact on the environment.

      The WMO was researching "potential global warming caused by the build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere" back in the mid-1970s.

      Back in 1956 scientist Gilbert Plass published a study titled "The Carbon Dioxide Theory of Climatic Change".

      In a 1975 Science article by geochemist Wallace Broecker of Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory: "Climatic Change: Are We on the Brink of a Pronounced Global Warming?"

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    17. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Zeromous · · Score: 1

      This doesn't happen in my lab- hundreds of physical machines, easy answer why is: My lab is pristine from a power/cooling/cleanliness/process aspect. For me it's more like 1-2% over 5 years. only slightly above RMA rate. Most bad drives die early. My lab is a bad example of industry standard drive failure.

      Most labs aren't pristine or are deficient in at least one way. Makes you wonder, what the average environment is like before applying the model.

      I guess my point is, are model's accurate if they are too clean? too dirty? Is the earth uniformly clean/dirty?

      Models are only really good at providing an average worst case. I'm not sure why people expect them to be so accurate. pre-existing conditions change, YMMV.

      --
      ---Up Up Down Down Left Right Left Right B A START
    18. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      A weatherman. Because he got sick of getting asked questions about climate.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    19. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by kanweg · · Score: 1

      If you face a campfire, your front will be hotter than your back.
      That holds true if you were a planet facing the sun.
      If you rotate it would spread more evenly.
      But at the top and bottom areas of the sphere, still very little sunlight would shine. Thus, these two pole areas would colder than the part in the middle.

      There you have it: You have made a qualitative model of a climate cold at the pole and warm in the center area. And you didn't predict what the weather would be tomorrow in any of these areas.

      Brains, they are fantastic instruments (if used).

      Bert

    20. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

      It isn't puzzling if you realize it is a function, in part, of statistics. No one can accurately predict a single coin flip. But they can accurately predict that, the more coin flips you repeat the more the observed frequency converges on 50/50.

      --
      This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
    21. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Why should someone predict that?
      Weren't last summers in USA and Canada (and winters for that matter in Australia, like the current one) all time highs in temperature?

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    22. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Here's a comment from Gavin Schmidt on the difference between weather models and climate models:

      Weather concerns an initial value problem: Given today's situation, what will tomorrow bring? Weather is chaotic; imperceptible differences in the initial state of the atmosphere lead to radically different conditions in a week or so. Climate is instead a boundary value problem — a statistical description of the mean state and variability of a system, not an individual path through phase space.

      Predicting the average climate sometime in the future is a totally different problem than predicting the weather in the short term.

    23. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Gilbert Plass published a paper in 1956 titled "The Carbon Dioxide Theory of Climate Change". When did it change from Climate Change to Global Warming?

    24. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Zeio · · Score: 1

      Yes, because Google searches are so unbiased, no tweaking to PageRank. None. His Excellency Lord Eric Schmidt the Honorable, who serves the three letter agencies and his masters in FEDGOV, has no agenda to promote politically biased search results. In fact, none of the Google searches you done and none of the things on Wikipedia are manipulated. Yes, we know this all to be true. The answer is always whatever Google says is the most viewed or most linked to version of Truth they say it.

      Also, the link, at skeptical science, is printed truth, with proper referencing so all of what is said there is truth. /sarcasm

      --
      Legalize the constitution. Think for yourself question authority.
    25. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Splab · · Score: 1

      This is probably the best explanation I've ever read.

    26. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by haruchai · · Score: 1

      You're looking for a prediction of something that didn't happen?
      "Zero warming" is utterly wrong. What could be said is that there was no "statistically significant" increase in surface temperatures where there are adequate measuring stations ie not the poles.

      And even that isn't really true - https://tamino.wordpress.com/2...

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    27. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      We're having record snowfalls in the U.S.. But people like you tell us not to use that to claim there is no warming, and now you ask us to use record summer heat to claim there is warming...

      Huh.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    28. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

      There's another way that "predicting" old data is important: if you're designing a model that's supposed to predict what the climate will be in twenty years, it's a good test to give it data from twenty years ago and see how close it comes to predicting the present. If it can't do that, you probably shouldn't trust what it says about the future.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    29. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by styrotech · · Score: 1

      Put differently, rather than creating a model from all of the old data (which, as you said, is trivial and not really that impressive), you put yourself in the shoes of a 1970s scientist and try to use the data from only up to that point to create a model that will work for the next 40 years. You then get to fast forward 40 years and see how you did. If you didn't get it right, you go back and try again.

      Yeah. Creating a projection of the future involves both the model itself and a bunch of assumptions about the future state of the input variables. A projection will then have a range of certainty based on running it with different sets of likely inputs.

      eg a future climate projection has to make a bunch of assumptions around variable things like big volcanic eruptions, the amounts of greenhouse gasses entering the atmosphere, what the sun actually output, what the southern oscillation index is going to do (ie swings between el ninos and la ninas which is a big factor) etc etc.

      And to test the usefulness of an old model you keep it around and run it again in the future using actual data instead of assumed data to test whether discrepancies between it and reality are down to the model or the input assumptions or both. And then using these comparisons and new research on the physical processes to fine tune newer models.

    30. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by maxandre · · Score: 1

      You do know that the amount of snow you get is a direct result of how much water precipitates from the clouds above your head right? Not how cold it is?

    31. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      You have no record snow falls.
      They are far below normal for this time of the year.
      The recent years you had a lack of snow fall, and you simply don't grasp that because you are to young!

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    32. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      We had some very large percentage of the U.S. covered in snow, a rarity.

      There are records being broken back east for amount of snowfall in 24 hours... in Colorado we had twice the average amount of snow for January. That's above the AVERAGE.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    33. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      The east has also been very cold. Does that really change the point? I mean, are you seriously saying if it were very cold it would mean there was no global warming? I don't think you WANT to say that. I certainly agree that weather is not climate, but you seem bound and determined to claim it is by saying how cold it is matters at all.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    34. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1
      Fun fact: the record snowfall season in the US was Mount Baker, Wash. 1998–1999

      Yup, right around the warmest year on record. Lesson for "sceptics": heavy snowfall is a bad indicator for (really) low temperatures.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    35. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by psymastr · · Score: 1

      If you didn't get it right, you go back and try again.

      You were doing fine until you reached that point... If you "try again" then you are no longer in the shoes of a 1970s scientist, are you?

      --
      Improve at backgammon rapidly through addictive quickfire position quizzes: www.bgtrain.com
    36. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

      So long as you don't use the test set as a training set, sure you are, just as much as you were the first time that you went back and put yourself in their shoes. Remember, I'm talking about machine learning algorithms, so the algorithm has no knowledge of the test set when you "go back". After you tweak the algorithm, it'll still learn from the training set and test on the test set, except it'll be doing it with an algorithm that generates a better model, hopefully.

    37. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      The average of the last how many years exactly? The snow the USA has right now is NOTHING compared to 1730 till 1950 ... stop cherry picking.
      Just a stupid TV company calls it a record: it is not by far a record, ask your grand parents.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    38. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      http://rwis.mdt.mt.gov/scanweb...

      Over to the right, a bit behind the "Welcome to Idaho" sign, is a snow depth marker that is 9 feet tall.

      Don't see the marker? That's cuz it's completely covered, for the first time in all the years I've been checking these highway cams (I think this one went up around 2001).

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    39. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by psymastr · · Score: 1

      So long as you don't use the test set as a training set, sure you are, just as much as you were the first time that you went back and put yourself in their shoes. Remember, I'm talking about machine learning algorithms, so the algorithm has no knowledge of the test set when you "go back".

      Once you select the algorithm then yeah, it doesn't have any knowledge of the test set. However, *you* have knowledge and you use that knowledge to select the algorithm and/or tune its parameters.

      --
      Improve at backgammon rapidly through addictive quickfire position quizzes: www.bgtrain.com
    40. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Optali · · Score: 1

      But, but, the IPCC wheren't invented yet!
      Ah, the Time Machine, I got it.
      Bad, bad, climate Scientists!! They are so evil that they are able to develop time travel just to keep their jobs and get their funds

      --
      -- 29A the number of the Beast
    41. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by OneAhead · · Score: 1
    42. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by OneAhead · · Score: 1
    43. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Bartles · · Score: 1

      What does the IPCC have to do with researchers adjusting their data?

    44. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      Ocean temperatures, where the bulk of the warming has occurred, show no pause in warming between 1998 and 2013. However, stronger Pacific winds definitely have shunted much of the heat from the atmosphere to the ocean during that period. The reality is that there hasn't been any "pause" in global warming.

    45. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by Optali · · Score: 1

      The IPCC is EVIL nad it is behind everything EVIL that happens in the world. They invented climate to start with.
      And everybody knows that IPCC is the acronym for Illuminaty Pokemon Collectors Club.

      The IPCC is actually a department of SPECTRA lead by the evil Dr NO who infiltrated his evil Climate Scientists all over the world with the ulitmate goal of getting the tax money of the hard working US citizen.

      This is all very well explained in South Park, or are you telling m,e that you don't watch South Park?

      So, to start with all these "scientists", specially the ones calling themselves "Climate scientists" are members of SPECTRA, the IPCC or both (1) and all the data in the world has been made up by them. The Hockeystick graph is a swindle as it is indeed not a hockey stick but a candy cane, but they just don want us to know the truth about global cooling!

      (1) limited offer util 10th March with 50% rebate and free access to the gym and the sauna)

      --
      -- 29A the number of the Beast
    46. Re:Predictions were made in the 1970s then? by SomeoneFromBelgium · · Score: 1

      I guess my point is, are model's accurate if they are too clean? too dirty? Is the earth uniformly clean/dirty?

      Models are only really good at providing an average worst case. I'm not sure why people expect them to be so accurate. pre-existing conditions change, YMMV.

      Well, they have studied this problem. And do you know what they found out?

      The world is not clean enough. Not by a mile. So what we need to do is release much less dirt and greenhouse gasses (like CO2) into the world and then the models will be better ;-)

  4. Predictive Power by simonbp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's because you are looking at climate models calibrated against that data that you are comparing to. Circular logic.

    If you look at the predictions from past IPCC reports, very few of their predicted temperature profiles match the later observed conditions. That is a failure of the models' predictive power. That doesn't mean there isn't warming, just that the Earth's climate is a more complex system than can be accurately simulated with modern computing hardware.

    1. Re:Predictive Power by SoupGuru · · Score: 1

      Maybe you could help us out by showing us where we can find predictions from past IPCC reports.

      --
      What doesn't kill you only delays the inevitable
    2. Re:Predictive Power by geekoid · · Score: 2

      That is false.
      WARNING: I have read many previous reports so you citation have better be rock solid*.

      *Rock Solid was my porn name!

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:Predictive Power by neilo_1701D · · Score: 1

      That's because you are looking at climate models calibrated against that data that you are comparing to. Circular logic.

      If you look at the predictions from past IPCC reports, very few of their predicted temperature profiles match the later observed conditions. That is a failure of the models' predictive power. That doesn't mean there isn't warming, just that the Earth's climate is a more complex system than can be accurately simulated with modern computing hardware.

      I would have said that the models are fundamentally flawed rather than blaming computer hardware. Processing power has followed Moore's Law for the entire time these temperature predictions have been made, so that really isn't the issue.

      The single biggest problem is clouds: accurate cloud modelling isn't happening; cloud activity is averaged to the grid size in the model. This leads to assumptions about planetary albedo. Look at the story the other day about the reduction in albedo in the Arctic: as the ice cover has shrunk the albedo has also shrunk. But polar albedo isn't where the action is; it's tropical albedo that is the world's thermostat, and tropical albedo is controlled by cloud formation.

    4. Re:Predictive Power by bunratty · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Following your advice, I looked at the overview from the first IPCC report, and in section 2 it lists one prediction as about a 1 degree Celsius increase in temperature between the time of that report (1990) and 2025. It's not 2025 yet, but based on an observed warming of about 0.16 degree Celsius per decade, we should see a warming of about 0.8 degrees Celsius between 1990 and 2025. It falls a bit short of one full degree, but the prediction was literally "about 1 degree Celsius," and 0.8 degrees Celsius is in fact about 1 degree Celsius.

      --
      What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
    5. Re:Predictive Power by EvilSS · · Score: 3, Insightful

      0.8 degrees Celsius is in fact about 1 degree Celsius.

      Well, +/- 20%

      --
      I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
    6. Re:Predictive Power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Check your math--1990-2025 is 35 years, or 3.5 decades. At 0.16 degree C per decade, that's 0.56, not 0.8. And it's a lot harder to argue that 0.56 is "about 1"; most people would say that it's "about one half".

    7. Re:Predictive Power by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "..models are fundamentally flawed .."
      They are not. Not by any stretch.

      " Processing power has followed Moore's Law for the entire time these temperature predictions have been made, so that really isn't the issue."
      And you don't understand Moore's law, well done.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    8. Re:Predictive Power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      it's not the computing hardware; it's the model.

    9. Re:Predictive Power by AmiMoJo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually predictions of the amount of warming have been pretty accurate, what was unexpected was that the atmosphere stopped warming so much and instead a lot of the energy went into the oceans. Sceptics make a lot of the recent "pause" in warming, but actually there is no pause when you remember to consider the oceans as well as the atmosphere.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    10. Re:Predictive Power by Burz · · Score: 1

      The Pacific Decadal Oscillation causes oscillations in the warming pattern as well. It doesn't change the overall picture for global warming: The oceans were assumed to heat up somehow, and now we have details about that process and how it affects surface temps.

    11. Re:Predictive Power by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Processing power has followed Moore's Law for the entire time these temperature predictions have been made, so that really isn't the issue.
      Does that mean if I can solve a model faster it is more accurate, or should be more accurate?

      But polar albedo isn't where the action is; it's tropical albedo that is the world's thermostat, and tropical albedo is controlled by cloud formation.
      Erm, you could not be more wrong. In the tropes a day is 12h and a night is 12h and that varies by roughly +/- 30 mins depending on "northern hemisphere season".
      At the poles you have the funny things like polar nights and polar days ... 24h sun for at least 3 weeks in a row ... THAT is a difference, imagine having a 3 weeks polar day in ice and snow, would be rather cold. Imagine that on an ice free ocean ... quite a big difference, not for your sun burn though, will be awfully in both cases.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    12. Re:Predictive Power by riverat1 · · Score: 2

      Maybe you could help us out by showing us where we can find predictions from past IPCC reports.

      At the IPCC website of course.

    13. Re:Predictive Power by zaklothar · · Score: 1

      You need to plug in the actual CO2 emissions instead of their predicted CO2 emissions. All that growth out of poverty in China meant much more CO2 than was assumed. The IPCC overview uses a linear trend. As you can see from:
      http://www.epa.gov/climatechan...
      the CO2 emissions increased quite a bit faster in the late 90's. This overproduction of CO2 means the models would predict more warming if you feed in the actual CO2 emissions.

    14. Re:Predictive Power by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Maybe you could help us out by showing us where we can find predictions from past IPCC reports.

      Maybe you should look in the past IPCC reports. Don't look someplace else.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    15. Re:Predictive Power by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "..models are fundamentally flawed .."
      They are not. Not by any stretch.

      That are off by nearly 50% over just 30 years (see earlier post about being 56% lower than predicted by 2025).

      If that's not a sign of a fundamental flaw, what is? How can you say what climate will be like in 100 years when your model has a +/- 50% error rate?

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    16. Re:Predictive Power by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      it is true, 10,000's of climate models are generated, then certain ones are cherry picked ex post facto. it's called "cooking the books".

    17. Re:Predictive Power by hey! · · Score: 1

      This is how modeling works. You construct your model, but it inevitably has a number of parameters that aren't known with any degree of certainty. You choose values for your model parameters which match historical results.

      For example we know that the amount of carbon plants absorb and the amount of water they emit as CO2 and ambient temperature change, but short of measuring the interaction of every blade of grass on Earth with the surrounding atmosphere we can't model it precisely. So we put together some equation and tweak the equation's parameters so the equation spits out the right numbers for our historical data.

      It's not intellectually dishonest; it just represents a method for arriving at the most reasonable guess for how the Earth will behave for data within or near the historical range of values. That's certainly more reasonable than assuming the plants will behave exactly at 500 ppm CO2 as they did at 300 ppm, when we know for a fact that's a physical impossibility.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    18. Re:Predictive Power by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      not when claims of "since 1980" are made, that is a very different kind of modeling, fitting model to facts after the facts. book cooking. cherry picking.

    19. Re:Predictive Power by hey! · · Score: 1

      I'm not clear what you are attacking. Are you suggesting that altering model parameters to match real world outcomes is somehow dishonest? Or are you suggesting that researchers altered their model after the fact then claimed the model predicted actual outcomes before the adjustments were made? If the latter, please provide the source for the claim.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    20. Re:Predictive Power by OneAhead · · Score: 1

      Yeah, small differences commonly suffer from large relative errors, Einstein. The sign is right and the order of magnitude is right, so it's largely correct. We're not all measuring optical wavelengths.

    21. Re:Predictive Power by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      " But polar albedo isn't where the action is"

      One would be hard pressed to entertain such fantasy given the obvious slowing of the jet stream caused by the decreasing differential between arctic and mid latitude temperatures.

      Clouds are particularly relevant except to local climate as explained above and elsewhere because water vapor goes in and out of the This atmosphere very quickly relative to the prolonged forcing effects of carbon dioxide which remains in the atmosphere for far longer time periods.

      The world's "thermostat", if such a crude analogy actually exists, is the oceans and the current and wind patterns over and within them. This is why ENSO is such a big deal.

    22. Re:Predictive Power by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter if the error rate is 50% as long as there is a clear trend upwards. For example, for the purposes of identifying a trend, it doesn't matter if 1.0 degrees or 1.5 degrees warming happens by 2025. As long as it keeps going up at this really fast rate, we know there are going to be problems that will require attention to fix.

      And +/- 50% of "so fast we've never seen temperature changes like this in 400,000 years of records", is still a worrying rate.

      As soon as the trend is cooling for a long period of time (17+ years), nothing contradicts the basic notion that adding C02 is warming the planet.

    23. Re:Predictive Power by sploxx · · Score: 1

      Sorry, replying only because i mis-moderated.

  5. Re:China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's almost as if there aren't big walls in the sky that keep emissions from leaving the countries that produce them.

  6. Roy Spencer has other motivation. by JoshuaZ · · Score: 5, Informative

    Spencer has contributed specific work in peer reviewed journals that is part of the scientific discussion, but his overall opinion on climate change is motivated more by his own religion than anything else. He's both sympathetic to intelligent design and signed a statement which said among other things ""Earth and its ecosystems – created by God's intelligent design and infinite power and sustained by His faithful providence – are robust, resilient, self-regulating, and self-correcting." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Spencer_(scientist)#Climate_change Essentially he believes that climate change isn't happening because his religion won't let him. Note how that statement wasn't even just about climate, but about ecosystems as a whole. Christy doesn't seem to have that same sort of underlying motivation and might make more sense to pay attention to, but in this context, the vast majority of experts disagree with both of them, and when dealing with complicated scientific issues, using expert consensus is a useful heuristic, that's before we get to the serious issue that not only is the expert consensus clear, it is a consensus about some very bad results, not just a consensus about an issue which doesn't have substantial impact.

    1. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      Very little if any of Spencer's attitude on AGW ever makes it to his published work. He's the Michael Behe of climatology.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Spencer has contributed specific work in peer reviewed journals that is part of the scientific discussion, but his overall opinion on climate change is motivated more by his own religion than anything else. He's both sympathetic to intelligent design and signed a statement which said among other things ""Earth and its ecosystems – created by God's intelligent design and infinite power and sustained by His faithful providence – are robust, resilient, self-regulating, and self-correcting." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Spencer_(scientist)#Climate_change Essentially he believes that climate change isn't happening because his religion won't let him. Note how that statement wasn't even just about climate, but about ecosystems as a whole. Christy doesn't seem to have that same sort of underlying motivation and might make more sense to pay attention to, but in this context, the vast majority of experts disagree with both of them, and when dealing with complicated scientific issues, using expert consensus is a useful heuristic, that's before we get to the serious issue that not only is the expert consensus clear, it is a consensus about some very bad results, not just a consensus about an issue which doesn't have substantial impact.

      As opposed to climate change being a religion unto itself

      Guess you must have missed this from TFA:

      Messrs. McNider and Christy are professors of atmospheric science at the University of Alabama in Huntsville and fellows of the American Meteorological Society. Mr. Christy was a member of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former Vice President Al Gore.

      Got anything to say about Mr. Christy?

      No?

      Take your ad hominem tripe elsewhere.

    3. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by ColdWetDog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The cherry picking and slanted explanation of the data most assuredly does.

      --
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    4. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      The keyboard moved but nothing came out

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    5. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Well, if that's the case, point out the inconsistencies and be done with it. Then, we can shoot the messenger, but not before.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    6. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      You are correct. Cherry picking and lying about the temperature data is the issue.

      --
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    7. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by scorp1us · · Score: 1

      So rather than attack his science, you attack his character? Since when can only straight, white, agnostic scientists do science?

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    8. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by JoshuaZ · · Score: 1

      I have no idea where you even began to get "straight" or "white" on that list. And in this particular context, I'd be perfectly ok with agnostics or atheists or Christians or members of other religions. However, when his beliefs about climate change are specifically motivated by his religion there's a problem. Heuristically speaking, his beliefs are more suspect. There are a lot of Christians who don't think that God is controlling the climate and they do perfectly good climate research.

    9. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by Suffering+Bastard · · Score: 1

      Christy doesn't seem to have that same sort of underlying motivation and might make more sense to pay attention to

      That's rich. Seems Spencer is the one being more "Christ-y."

      --
      "Molest me not with this pocket calculator stuff."
      - Deep Thought
    10. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by budgenator · · Score: 1

      I don't know,I've read his blog a far bit and his postings are not one sided, he's been wrong and admitted it, and when he publishes changed adjusted data he explains what he changed and why.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    11. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by Sabriel · · Score: 1

      "Earth and its ecosystems – created by God's intelligent design and infinite power and sustained by His faithful providence – are robust, resilient, self-regulating, and self-correcting." -- Roy Spencer

      Why do so many people fail to grok that their own religious reference frame specifically allows humanity to screw things up?

    12. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by scorp1us · · Score: 1

      Look, if you can't see that you and the kettle are both black...

      The straight and white were included to show you that your attack on him via his religion is not a valid grouping and qualifies as bigotry. It is not how science is to be debated. The only thing that Ham proved in the Nye/Ham young Earth debate was that devout Christians who believe in young earth are still capable of doing science.

      Who cares what the motivation is as long as the science is sound? Science does not bend to motivation. It is universally reproducible.

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    13. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by JoshuaZ · · Score: 1

      Nope, not really. The issue isn't his religion, it is that his religion by his own description motivates his conclusions and results. Not too long ago I was talking to an undergrad who said that he wanted to become a climate scientist because he wanted to get people to stop using fossil fuels. I told him that he should instead become an engineer.

      The problem in a nutshell is that humans are deeply imperfect. So when we have external motivations, and those motivations are strong enough, they distort what we do. That can occur in a variety of ways such as the file drawer effect http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_drawer_problem#File_drawer_effect but also more subtle issues. In this particular context, there are literally hundreds of predictions from the 1980s about what the climate would be like today. That means that there are very difficult decisions to make about which predictions one should compare to the current data, and how to measure how accurate they are. Spencer's own motivations make the decisions he makes there to be extremely problematic. And yes, science is universally reproducible, but we're not talking about whether to accept a specific paper in a journal (if we were climatologists who were doing so, I agree that Spencer's motivations should then not enter into that), we're talking about non-climatologists who have neither the full time nor full expertise to make a judgment about all the details of his claims. In that context, the fact that he has strong external motivation is highly relevant when scientists lacking that external bias by and large disagree with his conclusions.

    14. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by OneAhead · · Score: 1

      I honestly don't know why GP did that, but maybe it is because attacking the science has already been taken care of and all that's left was looking for his motives for doing such bad science?

      Also, what the hell does straight or white have to do with anything? Are you Godwinning your own post?

    15. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      Forget Spencer, he doesn't seem to be able to explain why if its not getting hotter all the world's glaciers are rapidly disappearing. Perhaps you are finally ready to provide an explanation? How can all that ice be melting faster and faster if its not getting hotter?

    16. Re:Roy Spencer has other motivation. by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      No the real issue is why if its not getting warmer are all the glaciers melting? To heck with the temperature data. If its not getting warmer why are we seeing so much melting everywhere on the planet?

  7. A More INteresting Question by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Informative

    A more interesting question is why Spencer never publishes any of his alleged massive critiques of AGW in peer reviewed journals. He seems to be quick to a check from the Koch Brothers and various other pro-oil interests, but oddly never seems to actually publish these resounding rebuttals in any kind of scientific venue.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    1. Re:A More INteresting Question by jfengel · · Score: 1

      An even more interesting question, to me: how did he get a PhD, to be in charge of an (expensive) NASA climate monitoring satellite? He's one of the people gathering the data that demonstrates the warming.

      And yet he's intent on doing anything he can to re-interpret that data to prove anything except the flagrantly obvious, using methods that don't even come close to passing scientific muster. It's as if he does reasonable science by day and turns into a raving lunatic by night. How does that work?

    2. Re:A More INteresting Question by cold+fjord · · Score: 2, Informative

      A more interesting question is why Spencer never publishes any of his alleged massive critiques of AGW in peer reviewed journals.

      There is a known problem there.

      THICK ATMOSPHERE and Climategate and Scientific Journal Chicanery

      Climate researcher and IPCC co-author Eduardo Zorita calls for Warmergate plumbers Michael Mann, Phil Jones and Stefan Rahmstorf to be barred from the IPCC process and muses on the “very troubling professional behavior” evident in those leaked emails:

      I may confirm what has been written in other places: research in some areas of climate science has been and is full of machination, conspiracies, and collusion, as any reader can interpret from the CRU-files

      I am also aware that in this thick atmosphere – and I am not speaking of greenhouse gases now – editors, reviewers and authors of alternative studies, analysis, interpretations, even based on the same data we have at our disposal, have been bullied and subtly blackmailed. In this atmosphere, Ph D students are often tempted to tweak their data so as to fit the ‘politically correct picture’.

      Climategate's Michael Mann Channels His Inner Palpatine

      The Climategate emails reveal that when the scientist-activists saw skeptical scientists successfully calling public attention to such evidence, they went on a vicious attack, pulling strings to pressure universities and science journals to fire or blackball the skeptical scientists for presenting their competing theories and evidence. The Climategate emails also show Mann as one of the most aggressive warriors in the battle to publicly disparage and ruin the careers of scientists who disagree with his views on global warming.

      For example, upset that Harvard University researchers were successfully arguing that solar variance rather than carbon dioxide emissions are the most likely primary cause of recent global temperature fluctuations, Mann sent out an email seeking to coordinate action to pressure Harvard to rebuke or discipline the researchers. “If someone has close ties w/ any individuals there [at Harvard] who might be in a position to actually get some action taken on this, I’d highly encourage pursuing this,” writes Mann to fellow scientist-activists.

      The Climategate emails also reveal Mann recruiting investigative journalists to dig up dirt on scientist Steve McIntyre, who had called into questions Mann’s scientific theories.

      There is plenty more if you dig into that instead of conspiracy theories about the "Koch brothers."

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    3. Re:A More INteresting Question by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Care to provide some actual citations in, y'know actual literature, and not links to blogs and news items?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:A More INteresting Question by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      Forget Spencer. Can anyone explain to me why, if its not getting warmer, are all the glaciers melting?

  8. Re:BS by MightyMartian · · Score: 1, Informative

    Can you provide the citation in peer reviewed or primary literature where it says every spot on the planet will be warmer due to AGW...

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  9. Since it only needs 2C by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Since it only needs 2C to drop and you get an ice age starting, I fail to see how you can claim 0.7C a minor fluctuation and wonder how it would matter.

    1. Re:Since it only needs 2C by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well, no, it doesn't just need a 2C drop to get an ice age. It needs a continuous temperature shift of 2C or more in higher-latitude temperate regions without any significant actions to remove the snow. After a couple years of that remaining true, the increased snow cover will become self-sustaining until acted on by a sufficient contrary change of some kind. Then you get an ice age.

      Dramatic climate changes don't work off the global average temperature, they work off regional interactions across large enough scales to become resistant to the minor fluctuations.

    2. Re:Since it only needs 2C by ivano · · Score: 1

      For an ice-age to occur you need three things: 0) Land masses near the poles (lets say in the northern hemisphere) 1) Earth's tilt needs to decrease (from it's present 23.5 degrees), 2) Earth's eccentricity increases, and 3) Summer in the northern hemisphere happens during Earth's aphelion When these 3 things happen. The summer is not powerful enough to melt all the ice created during winter. This allows the glaciers to grow. Ice-ages happen when we get cooler summers. NOT because it's getting colder.

    3. Re:Since it only needs 2C by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's... four things. Just because you treat it like an array doesn't make 3 = 4.

    4. Re:Since it only needs 2C by operagost · · Score: 1

      Darn off-by-one errors.

      Anyway, during which ice age did the Earth's tilt change, or eccentricity increase?

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    5. Re:Since it only needs 2C by SleazyRidr · · Score: 2

      He's either an idiot who doesn't know how to count, or he's trying to say that we already have a concentration of land near the north pole, so there are only three things left to happen.

    6. Re:Since it only needs 2C by Layzej · · Score: 4, Funny

      Our chief weapon is surprise. Fear and surprise. Two chief weapons, fear, surprise, and ruthless efficiency! Er, among our chief weapons are: fear, surprise, ruthless efficiency, and near fanatical devotion to the Pope! Um, I'll come in again...

    7. Re:Since it only needs 2C by riverat1 · · Score: 2

      Milankovitch cycles! Learn about them!

    8. Re:Since it only needs 2C by Dishevel · · Score: 2

      and since that has happened many times in the past I fail to see what the fuck we think we are going to do about it.

      --
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    9. Re:Since it only needs 2C by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      Actually, there's a big concentration of WATER near - or more precisely AT the North Pole. But that didn't stop the last ice age.

      And it really doesn't matter how hot or cool the summer is, as long as there's enough winter to tip the balance towards accumulating ice and snow.

    10. Re:Since it only needs 2C by Gunboat_Diplomat · · Score: 1

      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?

      It's not hard. You just have to actually bother to turn up and vote them out. Most other western nations than US have a stronger grasp of this concept.

    11. Re:Since it only needs 2C by Dishevel · · Score: 2
      I am aware of the stupidity of the voters.

      We have exactly the government we currently deserve.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    12. Re:Since it only needs 2C by hutsell · · Score: 2

      Darn off-by-one errors.

      Anyway, during which ice age did the Earth's tilt change, or eccentricity increase?

      With axial obliquity, axial precession, apsidal precession and two orbital Inclinations, maybe someone capable of handling the multitude cyclical combinations affecting weather can come up with an exact answer. It appears one or both of the orbital inclinations are the ones seriously considered responsible for the ice ages.

      Summarizing:

      Axial Obliquity:
      ~ Every 41,000 years ~ Presently at 23.5 degrees and decreasing toward its minimum of 22 degrees (22 to 24.5).
      Axial Precession:
      ~ Every 26,000 years ~ The average cycle fluctuates depending on the axial tilt — shorter at 22 degrees; longer at 24.5 degrees.
      Apsidal Precession:
      ~ Every 21,000 to 25,000 years ~ The eccentricity of the Earth's elliptical orbit with the expansion and contraction of the eccentricity's perihelion to the Sun (3,000,000 miles).
      Orbital Inclinations:
      ~ Every 70,000 years ~ The inclination of the Earth's fixed orbital plane rising and lowering.
      ~ Every 100,000 years ~ The Earth's orbital plane taken as a whole, also rises and lowers to the Solar System's monumental plane.

      Then there are the Sun cycles, whatever that might be. (Or the speculation of a very large heat absorbing dust cloud in a higher orbital inclination.)

      Also worth considering are continual non-cyclical events occurring over several millennia: The continental drift changing the location of land masses or the Moon's distancing slowing the daily rotation and weakening the tidal effects — It seems in the end that past circumstances may not always be indicative of future events.

      --
      Yesterday's Weirdness is Tomorrow's Reason Why
    13. Re:Since it only needs 2C by HiThere · · Score: 1

      N.B.: I am not a climate scientist.

      The North pole is closely surrounded by land. Sufficiently closely that in the near past, the entire Arctic Ocean was essentially unpassible in the winter, and dangerously treacherous in the summer. This means that with sufficient humidity, snow would fall and remain throughout the summer. This is not a good basis for glaciation, as increased weight would cause the snowpack to sink, but it facilitates glaciers forming on the encircling land.

      He's wrong when he claims that the cycle of the earth's orbit is sufficient to start a glaciation, but it sets the stage for any time when the oceans are warm and there's a cold couple of summers (perhaps caused by a volcano) for the glaciation to commence. And to spread.

      Actually, I'm probably oversimplifying it too, as he certainly was. There's lots of intermingled factors. Warm oceans are necessary, as otherwise you don't have enough percipitation. You won't get it happening at the South Pole (unless you count Antarctica), because there's no land closely restricting the oceanic flow. Etc. If the Arctic Ocean were slightly more tightly enclosing, then you wouldn't need to wait for a propitious point in the orbital cycle to get your ice age. If it were a bit more open, then even that wouldn't suffice...depending. And the depending on is depending on the oceanic currents. If teh Bearing Strait were wider, you'd get a lot more flow of water through between the Pacific and the Atlantic. This would make everything colder EXCEPT the areas right around the pole. Those would be warmer. ETC.

      P.S.: I am not a climate scientist.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    14. Re:Since it only needs 2C by Optali · · Score: 1

      Check this out:
      https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      That was our mayor national event. It used to be held every year. Then it changed to every few. The last ones were held with 11 years from each other and the last was in 1997.

      In the past Dutch skaters used the channels as a mean of transport, postmen and even men with special barrows skated from town to town. If we still relied on these nowadays we would be facing a problem.

      And recall that our country is in a great part below sea level. Even a minimal rise can cost us a lot of money in dike repairs and in the fight of underground water. The harbour of Rotterdam has several polders maintained dry with pumps, even a slight rise would cost us a lot of cash, energy and maybe a whole new investment in these pumps.

      But well, the Models are wrong, everybody knows that, climate change is a scam, this has been clearly proven by Mr. Jim Inhofe, and a man who believes in a guy who stood up from the dead after having been nailed to a piece of wood can be wrong... and I have seen it in South Park too!!!

      So. Tell me... who are the mofos who are stealing our ice?

      --
      -- 29A the number of the Beast
    15. Re:Since it only needs 2C by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      Straight from Disturbing The Solar System. I just picked that book up from a used bookstore for like $3.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
  10. Garbage in... by gmuslera · · Score: 5, Informative

    That is a perfect example on how to misalign graphs to make them match your agenda. He should be jailed for that.

  11. Re:BS by beatle42 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Apparently the concept of making all weather more extreme has been lost here. That would mean winter storms will be more extreme as well. Perhaps it's hard to imagine why global warming would make more snow in some areas, but failures of some people's imagination doesn't make something less true.

    Also, if we're talking about the gravy train, don't the people emitting greenhouse gasses have a much larger financial stake than the scientists researching it? I doubt all the climate research funding world wide was equal to even Exxon's profits last year.

  12. Oh boy! by briancox2 · · Score: 1

    An invitation to speculate and draw our own conclusions based on a model that everyone will pick apart?

    Bring in some pre-conceived ideas from Slashdot readers and we have a real festive discussion ahead of us today! Popcorn time.

    I'm taking wagers on how many posts this one gets within the next 2 days. My computer model puts the number at about 535.

    --
    We should learn what we need to know about issues, before we decide what we need to feel about them.
  13. Re:I'm cold! by MoronBob · · Score: 2

    Where you aware the current drought in California happened after millions of acres of farmland were denied water and the water was released to save a tiny fish in the Delta?

    --
    Telecommuting! What about socialization?
  14. Re:China? by geekoid · · Score: 1

    almost like pollutants don't give a shit about borders.

    --
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  15. Calling all Slashdot climate experts... by mspohr · · Score: 1, Funny

    I'm sure this will be an intelligent discussion since we have so many people visiting here who are solid scientific thinkers, are experts in the field and will be able to intelligently discuss the nuances of this subject. I doubt we will see personal bias. I'm sure the discussion will be well reasoned and without hyperbole.
    I personally don't feel I have to check back on the discussion since I have already made up my mind.
      (for the impaired)

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    1. Re:Calling all Slashdot climate experts... by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      You win this thread. Slashdot is not a scientific forum for anything.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
  16. Then we should discount other studies too? by nefus · · Score: 2

    Using your comments. We should also cancel out avid atheists too then? I'd be curious to see if there are any REAL people in the middle when it comes to scientists in either way. In same same vein, we should cancel out studies by scientist who get paid to do studies by any person, organization or government that wants to prove global warming is man made. Try to find some real neutrality by honestly curious scientist, I'm wondering if you really could.

    1. Re:Then we should discount other studies too? by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Well the current Canadian government has a real interest in disproving CO2 related climate change as they're planning on a tar sand mono-culture. Yet even with their financing they haven't been able to get any studies denying CO2 related climate change and are left just stifling all the scientists that us tax payers pay for, at least the few that are left.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  17. The Worst Offender by KermodeBear · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can't speak to the accuracy of historic weather data or modern weather models, but I can say this:

    Global Warming / Climate Change (pick one, please) alarmists do themselves an incredible amount of damage when they do the following:

    1. Grossly exaggerate predictions and base everything on the worst case they can find.
    2. Manipulate charts to make changes look far more significant than they really are.
    3. Instantly ridicule anyone who disagrees with them on anything, even if that disagreement is valid.

    Let's say for the sake of argument that all of the predictions from these weather models are 100% accurate, all of the research and data is correct, and that the climate is indeed warming because of CO2 emissions, and that the climate will warm 5 Celsius degrees in the next 200 years. Let's pretend that the science is completely perfect.

    Even if all of that is true, you will find a lot of people who won't even bother listening because they remember crazy predictions like "New York city will be underwater in 20 years!" and "We're all going to be cannibals! Cannibals, I say!"

    Do you see why so many people don't listen to those who are trying to push human-caused climate change?

    Politics needs to be taken out of the equation. Completely. Everything needs to be 100% transparent. The science needs to be broken down in ways the average person can understand. Even if that happens, it will be decades before the damage the global warming alarmists have caused can be reversed.

    --
    Love sees no species.
    1. Re:The Worst Offender by Grantbridge · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How long do you think it'll take for you to bleed to death if I shoot you with a pistol? Its not an easy problem to predict. You don't know precisely where you will be shot, if the bullet will go straight through or lodge in bone, or ricochet. You don't know how long your blood will take to clot. You can be pretty sure that, left unattended, you will die from being shot. But predicting exactly how long you will have is rather hard. CO2 levels cause global warming by basic physics, just as a greenhouse is warmer inside than outside. You trap the heat in, but let the visible light through. What the exact consequences of a certain CO2 level are is hard to say preciously, but if CO2 levels keep going up and up and up you can be sure that the polar ice caps are going to melt and sealevels are going to rise dramatically. Precisely when this will happen is as hard to predict as how long it'll take you to bleed out from a gunshot wound, but you wouldn't argue that because its hard to determine how long you have, it's not worth trying to avoid getting shot!

    2. Re:The Worst Offender by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 2

      "CO2 levels cause global warming by basic physics, just as a greenhouse is warmer inside than outside"

      Complete and total crap.

      1. CO2 levels are a response to past warming 800 to 1000 years ago, as all of the ice core records testify
      2. Greenhouses do not warm via the "atmospheric greenhouse effect" of suppressing radiation but by suppressing convection, an effect demonstrated a hundred years ago.

      If you want to invoke basic physics, then you first have to learn basic physics

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    3. Re:The Worst Offender by Grantbridge · · Score: 1

      Well the enclosed nature of a greenhouse certainly has the majority of the effect compared to letting the air simply escape. But the opaque to infra-red nature of glass provides insulation which lessens the heat loss at night. Its only a small effect compared to simply enclosing a space with rock-salt, but it still provides additional heating.

    4. Re:The Worst Offender by Laxori666 · · Score: 1

      Agreed about the alarmists. Note that it's never climate scientists who make ridiculous claims like the ones you listed. The first one was claimed by Al Gore, who is certainly not a climate scientist, while the second was Ted Turner. It is certainly a good idea to not take what they say as being scientifically valid. Even the IPCC report doesn't do any research of its own - it just takes existing research, compiles it, and makes recommendations. To really figure out what's happening you have to look at the science, which means the scientific papers published in peer-reviewed journals themselves, not what media sites or public figures or the IPCC says about the science.

    5. Re:The Worst Offender by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

      True, persuasion is an art, and sometimes it takes a lot of patience. I think we see similar behavior on a lot of subjects (hello Libertarians who like to say "sheeple"). We can hope that over time and repetition something resembling the truth will emerge. But considering that there are still people today who insist the Earth is flat, we will never reach 100% consensus. Probably having 100% would be a bad thing for the species anyway, a massive groupthink trap that would send us into extinction. Hope that helps.

      --
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    6. Re:The Worst Offender by Laxori666 · · Score: 1

      1) It works both ways. A rise in temperature does cause increased CO2 levels. Increased CO2 levels also contribute to further rises in temperature. It is a feedback loop.
      2) Yes the greenhouse effect is a bit of a misnomer. It is a different effect than what causes greenhouses to work. This video has an explanation.

    7. Re:The Worst Offender by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      The science needs to be broken down in ways the average person can understand.

      They can't. Almost every time someone tries, it gets taken out of context by either the deniers or the fervent believers and distorted.

      It's not the scientists making crazy predictions: it's the laymen who have listened to what the scientists tried to explain and not quite understood it all and who are rightfully concerned by it but either (a) get irrationally scared or (b) think the other side's irrational people and the undecided won't listen unless it's scary enough.

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    8. Re:The Worst Offender by david_thornley · · Score: 2

      The science is there, and published. People have explained global warming in simple but reasonably accurate terms. Raw data is available.

      Now, if you have a suggestion as to how to prevent people from going off the deep end (on either side) I'd love to know about it.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    9. Re:The Worst Offender by sstamps · · Score: 1

      I can't speak to the accuracy of historic weather data or modern weather models, but I can say this:

      Global Warming / Climate Change (pick one, please) alarmists do themselves an incredible amount of damage when they do the following:

      1. Grossly exaggerate predictions and base everything on the worst case they can find.
      2. Manipulate charts to make changes look far more significant than they really are.
      3. Instantly ridicule anyone who disagrees with them on anything, even if that disagreement is valid.

      I'd say that, by your use of the pejorative term "alarmist", you yourself have already violated your own rule #3. Let's see how you fare on the other 2.

      Let's say for the sake of argument that all of the predictions from these weather models are 100% accurate, all of the research and data is correct, and that the climate is indeed warming because of CO2 emissions, and that the climate will warm 5 Celsius degrees in the next 200 years. Let's pretend that the science is completely perfect.

      Something which is NEVER claimed by anyone researching or participating in climate science, but for the sake of argument, ok.

      Even if all of that is true, you will find a lot of people who won't even bother listening because they remember crazy predictions like "New York city will be underwater in 20 years!" and "We're all going to be cannibals! Cannibals, I say!"

      Ahh, here we are. A gross violation of your first rule. You are basing your judgment of so-called "alarmists" on the worst cases you can find. I don't know of any serious climate scientist or climate change / AGW adherent who says any of these things or, if said, are taken out of context by someone to prove the opposite. Yes, there are some nutjobs who should rightly be called "alarmists", and they say some pretty outlandish and stupid things, but they are far in the minority. What they say shouldn't have any impact on the science or anyone's perception of it. They are simply noise in the signal, and are pretty easily eliminated by even a modicum of critical thinking and a little bit of research.

      Do you see why so many people don't listen to those who are trying to push human-caused climate change?

      Politics needs to be taken out of the equation. Completely. Everything needs to be 100% transparent. The science needs to be broken down in ways the average person can understand. Even if that happens, it will be decades before the damage the global warming alarmists have caused can be reversed.

      I hate to break it to you, but real AGW/CC climate science adherents or "climate hawks" don't take the nutjobs seriously, either. The problem is in terms of where you get your information on the subject. Politics are inserted into the equation by people with an agenda. Understand who is talking, and what their goals/motivations are for telling you the things you are hearing from them, and seek out the source of their information. If they can't or won't provide it, then only take what they say with a heavy dose of skepticism. Everything in climate science is open and accessible (more today than in the past, to be sure), and there are many sites which break down the hard science into more meaningful chunks which the lay person can consume at their leisure.

      I think the damage that the "alarmists" (supposedly) have caused pales in comparison by far to what the well-monied climate contrarians have caused. We even see it in *this very article* by Spencer, who grossly violates your own Rule #2. It's easy to dismiss a nutjob statement that is very easy to source and check, like Ted Turner's noise. It is much harder to dismiss deceptions which are carefully

      --
      -SS "Teach the ignorant, care for the dumb, and punish the stupid."
    10. Re:The Worst Offender by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      "I'm gonna keep fscking with the environment until you pry it from my warm dead hands!"

      -NRA -- National Roil Association

    11. Re:The Worst Offender by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      "Politics needs to be taken out of the equation. Completely. Everything needs to be 100% transparent. The science needs to be broken down in ways the average person can understand. Even if that happens, it will be decades before the damage the global warming alarmists have caused can be reversed."

      Excellent idea. Now that we are back to breaking down the science in ways the average person can understand, can you explain to me why it is that if all the "global alarmists" are wrong and the world isn't getting hotter, all of the world's glaciers are melting?

    12. Re:The Worst Offender by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      The problem with global warming and what about it should be alarming is not just about factors of relevance to the physical sciences or confined to predictions about temperature changes on the surface of the planet we inhabit. It is also very much a problem concerning how the world's ecosystems will respond to these changes. In biology there are few simply linear relationships. Rather there are optimums and outside of these optimums things can change dramatically in very short periods of time.

      What biologists throughout the world are finding is that the predicted effects of the rapid carbon dioxide buildup, particularly in the oceans, is alarming. Food production is not rising in response to global warming, but declining since the changes bring about extreme weather patterns that make agriculture even more difficult, not to mention fisheries from which humans obtain more than 50% of all protein. It also disrupts the delicate balance among the constituent species in ecosystems that can irreversibly change them for long periods of time, if not permanently. Increased temperatures are not the only thing we need to worry about. Falling pH is becoming an increasing problem and if we go back in geological time and look at instances where ocean pH levels were very low, such as the end of the Permian, the effects upon marine organisms was severe, with 80-90% of all life forms going extinct within as little as 10,000-20,000 years, but possibly over a 100,000. Likewise, dramatic changes in the availability of freshwater are already profound and the bulk of the warming that is built into a 400 ppm C02 levels has only begun to occur. Humans, however, are accelerating these kinds of changes by several orders of magnitude compared to what has been previously occurred in Earth history. It is not just that it is warming at a steady rate that we have to worry about, it is how sensitive the world's ecosystems are to such rapid changes, changes that are several orders of magnitude larger than species typically encounter.

    13. Re:The Worst Offender by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      The news always sensationalizes things. A smart person doesn't rely on the news to accurately report on anything even remotely related to science.

      But ask yourself what other general areas of science, that enjoy broad scientific consensus, are constantly attacked in the media and other conservative outlets (news, radio, etc..)?

      If we eliminate the far religious right stuff (creationism, etc..), and just focus on mainstream conservatives, I can't think of any other scientific areas with broad scientific support, except climate change, that are so challenged.

      Do you see why so many people don't listen to those who are trying to push human-caused climate change?

      So maybe it has nothing at all to do with the news cherry picking some sensational headlines. They do that all the time. Maybe it has more to do with a massive industrially financed propaganda campaign to smear climate science, that is relentless, and being pushed through all forms of media. Just like some of the very same PR agencies did when tobacco came under fire as a possible cause of cancer.

  18. Re:China? by i+kan+reed · · Score: 5, Funny

    China are experts on big walls, though.

  19. One small problem... by cirby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The State of the Climate 2012 paper is... get this... from two years ago. After they had to start "adjusting" their models to reflect reality.

    When you look at the actual historical AGW models, we're below their "optimistic" model (the one where we cut CO2 drastically over the last couple of decades - which didn't happen). And a good 0.2 C below their "probable" models.

    If you're looking at predictions, go back and look at the climate models from the late 1980s and early 1990s. They're off, by a ridiculous amount.

    Out of 90 models (yes, ninety), a grand total of TWO managed to predict the current temperature.

  20. Re:BS by Salgak1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    And yet EVERYTHING is now caused by AGW. Heat Waves. Cold Spells, Floods. Droughts. Today, I saw a report linking Crime to Global Warming. Last year, it caused prostitution for impoverished women. About the ONLY thing not linked to AGW is the Heartbreak of Psoriasis and Waxy Yellow Buildup. But hey, it's only February. . . .

  21. Re:China? by StikyPad · · Score: 1

    Wait, are you implying that some of these walls are missing and/or faulty?

  22. Re:I'm cold! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    California is half desert. It always has been. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0071315 This whole movie (written in the 50 made in the 60s) one of the major plot points is water. This is not new. They have a desert there called *DEATH VALLEY* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_Valley. Meaning go in with plenty of water or die. The flooding from rainfall is well known. So they built lakes to control it. They then build industries around those lakes. The industries outgrew the lakes (as predicted in the 40's and 50's).

    South has to buy more snowplows
    "I wish it would snow more like when I was a kid". That is what many of the people I work with say. In the south. So the cities in their long term logic saw little to no snow for a few years decided to SELL said snowplows. The literally sold them because of 1-2 inches a year for a few years.

    We are in a drought. They happen. To blame 'global warming' is grasping for straws. The models are wrong because they are basically splines. Any 10th grade algebra teacher can tell you what they think of results of splines when you get off the edges no matter how many input items you have. They may be close or wildly wrong. But that will be pure chance.

  23. Roy Spencer is a religious fanatic by JDG1980 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Spencer's scientific views are being affected by his religious beliefs. He is a signatory to a document called An Evangelical Declaration on Global Warming, which holds that Earth was created by "God's intelligent design" and that ecosystems are therefore "robust, resilient, self-regulating, and self-correcting". Whatever you might think of this, it is definitely not a scientific statement. Basically, he refuses to accept, for religious reasons, that humans can have an effect on the Earth's climate – in his theology, only God can do that.

    Spencer is also a major proponent of the "intelligent design" scam. And both he and John Christy are based out of Alabama, one of the most backward and scientifically illiterate states in the U.S.

    1. Re:Roy Spencer is a religious fanatic by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      Of course, its Alabama's fault.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    2. Re:Roy Spencer is a religious fanatic by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      FTFY isn't it written Obama now?

      Ah, you meant the state, my fault hen.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    3. Re:Roy Spencer is a religious fanatic by jammer170 · · Score: 1

      Yes, Huntsville, AL. Definitely scientifically illiterate. I mean, it's not like NASA would ever build its largest space center there or anything....

      --
      Remember, you can't look dignified when your having fun! Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out of it alive
    4. Re:Roy Spencer is a religious fanatic by hey! · · Score: 1

      Which doesn't impeach Spencer's critiques of climate change theory; it only means his beliefs about how the climate will behave in the future are unscientific. Any substantive critiques he raises on things like the effect of cloud formation on climate models should be dealt with substantively. His belief that climate will not change in the future because God wills it not to change is not a scientific proposition, and can't be addressed scientifically short of waiting and seeing.

      It's important to note that Spencer continues to be published in climate journals. This shows that the denialist's belief that scientists who disagree with AGW are discriminated against is false. Skeptical scientists are free to critique, but not to publish their religious beliefs as science, which is exactly as it should be.

      I see even less reason to impeach the credibility of John Christy just because he's a climate change skeptic -- and especially not because he lives in the same state as Spencer. You're allowed to disagree with the scientific consensus; it means you're outside the mainstream of science, it doesn't automatically make you a crackpot. Even if you *are* a crackpot, you're allowed to publish non-crackpottish criticisms of the basis for scientific consensus. Science is very open-minded this way, which is one of the reasons why the scientific *consensus* is generally so reliable.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    5. Re:Roy Spencer is a religious fanatic by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      which holds that Earth was created by "God's intelligent design" and that ecosystems are therefore "robust, resilient, self-regulating, and self-correcting".

      That just proves that humans evolved; for they certainly don't fit that criteria.

  24. Re:BS by beatle42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't think it should be surprising if changes in climate affect the behavior of people in areas. If food becomes more plentiful I bet crime goes down. If food and water become more scarce I bet it goes up. If the weather patterns are changing surely some areas are going to get drier and some are going to get wetter. Also, as events become more extreme all the extreme weather events you sited are likely to happen more often too, don't you think? So you're right, global warming almost certainly is doing all those things.

    I don't see why it's controversial to think that. Even if you don't think people have anything to do with changing climate all those effects are obvious outcomes of it changing, and I don't think many people actually doubt that it is changing.

  25. Comparison from a real climate modeler by riverat1 · · Score: 4, Informative

    For several years Gavin Schmidt, one of the principals of the NASA/GISS Model/E climate model, has been doing a comparison of model output to observations. There isn't an update for 2013 yet but the comparison through 2012 is available here.

    1. Re:Comparison from a real climate modeler by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Interesting- especially since, that's only a .05 degree increase instead of the .07 others are claiming.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    2. Re:Comparison from a real climate modeler by stymy · · Score: 2

      The error bars on some of those graphs are so monstrously large it would be almost impossible for the real data to fall outside that range (in the first one, the margin of error for the forecast grows to a range of almost 0 degrees to 1). Anything with that much error has no real predictive value whatsoever.

    3. Re:Comparison from a real climate modeler by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      The first graph compares observed temperatures to the CIMP3 ensemble. The gray area is not exactly error range. It is the range that 95% of the model runs fell within. How pertinent that is to your point I'm not sure. I'll leave that to the guys who study that stuff for a living.

  26. These guys are deniers by nmrtian · · Score: 1, Informative

    These guys are well known climate change deniers with links to the petroleum industry. Their goal is not to enlighten but to sow doubt.

    1. Re:These guys are deniers by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      If they have links to the petroleum industry perhaps you'd like to share exactly how much they have made and exactly where this money is supposed to have come from. Otherwise it looks like you're blowing hard.

      On the other hand when Stanford University get $500 million from Exxon Mobil, it all turns into pixie dust.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    2. Re:These guys are deniers by InsertCleverUsername · · Score: 1

      If they have links to the petroleum industry perhaps you'd like to share exactly how much they have made and exactly where this money is supposed to have come from.

      Admittedly, it has gotten harder. The money used to follow a much more transparent path. See http://www.scientificamerican....

      --
      Ask me about my sig!
  27. Re:China? by oodaloop · · Score: 1

    That, and the fact that some forms of pollution change the albedo of the atmosphere and reflect more light back. The fog of pollution around Beijing probably reflects enough light to make it locally slightly cooler. But globally, the greenhouse gases contribute to an average higher temperature. In any case, I feel that the other effects of the pollution, consumption, and destruction of our environment will have more disastrous consequences sooner than the average change in global temperature will. Not denying global warming though, lest anyone misread me.

    --
    Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
  28. A very interesting answer by cirby · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A big reason you won't see any critiques of that sort is that the influential folks in the AGW alarmist camp made a big effort to block any critical papers from even being considered. Threats to blacklist journals for publishing "anti-AGW" papers, for example, or to take behind-the-scenes action against anyone who tried to submit such papers.

    This all came out in the Climategate emails. But you never heard about those, did you?

    They also admit in those emails that most of the actual criticisms of "mainstream" AGW were valid, and discussed ways to cover it up.

    "Hide the decline" ring a bell?

    Or "The fact is that we can't account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that we can't. The CERES data published in the August BAMS 09 supplement on ... shows there should be even more warming: but the data are surely wrong. Our observing system is inadequate."

    1. Re:A very interesting answer by Laxori666 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I, too, used to think climategate showed all those things. I read article after article about them and how it's all over for AGW, etc. However, when taken in context, those emails actually refer to something totally other than what they were made out to refer to. I highly recommend you check out this video and this one wherein potholer54 takes an in-depth and impartial look into climategate and reveals what it actually shows... as a spoiler, it doesn't reveal that there's a giant AGW conspiracy amongst all the climate scientists in the world.

    2. Re:A very interesting answer by BasilBrush · · Score: 4, Informative

      This all came out in the Climategate emails. But you never heard about those, did you?

      We are well aware of release of emails from the University of East Anglia. The attempt at connecting it with watergate fails, as unlike watergate there is no smoking gun. Nothing in the emails shows any conspiracy. There is no blocking of "anti-AGW" papers. There are no "anti-AGW" papers to block. And nothing in the emails says otherwise

      "Hide the decline" ring a bell?

      It sure does.

      "Many commentators quoted one email in which Phil Jones said he had used "Mike's Nature trick" in a 1999 graph for the World Meteorological Organization "to hide the decline" in proxy temperatures derived from tree ring analyses when measured temperatures were actually rising. This 'decline' referred to the well-discussed tree ring divergence problem, but these two phrases were taken out of context by climate change sceptics, including US Senator Jim Inhofe and former Governor of Alaska Sarah Palin, as though they referred to some decline in measured global temperatures, even though they were written when temperatures were at a record high.[32] John Tierney, writing in the New York Times in November 2009, said that the claims by sceptics of "hoax" or "fraud" were incorrect, but that the graph on the cover of a report for policy makers and journalists did not show these non-experts where proxy measurements changed to measured temperatures.[33] The final analyses from various subsequent inquiries concluded that in this context 'trick' was normal scientific or mathematical jargon for a neat way of handling data, in this case a statistical method used to bring two or more different kinds of data sets together in a legitimate fashion.[34][35] The EPA notes that in fact, the evidence shows that the research community was fully aware of these issues and that no one was hiding or concealing them.[36]"
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H...

      You have nothing.

    3. Re:A very interesting answer by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I love it. The pseudo-skeptic community has pretty much aped every single claim about the scientific community that the Creationists have made. What's next, a documentary starring Ben Stein?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:A very interesting answer by dylan_- · · Score: 3, Informative

      Or "The fact is that we can't account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that we can't. The CERES data published in the August BAMS 09 supplement on ... shows there should be even more warming: but the data are surely wrong. Our observing system is inadequate."

      Heh, I love it when deniers mindlessly repeat that quote. You don't even know what it means, do you? Because if you did, you certainly wouldn't be mentioning it.

      You see, we measure how much energy the Sun outputs. And we measure how much the Earth reflects of that energy (its albedo). We also measure how much it radiates, which - if the Earth was at a stable temperature - would be the same as the difference between the first two. Understand so far? That's what the "CERES data" refers to.

      What Trenberth is saying is that the CERES data shows there should be far *more* warming than we're actually measuring! When you take into account air temperature increase, melting ice, sea temperature increase, etc etc it *still* leaves a big chunk of energy to account for. Now, any sane person would therefore assume that the energy can't just vanish: it's got to go somewhere that we aren't measuring.

      Not the deniers, they think it's all being whisked away by the natural cycle fairies. Or perhaps they just don't understand what it is they're saying and are mindlessly repeating what they read on some blog. Hey, maybe you can tell us. Which is it?

      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    5. Re:A very interesting answer by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      you fucking idiot.

      some of us know how to read.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    6. Re:A very interesting answer by MoronBob · · Score: 1

      So say we all agreed that we needed to "take action" to save the planet. Would the US government do the job and would it involve a website?

      --
      Telecommuting! What about socialization?
    7. Re:A very interesting answer by OneAhead · · Score: 1

      What is it with Americans and taking quotes out of context? Come election season, you see these appearing almost daily on both sides, and they seem to be taken strangely serious too.

      In case you didn't know, an out-of-context quote can give an awfully skewed impression, even more so if it is ripped from informal communications. Here is a more complete story, including how a discussion of the papers in question was included in the IPCC report. It concludes with:

      Despite being heralded as “the final nail in the coffin of anthropogenic global warming”, Climategate did not even demonstrate corruption of the IPCC process, let alone corruption of the climate science community. In any case, the CRU scientists' influence extended to a couple of IPCC chapters covering only a small part of the large body of evidence for anthropogenic global warming. That mountain of evidence cannot be explained away by the behaviour of a few individuals.

    8. Re:A very interesting answer by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      I'm sure Ben Stein can tell me why all the glaciers are melting even though its not getting any warmer. It seems no one is able to answer this question. If global warming is a hoax and its not warming, why are all the glaciers melting?

  29. Submitter can't read a bloody graph... by Onymous+Hero · · Score: 3, Informative

    Where does the 0.7C warming since 1980 figure come from exactly? I make it roughly 0.7F (note: FAHRENHEIT) from 1980 until the last point in 2012. That's an anomaly of around 0.4C, which seems to tie in with the graph on the R Spencer page.

  30. Re:BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You have a fundamental lack of understanding about the concepts of global warming.

    There is a monumental difference between *climate* and *weather*. "Global warming" doesn't mean "it won't get cold", in fact snowier winters are complete compatible with the predictions made by climate change models (more moisture in the air, more energy in the system pushing arctic air further south than normal, etc).

    Global warming science speaks about *global* averages, not local weather anomalies. Once again, this doesn't mean it won't get cold anymore, instead it means the following:

    1. weather patterns in general will be more intense (more heat = more energy).
    2. record breaking heat waves will become more frequent. The past decade has seen a large increase in record breaking summers.
    3. the arctic/antarctic will be effected first because it is most sensitive. We are seeing this with massive ice shelves melting into the see and glaciers simply disappearing.

    Simply put, you can't use local weather to dispute global trends, it's just nonsense. That's like saying the drought in the south west is over because it rained a lot in NY.

    My response to your statement: "If this doesn't drive the nail into the global warming coffin, I don't know what will short of a snowball earth scenario."

    Given the mountain of evidence for global warming being real, what would it take to convince you? How many record breaking summers? How many stronger than usual storms? How much recession in ice shelves in at the poles? (The list goes on). Here's some indisputable facts:

    1. CO2 quantities in the atmosphere have increased drastically since the industrial revolution. I don't think anyone doubts this, you can measure it yourself if you like.
    2. The average global temperature has been steadily rising over the past few decades. Here's some data from NASA (http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/graphs_v3/).
    3. The oceans have absorbed much of this increased heat, with the top 700 meters (about 2,300 feet) of ocean showing warming of 0.302 degrees Fahrenheit since 1969.
    4. Global sea level rose about 17 centimeters (6.7 inches) in the last century.
    5. The 20 warmest years on record having occurred since 1981 and with all 10 of the warmest years occurring in the past 12 years.
    6. The Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets have decreased in mass.
    7. Glaciers are retreating almost everywhere around the world
    8. Since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, the acidity of surface ocean waters has increased by about 30 percent. (Due to the increase in CO2 in the atmosphere).
    9. The number of record high temperature events in the United States has been increasing, while the number of record low temperature events has been decreasing, since 1950.

    The list goes on. Honestly asking the question here: How much evidence is enough? Even if we can't prove *conclusively* that these things are related, it would be damn foolish, perhaps even reckless to claim that they certainly are not just because you had a bunch of snow in your roof.

  31. Since 1980? Give me a break by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Look back before that, the period from 1950-1974 (approximately). How well do the models match there?

    Cherry picking is bad science. You have to look at the whole record from the start of the Industrial Age... and the models haven't been particularly good.

    That's not an anti anthropogenic global warming statement, by the way. It's a "science is hard and you can't understand a subject after ten minutes of reading" statement.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  32. Re:Glad you asked... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 3, Informative

    And yet, tree ring data from California shows that region has been in drought for something like 1600 out of the last 2000 years.

    Much of it significantly *before* modern technology and CO2 pollution.

    Could it be the real problem is that we don't actually know what the average temperature was before 1700?

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  33. Re:BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    A lot of people aren't so much against the problem of the climate changing as to the proposed solutions. You dislike the solutions, so rage against the climate change so the solutions don't have to be implemented.

  34. Looking out the window... by BoRegardless · · Score: 1

    My prediction for a warm day is now shot to hell.

    1. Re:Looking out the window... by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      You need to think longer term. I'm confident it will be warmer 4 months from now. Global Warming is real!

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    2. Re:Looking out the window... by styrotech · · Score: 1

      You mean on average right? Because it sure as hell is going to be a lot colder HERE in 4 months time.

  35. 97% - bogus poll... by cirby · · Score: 1, Informative

    Just so you know: That "97 percent of all scientists in the world" silliness came from a rigged "poll."

    Basically, an AGW-supporting scientist polled a number of his AGW-supporting scientist friends and co-workers - 30 or so - and asked them if they thought AGW was real.

    That's where your number came from. Which should tell you something about the actual support for AGW among the scientific population at large...

    They recently came up with another poll, where they cherry-picked a bunch of papers, and said "97% of scientific papers agree!" While not mentioning that only about a third of them actually addressed AGW, and they got their "new" 97% by only looking at 65 papers. Out of 12,000. Oops.

    1. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Gunboat_Diplomat · · Score: 4, Informative

      Just so you know: That "97 percent of all scientists in the world" silliness came from a rigged "poll."

      Basically, an AGW-supporting scientist polled a number of his AGW-supporting scientist friends and co-workers - 30 or so - and asked them if they thought AGW was real.

      That's where your number came from. Which should tell you something about the actual support for AGW among the scientific population at large...

      They recently came up with another poll, where they cherry-picked a bunch of papers, and said "97% of scientific papers agree!" While not mentioning that only about a third of them actually addressed AGW, and they got their "new" 97% by only looking at 65 papers. Out of 12,000. Oops.

      ok, so.. read through all of this page, and repeat that this is just a guy polling his friends:

      http://climate.nasa.gov/scient...

    2. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 4, Informative

      "Basically, an AGW-supporting scientist polled a number of his AGW-supporting scientist friends and co-workers - 30 or so - and asked them if they thought AGW was real."

      Not quite true. The original "huge consensus" rumor was started by an article (NOT a peer-reviewed paper) that appeared in Nature by one Naomi Oreskes, years ago. Oreskes claimed to have surveyed a database of science papers and concluded that none of them (not one) disagreed with the greenhouse gas global warming idea.

      It was soon shown that Oreskes' "study" was in fact a textbook example of cherry-picking. She had searched the database for papers that included the phrase "global climate change". Only those were included in her analysis. The problem with that being that at the time, only papers that were ABOUT the effects of greenhouse gas warming mentioned the phrase "global climate change" at all. So, in effect, she selected out of the scientific literate just the papers about greenhouse global warming, and then conclude that they all agreed about greenhouse global warming! How surprising!

      The fact was, of course, that the majority of climate papers were not about greenhouse warming and never mentioned the subject at all. But those weren't counted.

      This "consensus" idea was bolstered by people claiming that almost all of the "thousands" of scientists behind the latest IPCC report had agreed about it. This, too, was a distortion of the truth. The scientists involved in the AR report at the time numbered in the hundreds. There were about 2,500 or so reviewers, and not all of those were scientists. Further, not all of them actually agreed.

      Shortly after that, the Petition Project was undertaken to show that scientists in fact did not agree. Some 30,000 people with actual science or engineering credentials signed the petition DISagreeing with greenhouse global warming, and their names and professions are still publicly available at petitionproject.org. More than 9,000 of those were PhDs... far more than the 2500 who supposedly agreed, again many of whom had no advanced degrees.

      Another "study" was done in this last year, which came up with that "97%" figure. Unfortunately, THAT "study" suffered from exactly the same flaw as the discredited Oreskes study: it searched the literature for papers that contained the phrase "global climate change". Self-selection at its finest.

      And of course then there's the real kicker here: even if these "studies" had not been statistical nonsense, the fact remains that "consensus" is not science. If consensus were a scientifically valid measure of anything, we'd still be in the stone ages.

    3. Re:97% - bogus poll... by kwbauer · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "in the climate field"... The only way to get into "the climate field" is to believe in AGW so why the hell do only most of them believe it.

    4. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Chalnoth · · Score: 2

      It was soon shown that Oreskes' "study" was in fact a textbook example of cherry-picking. She had searched the database for papers that included the phrase "global climate change". Only those were included in her analysis. The problem with that being that at the time, only papers that were ABOUT the effects of greenhouse gas warming mentioned the phrase "global climate change" at all. So, in effect, she selected out of the scientific literate just the papers about greenhouse global warming, and then conclude that they all agreed about greenhouse global warming! How surprising!

      The fact was, of course, that the majority of climate papers were not about greenhouse warming and never mentioned the subject at all. But those weren't counted.

      The phrase "global climate change" does not specify whether the paper is supporting or disagreeing with the consensus view. It's a neutral phrase. It's just a way of limiting the papers to only those that are on-topic. Why do you think limiting to only on-topic papers was a bad thing?

      I can guarantee you that there is no possible selection criteria that would result in a significant number of peer-reviewed papers that claim that global warming isn't happening, that humans aren't causing it, or that global warming isn't quite dangerous. I'm sure you can find some, but they won't come anywhere close to the number that support global warming.

    5. Re:97% - bogus poll... by dwpro · · Score: 3, Informative

      this article was published in 2009 From the abstract:

      "Here, we use an extensive dataset of 1,372 climate researchers and their publication and citation data to show that (i) 97–98% of the climate researchers most actively publishing in the field support the tenets of ACC outlined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and (ii) the relative climate expertise and scientific prominence of the researchers unconvinced of ACC are substantially below that of the convinced researchers"

      This study does not seem to have the flaws you mention. There have been several studies I've seen with similar outcomes.

      --
      Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    6. Re:97% - bogus poll... by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The thing is, it really doesn't matter how many scientists support it. Science isn't a democracy. See the pamphlet called 100 authors against Einstein. Einstein replied that it didn't need 100 people do disprove his theory of relativity, rather all it needed was one fact. I really hate how modern science has turned into this "if the majority believes it, it must be true." I'm sure the majority of the world still believes in creationism, but they're also still wrong.

      (By the way, who decides what makes you a scientist anyways?)

      --
      Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
    7. Re:97% - bogus poll... by sstamps · · Score: 2

      Not quite true. The original "huge consensus" rumor was started by an article (NOT a peer-reviewed paper) that appeared in Nature by one Naomi Oreskes, years ago. Oreskes claimed to have surveyed a database of science papers and concluded that none of them (not one) disagreed with the greenhouse gas global warming idea.

      Ahh, yes, the old Oreskes essay "scandal". It was not published in Nature, but in Science. Small quibble, but if you're going to be critical of something, at least get your facts correct.

      It was soon shown that Oreskes' "study" was in fact a textbook example of cherry-picking. She had searched the database for papers that included the phrase "global climate change". Only those were included in her analysis. The problem with that being that at the time, only papers that were ABOUT the effects of greenhouse gas warming mentioned the phrase "global climate change" at all. So, in effect, she selected out of the scientific literate just the papers about greenhouse global warming, and then conclude that they all agreed about greenhouse global warming! How surprising!

      No, it wasn't. It was exactly what it claimed to be. The phrase used did not include the word "global"; it was just "climate change" (which could go either way -- remember all those supposed "global cooling" papers from the 70s? They would still qualify as they referred to "climate change").

      Yes, she chose "climate change" because, you know, all those papers on the reproduction cycles of ring-tailed lemurs are not so relevant to the subject.

      She did not select papers about greenhouse global warming, as those were not her search terms. The fact that most of the papers that mentioned "climate change" endorsed anthropogenic causes to some degree or another, rather than saying it was something else when they most certainly could, is significant and not a simple result of cherry-picking.

      The fact was, of course, that the majority of climate papers were not about greenhouse warming and never mentioned the subject at all. But those weren't counted

      Incorrect. 25% of the papers she counted did not endorse or were neutral on the subject of anthropogenic causes. NONE of them rejected it.

      Further, her essay was formally challenged by Dr. Benny Peiser, who ended up later retracting his challenge, concluding:

      "Only [a] few abstracts explicitly reject or doubt the AGW (anthropogenic global warming) consensus which is why I have publicly withdrawn this point of my critique. [snip] I do not think anyone is questioning that we are in a period of global warming. Neither do I doubt that the overwhelming majority of climatologists is agreed that the current warming period is mostly due to human impact."

      This "consensus" idea was bolstered by people claiming that almost all of the "thousands" of scientists behind the latest IPCC report had agreed about it. This, too, was a distortion of the truth. The scientists involved in the AR report at the time numbered in the hundreds. There were about 2,500 or so reviewers, and not all of those were scientists. Further, not all of them actually agreed.

      "bolstered by people" By whom? The 97% figures come from several independent studies, most of them dealing with longer periods and an order of magnitude larger sample size than the one Oreskes used. None of them refer to the "thousands of scientists behind the latest IPCC report". I question where you're getting your information, because it isn't from the people performing the actual research.

      Shortly after that, the Petition Project was undertaken to show that scientists in fact did not agree. Some 30,000 people with actual science or engineering credentials signed the petition DISagreeing with greenhouse global warming, and their names and professions are still publicly available at petitionproject.org. More than 9,000 of those were PhDs... far more than the 2500 who supposedly

      --
      -SS "Teach the ignorant, care for the dumb, and punish the stupid."
    8. Re:97% - bogus poll... by buswolley · · Score: 2

      Over 10,000 scientists were invited to participate. That a whole lot of 'friends and coworkers'

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    9. Re:97% - bogus poll... by buswolley · · Score: 2

      Bullshit. If there is good data that is contrary to the general consensus, you better believe that scientists will claw for it....

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    10. Re:97% - bogus poll... by riverat1 · · Score: 2

      Actually, most scientists in the climate field believe in AGW. They will continue to do so as long as it is easier to get funding for projects intended to prove it exists. They will cease doing so when it's easier to get funding for projects intended to prove it doesn't exist.

      What an opportunity for the fossil fuel companies! If they got together they could easily provide a $1 billion fund to provide grants to prove AGW doesn't exist. They ought to try it and see who bites.

      The reality is that any scientist who tries to get grants based on false premises sooner or later will find themselves shut out from the process. That's the beauty of science, it's self correcting. It may take a while but eventually reality wins out. With a few notable exceptions scientists are smart enough to know this and avoid promulgating science the know is wrong.

    11. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "I can guarantee you that there is no possible selection criteria that would result in a significant number of peer-reviewed papers that claim that global warming isn't happening, that humans aren't causing it, or that global warming isn't quite dangerous. I'm sure you can find some, but they won't come anywhere close to the number that support global warming."

      Then quitcher bitching and do it. Because until it *IS* done, there are no good statistics. Bullshit is bullshit.

    12. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      ""Here, we use an extensive dataset of 1,372 climate researchers and their publication and citation data to show that (i) 97â"98% of the climate researchers most actively publishing in the field support the tenets of ACC outlined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change"

      "... of the climate researchers most actively publishing". Uh-huh.

      "the relative climate expertise and scientific prominence of the researchers unconvinced of ACC are substantially below that of the convinced researchers"

      Uh-huh. Wow, how about that?

      So they found that the people most actively promoting climate change were in agreement with climate change. Big surprise.

      And then they base more of their results (ii) on ad-hominem: "the relative climate expertise and scientific prominence of the researchers unconvinced of ACC..."

      Haha. That latter is really a hoot. "Hey... let's judge people's science based solely on their reputations, and how many papers they've published! We'll show those deniers!"

      Statistical garbage.

    13. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Ahh, yes, the old Oreskes essay "scandal". It was not published in Nature, but in Science. Small quibble, but if you're going to be critical of something, at least get your facts correct."

      It was 10 years ago, and I didn't want to dig it up. You are correct, but it makes little difference.

      No, it wasn't. It was exactly what it claimed to be. The phrase used did not include the word "global"; it was just "climate change" (which could go either way -- remember all those supposed "global cooling" papers from the 70s? They would still qualify as they referred to "climate change").

      Again, pardon me, as I said it was a long time ago. Yes, theoretically it could go either way, but get real; in the real world it did not. Nobody in 2004 who was publishing papers on climate change were predicting "global cooling". However, a substantial body of scientists were also publishing climate papers that were not predicting climate change. And therein lies the important difference, because those papers did not mention "climate change". And why should they? They weren't about climate change.

      Yes, she chose "climate change" because, you know, all those papers on the reproduction cycles of ring-tailed lemurs are not so relevant to the subject.

      I will be polite and say that is disingenuous. There were other CLIMATE papers that did not mention "climate change". Those were EXCLUDED from her search, which is enough to INVALIDATE her statistics. Do you get it yet?

      "She did not select papers about greenhouse global warming, as those were not her search terms."

      Yes, she did, because the only papers ABOUT "climate change" in 2004 were about greenhouse global warming. That's WHY her statistics were invalid. Seriously, do you still not get it?

      I was going to address the rest of your comments but I'm just going to stop here. Either you missed the entire point or you're pretending certain fundamental rules of statistical study don't exist. Either way, there is no reason for me to continue.

    14. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

      Do what, specifically? What criteria do yo think will produce a significant number of papers which support the view that either global warming isn't happening, humans aren't causing it, or it isn't a serious problem?

    15. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 1

      So they found that the people most actively promoting climate change were in agreement with climate change. Big surprise.

      Are we to infer, then, that you believe a large majority of climatologists don't believe in ACC and are, for some reason, refusing to set the record straight by collectively pointing out flaws in the already-published literature?

      --
      People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
    16. Re:97% - bogus poll... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Are you really this stupid? Do you know who gets the most funding? Scientists who overturn the commonly-accepted and develop new fields of research. They can name their price. They can work anywhere they want, with anyone they want, with any equipment they want. They get all the academic glory they could ever hope for. This nonsense about getting grant money is pathetic. You don't think the oil companies wouldn't throw cash at scientists to try to debunk this stuff? Well, they already do, and so far they've not found anything, because AGW is real. The science behind it is real and understood. AGW means the world is warming way faster than it would without us (in fact, it would be cooling at the moment if it weren't for humans). You know nothing, and seem to relish it, because it makes you feel superior and not at all guilty for living a wasteful experience at the expense of those who come after you. If you have kids you are a terrible parent. If you don't, well, I can see why.

    17. Re:97% - bogus poll... by dwpro · · Score: 1

      Publishing a paper about the climate is not promoting climate change. I see nothing wrong with the methods. If you do, please point them out. Your flippant dismissal is disheartening, as if you do not wish to know things that might challenge your world view.

      --
      Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    18. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Spock627corfu · · Score: 1

      The Oregon Petition -- of 30,000 signatures fame -- has some credibility problems. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O...

    19. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Do what, specifically?"

      Pardon me. I misread your comment a bit so that did not make a lot of sense. What I meant was to do a study that did not specifically search for "global climate change".

      "What criteria do yo think will produce a significant number of papers which support the view that either global warming isn't happening, humans aren't causing it, or it isn't a serious problem?"

      Simple: a thorough search of ALL climate papers. As opposed to a search for papers on "global climate change". Because papers about climate that don't support "global climate change" aren't likely to mention global climate change, for the simple reason that they aren't about global climate change.

      You seem to assume that any scientific paper that isn't about "global climate change" must be attempting to refute global climate change. But normally, if a paper is about climate but does not come to the conclusion that climate is changing significantly, it isn't likely to announce what it DIDN'T find. That's not how it works. It will simply report the things that it DID find.

      I repeat: searching for papers specifically about "climate change" is going to find papers that are attempting to show climate change. Because that's what papers do. It is not going to find the papers that aren't.

    20. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

      If the paper doesn't mention climate change, how are you going to determine whether or not the paper is in support of the consensus view?

    21. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Are we to infer, then, that you believe a large majority of climatologists don't believe in ACC and are, for some reason, refusing to set the record straight by collectively pointing out flaws in the already-published literature?"

      No. That would be an incorrect inference.

      First, "majority" has nothing to do with it. Consensus is not science. But second, and more important, is that I was referring to scientists in general, not necessarily climatologists.

      Trying to say "listen to climatologists about climate science" is disingenuous. Because you don't have to be a climatologist -- or even a scientist, for that matter -- to see that an improper statistical method was used, or that the math is inconsistent.

      But even if you ARE confining it to climatologists, the whole point of this discussion was that they do NOT all agree. Or even 97% of them. Those are "statistics" that came from statistically invalid "studies".

      I'm not making broad claims about how many do believe and how many don't... although I there is good evidence that it is nowhere near to 97%. Just for example: if it were, they wouldn't have to fudge their "studies", as it has been clearly shown they have.

      But as it turns out, other people ARE making those claims. A comprehensive study of meteorologists HAS been done, which did not use fraudulent statistical methods. And the "consensus" it found amounted to 52%. Not exactly overwhelming,

    22. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Publishing a paper about the climate is not promoting climate change. I see nothing wrong with the methods. If you do, please point them out."

      I already did point them out. It just went over your head. That's not "flippant", it's a factual observation.

      The POINT is that in 2004, the only climate papers that mentioned "climate change" were papers about greenhouse warming. But there were lots of papers about climate that did not mention "climate change" at all. Those were excluded from the study.

      So Oreskes' sampling method (and similarly, another such "study" this year) SELECTED for papers that were about greenhouse warming. Keep in mind here that if somebody writes a paper about climate, and does not conclude that climate is significantly changing, they aren't going to mention "climate change" because the paper is not about climate change. They won't mention it because they aren't trying to disprove it... their paper is about something else.

      There was a study done, however, using proper statistical methods. And the "consensus" they found was hardly overwhelming... 52%. That is the difference between the statistical error you did not see, and a properly done study. And that difference is pretty damned large.

    23. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "If the paper doesn't mention climate change, how are you going to determine whether or not the paper is in support of the consensus view?"

      You don't, because there is no way to tell. THAT IS THE POINT. Oreskes' paper is not a reflection of actual "consensus view" because there is no way to tell merely from the published papers. That's not the way science publishing works. And I'd be willing to be she knows that, and knew it then.

      If you want to find out what meteorologists and climatologists actually think about greenhouse warming, you have to actually ask them. (Interesting, is it not, that neither Oreskes or this more recent "97%" paper did not actually ask anybody what they think, even though they were supposed to be about what people think?)

      But that has been done. They were asked. And the results are very different from "97%".

    24. Re:97% - bogus poll... by dwpro · · Score: 1

      79% of the AMS study participants self-identify as non-publishers of climate papers. link. That bears about the same weight as a slashdot poll on the subject. I rest my case.

      --
      Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    25. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

      Essentially all scientific papers that it is possible to tell whether or not they support the consensus view unambiguously support the consensus view. That's what has been shown. This would not happen if there was any meaningful debate within the scientific community on this subject.

      As for the link you offered, that's a survey of meteorologists, not climate scientists. Nearly all climate scientists do, indeed, support global warming unambiguously (and if they are actively working, they are even more likely to support it).

    26. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Optali · · Score: 1

      Our friend also forgets that science is not only the words but that there is math and data backing it.

      People love to fix their aims in one single person or acronym (Oreskes, IPCC) it's easy to recall and looks cool in a blog... and rant a few thousands of characters... curiously enough with he absolute conviction that what scientists are doing is just sitting somewhere writing stuff just for the sake of it and engaging in philosophical discussions.

      That's why it's so difficult to make these people understand: They do not realise what science really is. They know words, not numbers, they know names, not equations. They aren't even aware of their existence or what use they are for even if a basic level of statistics would suffice, the same any marketeer uses every day or a humble web analyst uses. Not to speak about basic primary school physics. Greenhouse effect? That's an invention of the IPCC and Oreskes... it was already there before AGW? Well, the IPCC has invented the time machine and send Oreskes back to manipulate data ;)

      --
      -- 29A the number of the Beast
    27. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Optali · · Score: 1

      Oil companies?
      You mean like the Koch Brothers?
      No way man, these poor people putting money into something. No way these humble and simple people could fund anybody against the Evil IPCC...

      --
      -- 29A the number of the Beast
    28. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "79% of the AMS study participants self-identify as non-publishers of climate papers. link. That bears about the same weight as a slashdot poll on the subject. I rest my case."

      Go ahead and let it rest, since you have no case.

      THIS survey has nothing to do with the OTHER surveys. Those OTHER surveys were statistically invalid. Get it?

      Let's get this very clear: regardless of what you think of this survey, those other surveys did not show what they purported to show: that there was an overwhelming scientific "consensus" on greenhouse gas warming. That was my point. My point was NOT about what publishers of climate papers think about climate science (except to the extent that those surveys were wrong), but rather about whether scientists, or even just climatologists and meteorologist, overwhelmingly agree with greenhouse gas warming. It's not about publishing, it's about consensus, and there is none.

      But since you brought this up: the Cook survey sent out 10,000 survey forms, and based their results on only 75 of the responses... all of whom, it turned out, were known to them. THIS survey shows over 1200 people who are actively involved in the field. Given that, which survey do you think is more statistically valid?

      I ask the question rhetorically, because you don't seem to have gotten my point about the statistics in the first place.

    29. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Essentially all scientific papers that it is possible to tell whether or not they support the consensus view unambiguously support the consensus view. That's what has been shown."

      Yes, that is what was shown. But it doesn't mean anything. The only useful thing that shows is that doing a survey of the published papers on the subject does not give you an accurate picture of how many people think what.

      See, the PROBLEM here is that these surveys claim to show that there is a "consensus" on greenhouse gas warming. But they don't actually show that. What they show is that people who have been publishing papers about greenhouse warming agree about greenhouse warming. Well, duh. Who'da thunk it? What they don't show is the overall scientific opinion about greenhouse gas warming... even though that's what they are pretending to show.

      I will repeat what I wrote in an earlier reply above: the only way to know what people in that field of study actually think about greenhouse gas warming is to ask them. And that's what THIS STUDY did. The result? 52%. Hardly overwhelming and probably different from half by not much more than the standard error.

    30. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

      Except surveys of climate (and related) scientists have been done as well, and they show very similar numbers.

      Once again, your survey wasn't a survey of scientists at all, let alone climate scientists.

    31. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Except surveys of climate (and related) scientists have been done as well, and they show very similar numbers."

      Really? Which ones were those? The only surveys I am aware of were the surveys by Oreskes, Cook, Anderegg, and the one I linked to in my previous comment. I have already addressed the first three elsewhere. Of all the surveys done, the only one I am aware of that actually asked the professionals in the field what they actually thought, was that one in my previous post.

      If you know of any besides those 4, I would be happy to take a look at them.

    32. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

      Except the survey you linked didn't asked the professionals in the field. It asked people in a different field, many of whom aren't scientists at all.

      You can keep burying your head in your ass all you like, but the real world isn't going to wait for you to start paying attention to it. The Earth is warming. Humans are causing it. And the effects are not going to be good. You would be far, far better off if you would pay attention to the actual physical evidence sometime.

    33. Re:97% - bogus poll... by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1
      http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2003/mar/04/usnews.climatechange

      The US Republican party is changing tactics on the environment, avoiding "frightening" phrases such as global warming, after a confidential party memo warned that it is the domestic issue on which George Bush is most vulnerable.

      The phrase "global warming" should be abandoned in favour of "climate change", Mr Luntz says, and the party should describe its policies as "conservationist" instead of "environmentalist", because "most people" think environmentalists are "extremists" who indulge in "some pretty bizarre behaviour... that turns off many voters".

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  36. Climate models, the ocean, the sun, magnetic field by Danathar · · Score: 1

    Most of the well sited models don't take into account very well deep ocean dynamics, or even consider things like the magnetic field (might be nothing but who has really looked into it?). Also interdecadal oscillation in the Pacific is not really factored in that much either.

    Are humans affecting the planet? I'd say yes. Do we know well enough to trust climate models? I'd say we need more data and more work.

  37. Re:BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Why are you so easily convinced that the multi-million dollar climate science industry is using global warming as a "gravy chain", but at the same time aren't convinced that the **multi-billion** dollar oil and coal industries might be trying to bury the truth? When looking for corruption, isn't it usually reasonable to first look at who has the most to gain and who has the most to lose?

    The answer to both is big oil and big coal. If you want to be skeptical about people's motives, the most corruption probably lies with those who stand to profit for dirty energy.

  38. Re:BS by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

    Almost like what we just called a normal winter 25 years ago.

    Hmmm. Maybe it has warmed up. And is causing more variation in *your* weather.

    --
    There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
  39. Truth and hype by Alomex · · Score: 1

    An event can be both true and overhyped, e.g. Y2K, the speed of propagation of AIDS, peak oil, overpopulation.

    All of those are real concerns that need to be addressed but also have a legion of "oh my god we are all going to die" supporters.

    For example, the raise in the level of the oceans will likely not be catastrophic. Many places are subsiding or already below water and they sort of manage (see Netherlands). At the same time, the fact that this particular aspect of AGW is overhyped does not mean that other changes will not be dire e.g. possible desertification of current bread baskets.

    1. Re:Truth and hype by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Y2K certainly was not 'overhyped'.
      I believe the majour world crisises afterward where because of a complete wrong, slow and over expensive reaction on it. I mean Germany spent something like 4 or 5 times the price for one LOC than the USA, because they preferred to hire 'language experts' (like half dead Cobol programmers) from companies like Price Waterhouse, Anderson Consulting (now Accenture) or Cap Gemini instead of using simple tools and hire Y2K experts. I have a vague idea what "Deutsche Bank" has spent for Y2K repairs. My company would have done the fixes for less than 10% of the price and in perhaps 5% of the TIME!
      Your sea level argument makes not much sense either.
      The Netherlands are coping well because they have a roughly 1000 years tradition in building dikes (yes, there is no extra zero). The coastline of the Netherlands compared to the UK is a joke, compared to the USA it is perhaps 1% (just wild guessing would not wonder if it is just one promille) compared to the rest of the world: you are comparing mandarines with planets.
      How should Indonesia ever be able to protect as much as 1% of their current coast against sea level rising?
      Most nations in the pacific will be wiped out in the next 30 years, unless unknown new effects safe them, e.g. at one place corals are dying because of accidiation of the ocean, at other places the atolls are rising: because of more C (not CO2) in the ocean.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    2. Re:Truth and hype by Alomex · · Score: 1

      Y2K certainly was not 'overhyped'.

      You seem to contradict yourself there, since you give an example of how Germany overreacted.

      How should Indonesia ever be able to protect as much as 1% of their current coast against sea level rising?

      The same way as Thailand has, where Bangkok has subsided over the last fifty years.

      The coastline of the Netherlands compared to the UK is a joke,

      You don't need to defend every inch of coast in the UK and much less in the USA, whereas the Netherlands has to defend every bit, so in the end is a wash. Plus the UK and USA have vast larger economies to support sea wall defenses.

      As to the Dutch expertise all it means is that when it comes the time to defend Jakarta they will be hiring Dutch companies.

      Most nations in the pacific will be wiped out in the next 30 years,

      This is positively false, which proves my point. AGW is real but there are plenty of chicken littles on the side of the truth.

    3. Re:Truth and hype by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Y2K certainly was not 'overhyped'. / You seem to contradict yourself there, since you give an example of how Germany overreacted.
      What has the bad performed reaction to do with the initial danger?

      Most nations in the pacific will be wiped out in the next 30 years, / This is positively false, which proves my point. AGW is real but there are plenty of chicken littles on the side of the truth.
      Based on what facts do you conclude that? Oh, there are no facts until we can look back 10 years after 40 years are over ...

      You are bad in science, aren't you. How do you think that one meter of sea water rise is any difference in Netherlands, UK, USA, Indonesia or Thailand?

      It is the same, you have to have a one meter dike around your (the respective) country.

      I doubt even the USA have the economic power to build a one meter high dike around their coasts. The math is up to you ... In fact I doubt that the US are able to do anything about it anyway. It is more likely that the emerging countries survive than the US.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    4. Re:Truth and hype by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind that these islands need to be underwater before they become uninhabitable. Large storm surges can make islands that are dry most of the time uninhabitable, particularly since these storms can deposit salts on otherwise fertile soils that are often limited at many oceanic islands. Likewise, saltwater encroachment into limited freshwater aquifers can make them uninhabitable as well. At the present rates of warming and sea level rise, 50-150 years is probably a conservative estimate for many low islands in the South Pacific.

  40. Poor job in critiquing the models by g01d4 · · Score: 2
    I only bothered w/the McNider & Christy article. Do they fix the physics of any of the models? No. Do they put forward their own model? No. Do they have any scientific explanation for changes in weather patterns:

    Shouldn't modelers be more humble and open to saying that perhaps the Arctic warming is due to something we don't understand?

  41. Yeah, let's debate vaccinations while we're at it by jopsen · · Score: 5, Informative

    Or the fact that we are still coming off of an Ice Age that lasted for more than 100,000 years, and ended less than 10,000 years ago (Or the little Ice Age that ended in 1850). Several models predict that the average temperature at the END of the last Ice Age was 15-20C lower than today.

    So over 10k years temperature raised 20C, that is (20 / 10000) * 10 = 0.02C per decade, very far from 0.7 / 3 = 0.23 per decade that we see now.
    I don't have sources from your numbers, and it's probably safe to assume that the rate of temperature change isn't constant either... So maybe we shouldn't try to model this at all, my calculations above are certainly as ignorant and non-sense as your postulation of numbers...

    Is global warming happening? Yes. Is the human race a contributing factor? Probably to some degree. Is the human race the only cause? No.

    True, there are many factors that affect the environment, but non other does it with the same speed as humans.
    Global warning is primarily man-made, it's a real problem, that's the scientific consensus. And I'm fairly sure that most people on slashdot as just as qualified to discuss the scientific consensus around global warming, as soccer moms are qualified to discuss the merits and "dangers" of vaccinations.

  42. Re:BS by geekoid · · Score: 1

    You seem to be ignoring the states that have higher then normal temperature this year. Why?
    You seem to be linking overall global temperatures to a few states in the US. Why?

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  43. Re:China? by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

    They are exporting all their products, including emissions, to the west.

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    This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
  44. I guess people have trouble with averages by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

    At my place in winter it is rouchly 20 - 30 degrees celsius warmer, in summer it is about the same as before, but had a peak around 1997 - 2001 where it was about 10 degrees centigrade warmer.
    About spring and autumn I have normal opinion as I never really cared when I was young ... it was always 'warm enough'.
    So, we have an average increase of 0.7 degrees, or 0.8. My personal experience is something like a 10 to 20, if not 30 degrees increase (actually with cherry picking I can make that a over 50 degrees increase: -30 degrees at 27th december of 1971 and +23 degrees on 23th of december 2011 - these are degrees celsius btw.) Obviously my real life experience has no relation to the 'averages'.

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  45. Re:BS-temp records are heavily manipulated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Many of these surface temperature records are heavily "adjusted" adding to recent temperatures, and subtracting from old (from the 1930s!) records to make the warming look worse.

    Un-adjusted data at least for the US shows little trend of increase for the past 50-100 years.

    There are other games with "homogenization" and removing rural thermometers retaining urban or airport thermometers, producing a warming trend.

    Certainly not a record trust worthy enough to make trillions of dollars of economic decisions upon.

  46. Big Difference? by robert.j.saulnier · · Score: 1

    They predicted (guessed?) a 1C increase, but it ended up only increasing by 0.8. Is this a big difference? I think so at 20%

  47. Re:China? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

    Until roughly 18 months ago, the biggest contributor of CO2 was the USA.

    --
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  48. But it is warm... by sl3xd · · Score: 1

    WTF are you talking about? I'm in the continental US, and it's been the WARMEST winter in at least 20 years. We've been breaking record highs daily for almost two months.

    Just because it's cold where you live doesn't mean it is cold everywhere.

    --
    -- Sometimes you have to turn the lights off in order to see.
  49. Re:BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The trend has been going up for quite a while, more than 50 years. A few years of stabilization is not counter evidence (yet). The longer a trend, the more you need to "change its course". If after another 10 years (ball-parking) the temperatures have still remained stable (or even drop), *then* you will have a point worth taking seriously.

    Here's an example of why your counter point is invalid. Let's pretend the numbers looked like this:

    10, 11, 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, 9, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, ...

    Starting from the 10, there is a clear trend upwards. But at the 8th data point there is a sudden drop!, over the next two it even looks stable. Someone like you might argue that the trend has reversed and that it is actually going down... But they'd be wrong. Once the series continues, it because clear that the overall trend is still going upwards and that those 3 data points were temporary anomalies. You'd have to see it *continue* along the new trend for sufficient time for it to be reasonably considered a change in trend.

  50. Re:BS by CaptainLard · · Score: 1

    And yet EVERYTHING is now caused by AGW. Heat Waves. Cold Spells, Floods. Droughts....

    Ok fair enough, AGW is a big topic these days so you can always find a fringe connection attempting to get more publicity. But the extreme weather-related events you mentioned are all a predicted side effect of an overall warmer climate. Atlanta got an ice storm and the east coast is frozen. Meanwhile, Alaska has had it's 3rd warmest January on record (8C above average). There is more energy in the atmosphere so crazy regional weather stuff, hot or cold, is more likely to happen. And it is!

  51. Re:BS by Valdrax · · Score: 2

    A warm spell somewhere is evidence for AGW, but a cold spell across a region should be ignored.

    Well, there are (to broadly generalize) four positions on AGW:
    1) Scientifically informed acceptance.
    2) Fervent, incorrect denial.
    3) Fervent, incorrect acceptance. ("OMG! Hurricane Katrina was directly caused by Global Warming!")
    4) Easily swayed people with the memories of goldfish.

    #4 is the group of people that keeps "swing voting" on it depending on the current weather.

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  52. Re:BS by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    How about you provide a citation. Or even some sense that you understand the theory at all.

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  53. Plain reading of the graph... No by scorp1us · · Score: 1

    In a plain reading of the graph presented, I found that we are only about 0.4 above the line. Which makes the statement in the OP false. It's not 0.8, it's 0.4.

    But even if warming has happened (and we have good data saying it has) it does not mean it is CO2 related. The entirety of the body of evidence for anthropogenic warming is identical to non-anthropogenic warming. So we're at a loss. Melting glaciers, ice-less arctic, weird weather. None of it points a finger at CO2, it only points the finger at heat. There is no tell-tale sign that is specific to CO2. That's why we turn to the models. The models are substantially wrong. I'm sorry, but "climate science" is not a science in that we can make predictions and test them, but we fail to validate those predictions far more than we validate them. Furthermore, we cannot experiment on the environment without substantial outcry.

    Do I hope we get models that are accurate. I really do.

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  54. Cherry picking. by jklovanc · · Score: 2

    From the article;

    Since 1976, every year including 2012 has had an annual temperature above the long-term average. Including the 2012 temperature, the rate of warming is 0.06C (0.11F) per decade since 1880 and a more rapid 0.16C (0.28F) per decade since 1970, according to the 2012 annual report from NOAA's National Climatic Data Center.

    Take look at the graph they are referring to. Between 1880 and 2010 there is a change of 1.43 F giving a per decade increase of .11F. But wait, that is not the whole picture. It ignores the period between 1880 and 1910 when global temperatures were decreasing. If you look at the increase since 1910 you get 2F over ten decades which is .2F per decade. It also ignores the time between 1910 and 1940 where the temperature changed 1.1F or 0.37F/decade. Compared with the time between 1910 and 1940 global warming is slowing.
    To me it looks like they are picking data that agrees with their conclusion.

  55. Old school models work better by scorp1us · · Score: 1

    Farmer's Almanac which is based on historic patterns, called this one.

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  56. Re:BS by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

    Because he lives in 'gods own country' and does not know from which 'area' of the world Jesus Christ came and his father, the god he is worshipping. (I always wonder if worshipping and whoreshipping has a relation or if that is only my german stupidity)

    --
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  57. Small, but significant by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 3, Informative

    On a global scale, indeed: 0.7C is a small variation. The Earth has had larger variations before, and this is not unusual on a geological scale (although to be fair, its happening at a faster time scale than most of the climate changes in the past.)
    However, 0.7C pretty much validates the models. If the anthropogenic greenhouse effect is not real, you need three things:
    (1) You need to find an explain an explanation for why the radiative forcing does not increase temperature
    (2) You need to find a hitherto-unknown effect that is causing the warming that we measure, and
    (3) You need to find an explanation for why the amplifier that amplifies effect (2) to be large enough to increase the temperature doesn't also amplify the greenhouse effect. (and, contrawise, you need to explain why whatever effect it is that cancels out the greenhouse effect, (1), does not also cancel out effect (2).)

    While 0.7C may be small, you should also note that we are continuing to put carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Small, but significant by HiThere · · Score: 1

      At some point, though, the atmosphere will become essentially opaque to long infrared, and from that point on, additional CO2 won't increase the rate of global warming. It will, of course, continue to acidify the oceans, and continue to make it more difficult to return to the previous level.

      P.S.: I have NO idea how close we are to the point at which the atmosphere becomes essentially opaque to long infra-red. I doubt, however, that the scale is linear. Probably logrithmic.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:Small, but significant by hsthompson69 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you want to assert the anthropogenic greenhouse effect is both real, and dangerous, the burden of proof is on the affirmative to come up with a necessary and sufficient falsifiable hypothesis statement which rules out natural climate change as the reason for observed temperatures.

      0.7C doesn't validate a non-falsifiable model, even if that's close to what the model predicted. Even astrologists make predictions, but astrology isn't science.

  58. Does this 'trick' adhere to scientific principles? by pastafazou · · Score: 2

    Your clarification that the climate scientists were trying to hide the decline of the tree ring data as opposed to hiding the decline of the temperatures isn't very reassuring. If they've used tree rings to reconstruct worldwide climate temperatures as a proxy, and this proxy diverges from observations to the point that they have to "hide the decline", I think there's a definite problem with their science. Doesn't this invalidate the entire climate/temperature reconstruction that includes these tree rings? Why would they have to use a statistical method or 'trick' to make the data fit the theory? That doesn't sound like something a scientist interested in discovering the truth should have to do. Unfortunately, this isn't about pure science, as there is plenty of money and politics involved on both sides of the argument. There are reputations, careers, and honor at stake too. The email leaks revealed the science isn't as clear cut as they would have us believe. They also revealed that there are some climate scientists who are quite unwilling to even consider any evidence that contradicts their own beliefs. It's especially concerning when they advocate hiding or even deleting info, data and communications in order to avoid having to respond to FOI requests. Why would they need to do this?

  59. Re:Hockey Sticks by sstamps · · Score: 1

    > Did he take funding from the public?

    Who? Spencer and Christy? As principal researchers at the University of Alabama at Huntsville, they receive quite the plethora of public funding -- research grants from NASA, NOAA, DOE and the DOT. They ALSO get quite a few checks from private sources, including the fossil fuel industry.

    > Did he hide his data and refuse FOI requests?

    No, they fudge data. I mean *REALLY * fudge data. They fabricate and distort it. (In)Famously, their own UAH satellite temperature record was originally badly flawed, and they were forced to admit it and correct it.

    Did he splice together separate graphs or choose outliers?

    Worse, as part of their standard modus operandi, Spencer cobbled together a set of graph with disparate cherry-picked parameters to show something that doesn't exist, but fits his own worldview. Basically, fabricating evidence in support of his position/hypotheses.

    > Anywhile, still waiting for someone, anyone on the Warmist side to admit that Mann was, or even could be, wrong.

    Why would anyone do that? Mann hasn't engaged in *ANY* of these practices. His research and conclusions have withstood the test of time and severe scientific and public scrutiny. All challenges against him have, so far, been dismissed with prejudice (which means, in legal terms, those who challenged him had *ABSOLUTELY NOTHING* to their case when examined with the same level of critical scrutiny Mann's work has been subject to, and were summarily dismissed).

    I am still waiting for someone, anyone on the Denier side to admit that they are, or even could be, wrong.

    Yeah, I know; that's a long wait for a train don't come.

    --
    -SS "Teach the ignorant, care for the dumb, and punish the stupid."
  60. Re:Does this 'trick' adhere to scientific principl by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    Your clarification that the climate scientists were trying to hide the decline of the tree ring data as opposed to hiding the decline of the temperatures isn't very reassuring.

    That was neither my clarification, nor a correct summary of the text I posted.

    There is no scientific or technical error or fraud here, just as the text says. Just a valid way of joining together temperature data that was collected via a thermometer, with those that are deduced from before thermometer measurements were taken via "proxies", in order to get a longer term trend.

    The email leaks revealed the science isn't as clear cut as they would have us believe.

    They did nothing of the sort. Deniers hoped they would, but they didn't.

  61. Re:BS by jafac · · Score: 1

    The Syrian civil war has been linked to global warming (in fact the whole - and better still, conflicts "like that" were predicted in the late 1990's. There was even a Pentagon report about how GW (if valid) would impact global stability and geopolitics.

    --

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  62. Great job in critiquing the models by rjh · · Score: 1

    Nowhere is it written that your critique can only be taken seriously if you fix the problem you discover, propose an alternate model, or solve the problem outright. By your logic, all the people from the 1800s on into the early 20th century who said, "You know, Newtonian mechanics has a serious problem: it cannot correctly describe the precession of Mercury" were doing a poor job of critiquing Newtonian physics.

    Rubbish. They were doing a superb job of critiquing Newtonian physics by pointing to something in the Newtonian model that was clearly, unambiguously, wrong. They may not have been able to realize why it was wrong or able to construct a better model, but they pointed out an important anomaly. Later on, Einstein came along and proposed General Relativity, and one of GR's greatest initial successes was its ability to correctly model the precession of Mercury.

    If John Christy's reading of the facts is in error, then that's ample grounds to say he's made a poor critique. But to say that he's made a poor critique just because he hasn't fixed the models, put forward a new model, or explained the differences between model and observation, betrays you as a very poor scientist.

  63. Voting by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

    I vote, but it's easy to see why people don't.

    Because of our voting system (first-past-the-post), we've devolved into a two-party system (see Duverger's Law). Because the two big parties cannot be challenged (without an unbelievable amount of outrage), they rarely field candidates that are good for the voters, only candidates that are good for the parties. Why vote when none of the candidates represent you, or will do the things you wish to see happen?

    Unfortunately, the idea that voting is useless only occurs to those of us who have two brain cells to rub together. I'd be fine with only a few voters, if they were the more intelligent population. I can draw an analogy to jury duty. Those who are smart enough to get out of it, shouldn't. Those who are smart enough to see how the voting system is broken, should vote. It may be disheartening, but we're not going to right this ship any other way.

    (Which won't correct the vote rigging, but that's another topic.)

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  64. Temperature data by gd2shoe · · Score: 2

    And even most of the data more than a few decades back is pretty suspect.

    --
    I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    1. Re:Temperature data by Malizar · · Score: 1

      Even the current data is suspect. I know the local monitoring station is next to a big hunk of asphalt that was not there 20 years ago.

  65. Re:Does this 'trick' adhere? Nope. by cirby · · Score: 1

    Except, of course, that it was not "valid" at all.

    When you have to hide your own results, you're doing something wrong.

    A lot of dedicated alarmists have tried to pretend that "the trick" was above-board... but it wasn't.

    In any other field, if a scientist had tried this sort of thing to hide a bad result, they'd be in deep trouble.

  66. Re:BS by kwbauer · · Score: 1

    " If food becomes more plentiful I bet crime goes down." Yup, those kids broke into my garage and stole my bikes to sell for drug money because they had no food at home.

  67. Re:BS by kwbauer · · Score: 2

    "Let's pretend"... Yes, the AGW crowd seems to be doing plenty of that with their numbers.

    Take down all those rural weather stations because we don't need them. We can just use the numbers from the ones located in the middle of the asphalt parking lots and pretend we know how to properly adjust the numbers to get some data we can pretend is accurate.

  68. Re:BS by kwbauer · · Score: 1

    but most English speakers not trying to trick someone would use "less alkaline" to help point out that the oceans started on the alkaline side and are still on the alkaline side.

    more acidic to people not stopping to consider the starting and ending means "I can't go in because it will burn my skin off" while "less alkaline" to most people means closer to neutral.

  69. A problem... by cirby · · Score: 1

    ...with your links.

    The first one? The guy who uses Rush Limbaugh and other TV folks to show how unredeemable the skeptics are? Instead of actually quoting the folks who did the research and found the quotes?

    He makes a big deal about finding "trick" in scientific papers to represent a clever solution for a problem. Fair enough.

    However, he pretends that the problem with "hide the decline" is about something other than tree rings... when the hinge of most of the AGW models was tree-ring reconstruction. Basically, the guys "hiding the decline" desperately needed to hide the decline in temperatures for that part of their reconstruction in order for that reconstruction to be used as a metric for past temperatures versus CO2.

    Yes, it's a nice snarky propaganda video, but it's wrong.

    The second one? the one you refer to as "in depth and impartial?"

    You're kidding, right?

    For example, he handwaves "the divergence problem" with tree rings, which is something that those particular climate models can't survive. Remember the Hockey Stick? Notice how nobody uses it any more? Based on tree ring models. So yeah.

    The thing you also missed about the Climategate problem for AGW fans: a lot of what they said would be fine, in a publication, or in an answer to a paper. It was, however, stuff they never told anyone, because it poked huge holes in the foundation of their work.

    1. Re:A problem... by Laxori666 · · Score: 2
      Both vids are by the same guy.

      However, he pretends that the problem with "hide the decline" is about something other than tree rings...

      Where does he say that? He says at 4:12: "But in fact, Jones was talking about something completely different [than the decline in the global temperature]: the apparent decline in temperatures shown by tree ring data since the 1950s." He is exactly stating that "hide the decline" has something to do with tree rings.

      Basically, the guys "hiding the decline" desperately needed to hide the decline in temperatures for that part of their reconstruction in order for that reconstruction to be used as a metric for past temperatures versus CO2.

      Yes, exactly as potholer says at 4:27: "The argument is whether tree rings should be used when reconstructing pre-industrial climates." You make this out to be something sneaky and hidden from public, especially combined with your closing statement:

      The thing you also missed about the Climategate problem for AGW fans: a lot of what they said would be fine, in a publication, or in an answer to a paper. It was, however, stuff they never told anyone, because it poked huge holes in the foundation of their work.

      However, at least in this case, you are simply wrong. It's been openly discussed since at least 1998 when a paper called "Trees tell of past climates: but are they speaking less clearly today?" was published. A quote from the paper: "This is illustrated in figure 6, which shows that decadal trends in both large-scale-average [Tree-Ring Width] and [MaXimum latewood Density] increasingly diverge from the course of decadal temperature variation after about 1950 or 1960." The lead author, Keith Briffa, even works at the CRU! Clearly this was openly talked about, and before the "hide the decline" email (which was in 1999).

      What else ya got?

    2. Re:A problem... by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      So if all these scientists are wrong and are little more than frauds and its not getting warmer, can anyone tell me why all the glaciers are melting?

  70. Re:Glad you asked... by nairnr · · Score: 2

    And yet, tree ring data from California shows that region has been in drought for something like 1600 out of the last 2000 years.

    Much of it significantly *before* modern technology and CO2 pollution.

    Could it be the real problem is that we don't actually know what the average temperature was before 1700?

    No, that isn't the case. There are many different ways in determining temperature. Tree ring data is one, but there are ways of figuring out temperature far past the time trees are capable of...

  71. Re:BS by budgenator · · Score: 1

    Well there are at least 98 major climate models, between that bunch anyone should be able to find any result they wanted! My thinking is if the science was really settled, there would be one model.

    --
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  72. Angle Of Incidence by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    At the poles you have the funny things like polar nights and polar days

    You have periods where the days are longer, yes.

    But don't forget the sun is also at a very low angle for much of the time during those really long days. No matter what the surface color is a lot of the energy will be reflected.

    It looks really pretty but doesn't contribute nearly as much to warming as does the more direct sun at the equator being absorbed or not.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Angle Of Incidence by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      The sun is at a normal high angel around noon, and only low at morning and evening.
      I suggest to watch a web cam there, or more interesting travel there.
      At the equator nothing is happening, there it is as always, same sun, same clouds, same heat ... I bet 'average' warming is at the equator the lowest ... probably so low, no one notices.

      --
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    2. Re:Angle Of Incidence by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      I suggest to watch a web cam there, or more interesting travel there.

      I have been there during the long, long days...

      The original argument is because the sun is up so much more it will cause more heating than the tropics. But MOST of the time (not at noon) while the sun is up, it's really low. It's not causing any heating to speak of. It's really adding very little energy into the atmosphere at the poles even though it's up longer.

      there it is as always, same sun, same clouds, same heat

      It is more constant which is why it contributes more to energy retained from the sun. It's not about warming above ambient, it's how much incoming energy is absorbed. The ambient temperature and humidity there is so high exactly because it's retaining so much more solar energy.

      Don't forget that water vapor is also a massive factor in retaining solar energy, the tropics have very high humidity and the poles are basically deserts (as are most cold regions).

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    3. Re:Angle Of Incidence by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      I did not talk about the time, my fault, just about sun hight at noon.
      Otoh, every bit counts, imagine an Alaska summer where there is more snow ... then it is warmed up less of course (due to reflection).

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  73. Standard by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    So rather than attack his science, you attack his character?

    Well, yes - that's what all AGW cultists do.

    It's reasonable since they have no science to stand on to refute.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Standard by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      So you must be able to explain, why if its not getting warmer, all the world's glaicers are melting? I still can't seem to get a single AWG denier to explain how this could be happening. Why is that?

  74. Re:BS by budgenator · · Score: 1

    You seem to be ignoring the states that have higher then normal temperature this year. Why?
    You seem to be linking overall global temperatures to a few states in the US. Why?

    Considering there is/was snow in 49 out of 50 states (at the same time), it's hard to imagine this winter being warmer than usual anywhere except Alaska; feel free to cite a reference.

    --
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  75. Maybe it's for the best. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    This is one thing that bothers me. If the natural order is for a period of glaciation to begin in the near future, surely global warming will benefit mankind. So why are we acting like we need to cool the place down? All the geologic evidence points to a risk for run-away cooling, if temperatures get a just few degrees lower than they are today. None of it points to a serious long-term threat of run-away global warming. And if the present ice-age were to end, it seems like the world would more hospitable to humans than ever. Sure over the next couple thousand years some cities would have to move to make way for rising water, but most buildings aren't occupied over that kind of time-frame anyway.

    1. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by Chalnoth · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sea levels are set to rise by a meter or more by the end of the century, and the frequency of both droughts and strong storms has already increased dramatically. No, these are not good things.

      Also, we only need about 2.2C of warming or so for all of Greenland to melt (though it will take a few centuries to do so). Greenland melting means sea level rise of about seven meters. That's going to drown a lot of cities.

    2. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Uh, no....
      At most sea level rise is 2-3mm/year, for the next 86 years gives about a quarter of a meter.

      The current sea level has been rising for hundreds of years and shows no acceleration.
      See http://sealevel.colorado.edu/

      All these scare scenarios are based on the same dubious models.

      Real data, no problem.

    3. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      So why are we acting like we need to cool the place down

      We like to be able to eat.

    4. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      That has happened plenty of times in the past. Ports have silted up or been drowned. People move over the generations. It's really not that big of a deal.

      But it is unlikely to happen, given the logarithmic nature of CO2 forcing and the fact that water vapor is a more likely candidate for the 0.7 K rise. That is not to say that humans weren't responsible, they very much are, but the response is different if it is water. CO2 still needs to be dealt with, as ocean acidification is a worse problem than global warming anyways.

    5. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Siberia and Canada have huge swaths of land that will become productive as the temperature rises. We aren't going to run out of food before things get really drastic (which they won't).

    6. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      We don't need to cool the place down so much as we need to stop accelerating the warming.

      If the present ice age* were to end sea level would eventually rise by well over 200 feet (60 meters). It would likely take thousands of years for all of the ice to melt but melt it would.

      BTW, the last time CO2 was at 400 ppm, the current value, sea level was about 60 feet higher than it is now. It's possible that much sea level rise is already baked in to our situation although it will take several centuries to get there.

      *Ice age as defined by geologists include any times there are significant ice sheets on the planet such as what we currently have on Greenland and Antarctica. What most people commonly call an ice age, when glaciers and ice sheets advance on North America and Eurasia is called a glaciation by the geologists and what we have now is an interglacial period.

    7. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      With respect you are demonstrating the barbarian versus farmer problem in a very apt situation.
      It goes like this: "No problem - growing stuff can't be anywhere near as hard as the fighting I know how to do. I sure those little people will work out how to do it".

      We are supposed to be the technical people that should not be falling into that mindset because we've seen it applied to ourselves by others that think our fields are unimportant.

    8. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Yes. Absolutely. Some amount of warming is probably a good thing. At some point though additional warming will/has become detrimental. Run away global warming is probably not in the cards, but substantial financial impacts are. We need to tone down the rhetoric and perform a cost benefit analysis. Some investment in mitigation is warranted. An ounce of prevention and all that.

    9. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by Layzej · · Score: 2

      The current sea level has been rising for hundreds of years and shows no acceleration. See http://sealevel.colorado.edu/

      No. As your link points out, sea level has been rising at 3mm/year since 1991. Earlier in the century it was rising at a much lower rate. Prior to that (for the last 4000 years) it was not rising at all: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wi....

    10. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by dave420 · · Score: 1

      So we just need to continually uproot the agriculture industry and move it where the suitable climate goes, bringing the associated infrastructure, technologies, training and communication lines with it? Brilliant! You're a genius! Not to mention that when Siberia becomes good for farming, the methane-soaked permafrost would have melted, increasing the amount of warming, meaning it might not stay very suitable for farming for any good length of time. And what happens when Siberia finally gets too hot? Move all farming to Antarctica? What happens when *that* gets too hot? Starve to death or hope that we've moved to another planet? Your logic is childish at best, and moronic at worst.

    11. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      The Earth itself can accommodate dramatic swings in temperature and shifts in climate. Most organisms can not. California produces about 60% of all fruits and vegetables consumed in the US. The current drought believed now to be the worst in 580 years is by all indications exacerbated by climate change. Rapid fluctuations in climate are likewise dramatically affecting agricultural productivity and the availability of water or excess water are both harmful to agriculture. This means that we humans are about to face a substantial drop in available foodstuffs, if climatologists are correct. Of course, if you don't eat either plants or animals, then you can ignore the consequences of a rapidly warming world.

      You claim, without justification, that "All the geologic evidence points to a risk for run-away cooling," However, if this were true, then please explain why it is that virtually every single glacier on the planet that has been studied by geologists are simultaneously receding at rates often far in excess of any recession in recent geological history? If its not getting warmer, why are all the glaciers and icecaps and ice shields over the entire planet disappearing so rapidly?

    12. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      "ocean acidification is a worse problem than global warming anyways."

      These are really both consequences of the same phenomenon, increasing carbon dioxide concentrations due to the burning of fossil fuels. Of course, the time to reverse the effects of a lower oceanic pH will be on the order of tens to hundreds of thousands of years, not that it will matter much to humans should we let it get that far along. Already oyster farming is under threat and fish distributions are rapidly changing. Considering that humans acquire about 50% of all protein consumed from the oceans, this is an especially big problem for top predators like Homo sapiens.

    13. Re:Maybe it's for the best. by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      This may or may not be true. Much of the soils in these regions is incredibly poor and because even with global warming, one will still have seasons. Most plants typically consumed by humans will not be able to grow well in high latitudes even if it is warmer because they will not get sufficient sunlight for a sufficiently long growing season to occur (not to mention that many pollinators may no longer be present in the wild).

  76. Problem is action is different than warning by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    The thing is, we know because of the large rise in CO2 with very little accompanying warming over the last decade, that CO2 is metaphorically more like being slapped than being shot.

    So you and your other cultists have been warning us for years that we are going to be shot somewhere, just not sure how bad. Only instead of being shot we find as I said the real result is a slap, only it's not even a slap that will hurt because warming helps produce more abundant food through the slight warming we actually get.

    So in fact I don't really care where the light slap lands, because it's irrelevant - and I'm certainly not going to pay trillions for your "protection" to try and stop it.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Problem is action is different than warning by Reziac · · Score: 1

      And how does CO2 compare to water vapor, which is so vastly more plentiful and is also a 'greenhouse gas' ??

      My fear is that the warmists will actually gain the power to "do something about it" and manage to plunge us into another ice age.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  77. Re:BS by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    And you have references to the peer-reviewed scientific paper linking AGW to prostitution? It would be nice to have fewer loonies on both sides of the issue.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  78. Re:BS by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    The claim was that the Antarctic ice sheet has decreased in mass. Your counterclaim appears to be about sea ice, which is only part of the ice sheet.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  79. "Aliens Cause Global Warming" by leereyno · · Score: 1, Informative

    https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~s...

    A lecture by Michael Crichton
    Caltech Michelin Lecture
    January 17, 2003

    My topic today sounds humorous but unfortunately I am serious. I am going to argue that extraterrestrials lie behind global warming. Or to speak more precisely, I will argue that a belief in extraterrestrials has paved the way, in a progression of steps, to a belief in global warming.

    Charting this progression of belief will be my task today.

    Let me say at once that I have no desire to discourage anyone from believing in either extraterrestrials or global warming. That would be quite impossible to do. Rather, I want to discuss the history of several widely-publicized beliefs and to point to what I consider an emerging crisis in the whole enterprise of science—namely the increasingly uneasy relationship between hard science and public policy.

    I have a special interest in this because of my own upbringing. I was born in the midst of World War II, and passed my formative years at the height of the Cold War. In school drills, I dutifully crawled under my desk in preparation for a nuclear attack.

    It was a time of widespread fear and uncertainty, but even as a child I believed that science represented the best and greatest hope for mankind. Even to a child, the contrast was clear between the world of politics—a world of hate and danger, of irrational beliefs and fears, of mass manipulation and disgraceful blots on human history. In contrast, science held different values—international in scope, forging friendships and working relationships across national boundaries and political systems, encouraging a dispassionate habit of thought, and ultimately leading to fresh knowledge and technology that would benefit all mankind. The world might not be a very good place, but science would make it better. And it did. In my lifetime, science has largely fulfilled its promise. Science has been the great intellectual adventure of our age, and a great hope for our troubled and restless world.

    But I did not expect science merely to extend lifespan, feed the hungry, cure disease, and shrink the world with jets and cell phones. I also expected science to banish the evils of human thought—prejudice and superstition, irrational beliefs and false fears. I expected science to be, in Carl Sagan's memorable phrase, "a candle in a demon haunted world." And here, I am not so pleased with the impact of science. Rather than serving as a cleansing force, science has in some instances been seduced by the more ancient lures of politics and publicity. Some of the demons that haunt our world in recent years are invented by scientists. The world has not benefited from permitting these demons to escape free.

    But let's look at how it came to pass.

    Cast your minds back to 1960. John F. Kennedy is president, commercial jet airplanes are just appearing, the biggest university mainframes have 12K of memory. And in Green Bank, West Virginia at the new National Radio Astronomy Observatory, a young astrophysicist named Frank Drake runs a two week project called Ozma, to search for extraterrestrial signals. A signal is received, to great excitement. It turns out to be false, but the excitement remains. In 1960, Drake organizes the first SETI conference, and came up with the now-famous Drake equation:

    N = N* fp ne fl fi fc fL

    Where N* is the number of stars in the Milky Way galaxy; fp is the fraction with planets; ne is the number of planets per star capable of supporting life; fl is the fraction of planets where life evolves; fi is the fraction where intelligent life evolves; and fc is the fraction that communicates; and fL is the fraction of the planet's life during which the communicating civilizations live.

    This serious-looking equation gave SETI a serious footing as a legitimate intellectual inquiry. The problem, of course, is that none of the terms can be known, and most cannot even be es

    --
    Muslim community leaders warn of backlash from tomorrow morning's terrorist attack.
    1. Re:"Aliens Cause Global Warming" by Uecker · · Score: 1

      TL;DR

      But why do you feel that the ramblings of a fiction author with a known interest in the paranormal are relevant in a scientific debate?

    2. Re:"Aliens Cause Global Warming" by tirefire · · Score: 1

      TL;DR?

      Fuck you, read it. And put your ad hominem aside while you do.

  80. Why Politicized Science is Dangerous by leereyno · · Score: 1, Informative

    http://www.michaelcrichton.net...

    (Excerpted from State of Fear)

    Imagine that there is a new scientific theory that warns of an impending crisis, and points to a way out.

    This theory quickly draws support from leading scientists, politicians and celebrities around the world. Research is funded by distinguished philanthropies, and carried out at prestigious universities. The crisis is reported frequently in the media. The science is taught in college and high school classrooms.

    I don't mean global warming. I'm talking about another theory, which rose to prominence a century ago.

    Its supporters included Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and Winston Churchill. It was approved by Supreme Court justices Oliver Wendell Holmes and Louis Brandeis, who ruled in its favor. The famous names who supported it included Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone; activist Margaret Sanger; botanist Luther Burbank; Leland Stanford, founder of Stanford University; the novelist H. G. Wells; the playwright George Bernard Shaw; and hundreds of others. Nobel Prize winners gave support. Research was backed by the Carnegie and Rockefeller Foundations. The Cold Springs Harbor Institute was built to carry out this research, but important work was also done at Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford and Johns Hopkins. Legislation to address the crisis was passed in states from New York to California.

    These efforts had the support of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Medical Association, and the National Research Council. It was said that if Jesus were alive, he would have supported this effort.

    All in all, the research, legislation and molding of public opinion surrounding the theory went on for almost half a century. Those who opposed the theory were shouted down and called reactionary, blind to reality, or just plain ignorant. But in hindsight, what is surprising is that so few people objected.

    Today, we know that this famous theory that gained so much support was actually pseudoscience. The crisis it claimed was nonexistent. And the actions taken in the name of theory were morally and criminally wrong. Ultimately, they led to the deaths of millions of people.

    The theory was eugenics, and its history is so dreadful --- and, to those who were caught up in it, so embarrassing --- that it is now rarely discussed. But it is a story that should be well know to every citizen, so that its horrors are not repeated.

    The theory of eugenics postulated a crisis of the gene pool leading to the deterioration of the human race. The best human beings were not breeding as rapidly as the inferior ones --- the foreigners, immigrants, Jews, degenerates, the unfit, and the "feeble minded." Francis Galton, a respected British scientist, first speculated about this area, but his ideas were taken far beyond anything he intended. They were adopted by science-minded Americans, as well as those who had no interest in science but who were worried about the immigration of inferior races early in the twentieth century --- "dangerous human pests" who represented "the rising tide of imbeciles" and who were polluting the best of the human race.

    The eugenicists and the immigrationists joined forces to put a stop to this. The plan was to identify individuals who were feeble-minded --- Jews were agreed to be largely feeble-minded, but so were many foreigners, as well as blacks --- and stop them from breeding by isolation in institutions or by sterilization.

    As Margaret Sanger said, "Fostering the good-for-nothing at the expense of the good is an extreme cruelty ... there is not greater curse to posterity than that of bequeathing them an increasing population of imbeciles." She spoke of the burden of caring for "this dead weight of human waste."

    Such views were widely shared. H.G. Wells spoke against "ill-trained swarms of inferior citizens." Theodore Roosevelt said tha

    --
    Muslim community leaders warn of backlash from tomorrow morning's terrorist attack.
    1. Re:Why Politicized Science is Dangerous by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure that a Godwining from a noted crank on this issue, who cast his major scientific critic as a child molester with a small dick, is really relevant.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  81. Re:BS by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

    Except global warming isn't causing food production to go down. In fact, nothing is, food production is only going up. The only thing that is fluctuating is the global economy, and when the global economy tanks, food distribution tends to suffer.

    --
    Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
  82. Re:You're dumb by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    wrong, third coldest winter on record, one other of which was in 19th century.

  83. Re:BS by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

    The oil and coal industries will make lots and lots of money regardless of what the climate does. Maybe they won't make quite as much if things get hotter, but they won't be hurting, either. However, grad students in various climate-related disciplines and post-docs have to worry about whatever grants are paying their expenses, and nontenured instructors have to publish or perish, and that means writing what their supervisors want to see and/or getting past the peer review process to get published. Now, if the students are under the impression that their work won't be accepted if it doesn't "toe the line," or the instructors believe that buying in to AGW is the only way to get published, can you blame them for writing that type of paper? It doesn't need a vast, global conspiracy, just large numbers of people looking out for their own best interests and writing what they think is expected of them.

    --
    Good, inexpensive web hosting
  84. Climate Sensitivity by TapeCutter · · Score: 3, Informative

    The IPCC's attribution graph shows the various natural and man made radiative forcing's. Without mankind's influence, most climate models predict a very slight cooling for the 20th century. Feedbacks are far more difficult to quantify however using archaeological evidence their magnitude can be inferred. Climatologists use this information to calculate a metric called climate sensitivity, this number has hardly changed since it was first derived in the 1970's. A lot of people think the IPCC is exaggerating, observation has shown that their predictions are on the conservative side (in particular the rate of melt at the north pole), cautious conservatism is what one would expect when a couple of thousand experts agree with each other.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  85. Small, but measured [Re:Small, but significant] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 3, Informative

    1) easy, CO2 is a pretty shitty greenhouse gas water is much more important.

    Water is indeed a very good greenhouse gas. It also condenses out of the atmosphere, in the form of rain. Carbon dioxide does not. As a result, the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has a long-term effect. The amount of water vapor in the atmosphere, on the other hand, goes in and out of the atmosphere on a short time scale, driven primarily by the temperature-- warmer air holds more water than cold air.

    The infrared absorption of carbon dioxide is measured, by the way. It's not something made up.

    2) we've been coming out of an ice age for 10,000 years,

    Correct-- or, more correct, we are out of the ice age.

    that this remains unexplained

    Fifty years ago it was unexplained. It's pretty well understood now.

    leaves any "blame the humans" nonsense as laughable.

    The fact that there causes of climate variation other than human input does not imply that human input doesn't also have an effect. As was pointed out, the effect is small, about 0.7C so far. But it is real.

    3) no, you dont, see one and 2

    The theory matches the data. If you have another theory, you have to both explain why the theory based on actual measured facts, like the absortion of infrared by carbon dioxide, isn't true, and you also have to explain why we see rising temperature anyway

    like the sea rising... panicing about a few mm when in many places it changes on a meter scale every day.

    Huh? I'm not panicking. I do, however, believe that it is important to not dismiss the science because you don't like the conclusions.

    4) Warming is much better than cooling.

    I agree. That is, however, no reason to dismiss the science.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Small, but measured [Re:Small, but significant] by Eunuchswear · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Venus isn't hot because of the greenhouse effect, it's hot because of the enormous pressures caused by an incredibly dense atmosphere.

      Moron.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    2. Re:Small, but measured [Re:Small, but significant] by Optali · · Score: 1

      But, there are other theories!!

      Global Cooling, for instance!!!

      this has to be true as everybody and hte dog knows that global warming is not true!

      What? There is no sign of temperatures going down? You unfaithful infidel! This is the work of the Evil IPCC who has worked with the NSA to hack all our thermometers!!!

      --
      -- 29A the number of the Beast
  86. Logarithmic [Re:Small, but significant] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    P.S.: I have NO idea how close we are to the point at which the atmosphere becomes essentially opaque to long infra-red. I doubt, however, that the scale is linear. Probably logrithmic.

    Logarithmic is correct! Excellent back of the envelope physics. This was derived by Arrhenius; it's been known for over a century now. In fact, if you assume (as you did) an infrared-opaque atmosphere (a "greybody"), this is easy to derive from the adiabatic lapse rate (by defining an effective altitude at which the planet emits infrared, which moves upward as gas is added to the atmosphere).

    This is why climate sensitivity is usually expressed in degrees of warming per doubling of carbon dioxide-- it's logarithmic.

    So yes: once we've doubled the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, we get to put in twice as much to get the same increment of temperature next time, and four times as much to get the same increment of temperature the time after that.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  87. Prediction validated [Re:Small, but significant] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you want to assert the anthropogenic greenhouse effect is both real, and dangerous, the burden of proof is on the affirmative to come up with a necessary and sufficient falsifiable hypothesis statement which rules out natural climate change as the reason for observed temperatures.

    OK. My prediction is that if you aim an infrared spectrometer at the sky, you will see downwelling infrared radiation from the CO2 spectrum.

    This prediction is falsified if you don't see downwelling infrared radiation.

    Hey, we see it! I win. Carbon dioxide actually does re-radiate absorbed thermal infrared. The greenhouse effect is real.

    This was done over a century ago, by the way. The greenhouse effect has been known for a long time. Good thing, too; the Earth would be frozen if it didn't exist.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  88. Re:Glad you asked... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    Tree ring data is better at predicting rainfall than temperature.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  89. Re:BS by maxandre · · Score: 1

    FYI, the continental US only covers about 3% of the planet. It's not just all about you, you know? While you have it colder than normal, other countries - you know those places where foreigners come from? - are experiencing record heat. Like for example Australia - you know, that place "down under" that has it's summer when you have winter. And yes, I can see how you could belive that the "global warming boffins" are making much more money hyping global warming then the oil companies are doing creating it.

  90. Re:Prediction validated [Re:Small, but significant by tmosley · · Score: 1

    You actually wouldn't see anything, as the spectrum of water swamps most of the IR spectrum. Hydrogen bonding is funny.

  91. Karl Popper's "Republic of Science" by TapeCutter · · Score: 2

    If consensus were a scientifically valid measure of anything, we'd still be in the stone ages.

    Perhaps that's why you have so much trouble comprehending this issue, go and read about Karl Popper's "republic of science" and tell us all how that is different from "consensus". At the end of the day Science is a philosophy, your own track record of posts on AGW indicate you are unable to apply that philosophy to real world questions. You clearly judge your sources not by their content but by their political colour, which is why you link to Anthony Watts and avoid the internationally recognised leaders in the field such as Mann or Hansen.

    This post is no different, first you say a valid survey means nothing, then you say it's wrong, then you say another survey, the Petition Project, proves the opposite. Think about it like Karl Popper would, why do accept the politically inspired survey at face value but reject several other much more rigorous surveys that clearly show the opposite conclusion. If that's not enough to convince you that you are being used as a useful idiot then just look at the tortured logic of your post, all to try and prove black really is white.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    1. Re:Karl Popper's "Republic of Science" by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Perhaps that's why you have so much trouble comprehending this issue..."

      Calling names is not an argument. Do you have an argument to make?

      "At the end of the day Science is a philosophy, your own track record of posts on AGW indicate you are unable to apply that philosophy to real world questions."

      More ad-hominem. Easy enough to insult people, but that's not a refutation. What are the specific errors to which you refer? Would you care to share them, and show why they are wrong?

      "This post is no different, first you say a valid survey means nothing,"

      It's not valid and it's ridiculously easy to show that. A survey that self-selects for the thing it's trying to prove is not a valid survey. That's hardly a complex concept... it's Statistics 101.

      "... then you say another survey, the Petition Project, proves the opposite."

      The Petition Project wasn't a "survey", and I made no claim that it "proves" anything at all. It does suggest pretty darned strongly, however, that there was no overwhelming consensus among science professionals.

      "Think about it like Karl Popper would, why do accept the politically inspired survey at face value but reject several other much more rigorous surveys that clearly show the opposite conclusion"

      I have no idea what you're talking about. What "politically inspired survey"? If you mean the petition project, it was not a survey. But aside from that, why do you say that it was "politically inspired"? Do you have evidence of that? Further, why do you seem to feel that Oreskes' survey was NOT politically inspired? Do you have evidence of that?

      And what "rigorous" surveys do you refer to? I haven't seen any. So far I've seen 3 studies that (A) pretend to take themselves seriously, and (B) purport to support an overwhelming consensus supporting greenhouse warming. Of those 3, the first is the discredited Oreskes study of 10 years ago.

      Of the other two, the Cook survey commits the same cardinal statistical sin that Oreskes did, with a "survey" that was essentially self-selecting. Further, out of 10,000 survey questionnaires sent out, the "results" were cherry picked from only 75 of the returns. And not only that, but memos regarding that study were made public which make it very clear that the "study" was performed with the clear intent to demonstrate a consensus... that is to say, the conclusion was foregone. If you want an example of an ADMITTED "political" motivation for a survey, there you have it.

      The third study, by William Anderegg et al., used clearly political criteria such as opposition to the Kyoto protocol, rather than actual opinions on whether greenhouse warming is real, to categorize its results. So it doesn't show what it pretends to show either.

      "If that's not enough to convince you that you are being used as a useful idiot then just look at the tortured logic of your post, all to try and prove black really is white."

      Why should that convince me? By what crazy rules of the universe should a plethora of evidence suggesting skewed (possibly even dishonest?) surveys on the side of the greenhouse gassers, and an utter LACK of evidence of any wrong doing on "the other side", convince me? What is there to change my mind?

      So, no. If anything, what appear to be deliberate attempts to skew survey results does not "convince" me at all. Rather the opposite: it tends to make me even more skeptical of their science.

      If it appears that survey results are being skewed, what reason would I have to think they aren't faking their science results, too? After all, they're some of the same people.

    2. Re:Karl Popper's "Republic of Science" by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      Lets suspend the inconsequential dialog about what people may or may not believe and just try to explain why it is, if its not getting hotter, virtually all the world's glaciers and all the world's ice caps and ice shields are melting? How can this happen if its not getting warmer?

  92. Re:We don't have enough processing power by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    True "3D" climate modeling is still out of the reach...

    Good, my model is still relevant then.

  93. Merchants of Doubt by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    Very informative, I would also like to point out that Oreskes is a Science Historian not a climate scientist, she is a frequent target of deniers mainly because of her book "Merchants of Doubt", which details the history and operations of the anti-science propaganda networks.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  94. Re:BS by beatle42 · · Score: 1

    Whether the droughts are in fact related to global warming or not, farmers in California may disagree with your point. For many, their ability to produce food this year at least is very definitely down (and I've seen the effects in grocery stores in the north east). Net production may be up, but that has no bearing on whether it is down in specific areas where crime may go up. That's of course the point of my observation that some places will have production go up and some will have it go down.

  95. Re:BS by beatle42 · · Score: 1

    Well I'm glad you thoroughly debunked the idea that higher temperatures and higher crime rates are in fact correlated.

    Of course, this study produced in 1989 before global warming alarmism was really ramped up suggesting this question has been around for a long time (especially considering it sites papers from 1899) includs the following quote:

    The studies of geographic region temperature effects on aggression provide impressive support for the temperature-aggression hypothesis.

    And are you in fact sure that no AGW supporters commented on the CNN anchor's comment? It didn't seem all that hard to find at least a couple of sites mentioning the topic and suggesting that Bill Nye was polite enough not to mention the absurd segue question.

  96. Re:BS by beatle42 · · Score: 1

    As the AC also observed I don't think that discounting an explanation in one specific situation means it never applies, is that actually what you're suggesting? I'd also point out that "no food at home" is only one possible effect of impacts on food production, which will also likely reduce employment in the area (if there are no crops to harvest), and surely it's not controversial to correlate unemployment rate and crime rate, is it?

  97. Define: fact by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    all it needed was one fact

    So Albert was wrong more than once, who knew? The problem with that quote is that outside of axiomatic systems such as maths, there are no "facts", only observations. Karl Popper is widely credited with the modern philosophy of science, he used the phrase "Republic of Science" to describe what we are calling "consensus". Consensus is not the same as democracy, but it is very much a part of modern Science, it's the difference between "a scientist says" and "scientists say", the later of which is sometimes referred to as a "scientific fact" or a "well established theory".

    Aside from that modern science says that you can never prove a theory beyond doubt, you can only disprove it. ie: Science cannot tell you if your theory is correct it can only tell you that it is incorrect. This modern view of science has been around for over a century now, it's sometimes called "model dependent reality", meaning that the model predicts the behaviour of nature but does not describe nature itself.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  98. CO2 emission spectrum [Re:Prediction validated] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 3, Informative

    You actually wouldn't see anything, as the spectrum of water swamps most of the IR spectrum. Hydrogen bonding is funny.

    Yes, in some wavelength bands all you see is the water. In others the CO2 dominates. (It also somewhat depends on whether you're lookig up from sea level in the tropics, or from temperate zones).

    But, overall, if you take the spectrum (especially across the CO2 band at around 15 microns), yes, you can clearly see the downwelling IR from CO2 emission.

    I could show a dozen plots for you, but here's a nice one with the big CO2 emission labelled:
    http://klimakatastrophe.files....

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  99. Amplification [Re:Small, but measured ] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 2

    The lifetime of water emitted into the air is so short that no, you really don't get a long-lasting greenhouse effect by directly emitting water. It condenses out. We call this "rain" on our planet.

    It is, however, an amplifying effect: if you make the average temperature a little bit warmer for some other reason, that means that more water evaporates and the atmosphere can hold more water, which raises the temperature. This increases the effect of other greenhouse gasses, such as CO2.

    If you ever get to the point where the amplification factor is greater than 1 (that is, 1 increase in temperature increases the atmospheric water such that it increases the temperature by another 1), you get "runaway greenhouse effect." Fortunately, Earth is far away from this condition. (It is believed to have happened on Venus, though.)

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  100. Re:Does this 'trick' adhere? Nope. by Fned · · Score: 1

    Except, of course, that it was not "valid" at all.

    "The final analyses from various subsequent inquiries concluded that in this context 'trick' was normal scientific or mathematical jargon for a neat way of handling data, in this case a statistical method used to bring two or more different kinds of data sets together in a legitimate fashion."

    When you have to hide your own results, you're doing something wrong.

    "The EPA notes that in fact, the evidence shows that the research community was fully aware of these issues and that no one was hiding or concealing them."

    A lot of dedicated alarmists have tried to pretend that "the trick" was above-board... but it wasn't.

    "...in this case a statistical method used to bring two or more different kinds of data sets together in a legitimate fashion."
    "...the evidence shows that the research community was fully aware of these issues and that no one was hiding or concealing them."

    In any other field, if a scientist had tried this sort of thing to hide a bad result, they'd be in deep trouble.

    [citation needed]

  101. Re:BS by Barsteward · · Score: 1

    quote from that article.... "Although this maximum in the ice-covered surface can not be equated with a maximum of the total volume or mass"

    --
    "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  102. Citation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Or you can read the actual truth here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surveys_of_scientists'_views_on_climate_change

    One rigged poll? Please inform yourself. Hundreds of scientists and thousands papers, over many polls..

  103. 97% - Valid study by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "Cook et al examined 11,944 abstracts from the peer-reviewed scientific literature from 1991–2011 that matched the topics 'global climate change' or 'global warming'. They found that, while 66.4% of them expressed no position on anthropogenic global warming (AGW), of those that did, 97.1% endorsed the consensus position that humans are causing global warming." - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surveys_of_scientists'_views_on_climate_change#John_Cook_et_al.2C_2013

  104. Re:Prediction validated [Re:Small, but significant by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

    The planet I live on has these things called oceans.

    Maybe you've heard of them?

    --
    Watch this Heartland Institute video
  105. Re:Great post, thank you by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

    But, what percentage of the CO2 increase is due to anthropological sources?

    All of it.

    The amount we are releasing is about twice the current increase - i.e. about half of what we're releasing gets taken up by the carbon cycle.

    --
    Watch this Heartland Institute video
  106. visible and infrared [Re:Small, but measured] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 3, Informative

    ->The infrared absorption of carbon dioxide is measured

    its absorbtion and radiation
    but more CO2 definately doesn't mean a hotter atmosphere.
    Because you don't just trap more heat - you also prevent more sunlight entering in the first place.

    No. Take a look at the solar spectrum some time. Almost all of the energy of incident sunlight is in a spectrum range in the visible and near IR-- peaking around one micron. The energy of the exiting infrared is in much longer infrared-- ten to twenty microns. (The fact that it's longer wavelength is Wien's law). You can have an atmosphere transparent to incident light, but absorbing to exiting infrared. This was discovered in the late 1700s.

    Venus isn't hot because of the greenhouse effect, it's hot because of the enormous pressures caused by an incredibly dense atmosphere.

    I'm sorry, but at this point you are revealing that you don't actually understand what you're talking about, so bye, have a nice life.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  107. Venus [Re:visible and infrared] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 2

    You really think the temperature of venus is from the greenhouse effect?

    Yes. In fact, because the atmosphere of Venus is so opaque in the thermal infrared, it is easy to analyze-- it's one of the few planets that can be analyzed with a relatively simple back-of-the-envelope calculation.

    That's funny.

    If you don't understand that the temperature of surface of Venus is due to the greenhouse effect, you don't understand the greenhouse effect. It's not actually a crime to not understand something-- the greenhouse effect is poorly explained in popular culture, and few people have even a clue how to do a calculation, even a simple one-- but when you don't understand something, that might suggest that you should learn, rather than shoot off uneducated opinions.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  108. Re:Minor Fluctuation? Yes minor and unknown by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    reprint from WUWT blog

    http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Holocene_Temperature_Variations.png
    rgbatduke says:
    February 7, 2014 at 10:34 am
    A) The increase in temperature we have experienced during the 20th century is nothing unusual and is quite normal, and,
    B) the rain and storms suffered by the people of the UK are also nothing unusual.
    A) Which half? The increase in the first half of the 20th century is almost identical to the increase in the second half. The two halves are so nearly identical in form that unless you have studied them enough to be able to pick out specific features, you won’t be able to tell which one occurred with the hypothetical help of CO_2 and which one occurred without the hypothetical help of CO_2 when they are plotted on the same vertical relative scale and the same horizontal relative scale but with the actual dates obscured.
    In the first half of the 20th century, not even the most ardent warmists claim that there was enough anthropogenic CO_2 in the atmosphere to have any measurable effect. The global industrial revolution that started the CO_2 crank was 1950s on, and there was supposedly a lag of 30 years before that had any effect (to explain the fact that through the 50s, 60s, and early 70s the temperature was pretty close to flat, which didn’t fit in well with the instantly well-mixed, instantly more strongly forcing picture of CO_2 emissions.
    So as a matter of pure fact, the increase in temperature experienced during the 20th century was not unusual or abnormal in any way that can be definitively linked to anthropogenic activity as far as we can tell from the data! We had little to no impact on the first half, the warming in the second half matched that of the first half (with our hypothetical help), both halves were part of a perfectly reasonable continuing century-scale rebound from the lowest temperatures experienced on Earth since the Holocene Optimum during the Little Ice Age.
    It’s amazing how ignorant people who participate in this debate with total certainty that our climate is unusual are of the “patient’s” history. I like to keep the patient’s chart for the last 12,000 years handy to help them learn:
    http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Holocene_Temperature_Variations.png
    Note well, this is smoothed. Note also that the error bars (never, ever shown in climate science) are probably as wide as the total variability envelope of all contributing reconstructions — an easy 1 to 2 C. As Lief pointed out above, reconstructing things like solar activity or temperature in the pre-instrumental era is neither easy nor precise, and the tiniest hint of bias or prior belief in the part of the researcher can effortlessly further cloud the proxy-based extrapolations by causing them to make countless small, almost harmless decisions that ultimately are cherrypicking of the data, comparing low temporal resolution data to high temporal resolution data to make erroneous statements about extremes, or ignoring the possibility of confounding causes or degradation of the data sources in those sources that match their “preferred” narrative at the expense of those that do not. If you count the assumptions — most of which cannot possibly be verified in the present — that go into reconstructions, there are many and each one contributes to increased uncertainty in the final claim.
    Still, taking it for what it is worth — a possibly accurate reconstruction of the planet’s temperatures in the Holocene (post the Wisconsin glaciation, but including the Younger Dryas) that is at any rate the best we can do with the data and methods available (biased or not) at this time, what does it tell us?
    First, the climate now is not warmer than it was in the Holocene Optimum (do not make the mistake of conflating the high frequency, high resolution “2004 data point with the smoothed low frequency, low resolution data in the curve — even the figure’s caption warns against do

  109. Re:I'm cold! by MoronBob · · Score: 1

    Its just a choice. You can have farms, or the rare monkey fish frogs and a big marsh. Just remember choices have consequences.

    --
    Telecommuting! What about socialization?
  110. Re:Prediction validated [Re:Small, but significant by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

    You've pointed out one *necessary* factor.

    You haven't shown that because of this GHG effect, that we can rule out natural climate change.

    Hell, you could do the same experiment against H2O - are you now going to claim that catastrophic global warming is caused by irrigation and increased humidity?

    Again, necessary *and* sufficient falsifiable hypothesis statement. Please feel to try again :)

  111. Stop attacking the science [Re:Small but measured] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 2

    Geoff,
    You don't seem to get it, the CAGW crowd including yourself want huge sums of money taken from people to do something (like fuck the energy sector) and keep coal plants from being built by denying financing through the world bank (already happening) so poor countries are taking it in the ass economically.

    No, actually, I don't.

    I want people to understand the science. I want people to understand that there is science here; that the greenhouse effect has been known and studied for a long time, it is relatively well understood, and the models are well tested. I want people to stop attacking the science when they don't like the political consequences that they believe would ensue if they believed it. The argument "it would be extremely expensive if the science were correct so therefore the science must be wrong" is not a logical argument. This is worth emphasizing: the correctness of the science is independent of your beliefs about the consequences.

    As for the question "what should we do about it-- well, that is worth discussing. Maybe nothing. But, as far as I can tell, whenever anybody suggests any discussion, a small group of people start shouting "Stop discussing this! The science is a hoax! It's not real! It's a scam!"

    ... One last thing, just what ppm level of CO2 would be optimum for you?

    Me personally? I live in Ohio-- a bit of global warming would be nice, I'm in favor of it. Global warming will both have benefits and cause problems, of course. I find it amusing to notice that the three countries that have been most adamant in blocking global warming discussions are Canada, Russia, and Norway-- obviously, they've done the same calculation.)

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  112. Pressure or Volcanoes? [Re:Venus] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    I understand the greenhouse effect just fine,

    From the evidence, apparently not.

    But the temperature at the surface of venus has nothing todo with the optical properties of CO2, and everything todo with the lava flows that cover the planet. Unless you are saying Volcanoes are caused by the greenhouse effect you are competely wrong.

    In the next comment down, Eunuchswear said "Venus isn't hot because of the greenhouse effect, it's hot because of the enormous pressures caused by an incredibly dense atmosphere."

    So, why don't you and Eunuchswear get together and get your stories straight. Do some calculations, maybe. Figure out which one it is you're claiming: the pressure? Or the volcanoes?

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Pressure or Volcanoes? [Re:Venus] by OneAhead · · Score: 1

      Maybe you got exhausted from fighting the stupid troll, or maybe you have some fancy browser customizations that make the gray vertical lines more difficult to see, but you somehow failed to spot that Eunuchswear was quoting mSparks43 making the idiotic claim about pressure and density, and replying "Moron". So it's really mSparks43 and mSparks43 who have to get together and get their stories straight.

    2. Re:Pressure or Volcanoes? [Re:Venus] by mSparks43 · · Score: 1

      the pressure is important because it enables the Co2 to reach those temperatures.

      If it was a lower pressure the hot gases would not be able to hold the same amount of energy.

    3. Re:Pressure or Volcanoes? [Re:Venus] by OneAhead · · Score: 1

      I'm not even going to ask where you got the idea that gases "become able to" reach higher temperatures or "hold" more energy at higher pressures, nor how these two statements can be reconciled from the point of view of, for instance, heat capacity. Arguing with crackpots is futile because they treat science as a postmodernist word game instead of a math game. Don't be surprised if I don't reply to your next post; we'll never find common ground and I've got better things to do.

    4. Re:Pressure or Volcanoes? [Re:Venus] by mSparks43 · · Score: 1
    5. Re:Pressure or Volcanoes? [Re:Venus] by OneAhead · · Score: 1

      Cute, but that law is only valid if the volume is held constant, as in a fixed quantity of gas in a rigid vessel. Under these conditions, the pressure cannot be altered by external forces other than heating or cooling (transferring thermal energy into or out of the system). A planetary atmosphere is not constant-volume; it can and does expand and contract freely. Ironically, this is explicitly mentioned in the document you're citing; at the end of the section "doing the experiment", the reader is invited to use Gay-Lussac’s Law (aka. Amontons' Law of Pressure-Temperature) to calculate the temperatures at different altitudes on earth, then it is explained that "The reason the observed temperatures do not reach these extremes is because in nature the volume is not held constant. The volume of the gas expands and contracts to counter the changes in temperature."

      A slightly more appropriate argument would be to argue that adiabatic compression (where the volume is allowed to vary but the system is thermally perfectly insulated) also results in temperature increase. However, this would still be irrelevant because a planetary atmosphere is everything but thermally insulated.

      Then, if you'd know a bit more about thermodynamics, you might say "fine, forget about temperature for a moment, you cannot deny that if I increase the pressure on a gas while allowing the volume to vary, part of the work I exerted will be converted to thermal energy or heat." To which I would reply, yes, but in the example of the high pressures in Venus' lower atmosphere, this is a one-time event. When Venus was formed, gases got gravitationally compressed and heat was produced. Since then, the system has had billions of years to equilibrate and the one-time heat release at its creation has become irrelevant to its present equilibrium state. This is the most fundamental mistake in your thinking.

    6. Re: Pressure or Volcanoes? [Re:Venus] by mSparks43 · · Score: 1

      Exactly.
      But on venus the atmospheric gad is so dense it does reach those temperatures.

      Thanks for proving my point.

    7. Re: Pressure or Volcanoes? [Re:Venus] by OneAhead · · Score: 1

      Moron.

    8. Re: Pressure or Volcanoes? [Re:Venus] by mSparks43 · · Score: 1

      I do hope you own a prius.

  113. Re:Does this 'trick' adhere? Nope. by pastafazou · · Score: 1

    "The final analyses from various subsequent inquiries concluded that in this context 'trick' was normal scientific or mathematical jargon".... Sorry, but 'trick' isn't scientific or mathematical jargon. Please look at the tree ring proxy in question. Please note that it matches the temperature reconstruction pretty closely for a while, and then goes in the opposite direction. The 'trick' eliminated the obvious visual contradiction. It wasn't an issue of making disparate data sets fit. You can believe what you want, and obviously you've made your choice and have proceeded to dig. I think the right thing to do would have been to come to the conclusion that the correlation of the tree ring data with most but not all of the temperature data means it should be excluded, not 'tricked' into fitting.

  114. Greenhouse and Volcanoes! [Re:Pressure or Volc...] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    Yes, same thing.
    The atmosphere is incredibly dense and as such conducts and retains the heat fairly efficiency from those lava flows throughout the lower atmosphere.

    Wow-- so you're proposing that the volcanoes supply heat, and then the atmospheric greenhouse effect traps the heat and keeps it warm.

    Greenhouse effect and volcanoes!

    I've got to give you credit for creativity. Why don't you do some calculations and write a paper for the AGU?

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  115. Re:Greenhouse and Volcanoes! [Re:Pressure or Volc. by mSparks43 · · Score: 1

    Nope.
    That's not "greenhouse effect".

    Do you understand that and why thicker glass in your garden greenhouse would make the greenhouse colder. (repeatable experiment - actual science).

    Do you have even the slightest idea about thermodynamics at all? or are you really just repeating the drivel you read on the internet and MSM.

  116. Bye [Re:Greenhouse and Volcanoes!] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    When you state "The atmosphere is incredibly dense... and retains the heat fairly efficiency"--that is a description of the greenhouse effect. The fact that you don't actually understand how the greenhouse effect works doesn't affect the fact that when you state that a dense atmosphere retains heat, what you're describing is known as the greenhouse effect.

    I'm sorry, but we seem to have reached the point where you call me ignorant and I point out that you are ignorant. Unfortunately, you seem to be know so little about atmospheres that the conversation really isn't going anywhere. Ignorance is curable, though, so perhaps sometime in the future you'll be capable of an interesting conversation. I assume you're in high school? Well, keep at it, learn something, and in the future, you'll be able to contribute.

    Have a good one. Bye.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Bye [Re:Greenhouse and Volcanoes!] by mSparks43 · · Score: 1

      no, it's because the heat from the massive number of lava flows conducts and convects through the dense gas.

      Absolutely nothing todo with the amount of sunlight absorbed or reemitted (the greenhouse effect)

  117. Re:Greenhouse and Volcanoes! [Re:Pressure or Volc. by OneAhead · · Score: 1

    Wow. After having exhausti(ve/ng)ly showcased your own ignorance of thermodynamics, I'd expected you to have at least the decency not to frivolously accuse others of "not having the slightest idea about thermodynamics". I'm going to call "troll".

  118. Re:Greenhouse and Volcanoes! [Re:Pressure or Volc. by mSparks43 · · Score: 1

    lovin the reasoned argument backed up by facts.

    I actually wavered for a minute thinking maybe I was wrong.

    But after finally establishing a certain crowd think convection and conduction are part of the greenhouse effect I'm at least now more comfortable that I'm less wrong than them.

  119. Spencer and Christy aren't well-cited by emmerson.steven · · Score: 1

    If knowing one's sources is a good thing, then you should know that Spencer is the 500th entry in the list of most-cited scientists on climate change and Christy is the 747th (see http://www.eecg.utoronto.ca/~p...). Personally, I pay more attention to the more cited individuals.

  120. Re:China? by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Don't forget to mention that a very sizable proportions of those emissions results from Chinese factories owned by US corporations and producing products that are consumed by Americans. One can't credibly complain about the Chinese and then simultaneously shop at WalMart or just about any store where Chinese manufactured goods are sold.

  121. Re:Does this 'trick' adhere to scientific principl by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    "Your clarification that the climate scientists were trying to hide the decline of the tree ring data as opposed to hiding the decline of the temperatures isn't very reassuring."

    Since now that you have clearly demonstrated that all climate scientist who believe that the Earth is warming are frauds and totally wrong, can you now tell me why if its not getting warmer, all the glaciers are melting?

  122. An Even More Interesting Question by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    From a scientific perspective they have an even bigger problem to worry about than missing energy in the system. Obviously, they haven't looked at the oceans, but that aside, they seem to be totally and completely unable to explain how it is, if its not getting hotter, why all the world's glaciers are melting? If its not getting warmer, then how could this possibly be happening?

    I have discovered that this is one aspect of their "alternative theory" that proves global warming is a hoax that they seem unable and totally unwilling to explain. Even worse, they slink away from any attempt to answer the question. Its almost like cockroaches immediately rushing to a dark spot to avoid the light. Here they stand poised to become some of the greatest scientists of their day by providing a cogent explanation and showing the entire world of science why virtually everyone but them got it wrong, and yet they are struck dumb and mute, unable to answer such a simple question. Why is that?

  123. What about the ice on the court? by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    "I am still waiting for someone, anyone on the Denier side to admit that they are, or even could be, wrong."

    I am still waiting for anyone on the Denier side to explain, if they are right as they assert that the Earth isn't getting hotter, why all the world's glaciers are melting?

  124. Re:BS by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Here's the data:

    Keep in mind just because it snowed somewhere in California, doesn't mean all of California was snowed in.

  125. Re:BS by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Perhaps since you are one of those prescient few who recognize that AWG isn't real, you are no doubt astute enough to tell me why if its not getting warmer, are the world's glaciers all receding? I can't get anyone to answer this question.

  126. Re:BS by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    "food production is only going up."

    especially in California.

  127. Re:You're dumb by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Here's the actually data, rewritten for the lay person.

    January 2014, 4th warmest on records but don't let that fact get in the way of your sophism.

  128. Re:I'm cold! by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    It wasn't just the delta smelt that got saved, but the entire San Francisco Bay ecosystem.

  129. Re:Greenhouse and Volcanoes! [Re:Pressure or Volc. by OneAhead · · Score: 1

    lovin the reasoned argument backed up by facts.

    Oh, so when other people do it, it's suddenly not cool?

    I'm at least now more comfortable that I'm less wrong than them.

    That's the Dunning–Kruger effect for you. What other people see is someone who talks like a crackpot.

  130. Re:Greenhouse and Volcanoes! [Re:Pressure or Volc. by mSparks43 · · Score: 1

    Temperature = Constant * Pressure

    so as the pressure increases so does the temperature.

    It's really not that hard, but hey, I'm willing to listen to these calculations, do show, I've never seen.

  131. Re:Greenhouse and Volcanoes! [Re:Pressure or Volc. by OneAhead · · Score: 1

    You are citing Amontons' Law of Pressure-Temperature, aka. Gay-Lussac’s Law. This law is only valid for constant-volume systems. A planetary atmosphere is not constant-volume; it can and does expand and contract freely. There's also a more fundamental error in your thinking; if you were right, all cylinders with compressed gas would be incredibly hot, with no way of cooling them, which is obviously absurd. Look here for a more exhaustive rebuttal.

    Amontons' Law is taught in secondary school, but has few real-life applications, especially in planetary science. The fact that you're even bringing it up shows you know even less about thermodynamics than I initially assumed. Which makes it all the more ridiculous that you're trying to insult our resident professional planetary scientist for not having the slightest idea about thermodynamics. Look, kid, the level at which you're talking about thermodynamics is so basic that even a high school science teacher could correct you. You don't possess special elite insight that allows you to see things a professional scientists fails to see. All you have shown so far is ignorance of your own ignorance.

  132. Re: Greenhouse and Volcanoes! [Re:Pressure or Volc by mSparks43 · · Score: 1

    What it does is explain why the surface temperature is so hot.
    regularily compressed gas to very high pressures passing over lava.

    Not a thing to do with the optical properties of co2 or the sun.

  133. Re:BS by Truth_Quark · · Score: 1

    The global mean temperature rise due to global warming is about 0.01C.

    Do you notice that that's how much warmer it is than last year?

    If not, then it will be other changes in the weather, biosphere and sea level that you will notice.

  134. Stefan-Boltzmann law [Re:Venus] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    Sigh.

    In the absence of an atmosphere, the temperature of a planet would be follow the Stefan-Boltzmann equilibrium law, P absorbed = P radiated, or alpha Io (pi R^2)= epsilon sigma T^4 (4 pi R^2)

    where Io is the incident intensity, alpha and epsilon the absorptivity in the solar spectrum and emissivity in the thermal spectrum, R the planet's radius, T the temperature (absolute), and sigma the Stefan-Boltzman constant.

    Even if Venus weren't extraordinarily reflective--highest albedo of all the planets-- the surface temperature in the absence of an atmosphere would only be higher than Earth's average by the fourth root of the intensity, which is the square root of 1/distance, which is a factor of 1.179. That calculates out to about 50C above Earth's average temperature. It is actually somewhat over 400C higher in surface temperature than Earth.

    Yes, it's closer to the sun. No, that isn't a sufficient explanation for why it's so much hotter than Earth.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com