quote:If you are talking of the graph on page 6 of the IPCC summary report then the graph shows the atmospheric methane concentration starting at 750ppb 100 years ago, which has a radiative forcing effect of 0 W per m2. By the year 2000 the concentration has increased to 1500ppb or so, with a radiative forcing 0.5 W per m2. So the zero is not the concentration of methane but the effect of the methane that was being produced by all those cows on the global temperature. Feel free to post a link to a different graph showing what you state, if there is one. Otherwise it might be prudent to check your facts before posting if there is to be a sensible debate.
When the IPCC (was this there? I think it was) marks an 18th century methane output at "zero" then increases from there to now, I think the numbers are screwy: what happened to all those cows back then? No methane?
quote:Quite true. Personally I would prefer life on earth to include humans (though recognising that other species might prefer the opposite), but even if we totally wreck the environment, there will still be life. I'd like my children and their descendants to have somewhere to live - selfish I admit.
Adaption of species is the norm: we can't save the earth from itself: and we can't have a permanent impact that threatens the earth's capacity to support life: life will change, with or without us.
quote:
Originally posted by MerlintheMad:
................. Oh, we already have too much, I forgot. We should be glad to cut back and become like everyone else, become a third-rate nation and join the rest of the U. N. which carps about how we are ruining the planet with our careless lifestyle. I have a couple of things to say about that.................
quote:So America consumes 2.5 times European consumption. That seems to give plenty of potential for cutting back without becoming a '3rd rate nation' - unless MerlintheMad is trying to tell us something of what he thinks of us.
Originally posted by JonahMan:
Americans also happen to consume on average 50 times that of a Nigerian (Europe isn't much better - about 20 times). And generate about 5 x the global average amount of CO2.
quote:Pointless. No-one really doubts that climate change is real. And arguing about whodunnit is irrelevant. If its our fault I'm sure God will let us know about it at the last judgement.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
argue about whether or not man-induced climate change (or anthropogenic climate change, or ACC) is real.
quote:Sadly, this isn't entirely true, even though the evidence is staring people in the face.
Originally posted by ken:
quote:Pointless. No-one really doubts that climate change is real.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
[qb] argue about whether or not man-induced climate change (or anthropogenic climate change, or ACC) is real.
quote:It is relevant to the extent that it helps you decide what to do. If you know what and who is causing the problem, that tells you something about what you need to do to counteract it.
And arguing about whodunnit is irrelevant. If its our fault I'm sure God will let us know about it at the last judgement.
But whether it is our fault or not we still need to do the same things. So talking about what to do is more relevant thatn whether or not we made it happen.
quote:David Bellamy has now admitted that his arguments were misplaced, and will remain silent on the matter henceforth.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
So sceptics, doubters, conspiracy theorists and David Bellamy come on down!
quote:This is what I expect to happen. But I'm not so sure of it that I would want us to take the risk of not cutting CO2 output. When in hole stop digging.
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
His contention was that increased CO2 would just be assimilated by increased plant-growth
quote:I'm not so sure about that... in most parts of the world, carbon isn't limiting for plant growth - in the absence of additional nitrogen, phosphorus, or water (or iron in the case of phytoplankton), I'd be surprised to see much of our additional carbon being soaked up in that way.
Originally posted by ken:
quote:This is what I expect to happen. But I'm not so sure of it that I would want us to take the risk of not cutting CO2 output. When in hole stop digging.
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
His contention was that increased CO2 would just be assimilated by increased plant-growth
quote:Nope. I wasn't that. Sorry. I don't have the magazine in front of me, but look in the current issue of SciAm; there's an article which shows in the first graph, how 300 years ago there was zero methane. Bad chart, I suspect. Or deliberate fudge of the numbers? Anytime you read where "since the mini iceage", or similar, you are seeing someone fudge the numbers; because the climate change window is much larger than that. Starting out showing zero methane 300 years ago, and comparing that to now, is not being honest.
JonahMan:
If you are talking of the graph on page 6 of the IPCC summary report then the graph shows the atmospheric methane concentration starting at 750ppb 100 years ago, which has a radiative forcing effect of 0 W per m2. By the year 2000 the concentration has increased to 1500ppb or so, with a radiative forcing 0.5 W per m2. So the zero is not the concentration of methane but the effect of the methane that was being produced by all those cows on the global temperature. Feel free to post a link to a different graph showing what you state, if there is one. Otherwise it might be prudent to check your facts before posting if there is to be a sensible debate.
quote:No. Sorry for the inclusive tone. Most U. N. members are NOT Europeans, but "genuine" underdeveloped, oppressive, even backward regimes, pretending to be around a table with real democracies discussing human civil rights advancement. ::pfffthbt::
Merchant Trader:
So America consumes 2.5 times European consumption. That seems to give plenty of potential for cutting back without becoming a '3rd rate nation' - unless MerlintheMad is trying to tell us something of what he thinks of us.
quote:Nothing in my attitude targets European cultures. I have a disagreement with the amount and type of controls governments "over there" have. Way of life is certainly second only to the U. S. of A., imho: based solely upon opportunity and lack of "red tape" types of hassles in daily life. We don't have near the socialistic infrastructure that much of Europe has in place. We have more resources and wide open spaces, still. Room to move, literally, without getting in someone else's way. It affects the way we think and live enormously. So there are clear differences in lifestyle based on origins. I don't know any emigrants who have any intention of ever returning to their motherlands, despite how much complaining they do about conditions over here: missing the atmosphere of home is never replacable with better living standards: but in this imperfect world, to get the latter you have to give up the former. Hopefully, as the world in general becomes more prosperous, people will be able to have a great life where they live, and not have to move to America anymore to get it.
IMHO in Europe we have a very good standard of living, rich culture and, for most people, plenty. We have room to cut waste. However, surely it must be easier to make cuts if you are consuming 2.5 the European figure.
quote:Most of the ex-pat Americans I know, including myself, could be described as "born-again Canadians". Some still visit and have family in the US, but laugh if you even suggest going back to live there. OliviaG
Originally posted by ken:
Funnily enough the Americans I know who immigrated here mostly don't want to go back there either...
quote:Good luck.
This is my vigilante attempt to clear up the many climate change threads.
quote:I'm not quite sure I get where you are coming from, MerlintheMad (except America, obviously!) Are you suggesting that the American Way Of Life (TM) is the way that the rest of the world should aspire to?
Originally posted by MerlintheMad:
Hopefully, as the world in general becomes more prosperous, people will be able to have a great life where they live, and not have to move to America anymore to get it.
quote:Whereas I read it to mean that people emigrate to the States to live a better life from the one they felt they had 'at home'. In much the same way as people emigrate to the UK for a better life. Isn't that why people emigrate? To find a better life for themselves?
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
quote:I'm not quite sure I get where you are coming from, MerlintheMad (except America, obviously!) Are you suggesting that the American Way Of Life (TM) is the way that the rest of the world should aspire to?
Originally posted by MerlintheMad:
Hopefully, as the world in general becomes more prosperous, people will be able to have a great life where they live, and not have to move to America anymore to get it.
quote:I couldn't agree more. But what worries me is that the biggest political parties we have here in the UK, Labour and Conservative, have jumped on the bandwagon of "green taxes" to help the environment. Forgive my cinicism after almost 53 years of living under both parties, but I think that green taxes are just another way of putting our hard earned cash into government coffers, not of protecting the environment. An example, using this modern idea of the carbon footprint, though I am approximating as I can't remember the exact figures.
Originally posted by ken:
Pointless. No-one really doubts that climate change is real. And arguing about whodunnit is irrelevant. If its our fault I'm sure God will let us know about it at the last judgement.
quote:OK, I see what you are saying - but I fail to see any evidence for your viewpoint. What makes you think your viewpoint is 'realistic'? Equally there is no evidence against it, but it is hard to prove a negative.
Many doubt that thousands of scientists could be in cahoots with the U. N. in a conspiratorial power grab. But it isn't the information which is conspiratorial; it is the way it is being taken advantage of. Scientists that discovered nuclear power did not want the Bomb. And scientists who forecast doom if we continue on our present way of life most likely do not want greater governmental controls to become abusive; but the fear of that is not going to make them shut up. The U. N. powers will take the veracity of scientific consensus and twist it to gain advantages on the United States. That isn't being "hysterical." It is being realistic....
quote:That's not a low-cost airline, that's an airline with a pricing policy that offers a few absurdly cheap seats at a loss and a whole lot more seats at realistic prices. I'm quite certain that the actual operating cost per passenger per flight is a bit higher than 99p. It's actually the other passengers who paid for most of the cost of your wife's flight because they didn't book in advance / don't want to stay Saturday night / whatever. OliviaG
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
Low cost airlines are a joy to the modern traveler. My wife, who is Irish, can visit her folks in the West of Ireland every 2-3 months for a hopover, because, if you book in advance, the flights can cost from 99 pence to £5.99 plus taxes. Its possible to fly from London to Edinburgh for less than £20.
quote:Paul could have been referring to what we call 'no frills' airlines here: they do short haul flights for very low cost. They make savings by flying out of our smaller airports, they don't include meals in the cost (you take your own sandwiches/buy something on board), etc. It's perfectly possible to fly for a ridiculous price to Europe, the cheapest flights usually happening during the night/very early morning. Ryanair is one example. They seriously undercut the major airlines on routes to Europe. I think they've been a blessing for people who aren't well off but who want to catch some sun for their vacation.
Originally posted by OliviaG:
That's not a low-cost airline, that's an airline with a pricing policy that offers a few absurdly cheap seats at a loss and a whole lot more seats at realistic prices. I'm quite certain that the actual operating cost per passenger per flight is a bit higher than 99p.
quote:Yes. The amount of freedom (only more so, as we have some regaining of our liberty to attend to). The good life. But at the same time, we all need to be conservationists. The energy we power our lifestyle with must be clean and non destructive. The materials we use to manufacture most of our goods must be reusable: and the balance that we take which is natural (e.g. wood), must be less than the natural resources we get it from.
Noiseboy:
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by MerlintheMad:
Hopefully, as the world in general becomes more prosperous, people will be able to have a great life where they live, and not have to move to America anymore to get it.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I'm not quite sure I get where you are coming from, MerlintheMad (except America, obviously!) Are you suggesting that the American Way Of Life (TM) is the way that the rest of the world should aspire to?
quote:
JonahMan:
MerlintheMad said
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many doubt that thousands of scientists could be in cahoots with the U. N. in a conspiratorial power grab. But it isn't the information which is conspiratorial; it is the way it is being taken advantage of. Scientists that discovered nuclear power did not want the Bomb. And scientists who forecast doom if we continue on our present way of life most likely do not want greater governmental controls to become abusive; but the fear of that is not going to make them shut up. The U. N. powers will take the veracity of scientific consensus and twist it to gain advantages on the United States. That isn't being "hysterical." It is being realistic....
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OK, I see what you are saying - but I fail to see any evidence for your viewpoint. What makes you think your viewpoint is 'realistic'? Equally there is no evidence against it, but it is hard to prove a negative.
quote:Denying the evidence of human contribution to global warming: and denying the main U. N. attitude toward the U. S. of A., are two different things. The Bush admin admit (I like that), they admit that global warming is a scientific fact. At the same time, they won't play along with the Kyoto Accords, et al., because they deliberately target us and take and don't give anything back. The "evil" that America does is a constant litany from most U. N. spokespersons. At the same time, they are more than willing to have us continue to send food and other stuff to help them out. So in effect, they are demanding that the American people agree to become like they are (reduce their ecological footprint a lot), and yet the US government is supposed to continue to send the aid to the countries that need it. So they cook up stupid ideas like "carbon dept", and expect it to fly with Americans.
Noiseboy:
As an addition to JonahMan's comments to MerlintheMad - if the UN is one big realistic conspiracy to do-in the US out of sheer bloody-minded envy, why do the current US administration say that the science is now "beyond doubt" with regard to climate change? Is the Bush administration now a bunch of pinko lefty wimps or something? You're gonna need a REALLY right wing government to stand up to the evil, envious UN now! There's something for the world to look forward too...
quote:And if everyone agreed on what the good life is, and exactly how to balance personal freedom with responsibility and the rights of others, that might mean something. News flash: Not everyone all over the world wants the same kinds of "freedoms" or the same kind of "good life". And in case you weren't aware, sometimes Americans move to other countries and discover they are really happy with their life outside the USA.
Originally posted by MerlintheMad:
The amount of freedom ... The good life.
quote:(italics mine)
Originally posted by MerlintheMad:
I don't think we are that far off from being largely this way, world-wide. It seems like we have a huge amount of changing to do, but really, it is dependant on cooperation and shared vision more than anything else.
quote:European nations have a legacy of control that was deliberately excised out of our system of government in the beginning. So individual liberty (a lack of "cradle to grave" socialistic care mentality) is the fundamental difference that I value the most.
Noiseboy:
There is also the issue of what the fundamental difference between Europeans and Americans is that you cherish. You value conservation, which is great, so clearly you don't advocate the wastefulness that is inherant in the contemporary US way of life. So what is wrong with Europe, from your perspective, that America betters?
quote:Surely, when Bush and his admin decided to invade Iraq, I was aghast at the way it happened. The U. N. balked, and we said that Britain and the U. S. of A. would do it then. That was dividing the U. N. Part of it supported the invasion, the rest didn't. It all has rather the feel of early US division of the States; this resulted in Civil War, and even today we feel echoes of that division. Nothing is perfect!
Also, I'd like to make the point that America sees itself as the world's policemen, and how we (the world) wants it to be. Well, I don't. I don't want America to unilaterally invade countries when they feel like it. If any invading really has to be done, it is the job of the UN, and no other country. Including the US. I'd guess that this view is shared by the UN and most of its member countries.
Anyway, hopefully the US will have a more constructive role in the negotiations for the replacement of Kyoto. Blair has said he is optimistic on this - let's wait and see (and pray!)
quote:If that creeps you out, why not stop listening to whack-o right-wing talk radio that says that it is happening?
Originally posted by New Yorker:
2. What really creeps me are the calls starting to be heard to criminalize those who deny it. Proves that the eco-leftists are the new Nazis.
quote:Which is why I have lined my hoodie with aluminum foil, so the UN cannot monitor my thought waves.
Originally posted by MerlintheMad:
That is the main beef Americans have with the U. N. It threatens to take over the world and institute a U. N. "constitution" binding all nations to the same international laws, making the world one empire.
quote:So any country that doesn't go along with whatever the USA - oh, sorry, cooperate with a shared vision - is being divisive?
Surely, when Bush and his admin decided to invade Iraq, I was aghast at the way it happened. The U. N. balked, and we said that Britain and the U. S. of A. would do it then. That was dividing the U. N. Part of it supported the invasion, the rest didn't.
quote:MerlintheMad, is there any evidence that the US - a country fixated on individual liberty and national sovereignty - is culturally or politically ready to sacrifice some of that liberty and sovereignty in order cooperate internationally on this (or any) issue? OliviaG
To meet climate change, it will take a united effort of all nations, a U. N., not a divided one. We do indeed need to pray, and work hard, and not be selfish....
quote:Dear OliviaG
Originally posted by OliviaG:
I'm quite certain that the actual operating cost per passenger per flight is a bit higher than 99p. It's actually the other passengers who paid for most of the cost of your wife's flight because they didn't book in advance / don't want to stay Saturday night / whatever. OliviaG
quote:Is there any reason why the US should sacrifice any of that which we believe is what made us "top nation?" That would be stupid. That does not mean that we can't work toward the common good. Perhaps other nations need to increase their prosperity by giving up some of their oligarchy: because that is how the US got great in the first place: by holding as few controls over free commerce and ownership of property as necessary to make the general peace and national defense hold up. The strength of the nation came from within. It was not imposed by controls from the top down. That is a lesson the American people often do not appreciate themselves. But it is the lesson which, if the U. N. were to follow the same path in its relationship with the nations of the earth, would produce a similar realtionship which the federal government holds over the states in the US: where the sovereign states govern within their borders the fed has no say; where the states must interact with each other or the whole, the fed exercises the controls. On a planetary scale, the U. N. would not control a sovereign nation within its borders, but would hold authority to impose sanctions and membership requirements upon that nation. This approach is what the US as top U. N. member has tried to inculcate into the general body of member nations. It has had frustrating results, i.e. gone nowhere in the main. Perhaps we need more time. Perhaps too many people are losing patience. And perhaps this global crisis of impending doom from the changing climate is increasing that impatience: and allowing too much credence to those voices who advocate quick, expedient measures, which ride roughshod over national interests. That should not happen.
OliviaG:
MerlintheMad quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To meet climate change, it will take a united effort of all nations, a U. N., not a divided one. We do indeed need to pray, and work hard, and not be selfish....
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MerlintheMad, is there any evidence that the US - a country fixated on individual liberty and national sovereignty - is culturally or politically ready to sacrifice some of that liberty and sovereignty in order cooperate internationally on this (or any) issue? OliviaG
quote:How about because that which you believe includes a lifestyle that is unsustainable and would consume the planet?
Originally posted by MerlintheMad:
Is there any reason why the US should sacrifice any of that which we believe is what made us "top nation?" That would be stupid.
quote:PaulTH (and anyone else interested) - I've replied to this on the "Is our energy use sustainable" thread as it looks off topic here to me.
Originally posted by PaulTH*:
For the government to tax away these freedoms which took so long in coming is immoral. And I reiterate my point that on a small island like Britain, it would be much more sensible to take a train rather than fly, especially for the environment. But its a no brainer whether anyone is going to pay £200 return from London to Edinburgh when they can fly both ways for £50. Instead of taxing away the airlines the government should concentrate on pressurising the train operators to offer competitive fares.
quote:That may be because this is the third thread on the subject in recent days. Those of us skeptical of humanity being the reason for climate change have said what we had to say already. No point in saying it all again just coz you started a new thread about it.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
On a general point - it's interesting that the vast majority of people here now apparently accept the reality of anthropogenic global warming. So far on this thread, there has been very little attempt to challenge this.
quote:Link.
Man-made climate change may be happening at a far slower rate than has been claimed, according to controversial new research.
Scientists say that cosmic rays from outer space play a far greater role in changing the Earth's climate than global warming experts previously thought.
quote:
As understanding grows, predications may become less, rather than more, certain. Thus the IPCC's range of predictions of the rise of temperature by 2100 has increased from 1.4-2.5°C in the 2001 report to 1.1-6.4°C in this report... [this leaves] plenty of scope for argument about whether it is worth trying to do anything about climate change.
quote:No such thing. It's a question of choosing your bias.
Originally posted by Clint Boggis:
unbiased scientists
quote:I believe the quote from the Economist is based on table SPM-3 (which does give a likely range of 1.1°C-6.4°C for temperature change to 2100) and this passage from the latest IPCC Summary for Policy Makers :
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
The Economist's quote seems mad - so manifestly wrong it hardly dignifies a response, but in brief the range of possibilities considered by the IPCC has actually narrowed in the past 5 years. [...] The Economist appear to simply be making stuff up - I've no idea how they can arrive at those figures without massively misinterpreting the reports.
quote:So not "mad" or "making stuff up." Though the SPM does say that the ranges "are not directly comparable" their explanation isn't exactly a model of clarity - perhaps a better one will be included in the full report to be released in May.
Best estimates and likely ranges for globally average surface air warming for six SRES emissions marker scenarios are given in this assessment and are shown in Table SPM-3. [...] Although these projections are broadly consistent with the span quoted in the TAR (1.4 to 5.8°C), they are not directly comparable (see Figure SPM-5). The AR4 is more advanced as it provides best estimates and an assessed likelihood range for each of the marker scenarios. The new assessment of the likely ranges now relies on a larger number of climate models of increasing complexity and realism, as well as new information regarding the nature of feedbacks from the carbon cycle and constraints on climate response from observations.
quote:
So, as understanding grows, predictions may become less, rather than more, certain. Thus the IPCC's range of predictions of the rise in the temperature by 2100 has increased from 1.4-5.8°C in the 2001 report to 1.1-6.4°C in this report.
That the IPCC should end up with a range that vast is not surprising given the climate's complexity. But it does leave plenty of scope for argument about whether it is worth trying to do anything about climate change.
quote:
Originally posted by Dave W.:
I think Eutychus' quote from the Economist may give an inaccurate impression of the content of the entire article. The Economist accepts the reality of AGW and doesn't raise doubts about the new IPCC report.
quote:This would seem like the best thread to me.
Originally posted by Eutychus:
My point was that they appear to conclude that given the range in the scenarios, it's difficult to know if it's economically worth trying to do anything about climate change.
I actually started to post on another of the multiple threads and then decided this one was the most appropriate. I may have been mistaken.
quote:As in the case of the full span of "likely range" numbers from the new SPM (1.1-6.4), I don't think there are numbers from the TAR that can be directly compared with the new "best estimate" numbers (1.8-4.0).
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
I think the received wisdom is that closest comparison is between the two "most likely" figures - in the TAR this was 1.4-5.8, wheras the FAR is has been narrowed to 1.8-4.0.
quote:Just to follow up this point, partly in response to questions from Clint Boggis and responses from Noiseboy.
Originally posted by Eutychus:
In this week's science, cosmic rays may be play a larger role in GW than CO2 emissions:
quote:Link.
Man-made climate change may be happening at a far slower rate than has been claimed, according to controversial new research.
Scientists say that cosmic rays from outer space play a far greater role in changing the Earth's climate than global warming experts previously thought.
quote:Isn't the controversy that Svensmark actually suggests the above is responsible for the greater part of climate change, whereas the consensus otherwise is that it is a very small part?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
And, of course, the researchers in question aren't doubting anthropogenic climate change. Just that they have a potential natural mechanism to account for a small proportion of recent global warming.
quote:Without reading the actual report produced by the researchers, how do you know that the Telegraph has produced a 'wildly inaccurate headline'? I'm not saying they haven't, but asking you how do you know that they have? You have consistently advocated that me and other skeptics read the 'actual science' yet you are coming to a conclusion without having done so yourself.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Re-reading the Climate Scientists' blog (earlier ref), it isn't too clear exactly who over-hyped these results. The implication on the blog is that it was the Danish National Space Center that put out a press release that over-sold the ideas, I guess leading to a wildly innacurate headline from the Telegraph.
quote:Aren't you assuming here that science is stagnant? Say what this team claim actually has worth, are you saying it should be ignored simply because it might not fit with the present political message? Isn't the idea to be flexible where science is concerned? Science makes new discoveries, adapts what it has claimed previously in the light of new data, etc. If this reported research has actually hit on something, isn't it worth keeping an open mind to wait and see what further work may produce?
It's fascinating to see how easily a little bit of science gets conflated to a headline along the lines of "Climate Change nothing to do with us after all".
quote:OK, I've managed to access the article referenced in the Telegraph. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 463, 385-396 (2007) . The link should take you to the abstract, you may need to be subscribed to read the full text. There is no way that you can get from that article, which is a report of experimental studies of nucleation following ionisation of gases, to the Telegraph headline. The article doesn't mention global warming once.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
Without reading the actual report produced by the researchers, how do you know that the Telegraph has produced a 'wildly inaccurate headline'? I'm not saying they haven't, but asking you how do you know that they have?
quote:Yes, it does and yes, you do! Pretty much the only bit of the abstract I understood was: 'concentrations relevant for the Earth's atmosphere'! Perhaps that was a subtle signal ...
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
The link should take you to the abstract, you may need to be subscribed to read the full text.
quote:That was the impression I got from reading the Telegraph article since the third paragraph begins 'In a book, to be published this week ...'
Of course, the Telegraph article could be drawn largely from the book rather than this specific article.
quote:
Originally posted by Eutychus:
The Telegraph obviously thinks this is a hottopic. Do your bit by not sending flowers to your Valentine (and feel guilty about hindering third world development just as you feel good about reducing carbon emissions...).
quote:Was this a slip? Is this what you really think: that we're not really talking about science but looking to scientists to endorse our political prejudices?
are you saying it should be ignored simply because it might not fit with the present political message?
quote:No, that is not what I meant.
Originally posted by Clint Boggis:
Littlelady:
quote:Was this a slip? Is this what you really think: that we're not really talking about science but looking to scientists to endorse our political prejudices?
are you saying it should be ignored simply because it might not fit with the present political message?
.
quote:Oh, I aint jumping up and down! I haven't the energy to do that. I just couldn't resist making the point. After all, you've been fairly vocal on other threads in making a similar point! I would still recommend you read the book, which is what the Telegraph article was referring to, before you assume the Telegraph is over-egging things. Me, as I've said elsewhere, well I'm a skeptic when it comes to all things reported in the media. But I'm consistent in that approach. My point was that you don't seem to be.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
don't think there's any need to jump up and down and point at me!
quote:I couldn't agree more with both these statements. It seems to me that the world needs a scapegoat, as usual, and America happens to be it at present. Your point about the UK is totally valid. Even within the EU we are totally crappy when it comes to being environmentally aware as a nation, so I don't think any Brit (of any variety) has any grounds to point the finger Pondways.
Saying America is the problem is also a joke
<snip>
And if you live in the UK/EU, your lifestyle is almost certainly also “Unsustainable” by environmental standards. Don’t throw stones in your glass church.
quote:I'm sure they have. And, deforestation certainly hasn't helped slow the increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Has anyone correlated the demise of rain forest in S.America and deforestation in the Far East against rising levels of CO2 in recent years?
quote:Totally irrelevant. In the 2000-2005 period fossil carbon emissions (ie: that due to burning of fossil fuels and ignoring other human activity such as deforestation) is estimated to be around 25Gt of CO2 per year. That's about 200 times the amount of CO2 from volcanoes. Besides, volcanoes also emit lots of other stuff such as sulphates and aerosols that tend to cool the earth. Large volcanic eruptions have been shown to have a net cooling effect for several years - ie: the aerosols etc cool the earth more than the extra CO2 heats it.
And how do volcano eruptions figure in this?
[Carbon dioxide (CO2)
Volcanoes release more than 130 million tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere every year. http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/Hazards/What/VolGas/volgas.html ]
quote:The figure is 650000 years, which is the extent of ice-core data from the Antarctic. The ice-core data gives CO2 concentrations of between 180 and 300ppm for most of that period, currently CO2 concentrations stand at over 380ppm. If you want data for the period since the last ice-age, figure SPM-1 from the latest IPCC Summary for Policy makers gives atmospheric concentrations of CO2, methane and NO over the last 10000 years.
Somewhere in the original thread, possibly the IPCC report, I recall that 670,000 years was given as a marker date, that CO2 emissions are greater now than any other time in this period - but how have they risen since the beginning of that marker date? I can't see any data relating to the whole period of increased global warming which has been contributing to the end of the last ice age.
quote:Volcanic activity is a very minor effect, as pointed out above. Plus, it's not been implicated with the end of the ice age (the generally accepted explanation of the recent ice-age cycles is that it's linked to orbital variations which changes the amount of solar energy impacting the earth coupled with CO2 related feedback cycles). The main question raised by the sceptics isn't "is the increased CO2 in the atmosphere due to human activity?" because there's no real doubt that it is - all that coal we burn and all those forests we cut down can't do anything else but increase atmospheric CO2 concentrations. The question they ask is "are those increased greenhouse gases enough, on their own, to account for the observed warming?" often citing increases in solar energy input or changes in cosmic ray flux as other (entirely natural) causes.
Is all the high concentration now due to man alone or to other factors such as increased volcanic activity which I assume has been the main factor in bringing the ice age to an end?
quote:For most of that period? Does that mean at times it was even closer or equal to what it is now? (since they say it hasn't been higher).
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:The figure is 650000 years, which is the extent of ice-core data from the Antarctic. The ice-core data gives CO2 concentrations of between 180 and 300ppm for most of that period, currently CO2 concentrations stand at over 380ppm. If you want data for the period since the last ice-age, figure SPM-1 from the latest IPCC Summary for Policy makers gives atmospheric concentrations of CO2, methane and NO over the last 10000 years.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Somewhere in the original thread, possibly the IPCC report, I recall that 670,000 years was given as a marker date, that CO2 emissions are greater now than any other time in this period - but how have they risen since the beginning of that marker date? I can't see any data relating to the whole period of increased global warming which has been contributing to the end of the last ice age.
quote:Volcanic activity is a very minor effect, as pointed out above. Plus, it's not been implicated with the end of the ice age (the generally accepted explanation of the recent ice-age cycles is that it's linked to orbital variations which changes the amount of solar energy impacting the earth coupled with CO2 related feedback cycles). The main question raised by the sceptics isn't "is the increased CO2 in the atmosphere due to human activity?" because there's no real doubt that it is - all that coal we burn and all those forests we cut down can't do anything else but increase atmospheric CO2 concentrations. The question they ask is "are those increased greenhouse gases enough, on their own, to account for the observed warming?" often citing increases in solar energy input or changes in cosmic ray flux as other (entirely natural) causes. [/qb][/QUOTE]I'm tending towards agreeing with this. It's obvious we're contributing something, and surely it's a good thing to stop adding poisons to our atmosphere and organic cycle, but it doesn't quite gel that the added 80ppm of CO2 is the real cause of global warming - these cycles have been going on for rather a long time and what industry was there 10,000 years ago which caused the ice to melt and the sea levels to rise so dramatically?
Is all the high concentration now due to man alone or to other factors such as increased volcanic activity which I assume has been the main factor in bringing the ice age to an end?
quote:No - the current value of 380 is much higher than anything in the ice core record. You can see a plot of CO2 from an ice core going back 650,000 years before present here, courtesy of this article from RealClimate.
Originally posted by Myrrh:quote:For most of that period? Does that mean at times it was even closer or equal to what it is now? (since they say it hasn't been higher).
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell
The figure is 650000 years, which is the extent of ice-core data from the Antarctic. The ice-core data gives CO2 concentrations of between 180 and 300ppm for most of that period, currently CO2 concentrations stand at over 380ppm. If you want data for the period since the last ice-age, figure SPM-1 from the latest IPCC Summary for Policy makers gives atmospheric concentrations of CO2, methane and NO over the last 10000 years.
quote:The ice age/inter-ice age cycles observed are believed to be associated with Milankovitch cycles; slow changes in the earth's orbit, axis tilt, etc. result in changes to the pattern of solar heating (e.g. more or less heating of poles vs. tropics) which, when combined with ice sheet and/or CO2 feedback mechanisms, cause large changes in temperature and climate.
[...] these cycles have been going on for rather a long time and what industry was there 10,000 years ago which caused the ice to melt and the sea levels to rise so dramatically?
quote:Yeah, my "most of that period" was basically to say "all of the period except the last 200 years". If you compare the plot Dave just linked to (for the last 650000 years) with the one I mentioned in the IPCC report (for the last 10000 years) you'll see that on the long time scale there was a "rapid" (in geological terms) increase in CO2 concentration from 180 to 260ppm in 10ky, starting 20ky ago - which marks the start of the end of the last ice age. In comparison, for the shorter time scale data presented in the IPCC report shows an increase from 300 to 380ppm over the last 50 years - that is the same amount of extra CO2 in the atmosphere in 50 years as nature managed in 10 thousand.
Originally posted by Dave W.:
quote:No - the current value of 380 is much higher than anything in the ice core record.
Originally posted by Myrrh:quote:For most of that period? Does that mean at times it was even closer or equal to what it is now? (since they say it hasn't been higher).
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell
The figure is 650000 years, which is the extent of ice-core data from the Antarctic. The ice-core data gives CO2 concentrations of between 180 and 300ppm for most of that period, currently CO2 concentrations stand at over 380ppm. If you want data for the period since the last ice-age, figure SPM-1 from the latest IPCC Summary for Policy makers gives atmospheric concentrations of CO2, methane and NO over the last 10000 years.
quote:
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
]Yeah, my "most of that period" was basically to say "all of the period except the last 200 years". If you compare the plot Dave just linked to (for the last 650000 years) with the one I mentioned in the IPCC report (for the last 10000 years) you'll see that on the long time scale there was a "rapid" (in geological terms) increase in CO2 concentration from 180 to 260ppm in 10ky, starting 20ky ago - which marks the start of the end of the last ice age. In comparison, for the shorter time scale data presented in the IPCC report shows an increase from 300 to 380ppm over the last 50 years - that is the same amount of extra CO2 in the atmosphere in 50 years as nature managed in 10 thousand.
quote:Not what I'm seeing. I'm seeing a dying body in the library with a fired pistol and the body actually dying from arsenic poisoning, no bullet wound at all.
Originally posted by Dave W.:
.
But the fact that there are also non-anthropogenic causes of climate variation doesn't mean that our GHG emissions aren't causing the current warming. (It's true that murder is sometimes committed with arsenic - but that seems an unlikely cause of death in a case where you have a recently fired pistol and a corpse with a sudden case of acute lead poisoning...)
quote:It's difficult to see how, as there is good physics proving that CO2 is a greenhouse gas that's partly responsible (there are other greenhouse gases) for blanketting the earth and keeping it warm, rises in CO2 can do anything other than increase global temperatures. Unless, other feedback mechanisms (eg: cloud cover) that would tend to cool the earth compensate entirely for the extra greenhouse effect. Most of the work examined by bodies like the IPCC is actually mostly concerned with how different mechanisms interact - eg: to answer the question "hotter seas=more evaporation=more cloud ... does that extra cloud cool the earth enough to compensate for the extra CO2?".
Originally posted by Myrrh:
A rise in CO2 levels is not proven to be correlated to global warming as cause - all the latest figures show that this is an unusual blip and ice ages have been coming and going during the majority of the periods of low Co2. CO2 could just as well be a product of global warming.
quote:If natural cycles were being followed we should be well past the mid point of an inter-glacial (a warm period between large scale glacial coverage of the earth). If natural cycles were being followed, there's no reason to expect anything other than a general reduction in CO2 levels and a cooling of the earth. That's clearly not happening.
We are actually at the end period of an ice age which rather dramatically changed northern Europe around 10-12 thousand years ago raising sea levels to what we have now, Ireland and Britain separated and France a tunnel away.
Where were the CO2 emissions contributing to this actually coming from when there was no industry 10,000 years ago to produce such a dramatic effect?
quote:The climate is a (relatively) slow moving system. It takes time for the effect of that extra CO2 to feed through to increased temperatures. Think of a cold night and you're shivering in bed - putting an extra blanket on the bed doesn't warm the bed instantly, it takes time for that extra insulation to take effect.
What exactly is this rise of 80ppm supposed to prove over 20thousand years? Since in the last 50 years we have a comparable rise, also 80ppm, shouldn't we be seeing a equal amount of effects as that supposedly produced by the earlier extra 80ppm C02?
quote:I still don't see the bullet hole. I can't see anything on any chart to show real facts proving that a high CO2 reading is an actual cause, the blip could still be showing that it's an effect, we could simply be adding to the effect of a natural cycle, which is still not answered. What actually caused the ice to melt 12k years ago? There was no industry. There was more CO2 around. There was an equal volume of extra blip.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
It's difficult to see how, as there is good physics proving that CO2 is a greenhouse gas that's partly responsible (there are other greenhouse gases) for blanketting the earth and keeping it warm, rises in CO2 can do anything other than increase global temperatures. Unless, other feedback mechanisms (eg: cloud cover) that would tend to cool the earth compensate entirely for the extra greenhouse effect.
quote:And talking of the data, I haven't been able to make a lot of sense from it. Charts of figures don't relate to each other. It's just disparate bits of information with no overall comparison over time, and ice ages have been coming and going for millions of years - where's the overall picture?
Most of the work examined by bodies like the IPCC is actually mostly concerned with how different mechanisms interact - eg: to answer the question "hotter seas=more evaporation=more cloud ... does that extra cloud cool the earth enough to compensate for the extra CO2?".
quote:OK, maybe I'm being immensely thick here and I've missed it (or, to be kind to myself, have missed it in the abundance of data), but where does this come from? The figure is 'highest in the last 650,000 years'.
As for describing the current CO2 concentration as an "unusual blip", that's possibly the understatement of the century. We're talking about the highest CO2 concentration for the last million years, probably for the last 20 million years. Which follows a rate of increase 200 times faster than any known natural increase of comparable size (eg: the post-glacial warmings of the last 650ky). Yep, that's a highly unusual blip.
quote:If natural cycles were being followed we should be well past the mid point of an inter-glacial (a warm period between large scale glacial coverage of the earth). If natural cycles were being followed, there's no reason to expect anything other than a general reduction in CO2 levels and a cooling of the earth. That's clearly not happening.[/qb][/quote]
MyrrhWe are actually at the end period of an ice age which rather dramatically changed northern Europe around 10-12 thousand years ago raising sea levels to what we have now, Ireland and Britain separated and France a tunnel away.
Where were the CO2 emissions contributing to this actually coming from when there was no industry 10,000 years ago to produce such a dramatic effect?
quote:
MyrrhWhat exactly is this rise of 80ppm supposed to prove over 20thousand years? Since in the last 50 years we have a comparable rise, also 80ppm, shouldn't we be seeing a equal amount of effects as that supposedly produced by the earlier extra 80ppm C02?
quote:OK, but this is back to my gripe (and I accept that it could be me not seeing it), where do I find a chart that gives me accurate data re rise of CO2 correlated to the effects of even of one ending of an ice age. At the moment all I've got is there was equal 80ppm blip more around 10,000 years ago in an end of ice age cycle that began 20,000 years ago.
The climate is a (relatively) slow moving system. It takes time for the effect of that extra CO2 to feed through to increased temperatures. Think of a cold night and you're shivering in bed - putting an extra blanket on the bed doesn't warm the bed instantly, it takes time for that extra insulation to take effect.
quote:Where's the power coming from? Wouldn't be fossil fuels would it?
Originally posted by Mad Geo:
Wow.
quote:Rock stars just jump on bandwagons. It wasn't so long ago they were all concerned about Africa. What happened to concern for Africa anyway?
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Hey, and it's not just the rock stars...
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6364663.stm
quote:I'm finding it increasingly ludicrous to think that anyone can believe that +80ppm CO2 in the last century is the driving force behind the earth's climate changes we're seeing now except that 'someone' is relying on the majority to do precisely what you and I have done - take it on trust that the figures aren't being manipulated because the data available are so complex, but manipulated we are. Temperature changes are given regardless of the patterns of extreme cold even in the last couple of millenniums (the 'mini-ice ages') and CO2 concentrations have been thousands of times greater than now in the millions of years earth's climate has been changing.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Some general thoughts having caught up on another few days posts (OK, I was bored at work!). Both in life and on these hallowed boards, I think I'm seeing a pattern emerging regarding people's response to ACC. It's a bit like the famous stages of grief, and it goes something like this.
1. Climate change isn't real. Anyone who looks into this for a few minutes realises that the science can't support this, so they usually quickly move on to:
2. Man-induced climate change isn't real. "How do we know man causes this? What about 200 years ago - it was much colder then anyway. What about volcanos / sunspots / cosmic rays / little ice age / badgers?" etc. Eventually people realise that, amazing though it may seem, the world's climate scientists have actually thought about all these things, and factored them in already. And the conclusion is that overall we did, in fact, do it. Perhaps it is no suprise, therefore, that every country on Earth has now accepted the science that man-induced climate change is real.
quote:Which means that global warming especially during the last 10 thousand years is why we have the abundance of plant and animal forms we have today, and generally life as we know it.
http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/073.htm
As more detailed information becomes available, the timing of the Holocene maximum warmth is seen to differ across the globe. There appears to be a south to north pattern, with southern latitudes displaying maximum warming a few millennia before the Northern Hemisphere regions. Interestingly, the Holocene appears by far the longest warm “stable” period (as far as seen from the Antarctic climate record) over the last 400 ky, with profound implications for the development of civilisation (Petit et al., 1999).
quote:
2.4.3 How Fast did Climate Change during the Glacial Period?
The most extreme manifestation of climate change in the geological record is the transition from full glacial to full inter-glacial conditions. During the most recent glacial cycle, peak glacial conditions prevailed from about 25 to 18 ky BP. Temperatures close to those of today were restored by approximately 10 ky BP. However, warming was not continuous. The deglaciation was accomplished in two main stages, with a return to colder conditions (Younger Dryas/Antarctic Cold Reversal) or, at the least, a pause in the deglaciation.
The central Greenland ice core record (GRIP and GISP2) has a near annual resolution across the entire glacial to Holocene transition, and reveals episodes of very rapid change. The return to the cold conditions of the Younger Dryas from the incipient inter-glacial warming 13,000 years ago took place within a few decades or less (Alley et al., 1993). The warming phase, that took place about 11,500 years ago, at the end of the Younger Dryas was also very abrupt and central Greenland temperatures increased by 7°C or more in a few decades... continued on:
http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/074.htm
quote:Without human interference dramatic changes can take place in a matter of decades. In other words, we're not in control. Our imput is even more inconsequential than the piddling amount of CO2 floating around.
2.4.4 How Stable was the Previous Inter-glacial?...
2.4.5. Summary....
During the Holocene smaller but locally quite large climate changes occurred sporadically; similar changes may have occurred in the last inter-glacial. Evidence is increasing, therefore, that a rapid reorganisation of atmospheric and ocean circulation (time-scales of several decades or more) can occur during inter-glacial periods without human interference.
http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/075.htm
quote:Of course, it depends what you mean by "driving force". CO2 is one of the main atmospheric gases responsible for maintaining the temperature of the earth at a reasonable level (mean temperature of 14°C rather then -10°C, and with much less day-night variation). But, it's probably pushing it to call CO2 the "driving force" behind the climate - the Sun is a much stronger contender for that title.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
I'm finding it increasingly ludicrous to think that anyone can believe that +80ppm CO2 in the last century is the driving force behind the earth's climate changes we're seeing now
quote:Do you have any evidence that the data has been manipulated? Or, have you found any credible climate scientist or atmospheric physicist (or any other moderately qualified scientist) that can support a claim that the work of 1000s of scientists published in peer reviewed journals over the last 20 years or so is misrepresenting that data? (I'd accept that some newspaper, and similar, presentations of the findings probably are misrepresenting the data. Some may even be setting out to deliberately manipulate people).
take it on trust that the figures aren't being manipulated because the data available are so complex, but manipulated we are.
quote:Generally, they're given simply relative to the mean temperature of the period 1990-2000, sometimes relative to the mean "predindustrial" temperature (something like mean 1700-1800 temperature). How else would you present temperature change, apart from relative to a baseline? Even if you chose a different basepoint, the plots would be the same - just moved up or down relative to the time axis depending on what base point chosen.
Temperature changes are given regardless of the patterns of extreme cold even in the last couple of millenniums (the 'mini-ice ages')
quote:No one's disputing that. And, when CO2 levels were much higher most life as we know it would struggle to survive.
and CO2 concentrations have been thousands of times greater than now in the millions of years earth's climate has been changing.
quote:Now, that's one of the most stupid arguments I've ever heard. Perhaps I should put 200mg of arsenic in your dinner. That'll be OK, after all it's an insignificant percentage of the total mass of your dinner. Sometimes, things have an impact above and beyond the actual amount present.
CO2 is practically insignificant in percentage terms of atmospheric gases
quote:Actually, water vapour is taken out mainly because it's so variable and non-persistant in the atmosphere (increase water vapour and you'll rapidly get more clouds and rainfall bringing the concentration back down again). And, it's hardly as though CO2 is the only greenhouse gas discussed. Most plots will give methane and N2O data as well.
(and of the 'greenhouse gases' it's the majority water vapour, 1.95%, which is taken out of figures to give an inflated reading for CO2).
quote:And your point is that lower CO2 = lower temperatures? Well, d'uh. That's what scientists have been saying for decades.
There have been times in our prehistoric past when C02 levels were well over 7000 ppm and one period of low level CO2 much as we have today it was also an ice age.
quote:I'm not sure what point you're trying to make. We know that the greenhouse effect gives us the planet we have, suitable for the life that's here. We know that life as we know it is adapted to the climate we have, but would probably struggle if we increase temperatures significantly. Life as we know it evolved in response to a climatic change (mostly the entire ice-age of cold and warmer cycles of the last million years or so) with the climate cooling distinctly from earlier times. That life will survive a change back to significantly warmer conditions isn't in doubt. Whether the plants and animals we depend upon for our food supplies will cope well, even with help from us, is a different question. That's even assuming we don't have some concern for the natural biosphere, and are only concerned with human survival or civilisation.
And talking of ice ages, let me begin with the one we began coming out of around 20 thousand years ago.
quote:Which means that global warming especially during the last 10 thousand years is why we have the abundance of plant and animal forms we have today, and generally life as we know it.
http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/073.htm
As more detailed information becomes available, the timing of the Holocene maximum warmth is seen to differ across the globe. There appears to be a south to north pattern, with southern latitudes displaying maximum warming a few millennia before the Northern Hemisphere regions. Interestingly, the Holocene appears by far the longest warm “stable” period (as far as seen from the Antarctic climate record) over the last 400 ky, with profound implications for the development of civilisation (Petit et al., 1999).
quote:Actually, they aren't the norm. If they were then your entire previous argument is meaningless. Either ice age conditions are the norm, or warmer conditions than now. You can't have it both ways and form an argument that's anything other than bollocks. As it is, the ice age conditions on the last million years or so are particularly abnormal; albeit fortuitously abnormal as far as we're concerned as it allowed human beings to evolve and human civilisation to be founded.
Ice Ages are the norm for planet earth
quote:You're right that we're still in an ice age. Colloquially, 'ice-age' is used for the periods of time of widespread glaciation, hence "last ice age" being used for the colder period that ended abou 10-15ky ago. Technically, with the abnormal conditions of large scale glaciation (currently about 10% of the earths surface under permanent ice) having persisted for the last million years it's all one single ice-age. I'm not quite sure what a "window of opportunity of global warming" is - are you suggesting that this is the only chance we'll get of screwing up our climate by artificially forcing the climate to much warmer conditions?
we're still in one now and coming to the end of a small 10ky window of opportunity of global warming within this.
quote:Then, if the trend has been towards cooling the present sudden and rapid increase in temperature is bucking the trend. Even more so than the climate scientists suggest, based on a more static trend. And, of course, contrary to the climate change skeptics who suggest that the current temperature rise is natural - if it was natural the trend would have been towards warmer conditions.
What we're actually in at the moment, coming to end of one 20,000 year cycle, is cooling - the temperature trend has been downwards, back to colder conditions from a high peak between 8-6 thousand years ago (average around 2 degrees Centigrade higher than now).
quote:Which is what climatologists were saying 40 years ago, before the impact of CO2 was fully appreciated. If things follow the natural cycle, then we should be in line for another period of glaciation in 5-10ky. That's a big if given the huge impact humanity has had in the last 100 years or so. Whether that would really impact the life forms on earth is a different question, most life is actually fairly well cold-adjusted (cold in relative terms compared to temperatures 20 million years ago). The 10-15ky since the last glaciation isn't long enough for evolution to remove the genes needed to survive a new glaciation. Many species of plants and animals survived the sequence of warm and cold from previous cycles in the current ice-age. There's little reason to think anything would have been different this time around, except for the impact of human activity.
And since this 20,000 year cycle comes between longer 100,000 year cycles what we're heading for in around a thousand years time is another 100,000 years of bitter cold ice age which will kill off the majority of life forms which are unable to adapt.
quote:Well, as I said, if things were following a natural trend you might be right. But, if you're going to accept that the natural trend is to cool the earth then you must also accept that human impact has been more significant than even the most pessimistic climate scientists are saying.
That's the real scenario here, global cooling. If it were only so simple to produce more CO2 to warm the place up...
quote:But Alan, this is what we're being told, that C02 is the driving force and it's all our fault for driving up the levels since the Industrial Age and our fault for the continuing pollution of the atmosphere and this, precisely, is what is causing global warming - you yourself keep stressing this is down to our responsibility because of the extra 80ppm of CO2. Whole countries are looking to change laws because of this claim, millions of pound sterling has probably already been spent to change to new industrial standards and whatever associated costs. The whole campaign is deliberately generating fear that we are destroying the balance of our world and when our children and grandchildren are all dying for lack of water for crops in the rising temperature and the ice melts and obliterates billions of acres of land destroying major cities and drowning countless millons people it is because we've been irresponsible.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:Of course, it depends what you mean by "driving force". CO2 is one of the main atmospheric gases responsible for maintaining the temperature of the earth at a reasonable level (mean temperature of 14°C rather then -10°C, and with much less day-night variation). But, it's probably pushing it to call CO2 the "driving force" behind the climate - the Sun is a much stronger contender for that title.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
I'm finding it increasingly ludicrous to think that anyone can believe that +80ppm CO2 in the last century is the driving force behind the earth's climate changes we're seeing now
quote:That's exactly the message we're being sold and as I've said above and besides the fear generated by saying this increase is the driving force many are also being made to feel ignorant/stupid/unfeeling for even questioning it.
Though, it's probably probably not inaccurate to say that the source of that extra CO2 (ie: people burning fossil fuels) is the driving force for recent changes in the climate. People will certainly know what you mean by that.
quote:
take it on trust that the figures aren't being manipulated because the data available are so complex, but manipulated we are.
quote:We're being manipulated because the data doesn't exist. If the theory was proved it wouldn't be so dense a jungle of disparate views and there are scientists questioning it (I'm sorry, I haven't had time to make a note of everything I've read and can only give the gist of what I've been finding). Not only is there no such theory proved, i.e. it isn't fact, but the theory can't show any clear correlation between CO2 levels and global temperatures, let alone show this increasing is the driving force to changing the climate.
Do you have any evidence that the data has been manipulated? Or, have you found any credible climate scientist or atmospheric physicist (or any other moderately qualified scientist) that can support a claim that the work of 1000s of scientists published in peer reviewed journals over the last 20 years or so is misrepresenting that data? (I'd accept that some newspaper, and similar, presentations of the findings probably are misrepresenting the data. Some may even be setting out to deliberately manipulate people).
quote:
Temperature changes are given regardless of the patterns of extreme cold even in the last couple of millenniums (the 'mini-ice ages')
quote:We're told our acts since the beginning of the Industrial are the cause of global warming and the perilous state we're in now, it is simply disingenous to present this as a base line when well known longer base lines show we're in a general cooling phase which is part of a much longer global climate pattern. It is simply unconscionable to present it as a fact when it's not even a very good theory.
Generally, they're given simply relative to the mean temperature of the period 1990-2000, sometimes relative to the mean "predindustrial" temperature (something like mean 1700-1800 temperature). How else would you present temperature change, apart from relative to a baseline? Even if you chose a different basepoint, the plots would be the same - just moved up or down relative to the time axis depending on what base point chosen.
quote:That's not what I've found - the longer temperature patterns clearly show we're in a progressively downward movement and this rise (if there actually is a rise which itself hasn't been proved, global atmospheric readings don't show it, the rise claims themselves appear based on localised variations) is itself a blip of no importance in this slide which is the end of an interglacial. And as I pointed out (IPCC report), the last such came and went without the confusion of our possible involvement.
If there were "extreme cold" events in the past they would appears as negative blips in the plots of temperature. And, indeed, if you get plots of norht western european temperatures (eg: the UK historic temperatures) then you will see the blips for the 'mini-ice age'. But if you look at global mean temperatures that simply disappears because it was a small, localised event that had no substantial impact beyond our little bit of the planet.
quote:
and CO2 concentrations have been thousands of times greater than now in the millions of years earth's climate has been changing.
quote:And CO2 levels around what we have now have been in an ice age. Where's the data to show actual correlation?
No one's disputing that. And, when CO2 levels were much higher most life as we know it would struggle to survive.![]()
quote:
CO2 is practically insignificant in percentage terms of atmospheric gases
quote:How is it stupid? I gave it as background information. We know the effects of arsenic, it's not a theory, but you haven't yet shown me any proof that the rise of such an insignificant amount of gas is the driving cause of global warming - which has had really huge effects on the world's climate in the past, bringing millions year ice ages to an end.
Now, that's one of the most stupid arguments I've ever heard. Perhaps I should put 200mg of arsenic in your dinner. That'll be OK, after all it's an insignificant percentage of the total mass of your dinner. Sometimes, things have an impact above and beyond the actual amount present.
quote:Oh and the throwaway, water vapour, which is the majority component (some 95% from memory) of the greenhouse gases. Someone's just come up with that being the real cause in the global warming theory.
Besides, in relationship to the greenhouse effect you need to consider those gases that interact with infra-red radiation; the others may as well not be there. That's carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O) and ozone (O3) which make up less than 0.1% of the atmosphere in total, and water vapour which is about 1% (though highly variable).
quote:
(and of the 'greenhouse gases' it's the majority water vapour, 1.95%, which is taken out of figures to give an inflated reading for CO2).
quote:And another scientist has proposed that increased methane levels is the real main driving force to global warming. Methane breaks down to form C02 which in turn was rather detrimental to the life forms around before the dramatic changes at the start of the Eocene; which was the beginning of a c 80-200,000 year warm period in which conditions were generated the ancestors of the animals we have now, and when the CO2 levels were around 3,000 ppm ...
Actually, water vapour is taken out mainly because it's so variable and non-persistant in the atmosphere (increase water vapour and you'll rapidly get more clouds and rainfall bringing the concentration back down again). And, it's hardly as though CO2 is the only greenhouse gas discussed. Most plots will give methane and N2O data as well.
quote:
There have been times in our prehistoric past when C02 levels were well over 7000 ppm and one period of low level CO2 much as we have today it was also an ice age.
quote:No, what I'm saying, and the chart linked expanded on, was that CO2 levels don't correlate to actual temperature - the lower, in comparison with the 7000 high, C02 was the level we have now and was an ice age.
And your point is that lower CO2 = lower temperatures? Well, d'uh. That's what scientists have been saying for decades.
quote:OK, let's just clarify something. The climate is a complex system involving several feedback mechanisms. About the only thing that acts from outside the system without being affected by those feedback mechanisms is the Sun. Therefore, the Sun is the only real candidate as the driving force behind the climate, everything else is derivative of that power supply (there's also a small input from geothermal energy, a combination of heat from radioactive decay and the left over energy from the original gravitational collapse of matter to form the earth, and some tidal energy from the moon).
Originally posted by Myrrh:
But Alan, this is what we're being told, that C02 is the driving force and it's all our fault for driving up the levels since the Industrial Age and our fault for the continuing pollution of the atmosphere and this, precisely, is what is causing global warming - you yourself keep stressing this is down to our responsibility because of the extra 80ppm of CO2.
quote:The scientific literature is packed full of data. The IPCC reports present the most conservative selection of that data (conservative in the sense of it's the data there's virtually no doubting, there's plenty of other data supporting all views that is much more dubious). If you've the inclination you can go out and collect your own data, or set up an experiment to demonstrate some provable facts. For example, if you doubt the mechanism of the greenhouse effect and the role of CO2 you can run an experiment - it's just basic physics. Get an infra-red lamp and one or more IR sensors, a glass vessel, a thermometer and a supply of CO2. Set up the lamp on one side of the apparatus, with a detector on the other side and fill the tube with air with different concentrations of CO2. Let the system equilibrate a while, and measure how much IR gets through the tube (if you have a second detector you can measure how much is reflected back towards the IR lamp) and the temperature. Plot IR transmission and temperature as a function of CO2 concentration and then tell me that CO2 isn't a greenhouse gas.
in the last few days I've become progressively more appalled at the singular lack of any real data to back this up.
...
We're being manipulated because the data doesn't exist.
quote:There's nothing disingenous about plotting temperature changes relative to a base line. You have no choice but to plot temperature changes relative to a base line, you have a choice about which baseline to use. But, a plot of temperature relative to the mean for 1961-1990, relative to the mean for 1700-1800, relative to the minimum during the last glaciation, relative to the freezing point of distilled water at 1bar pressure, or anything else will present you exactly the same shaped graph just shifted relative to the zero relative change point. If we're bucking the trend of a cooling period you'll see it. If we're enhancing a natural warming trend, you'll see it. And, without a doubt the earth has warmed to the tune of 0.6±0.2°C in the last 20 years.
We're told our acts since the beginning of the Industrial are the cause of global warming and the perilous state we're in now, it is simply disingenous to present this as a base line when well known longer base lines show we're in a general cooling phase which is part of a much longer global climate pattern.
quote:
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:Which means that global warming especially during the last 10 thousand years is why we have the abundance of plant and animal forms we have today, and generally life as we know it.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
And talking of ice ages, let me begin with the one we began coming out of around 20 thousand years ago.
http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/073.htm
quote:The point I'm making is that we have an abundance of life because of global warming and higher temperatures do not automatically warrant an apocalypse tag..., we had it significantly hotter 6,000 years ago - what was our planet like then? Our whole history has been of life coming and going, of change and it seems to me it's those global warmers giving disaster scenarios who are trying to hold onto control of 'their' world.
I'm not sure what point you're trying to make. We know that the greenhouse effect gives us the planet we have, suitable for the life that's here. We know that life as we know it is adapted to the climate we have, but would probably struggle if we increase temperatures significantly. Life as we know it evolved in response to a climatic change (mostly the entire ice-age of cold and warmer cycles of the last million years or so) with the climate cooling distinctly from earlier times. That life will survive a change back to significantly warmer conditions isn't in doubt. Whether the plants and animals we depend upon for our food supplies will cope well, even with help from us, is a different question. That's even assuming we don't have some concern for the natural biosphere, and are only concerned with human survival or civilisation.
quote:
Ice Ages are the norm for planet earth
quote:Well yes, but they are norm, they're called ages because there are many of them. They come and go over millions of years and, here I've found terms are used differently, the current ice epoch/Ice Age began some 40 millions of years ago and is set to continue for many more millions of years. I think it's reasonable to say that at the moment the world in this Ice Epoch/Ice Age is our norm.
Actually, they aren't the norm. If they were then your entire previous argument is meaningless. Either ice age conditions are the norm, or warmer conditions than now. You can't have it both ways and form an argument that's anything other than bollocks. As it is, the ice age conditions on the last million years or so are particularly abnormal; albeit fortuitously abnormal as far as we're concerned as it allowed human beings to evolve and human civilisation to be founded.
quote:
we're still in one now and coming to the end of a small 10ky window of opportunity of global warming within this.
quote:Tut, tut. Still holding on to that theory..
You're right that we're still in an ice age. Colloquially, 'ice-age' is used for the periods of time of widespread glaciation, hence "last ice age" being used for the colder period that ended abou 10-15ky ago. Technically, with the abnormal conditions of large scale glaciation (currently about 10% of the earths surface under permanent ice) having persisted for the last million years it's all one single ice-age. I'm not quite sure what a "window of opportunity of global warming" is - are you suggesting that this is the only chance we'll get of screwing up our climate by artificially forcing the climate to much warmer conditions?
quote:
What we're actually in at the moment, coming to end of one 20,000 year cycle, is cooling - the temperature trend has been downwards, back to colder conditions from a high peak between 8-6 thousand years ago (average around 2 degrees Centigrade higher than now).
quote:As I posted several times already, this global warming theory contradicts the real event happening now, that since the peak around 6,000 years ago we're into the downward slide into cold which is natural for the end of an interglacial. Warm periods are blips in the continuing slide into cold - see the charts I've posted.
Then, if the trend has been towards cooling the present sudden and rapid increase in temperature is bucking the trend. Even more so than the climate scientists suggest, based on a more static trend. And, of course, contrary to the climate change skeptics who suggest that the current temperature rise is natural - if it was natural the trend would have been towards warmer conditions.
quote:
And since this 20,000 year cycle comes between longer 100,000 year cycles what we're heading for in around a thousand years time is another 100,000 years of bitter cold ice age which will kill off the majority of life forms which are unable to adapt.
quote:It's still the true scenario here. And as before, you have yet to prove the global warming theory.
Which is what climatologists were saying 40 years ago, before the impact of CO2 was fully appreciated. If things follow the natural cycle, then we should be in line for another period of glaciation in 5-10ky. That's a big if given the huge impact humanity has had in the last 100 years or so.
quote:Major glacials/ice ages like the one we're going into will certainly affect life forms in a major way, the polar bears will rule in a land devoid of plants. A description of Europe as it will be again:
Whether that would really impact the life forms on earth is a different question, most life is actually fairly well cold-adjusted (cold in relative terms compared to temperatures 20 million years ago). The 10-15ky since the last glaciation isn't long enough for evolution to remove the genes needed to survive a new glaciation. Many species of plants and animals survived the sequence of warm and cold from previous cycles in the current ice-age. There's little reason to think anything would have been different this time around, except for the impact of human activity.
quote:Note the 'water is still rising and further drowning is to come' because what I'm really finding objectionable to the arguments from global warming theorists is their denial of this cycle we're in, the interglacial now coming to an end, which far better explains the events of today (we're still in a melt from the initial rise of temperature which is now in an actual slide into cold).
.. A tundra with Ice Age flora and fauna stretched across middle Europe from Asia to the Atlantic Ocean. Such was the case during the Last Glacial Maximum, ca. 22,000-14,000 yr BP, when ice covered Scandinavia and the Baltic, Britain and the Alps, but left the space between as open tundra. The loess, or wind-blown dust over that tundra settled in and around the Rhine Valley, contributing to its current agricultural usefulness.
These events were well within the residence of man. Meltwater adding to the ocean and land subsidence drowned the former coasts of Europe. The water is still rising, at the rate of about 1-3 mm per year. Further drowning is to come.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhine
quote:
That's the real scenario here, global cooling. If it were only so simple to produce more CO2 to warm the place up...
quote:You still haven't proved the theory. All I see is that we adapted and no doubt what is left of us will continue to adapt in cycles that are greater than our capacity to change. We, like the pre-human and human species before us, are in the same position as the rest of the vast populations of animals that have come and gone over the millenniums through the millions year cycles of heat and cold.
Well, as I said, if things were following a natural trend you might be right. But, if you're going to accept that the natural trend is to cool the earth then you must also accept that human impact has been more significant than even the most pessimistic climate scientists are saying.
quote:In the part of the interglacial we're in, the last 10,000 years since the big melt, temperature rose to a peak around 6,000 years ago; since then it has continued to drop, there is no global warming.
What really confuses me about your argument is that your last post seems to be saying two entirely contradictory things.
1) the natural state of the earth is much warmer, with much higher CO2 concentrations than today. And, therefore the increases in temperature and CO2 observed in the last 200 years are restoring the natural position and, presumably, the fact that it coincides with intense human industrial activity is coincidental.
quote:The natural state of the earth as we "know" it, the last 40 millions years, is ice age conditions interspersed with short periods of interglacials and this pattern is set to continue for millions more years.
2) the natural state of the earth is ice-age conditions, colder than today and that that's where we're heading so all this extra CO2 is, at best, delaying the inevitable freeze.
I don't see how you can have it both ways![]()
quote:What more do you want to make the theory 'good'? You want it to explain the recent changes in the climate? Well, you've got it ... it does. Do you want it to be able to model the climate such that if you run the model backwards you get something close to the observed past climates? Good, because there are plenty of models that do that too. Do you want a good physical mechanism based on properties of gases measured in the laboratory? Good, because that's there too.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
And, you have yet to prove that there is such as thing as global warming. It is not even a good theory.
quote:This page from wiki is as good a start as any: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_age
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:OK, let's just clarify something. The climate is a complex system involving several feedback mechanisms. About the only thing that acts from outside the system without being affected by those feedback mechanisms is the Sun. Therefore, the Sun is the only real candidate as the driving force behind the climate, everything else is derivative of that power supply (there's also a small input from geothermal energy, a combination of heat from radioactive decay and the left over energy from the original gravitational collapse of matter to form the earth, and some tidal energy from the moon).
Originally posted by Myrrh:
But Alan, this is what we're being told, that C02 is the driving force and it's all our fault for driving up the levels since the Industrial Age and our fault for the continuing pollution of the atmosphere and this, precisely, is what is causing global warming - you yourself keep stressing this is down to our responsibility because of the extra 80ppm of CO2.
quote:A theory is only good until a) it is proved and becomes fact or b) until it is contradicted.
But, we can put a finger on the driving force for recent climatic changes on human activity. That finger points firmly, clearly and unambiguously at human activity that has pumped greenhouse gases (not just CO2) into the atmosphere at an unprecedented rate. That extra 80ppm CO2, plus the extra 1000ppb of methane (from 750 to 1750 ppb) and 40ppb NO2 (from 270 to 310 ppb) all contribute to the recent increases in global temperatures. CO2 isn't the driving force, it's a significant part of the mechanism by which the driving force produces higher temperatures.
quote:
in the last few days I've become progressively more appalled at the singular lack of any real data to back this up.
...
We're being manipulated because the data doesn't exist.
quote:Oh please, Alan. I'm not saying that CO2 isn't a greenhouse gas, I'm saying that a)it isn't proved that it is a driving force to massive global temperature changes and b) data do not support this view, but contradict it. There is, therefore, no actual data to support this view.
The scientific literature is packed full of data. The IPCC reports present the most conservative selection of that data (conservative in the sense of it's the data there's virtually no doubting, there's plenty of other data supporting all views that is much more dubious). If you've the inclination you can go out and collect your own data, or set up an experiment to demonstrate some provable facts. For example, if you doubt the mechanism of the greenhouse effect and the role of CO2 you can run an experiment - it's just basic physics. Get an infra-red lamp and one or more IR sensors, a glass vessel, a thermometer and a supply of CO2. Set up the lamp on one side of the apparatus, with a detector on the other side and fill the tube with air with different concentrations of CO2. Let the system equilibrate a while, and measure how much IR gets through the tube (if you have a second detector you can measure how much is reflected back towards the IR lamp) and the temperature. Plot IR transmission and temperature as a function of CO2 concentration and then tell me that CO2 isn't a greenhouse gas.
quote:
We're told our acts since the beginning of the Industrial are the cause of global warming and the perilous state we're in now, it is simply disingenous to present this as a base line when well known longer base lines show we're in a general cooling phase which is part of a much longer global climate pattern.
quote:See above, first choose your base line.
There's nothing disingenous about plotting temperature changes relative to a base line. You have no choice but to plot temperature changes relative to a base line, you have a choice about which baseline to use. But, a plot of temperature relative to the mean for 1961-1990, relative to the mean for 1700-1800, relative to the minimum during the last glaciation, relative to the freezing point of distilled water at 1bar pressure, or anything else will present you exactly the same shaped graph just shifted relative to the zero relative change point. If we're bucking the trend of a cooling period you'll see it. If we're enhancing a natural warming trend, you'll see it. And, without a doubt the earth has warmed to the tune of 0.6±0.2°C in the last 20 years.
quote:Noiseboy, it is ad hominem to make personal attacks and bearing false witness to imply I have such a view.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Myrrh - I'm going to try a different tack here. For those who think that a plane never crashed into the Pentagon, the most crucial questions are: a) what happened to the plane? b) what happened to the passengers and, factoring in the World Trade Center and United 93 c) how many tens of thousands of people participated in the most complex and secretive mass murder in human history without a single leak or pang of conscience?
quote:See my posts and follow the logic.
Actually, these questions are a breeze next to ACC. ACC is now accepted by all the governments of the world, no matter what their politics. Since you - stunningly - have shown how easy it is for any one of us to debunk ACC via the help of a few websites, a ball of string and some sticky-backed plastic, why is every governmental advisor - and government - on the planet wrong? What is the common motive between China, America and France to keep all this screamingly obvious analysis away from their citizens? And how could an entire branch of science (climate) be so risible that they have missed a comprehensive debunking easily acheivable by any one of their practicioners in about 15 minutes?
quote:Proves my point. It ignores the Medieval Warm.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:What more do you want to make the theory 'good'? You want it to explain the recent changes in the climate? Well, you've got it ... it does. Do you want it to be able to model the climate such that if you run the model backwards you get something close to the observed past climates? Good, because there are plenty of models that do that too. Do you want a good physical mechanism based on properties of gases measured in the laboratory? Good, because that's there too.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
And, you have yet to prove that there is such as thing as global warming. It is not even a good theory.
As for proof that there's such a thing as global warming, what more do you want?
quote:P.S. Just found this:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
quote:Proves my point. It ignores the Medieval Warm.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:What more do you want to make the theory 'good'? You want it to explain the recent changes in the climate? Well, you've got it ... it does. Do you want it to be able to model the climate such that if you run the model backwards you get something close to the observed past climates? Good, because there are plenty of models that do that too. Do you want a good physical mechanism based on properties of gases measured in the laboratory? Good, because that's there too.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
And, you have yet to prove that there is such as thing as global warming. It is not even a good theory.
As for proof that there's such a thing as global warming, what more do you want?
You are being manipulated.
Myrrh
quote:I rest my valise. Thank you for the opportunity to explore this, until you mentioned it I had no idea what an interglacial was.
At this point of their paper, the international team of scientists had pretty much verified a number of things we have regularly reported on our website over the past several years, i.e., that in spite of the contrary claims of a host of climate alarmists, the Little Ice Age and Medieval Warm Period were (1) real, (2) global, (3) solar-induced, and (4) but the latest examples of uninterrupted alternating intervals of relative cold and warmth that stretch back in time through glacial and interglacial periods alike. http://www.co2science.org/scripts/CO2ScienceB2C/subject/s/summaries/solarmwp.jsp
quote:You really need to have a look at a bit of basic philosophy of science. Because you're statement there makes no sense at all. No theory is 'proved', much less 'becomes fact'. And, if a theory is contradicted it is, by definition, not a good theory. A good theory fits and explains known data, and makes testable predictions for new measurements. The climate models currently in use do a very good job of explaining how the climate works, and fit existing data fairly well (and, a good deal better than might naively be assumed considering the complexity of the system being modelled). If you doubt they fit the data, look at figure SPM-7 on the last page of the summary for policy makers, which though it only shows the 20th century gives model fits that match the historic record very well (with increasing uncertainties at the earlier dates). Climate models also make predictions about future measurements, though I do admit we'd actually need to wait to see if they're right. Climate modelling is in everyone's book (except yours, apparently) good science.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
A theory is only good until a) it is proved and becomes fact or b) until it is contradicted.
quote:I don't see why the science is discredited just by where we are in a glacial-interglacial cycle. Especially as the measurements show we're very much not par for the course. In which other interglacial do you see rapid CO2 concentration rises of similar magnitude to the end of the previous glaciation in the middle of that interglacial? Answer, none of them. But, that's exactly what we have seen in the last 50 years. What is happening in the middle of the interglacial is of similar magnitude as the start of an interglacial, and at a far faster rate. That is just not par for the course.
Global warming is immediately discredited as a theory because what we are in is an interglacial and the data all confirm that the events taking place are par for the course.
quote:Well, I'm just confused then. If you're accepting that CO2 is a greenhouse gas, and that it's concentration in the atmosphere is increasing rapidly, what do you expect that increase in CO2 to do? Are you expecting CO2 to suddenly absorb and re-irradiate IR radiation differently? More CO2 can do nothing else but drive temperature higher. That's simple physics. What's a bit more complex, and therefore makes climate modelling more challenging, is how that temperature rise interacts with other parameters such as cloud formation that may amplify or suppress the drive to higher temperatures resulting from increased greenhouse gas concentrations.
I'm not saying that CO2 isn't a greenhouse gas, I'm saying that a)it isn't proved that it is a driving force to massive global temperature changes
quote:And, I've seen no data that contradict the simple physics. Nor any data that contradict the more complex climate models that account for other influences. And, to call the worlds greatest climate scientists and atmospheric physicists (not to mention meteorologists and members of other relevant disciplines) corrupt beggers belief.
b) data do not support this view, but contradict it. There is, therefore, no actual data to support this view.
And, c) I'm also saying that measurements given by the global warming theorists are corrupt.
quote:Except that no serious scientist is doing what you're claiming. The so-called "mini-ice age" is well known, as is the Medievel warm period. What we're currently seeing is way above the changes observed in western europe then, even if those events had been global (they probably had wider effects in the northern hemisphere, maybe even south of the equator, but the most extreme changes were in western europe). Just so I'm not giving IPPC graphics, Wikipedia plots the temperatures associated with these events. That plot shows that at most, the warm period was 0.5°C warmer than the preceding period, with the little ice age less than 1°C cooler. That compares to current temperatures about 0.5°C warmer than the hottest part of the medieval warm period, and still rising. These older changes weren't, as you point out, associated with significant changes in greenhouse gas concentrations, instead being driven more directly by changes in solar activity and volcanism.
We can see that for a start because they use the end of a mini ice age from which to promote scare tactics ignoring the earlier hotter Medieval Warm and by ignoring the considerable amount of data showing that there was no increase in C02 as they describe.
quote:You still don't seem to be getting the point. Whatever you plot temperature against involves the selection of a baseline. Even if you just plotted actual temperature in °C you've still chosen the freezing point of water as a baseline. And, whatever baseline you chose doesn't affect the data you present. The plots of the past temperature presented by the IPCC and other scientific bodies include the Medieval warm period and little ice age (at least, those that cover that time period do). What's disengenuous about that?
See above, first choose your base line.
Measuring present temperature change against the end of a mini ice age while ignoring the much hotter previous Medieval Warm is disingenuous.
quote:Because I'm a scientist. I align myself with good science. And, I try my best to patiently correct people who are spouting bollocks.
Why would want to align yourself with such people?
quote:Huh? What personal attacks? What false witness? Have you or have you not attempted to debunk ACC? Huh?!
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Noiseboy, it is ad hominem to make personal attacks and bearing false witness to imply I have such a view.
quote:The logic, I'm afraid, eludes me completely.
See my posts and follow the logic.
quote:I was using 'theory' in a more general sense, no need to be quite so picky.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
You really need to have a look at a bit of basic philosophy of science. Because you're statement there makes no sense at all. No theory is 'proved', much less 'becomes fact'. And, if a theory is contradicted it is, by definition, not a good theory. A good theory fits and explains known data, and makes testable predictions for new measurements. The climate models currently in use do a very good job of explaining how the climate works, and fit existing data fairly well (and, a good deal better than might naively be assumed considering the complexity of the system being modelled). If you doubt they fit the data, look at figure SPM-7 on the last page of the summary for policy makers, which though it only shows the 20th century gives model fits that match the historic record very well (with increasing uncertainties at the earlier dates). Climate models also make predictions about future measurements, though I do admit we'd actually need to wait to see if they're right. Climate modelling is in everyone's book (except yours, apparently) good science.
quote:
Global warming is immediately discredited as a theory because what we are in is an interglacial and the data all confirm that the events taking place are par for the course.
quote:As before you cannot prove that your version of CO2 levels is correct, because there is a wealth of conflicting data out there. Above I linked a page for you to read asking for your comments
I don't see why the science is discredited just by where we are in a glacial-interglacial cycle. Especially as the measurements show we're very much not par for the course. In which other interglacial do you see rapid CO2 concentration rises of similar magnitude to the end of the previous glaciation in the middle of that interglacial? Answer, none of them. But, that's exactly what we have seen in the last 50 years. What is happening in the middle of the interglacial is of similar magnitude as the start of an interglacial, and at a far faster rate. That is just not par for the course.
quote:So now the "par for the course" of our interglacial, it's an interglacial. It's of limited duration and will end with a glacial, i.e. it will get progressively colder and information we have about it shows it reached its peak of warmth around 6000 years ago and the temperature has been dropping since notwithstanding the hiccups of hot and cold on its inevitable way down to freezing for another long time. This scenario appears to have been well thought of until it became an uncomfortable fact for those claiming global warming, and I've read many who are now trying to deny the temperature rises and falls in the last two thousand years and even to deny the peak ever existed in their mad scramble to prove hockey stick and CO2 rises fueling it, as if it's a problem. If there's more CO2 being pumped into the atmosphere and it really is capable of making our climate warmer then it is helping to delay our inevitable move into another major ice age. So why the panic?
We begin our investigation with a brief synopsis of the findings of Naurzbaev and Vaganov (2000), who developed a 2200-year proxy temperature record using cores obtained from 118 trees near the upper timberline in Siberia for the period 212 BC to AD 1996. This record revealed a cool period in the first two centuries AD, a warm period from AD 200 to 600, cooling again from AD 600 to 800, followed by the Medieval Warm Period from about AD 850 to 1150, the cooling of the Little Ice Age from AD 1200 though 1800, followed by the temperature rise that led to the development of the Modern Warm Period.
With respect to the late 20th-century portion of this latter warming (which must be truly unprecedented to provide any support at all for the climate-alarmist contention that it was CO2-induced), Naurzbaev and Vaganov state that it was "not extraordinary" and that "the warming at the border of the first and second millennia [AD 1000] was longer in time and similar in amplitude." What is more, they note that fluctuations in average annual temperature from the Siberian record agree well with air temperature variations reconstructed from Greenland ice cores, suggesting, in their words, that "the tree ring chronology of [the Siberian] region can be used to analyze both regional peculiarities and global temperature variations in the Northern Hemisphere," http://www.co2science.org/scripts/CO2ScienceB2C/subject/r/summaries/russiatemptrends.jsp
quote:
I'm not saying that CO2 isn't a greenhouse gas, I'm saying that a)it isn't proved that it is a driving force to massive global temperature changes
quote:I'm really sorry, I thought I'd explained it, I'm not agreeing that the levels have been increasing rapidly - that's your argument. Besides it not being proved to be a driving cause (it seems to me the sun, movement of the earth around it and geological events in it more important in the general fact of global warming and cooling over billions of years and in the more localised surface temperatures water vapour seems to play a much bigger part in changes), it could be an effect, that is coming mainly as a result of what the whole earth is going through (which then starts a cycle of plant and oxygen and giving back CO2 and so on), for example, methane (which breaks down into CO2) coming from natural geological activity appears to me more significant as a driving cause and CO2 then an affect; and of course, as before, I have yet to see any real correlation between CO2 levels and periods of warm only.
Well, I'm just confused then. If you're accepting that CO2 is a greenhouse gas, and that it's concentration in the atmosphere is increasing rapidly, what do you expect that increase in CO2 to do? Are you expecting CO2 to suddenly absorb and re-irradiate IR radiation differently? More CO2 can do nothing else but drive temperature higher. That's simple physics. What's a bit more complex, and therefore makes climate modelling more challenging, is how that temperature rise interacts with other parameters such as cloud formation that may amplify or suppress the drive to higher temperatures resulting from increased greenhouse gas concentrations.
quote:
b) data do not support this view, but contradict it. There is, therefore, no actual data to support this view.
And, c) I'm also saying that measurements given by the global warming theorists are corrupt.
quote:Why? Pro global warming campaigners say very nasty things about other great climate scientists and such whenever they produce data contradicting their pet theory..
And, I've seen no data that contradict the simple physics. Nor any data that contradict the more complex climate models that account for other influences. And, to call the worlds greatest climate scientists and atmospheric physicists (not to mention meteorologists and members of other relevant disciplines) corrupt beggers belief.
quote:
We can see that for a start because they use the end of a mini ice age from which to promote scare tactics ignoring the earlier hotter Medieval Warm and by ignoring the considerable amount of data showing that there was no increase in C02 as they describe.
quote:Shrug, depends on who you listen to...
Except that no serious scientist is doing what you're claiming. The so-called "mini-ice age" is well known, as is the Medievel warm period. What we're currently seeing is way above the changes observed in western europe then, even if those events had been global (they probably had wider effects in the northern hemisphere, maybe even south of the equator, but the most extreme changes were in western europe). Just so I'm not giving IPPC graphics, Wikipedia plots the temperatures associated with these events. That plot shows that at most, the warm period was 0.5°C warmer than the preceding period, with the little ice age less than 1°C cooler. That compares to current temperatures about 0.5°C warmer than the hottest part of the medieval warm period, and still rising. These older changes weren't, as you point out, associated with significant changes in greenhouse gas concentrations, instead being driven more directly by changes in solar activity and volcanism.
quote:But then, what does he know?
Warmer Days and Longer Lives
Thomas Gale Moore
Senior Fellow
Hoover Institution
Stanford University
History demonstrates that warmer is healthier. Since the end of the last Ice Age, the earth has enjoyed two periods that were warmer than the twentieth century. Archaeological evidence shows that people lived longer, enjoyed better nutrition, and multiplied more rapidly than during epochs of cold.
...
From around 800 A.D. to 1200 or 1300, the globe warmed again considerably and civilization prospered. This warm era displays, although less distinctly, many of the same characteristics as the earlier period of clement weather. Virtually all of northern Europe, the British Isles, Scandinavia, Greenland, and Iceland were considerably warmer than at present. http://www.stanford.edu/~moore/history_health.html
quote:
See above, first choose your base line.
Measuring present temperature change against the end of a mini ice age while ignoring the much hotter previous Medieval Warm is disingenuous.
quote:The point is that if one's base line is the Medieval Warm which many others show to have been much warmer than today then the IPCC chosen data is a different base line.
You still don't seem to be getting the point. Whatever you plot temperature against involves the selection of a baseline. Even if you just plotted actual temperature in °C you've still chosen the freezing point of water as a baseline. And, whatever baseline you chose doesn't affect the data you present. The plots of the past temperature presented by the IPCC and other scientific bodies include the Medieval warm period and little ice age (at least, those that cover that time period do). What's disengenuous about that?
quote:
Why would want to align yourself with such people?
quote:And I've learned something else new here, that scientists are prepared to ignore all conflicting data to prove their pet theory and that the current bandwagon based on IPCC data has drowned out all other voices in its desire to control the world...
Because I'm a scientist. I align myself with good science. And, I try my best to patiently correct people who are spouting bollocks.
quote:
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
And, to call the worlds greatest climate scientists and atmospheric physicists (not to mention meteorologists and members of other relevant disciplines) corrupt beggers belief.
quote:
“To capture the public imagination we have to offer up some scary scenarios, make simplified dramatic statements, and make little mention of any doubts we might have. Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between being effective and being honest.”
Climate scientist, global warming activist and former global cooling prophet Stephen Schneider (”Our fragile Earth,” Discover, October 1987, page 47) -
quote:The last scary movie, er, movement:
Because I'm a scientist. I align myself with good science. And, I try my best to patiently correct people who are spouting bollocks.
quote:So where's all the data supporting this gone now?
- The continued rapid cooling of the earth since WWII is in accord with the increase in global air pollution associated with industrialization, mechanization, urbanization and exploding population. — Reid Bryson, “Global Ecology; Readings towards a rational strategy for Man”, (1971) -
- This [cooling] trend will reduce agricultural productivity for the rest of the century — Peter Gwynne, Newsweek 1976 -
- There are ominous signs that the earth’s weather patterns have begun to change dramatically and that these changes may portend a drastic decline in food production - with serious political implications for just about every nation on earth. The drop in food production could begin quite soon… The evidence in support of these predictions has now begun to accumulate so massively that meteorologists are hard-pressed to keep up with it. — Newsweek, April 28, (1975) -
- This cooling has already killed hundreds of thousands of people. If it continues and no strong action is taken, it will cause world famine, world chaos and world war, and this could all come about before the year 2000. — Lowell Ponte “The Cooling”, 1976 -
- If present trends continue, the world will be about four degrees colder for the global mean temperature in 1990, but eleven degrees colder by the year 2000…This is about twice what it would take to put us in an ice age. — Kenneth E.F. Watt on air pollution and global cooling, Earth Day (1970) -
- In “The Cooling World,” April 28, 1975 issue of Newsweek proclaimed that scientists are “almost unanimous” in their concern that an “ominous” cooling trend “will reduce agricultural productivity for the rest of the century” and the world might be heading into another “little ice age.” -
quote:Well, if you use a phrase lack "poor science" in describing a theory, I assumed you were using 'theory' in the sense of scientific theory. And, for that matter 'poor science' in relation to standard assessments of the quality of scientific work. I'm not sure how anyone reading your posts could have assumed anything different.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
I was using 'theory' in a more general sense, no need to be quite so picky.
quote:But, by definition, science driven by any agenda other than seeking to understand the nature of physical reality isn't good science. If you're right that climate modelling is driven by some political agenda (or, indeed philosophical or religious) then you can't claim it to be good science. And, by definition, good science will consider all relevant data (that data may then be rejected for various reasons that relate to how well founded it is). If you're right that climate scientists deliberately disregard available data then, again, you can't claim that climate modelling is good science.
I'm not disputing climate modelling is good science, I'm certainly beginning to argue that science driven by an agenda which deliberately disregards available data can ever produce anything but garbage out.
quote:Sorry, I didn't have time to look over that yesterday, which is why I didn't reply to it. My first thoughts on that paper are that he doesn't seem to be saying anything that any half-decent glaciologist would already know. It quite often happens when someone outwith a particular discipline (though he does have extensive glaciology experience, he's primarily a radiological protection scientist) starts looking at published data from that discipline, as he hasn't spent years studying the field he doesn't realise that the obvious problems with data analysis haven't already been addressed and incorporated into the analysis, or at least into the uncertainties associated with the analysis. Second, I notice his one citation for "glaciologists attempting to prove the correction" is for his own individual work without any comment on whether others have tried to replicate his work.
Above I linked a page for you to read asking for your comments
Here it is again: http://www.warwickhughes.com/icecore/
quote:How do you know they didn't? It's old work, and as it presents apparently serious problems with the way ice-core data is analysed relevant to many different fields of study using that data must surely be known by scientists in the relevant disciplines. It's not my field and I don't have time to do any literature search to find out how it's been addressed by the glaciology community (and, doing a search outwith one's own discipline is difficult anyway), but I assume it has been addressed.
Why didn't the IPCC take this into consideration?
quote:The discussion about the "hockey stick" has been ongoing and lively since the publication of the 2001 IPCC reports (and, indeed, before that). I've not got time to got through recent IPCC publications just now, but I did read somewhere following the release of the summary a few weeks ago that the report includes considerable discussion of the "hockey stick", precisely because it has been so heavily investigated. The conclusion is that the evidence for the "hockey stick" is far stronger than against.
The IPCC claim that we now have the highest temperatures for two millenniums is also strongly disputed. I noticed on a wiki page that Mann wrote a letter in 2006 in which he brought attention to the title of his paper, is this backtracking now?
Mann's protagonist duo, McIntyre and McKitrick, have a web page here on the history of this argument: http://www.uoguelph.ca/~rmckitri/research/trc.html
quote:Yes, there were such variations in temperature. The IPCC acknowledges that. I still don't see why they're relevant. They're relatively small, and slow changing, climatic variations largely limited to one part of the global. The more recent changes are
Why should I believe the IPCC reports when the consensus pre the global warming theory from many and varied sources showed distinct variations in temperature, distinctive enough to be called the Medieval Warm followed by a mini ice age which only finished in the 1800's?.
quote:Those all sound like anthropological inputs to the environment to me. For the sake of this discussion I'm not sure if it makes that much difference why we're burning fossil fuels and otherwise polluting the globe. As it happens, I'm all in favour of taking steps to reduce the chances of wars - if that reduces fossil fuel use int he process then it's a bonus.
You keep mentioning this "last 50 years" - if there is anything of minute proportion in our atmosphere to be concerned about I think we should be wondering what atom bombs and nuclear testing and the casual use of such in conventional war heads as in the former Yugoslavia and Afghanistan and Iraq has had on us, the earth and its inhabitants - and, any idea how much of the CO2 was created by wars over the last century?
quote:Well, certainly climate change is the norm. The climate is a complex system of feedback loops subject to non-linear dynamics. As such, change is pretty much inevitable. The question is, are the current changes similar to other changes (such as the MWP and LIA) that have natural causes or not? The answer is clearly "not" - they're much larger than anything other than the end of a glaciation, much more rapid and at the wrong time to be associated with a natural process (a change of similar magnitude to the end of a glaciation when we're not in a glaciation is just not normal for the climate over the last several million years).
Anyway, my basic argument as it's developed here is that climate change is our norm, and our contribution no different in category than breathing out and farting of other animals populating the earth in the past and now gone forever after being a small blip in a very long period of time...
quote:OK, this is my very last comment about baselines. Because I simply don't have the time to keep banging my head against a brick wall. Go back to the plot from wikipedia I just linked to again. We could follow the IPCC and state that current temperatures are 0.4°C above the 1961-1990 mean. That in my mind is reasonable - it's a period for which we have good global coverage of instrumental measurements so don't need to rely on proxies, it's a period within the memory of most people (the "we don't get as much snow as when I were a lad" argument) and so is readily understandable to most people, and it's a period when the global climate was relatively stable.
The point is that if one's base line is the Medieval Warm which many others show to have been much warmer than today then the IPCC chosen data is a different base line.
quote:The data is still there on record. What has happened is that as more data was collected what at first appeared to be an increase in temperature through the late 1960s well within the uncertainties of the very slow downward trend turned out to be the first stages of a significant upward trend. In the early 70's that wouldn't have been obvious without a crystal ball. Even in the 1970's, good instrumental data on the global climate only went back a few decades so they were working with a less than perfect data set for the assessment of long-term changes.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
So where's all the data supporting this gone now?
Did they say anything about CO2 levels? Why were they so sure that temperatures had actually dropped in the twentieth century? Etc.
quote:OK, let me rephrase that. The Global Warming theory based on Mann's data is not even a theory constructed as it is on flawed data and altogether bad science for disregarding data contradicting the global warming scare fantasy.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Well, if you use a phrase lack "poor science" in describing a theory, I assumed you were using 'theory' in the sense of scientific theory. And, for that matter 'poor science' in relation to standard assessments of the quality of scientific work. I'm not sure how anyone reading your posts could have assumed anything different.
quote:Well then there's an awful lot of bad science going on in this field.
But, by definition, science driven by any agenda other than seeking to understand the nature of physical reality isn't good science. If you're right that climate modelling is driven by some political agenda (or, indeed philosophical or religious) then you can't claim it to be good science. And, by definition, good science will consider all relevant data (that data may then be rejected for various reasons that relate to how well founded it is). If you're right that climate scientists deliberately disregard available data then, again, you can't claim that climate modelling is good science.
quote:
[Re http://www.warwickhughes.com/icecore/Why didn't the IPCC take this into consideration?
quote:Er, 1997 old for such a 40 year study?! This conclusion utterly destroys the one thing you've been using here to brow beat me into accepting CO2 as the gun and man as the culprit pulling the trigger! ...I think it bad science to continue promoting your view without answering it since this contradicts the basic premise of an unprecedented rise of 80ppm etc., etc.
How do you know they didn't? It's old work, and as it presents apparently serious problems with the way ice-core data is analysed relevant to many different fields of study using that data must surely be known by scientists in the relevant disciplines. It's not my field and I don't have time to do any literature search to find out how it's been addressed by the glaciology community (and, doing a search outwith one's own discipline is difficult anyway), but I assume it has been addressed.
quote:Not what I've been reading, I think it's so far from off course from common findings from field data as to be thoroughly discredited, pretty obvious really when you compare his time line with already well established and continually being affirmed data, from tree, ice core samples and so on.
The discussion about the "hockey stick" has been ongoing and lively since the publication of the 2001 IPCC reports (and, indeed, before that). I've not got time to got through recent IPCC publications just now, but I did read somewhere following the release of the summary a few weeks ago that the report includes considerable discussion of the "hockey stick", precisely because it has been so heavily investigated. The conclusion is that the evidence for the "hockey stick" is far stronger than against.
quote:
Why should I believe the IPCC reports when the consensus pre the global warming theory from many and varied sources showed distinct variations in temperature, distinctive enough to be called the Medieval Warm followed by a mini ice age which only finished in the 1800's?.
quote:As above, this is so far off beam it's ridiculous. These changes were dramatic, the Medieval Warm Periiod created a considerably different climate in the Northern hemisphere to what we have now, it was hotter than now - stuff grew in the north where it doesn't grow today. It was followed by the Mini Ice Age which again radically changed the northern climate. We are still in the warm up coming out of the MIA and haven't yet reached the temperature of the MWP.
Yes, there were such variations in temperature. The IPCC acknowledges that. I still don't see why they're relevant. They're relatively small, and slow changing, climatic variations largely limited to one part of the global.
quote:Interesting graph, would you re-do the calculation taking out the disputed Mann line?
The more recent changes are
a) larger: recent temperature increases are approximately 1°C above a long term average I just estimated from this plot compared to the MWP of about 0.3°C above that and LIA about 0.5°C below.
b) much more rapid: the WMP peaked after about 400 years, the recent increase has only been going for about 100 years and is already twice the increase above that long-term mean.
c) global in extent: we're seeing definite warming in all parts of the world (with small parts bucking that trend due to particular geographical circumstances), the MWP and LIE were almost exclusively associated with Europe.
d) associated with a substantial increase in greenhouse gas concentrations, with associated mechanism for further warming, that were largely absent in the earlier MWP.
quote:
D. Deming, Science 1995“With the publication of the article in Science [in 1995], I gained significant credibility in the community of scientists working on climate change. They thought I was one of them, someone who would pervert science in the service of social and political causes. So one of them let his guard down. A major person working in the area of climate change and global warming sent me an astonishing email that said “We have to get rid of the Medieval Warm Period.”
quote:http://209.85.135.104/search?q=cache:-ZAQ_O_siyEJ:www.marshall.org/pdf/materials/316.pdf+hughes+and+Diaz&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=2
An uninformed reader would be forgiven for interpreting the similarity between the 1000-year temperature curve of Mann et al.and a variety of others also representing either temperature change over the NH as a whole or a large part of it (see the figure) as strong corroboration of their general validity …. Unfortunately, very few of the series are truly independent: There is a degree of common input to virtually every one, because there are still only a small number of long, well-dated, high-resolution proxy records. Briffa and Osborn, Science [1999]
quote:Strange attitude for a scientist. There's a wealth of information on that site - surely if there are genuine studies of interest to climatologists and they're not being taken into consideration then one needs to ask, why not?
I'm going to skip over a set of quotes and links to CO2science.org. Why? Because I can't be bothered to read stuff on a website for an organisation that well known to be neither objective nor impartial, nor even one that draws expertise from relevant disciplines. I guess I'd better justify that. CO2science is funded, in part at least, by oil companies; that certainly puts a big question mark over their impartiality and objectivity. Their scientific advisors include soil scientists, plant biologists, consultants to "energy and natural resource companies", plasma physicists, agriculturalists - but only one climatologist (and, he's basically just the guy that collects meteorological data for Oregon). Hardly the sort of expertise one would expect for an organisation that claims to speak authoritatively on the subject of climate change.
quote:Seems to me from what I've read on glaciation that such rises and drops are normal and what we're in now is the end of an interglacial in a continuing temperature drop from the peak it reached from its mid term (10ky), and this I'll also add to when I get to reply to your last post.
Those all sound like anthropological inputs to the environment to me. For the sake of this discussion I'm not sure if it makes that much difference why we're burning fossil fuels and otherwise polluting the globe. As it happens, I'm all in favour of taking steps to reduce the chances of wars - if that reduces fossil fuel use int he process then it's a bonus.[qb][quote]
But how much have wars contributed to the rise of CO2?
[QUOTE][qb]Well, certainly climate change is the norm. The climate is a complex system of feedback loops subject to non-linear dynamics. As such, change is pretty much inevitable. The question is, are the current changes similar to other changes (such as the MWP and LIA) that have natural causes or not? The answer is clearly "not" - they're much larger than anything other than the end of a glaciation, much more rapid and at the wrong time to be associated with a natural process (a change of similar magnitude to the end of a glaciation when we're not in a glaciation is just not normal for the climate over the last several million years).
quote:OK, and my last comment on baselines. Firstly, the general public is presented with the scare tactic of greatly increased temperatures since the Industrial Revolution and this is against a period which was dramatically colder in the major industrialised nations BECAUSE it was a MINI ICE AGE. If it had been insignificantly colder why would it have come to be called such a thing? Of course it is hotter now because we're still coming out of it.
OK, this is my very last comment about baselines. Because I simply don't have the time to keep banging my head against a brick wall. Go back to the plot from wikipedia I just linked to again. We could follow the IPCC and state that current temperatures are 0.4°C above the 1961-1990 mean. That in my mind is reasonable - it's a period for which we have good global coverage of instrumental measurements so don't need to rely on proxies, it's a period within the memory of most people (the "we don't get as much snow as when I were a lad" argument) and so is readily understandable to most people, and it's a period when the global climate was relatively stable.
But, we could just as easily say the current temperature is 1.2°C above the coldest part of the LIE. Or, 0.5°C above the warmest part of the MWP. Or, 14°C above the freezing point of water. It makes no difference, it's still the same temperature, still the same rate of increase.
quote:The observations of recent anomalous global warming is based on more than the findings of a single scientist. It's based on the observations of 1000s of scientists in many different countries, using different methods. Some of that data shows the recent warming to be stronger, other data shows it to be weaker. Some data shows features like the LIA and MWP more clearly than other data. All of that data is included in the assessments of what's happening - to do otherwise makes the whole exercise meaningless. To quote the IPCC SPM,
Originally posted by Myrrh:
OK, let me rephrase that. The Global Warming theory based on Mann's data is not even a theory constructed as it is on flawed data and altogether bad science for disregarding data contradicting the global warming scare fantasy.
quote:Does that sound like they're ignoring data that shows cooler periods for the LIA?
Average Northern Hemisphere temperatures during the second half of the 20th century were very likely higher than during any other 50-year period in the last 500 years and likely the highest in at least the past 1,300 years. Some recent studies indicate greater variability in Northern Hemisphere temperatures than suggested in the [2001 report], particularly finding that cooler periods existed in the 12 to 14th, 17th, and 19th centuries.
quote:I quite agree. But, which science is bad - the science that takes all the available data into consideration, or the oil-producer funded research that seeks to do little more than rubbish the majority of the data that shows an anomalous rise in global temperatures in recent years?
Well then there's an awful lot of bad science going on in this field.
quote:Ten year old studies are fairly old in a rapidly moving field. Especially studies that purport to demonstrate major procedural problems with the collection of primary data - such studies are always examined carefully by good scientists in the field. And, everything I've seen of the work of bodies such as the IPCC is that they're careful to assess all data, especially that data which contradicts their findings. The main criticism I've seen of the IPCC from climate scientists is that the recent report cuts out data that shows that the changes observed or predicted are going to be more extreme, rather than less.
Er, 1997 old for such a 40 year study?! This conclusion utterly destroys the one thing you've been using here to brow beat me into accepting CO2 as the gun and man as the culprit pulling the trigger!
quote:Then you really need to read some more. Try this Nature article about how the US NAS last year affirmed that the "hockey stick" is an accurate description of recent climate (even though it criticizes the way the graph has sometimes been used. Note that it says the hockey stick "has coloured the climate-change debate for nearly a decade". It really has been discussed to death. The way that the IPCC SPM puts it is "Paleoclimate information supports the interpretation that the warmth of the last half century is unusual in at least the previous 1300 years." ... ie: the hockey stick still holds true.
quote:Not what I've been reading
The discussion about the "hockey stick" has been ongoing and lively since the publication of the 2001 IPCC reports (and, indeed, before that). I've not got time to got through recent IPCC publications just now, but I did read somewhere following the release of the summary a few weeks ago that the report includes considerable discussion of the "hockey stick", precisely because it has been so heavily investigated. The conclusion is that the evidence for the "hockey stick" is far stronger than against.
quote:Why do you think that that's strange? Scientists are inundated with information. We simply can't read and assimilate everything, and apply common-sense filters to make the task manageable. The first filter is relevance - if you can't cope with papers in your own field, don't start trying to read tons of stuff from other fields. The second is the source - papers in peer reviewed journals are more likely to be good than other stuff, and some journals are better than others. In the case of the website in question, if their data is any good it'll be published in the peer reviewed journals that the top researchers in the field contribute to and read. If the studies there aren't being taken into consideration (and, it's quite possible that they are being considered) it's going to be largely because they're not good enough science to get into the top peer reviewed publications.
quote:Strange attitude for a scientist. There's a wealth of information on that site - surely if there are genuine studies of interest to climatologists and they're not being taken into consideration then one needs to ask, why not?
I'm going to skip over a set of quotes and links to CO2science.org. Why? Because I can't be bothered to read stuff on a website for an organisation that well known to be neither objective nor impartial, nor even one that draws expertise from relevant disciplines.
quote:Here, I'm interested in discussing the causes of climate change. I don't have to prove a theory, that's more than adequately done (to the extent that any theory can be 'proved') by 1000s of scientists in more relevant fields of study than mine.
What are you interested in here? To understand our climate or to prove a theory regardless of the supposed objectivity scientists claim to have?
quote:For the long term record, this plot from the 2001 IPCC Scientific Basis report shows the correlation between temperature and greenhouse gas concentrations over several glaciations and interglacials.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
you have yet to show me actual data about rises in CO2.
quote:I think that goes right to the heart of not only public confusion/misinformation about climiate change, but on many other scientific subjects that are politically charged--embryonic stem cells research comes to mind. The general public has a poor understanding of both the scientific method and the peer review process. Thus, when you have one or two people with PhD after their name on a talking heads show going off about ignored research, the Joe Public doesn't understand why that may be the case.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Why do you think that that's strange? Scientists are inundated with information. We simply can't read and assimilate everything, and apply common-sense filters to make the task manageable. The first filter is relevance - if you can't cope with papers in your own field, don't start trying to read tons of stuff from other fields. The second is the source - papers in peer reviewed journals are more likely to be good than other stuff, and some journals are better than others. In the case of the website in question, if their data is any good it'll be published in the peer reviewed journals that the top researchers in the field contribute to and read. If the studies there aren't being taken into consideration (and, it's quite possible that they are being considered) it's going to be largely because they're not good enough science to get into the top peer reviewed publications.
quote:Sometimes even practicing scientists have a poor understanding of the scientific method. You can succeed quite well in science working under an illusion that totally objective empirical data exist, or that a piece of data that contradicts a theory automatically falsifies that theory. Though, the peer review process is much more clearly understood by scientists - once you've had a paper rejected, or even accepted but subject to major correction, then you know how hard getting stuff published can be.
Originally posted by Siegfried:
The general public has a poor understanding of both the scientific method and the peer review process.
quote:Noiseboy - I haven't been deliberately avoiding answering anything, I have had a problem with finding the time to work on this and organise the wealth of material I've found which shows the real cause of 'global warming' - the general human proclivity to jump onto bandwagons to promote themselves or their pet causes, not that I'm disparaging pet causes per se, but it takes only a few to become the loudest voices moving whole populations into irrational and, our history is proof enough, often very evil acts - your assertion that world wide government participation is proof that global warming is a reality is tempting the use of examples which might encourage some to invoke Godwin's law, but, I haven't seen any real proof of such a creature as would fit 'conspiracy theory', which assumes some intelligence directing and manipulating everyone for its own purpose, but rather the more prosaic dumb and dumber scenario of various interests making use of an idea which in turn has generated its own energy in gathering momentum and still producing high levels of CO2 in the hot air promoting fear of the wrong threat which itself could be only farting in the wind of change which may rather be bringing global cooling.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Again, Myrrh has ignored the central and most crucial question of why we - the humble laypeople - should believe the analysis of someone who starting looking into this subject a week ago rather than the thousands of people who have dedicated their lives to studying the science.
Myrrh - I'll assume that your persistence in refusing to answer the point of any conspiracy between all the world's governments and scientists is because you have no answer. My suspicion is that - for whatever reason - you believe because you want to believe. For anyone to take you seriously, you need to demonstrate why the peer-review process is terminally faulty - if you do so, you qualify for the bonus of bringing down all science. Over to you.
quote:The misery, the tyranny, the abject failure... yes, I understand it well.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Though, the peer review process is much more clearly understood by scientists
quote:I'll ignore the jibes here, and focus on our mutual roles as lay people in the science. We can indeed look up the science ourselves, but (unless you are far more qualified in this field than I am) we must tread with care. It is possible that the overwhelming majority of climate scientists and unanimity of governmental advisors have got their collective intellectual knickers in a twist. But being that you and I have studied this subject for a few hours and others have for many thousands, I have to adopt a base position of intellectual humility until I see strong evidence of a systematic weakness.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
As a 'humble lay person' I take umbrage with your implication that makes us incapable of analysing the situation for ourselves, it's become very clear even after so short a foray into this murky world that there are also "thousands who have dedicated their lives to studying this" who give a completly different picture. This could only not matter to you if you have your own interest prompting the use of ear plugs every time you hear them.
quote:Here is how peer review works.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
What is this mythical beast "peer review" you claim supports your position?
quote:Indeed... and excuse the lack of modesty, but do make sure you read the preceeding post!
Originally posted by Clint Boggis:
While I'm hesitant to re-open the debate, UK readers of this thread may be interested in a programme on Channel 4 tonight called the The Great Global Warming Swindle.
I'll be watching with interest.
.
quote:We all have hunches, though.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
In summary, in a fight between independent scientists and the world's largest corporation, I have a hunch where any genuine conspiracy is likely to lie.
quote:Yet you keep linking the skeptical scientists with the oil industry! Is that not a sign of a conspiracy theorist at work?
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
The only answer - of course - is that it is a giant conspiracy.
quote:Totally not! You seem to have this somewhat naive view that if politicians are backing something, the something they are backing must actually be persuasive. Methinks you may forget that politicians are plugged into the mood of the electorate. They have votes to win. Granted, some politicians will be genuinely convinced of manmade global warming. Others will not but they don't want to signal their own political death.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Since in more recent years politicians of every persuasion now back the theory of ACC, isn't it likely that the arguments themselves have been persusasive?
quote:So what? What's the concern here for you? That the oil industry is squashed at all costs or that the people of Africa are lifted out of their tough and painful lives in the way that they themselves see fit?
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Funnily enough, the oil industry - who throughout the debates on ACC have consistently denigrated the arguments - stand to benefit from this position.
quote:Because she didn't.
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
They do not give a damn that Rachel Carson killed 50 million Africans and counting.
quote:DDT
However, DDT has never been banned for use against Malaria in the tropics. In many developing countries, spraying programs (especially using DDT) were stopped due to concerns over safety and environmental effects, as well as problems in administrative, managerial and financial implementation. Efforts were shifted from spraying to the use of bednets impregnated with insecticides. ...
Although the publication of Silent Spring undoubtedly influenced the U.S. ban on DDT in 1972, the reduced usage of DDT in malaria eradication began the decade before because of the emergence of DDT-resistant mosquitoes. ...
One old study that attempts to quantify the lives saved due to banning agricultural use of DDT, and thereby the spread of DDT resistance, has been published in the scientific literature: "Correlating the use of DDT in El Salvador with renewed malaria transmission, it can be estimated that at current rates each kilo of insecticide added to the environment will generate 105 new cases of malaria."[67]
quote:Yes, prescisely.
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
If we kill a billion people in the name of the precautionary principle can we comfort our selves that we SAVED two billion?
quote:I disagree. The argument is whether climate change is manmade in origin or not. The C4 programme was extremely good at highlighting the role various players have taken in communicating the message that it's all humanity's fault. It's not the first time a lobby has gained momentum and it won't be the last. But without the central tenet of the lobby, that climate change is manmade, the whole thing falls apart and there is no actual point in discussing 'what can be done' because there is nothing that can be done. If climate change is a solely natural phenomenon then my guess is we're helpless to stop it (assuming, of course, that stopping it would be a good idea - and 'only' scientific models tell us that it is).
Originally posted by JonahMan:
I think there are two different arguments going on here, and it's important that they aren't confused.
quote:It does? Where is it?
Originally posted by lapsed heathen:
The tech exists to deal with any problem the warming produces
quote:This is where you are mistaken.
Originally posted by lapsed heathen:
... everybody knows the danger ...
quote:As to what he really thinks, from a column for the Royal Society he wrote in 2006:
Carl Wunsch:
...the context was not at all what we had agreed on. Was billed as a balanced discussion of the threat of global warming As I began to see ads for the program, I realized I'd been duped.
quote:So Dave Marshall, I think the time for benefit of the doubt for Martin Durkin has passed.
Carl Wunsch:
It is probably true that most scientists would assign a very high probability that human-induced change is already strongly present in the climate system, while at the same time agreeing that clear-cut proof is not now available and may not be available for a long-time to come, if ever. Public policy has to be made on the basis of probabilities, not firm proof.
quote:You missed it because it wasn't there: it's you who keeps talking about conspiracy, not me! I've just mentioned a healthy suspicion of apparent political consensus. And yes, that's plenty enough, though possibly not for fundamentalists.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Littlelady, unless I missed it, you don't suggest how a conspiracy between all the world's governments might work. Being suspicious in a vague sense isn't really enough is it?
quote:"The entire world"
Sorry to repeat the question yet again, but what on Earth would make the governments and journalists of the entire world unite to tell a lie? Does China really need green public votes?
quote:By you're own admission you're not a scientist, Noiseboy. Therefore, how can you possibly say 'in fact' about the science? You simply believe one interpretation of the science, that's all. Same with your politicians, who largely are not scientists either, and the media nuts, and the majority of the UK population I should think as well.
It's worth pointing out a few more areas where the GCCS deceived its audience. It claimed that the troposphere was not warming - in fact it is
quote:
The Great Global Warming Swindle was so persuasive, yet so riddled with demonstrable falsehoods (never mind subjective personal opinion), that I've really got to write to Ofcom to look at all this.
quote:Fair enough.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
But alas, it does look like [director Martin Durkin] is up to his old tricks again. A graph of 20th Century global temperatures used in the programme and sourced as "NASA" appears to be a fabrication, and certainly not from NASA.
quote:Again, fair enough.
Likewise the sunspot graphs have been altered to fit the polemic, and crucial recent data that totally contradicts the theory omitted.
quote:You may be right. My point is, how can I find out for myself without having to take your word for it? Why should I believe you rather than someone who's created what you've acknowledged was a compelling TV programme for a national TV station?
So it is no exaggeration that the science case of the programme appears to be built on verifiable lies.
quote:Understood for a whole two years, huh? Great, then can you explain it in terms I can understand? What I picked up from the programme was that there's agreement about an 800 year lag between increased CO2 levels and global temperature rise. How then can we say that the current rise is down to increased CO2 resulting from human activity in the last, what shall we say for arguments sake, 200 years?
Fair enough, Dave Marshall, that the science involved in the relationship between CO2 and temperature is complicated (ironically exactly as Al Gore said in his film), but the temperature lag has been understood since at least 2004 and it entirely consistent with how CO2 warming is thought to occur.
quote:Noiseboy, you're making unsubstantiated and inflated claims. As I've said before, I don't know if you're right, only that you seem to very much want me and others to believe you because... you say so?
The least surprising development of the year is that some of the contributors are now disowning the programme. Carl Wunsch, Professor of Physical Oceanography and contributor to the GCCS:
[snipped one contributor's reservations and comments]
So Dave Marshall, I think the time for benefit of the doubt for Martin Durkin has passed.
quote:I'll be very interested in their response. Because as far as I've worked through this last post of yours, you have not demonstrated any falsehood and have offered nothing more by way of evidence than personal opinion you happen to agree with.
The Great Global Warming Swindle was so persuasive, yet so riddled with demonstrable falsehoods (never mind subjective personal opinion), that I've really got to write to Ofcom to look at all this.
quote:Remind me again. How exactly is anyone here supposed to know that for example Martin Durkin hasn't sacked you in the past for poor research work and you're not simply involved in a personal feud with him?
yet again (after breast cancer, GM crops and - oh, the environment), Martin Durkin has demonstrated that he is the master of deception.
quote:Actually, is this fair enough? If a TV programme clearly identifies a source for data when in fact it is not the source, aren't there legal implications? Just wondering ...
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
quote:Fair enough.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
But alas, it does look like [director Martin Durkin] is up to his old tricks again. A graph of 20th Century global temperatures used in the programme and sourced as "NASA" appears to be a fabrication, and certainly not from NASA.
quote:I doubt you could ever verify that. I haven't heard any opinion from Lichstenstein for instance or Lesotho ...
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
No, sayin "the whole world" is not melodramatic, it is entirely accurate.
quote:An opinion?
The programme called itself a "swindle", and said we are being told lies? What on Earth is that if not conspiracy?
quote:An agnostic position on the subject because "I'm not a scientist, and can't verify the science" has some logic to it. Though, the logical corollary to that is to trust those who can verify the science (in this case that'll be the IPCC and similar national bodies advising national governments).
Originally posted by Littlelady:
I don't happen to believe that humankind causes global warming. I have no idea what causes global warming, since I can't verify any of the science as I'm not a scientist.
quote:The problem is that governments (or at least this UK government) don't as far as I can tell have a good track record when it comes to making objective, best-science based decisions. For understandable if no less unwelcome reasons, pretty much all policy is heavily influenced by short-term political considerations. Will this, as part of our whole package, get us elected next time.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
the logical corollary to that is to trust those who can verify the science (in this case that'll be the IPCC and similar national bodies advising national governments).
quote:But I was answering Noiseboy on his particular point there, Alan, so of course my statement seems a little strange when taken out of its broader context.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:An agnostic position on the subject because "I'm not a scientist, and can't verify the science" has some logic to it. Though, the logical corollary to that is to trust those who can verify the science (in this case that'll be the IPCC and similar national bodies advising national governments).
Originally posted by Littlelady:
I don't happen to believe that humankind causes global warming. I have no idea what causes global warming, since I can't verify any of the science as I'm not a scientist.
To admit to not being able to assess the science, but then still take a position against that science seems somewhat strange.
quote:
What's not helping the debate is the moral tone adopted by the green side, this is not a moral issue, it's a problem to be dealt with.
quote:Thanks for this. It looks helpful.
Originally posted by Mr Clingford:
Here's a critique of the programme by John Houghton, Professor of Atmospheric Physics at the University of Oxford (1976-83), Director General and Chief Executive of the UK Meteorological Office (1983-91), Chairman of Scientific Assessment for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (1988-2002) and of the UK Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution (1992-1998) Critique
quote:It isn't a critique, Mr Clingford, it's a rebuttal (a critique is objective).
Originally posted by Mr Clingford:
Here's a critique of the programme by John Houghton,
quote:Is this supposed to convince us that modelling is actually more reliable a predictor of future events or to inform us that modelling has become more complex? How does more sophisticated technology make projections any more reliable? I think it's a fairly crucial point, in terms of the science, because the whole lobby is based on what continued global warming might do to the planet which is, in turn, based upon scientific modelling.
Climate modelling has developed enormously since then. Modern models include detailed coupling of the circulations of atmosphere and ocean and detailed descriptions of the interactions between all components of the climate system including ice and the biosphere. They have been tested thoroughly in their ability to reconstruct current and past climates.
quote:I'd agree with your sentiments there lapsed heathen. But on your point about cod disappearing ... hasn't it disappeared because we all over-fished it?
Originally posted by lapsed heathen:
What's not helping the debate is the moral tone adopted by the green side, this is not a moral issue, it's a problem to be dealt with. Blame is all very well for the "I told you so" brigade. It's no use to any practical solution.
quote:I missed this. It's a fine example of how things change!
Originally posted by lapsed heathen:
Electricity can be generated without co2 emissions, it's called nuclear.
quote:The crucial part of the quote is "ability to reconstruct current and past climates". That is, we can't test models against future climates because we only know those possible futures from the models themselves. We can, however, run the models with contemporary or recent solar energy influxes, atmospheric concentrations of gases etc and watch them predict the way the climate should work and compare that with actual observations. If a model reasonably accurately reproduces the current climate, and if run backwards reproduces past climates, then we can be fairly confident that they'll accurately model future climates. And, it's "climates" because they're run for different scenarios - eg: maintain current CO2 emissions, increase of decrease them by 20% in ten years etc.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
quote:Is this supposed to convince us that modelling is actually more reliable a predictor of future events or to inform us that modelling has become more complex? How does more sophisticated technology make projections any more reliable?
Modern models ... have been tested thoroughly in their ability to reconstruct current and past climates.
quote:I honestly don't know how you can fairly say this. I have researched a great many credible sources of peer-reviewed scientists and provided links and yet am rewarded with "it's too difficult". I even give a very simple potted precis of one particular issue. Is it really fair to THEN claim all I am saying is "believe me because I say so"? Even when, in this recent case, I quote the programme's own contributors when they say they have been duped by the programme makers it apparently does not count. And yet - somehow - it is me who is apparently being unfair.
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
This particular programme addressed questions I was actually asking. Noiseboy asserts the programme maker is "a master of deception" and mostly sidelines the actual scientific issues. I'm asking why I should agree with his take on all this. So far, his answer has really only been 'because I say so'.
quote:[Note - if the text of the original correspondance between WAG and Carl enters the public domain, I'll post it here.]
Mr. Steven Green
Head of Production
Wag TV
2D Leroy House
436 Essex Road
London N1 3QP
10 March 2007
Dear Mr. Green:
I am writing to record what I told you on the telephone yesterday about your Channel 4 film "The Global Warming Swindle." Fundamentally, I am the one who was swindled---please read the email below that was sent to me (and re-sent by you). Based upon this email and subsequent telephone conversations, and discussions with the Director, Martin Durkin, I thought I was being asked to appear in a film that would discuss in a balanced way the complicated elements of understanding of climate change--- in the best traditions of British television. Is there any indication in the email evident to an outsider that the product would be so tendentious, so unbalanced?
I was approached, as explained to me on the telephone, because I was known to have been unhappy with some of the more excitable climate-change stories in the British media, most conspicuously the notion that the Gulf Stream could disappear, among others. When a journalist approaches me suggesting a "critical approach" to a technical subject, as the email states, my inference is that we are to discuss which elements are contentious, why they are contentious, and what the arguments are on all sides. To a scientist, "critical" does not mean a hatchet job---it means a thorough-going examination of the science. The scientific subjects described in the email, and in the previous and subsequent telephone conversations, are complicated, worthy of exploration, debate, and an educational effort with the public. Hence my willingness to participate. Had the words "polemic", or "swindle" appeared in these preliminary discussions, I would have instantly declined to be involved.
I spent hours in the interview describing many of the problems of understanding the ocean in climate change, and the ways in which some of the more dramatic elements get exaggerated in the media relative to more realistic, potentially
truly catastrophic issues, such as the implications of the oncoming sea level rise. As I made clear, both in the preliminary discussions, and in the interview itself, I believe that global warming is a very serious threat that needs equally serious discussion and no one seeing this film could possibly deduce that.
What we now have is an out-and-out propaganda piece, in which there is not even a gesture toward balance or explanation of why many of the extended inferences drawn in the film are not widely accepted by the scientific community. There are so many examples, it's hard to know where to begin, so I will cite only one: a speaker asserts, as is true, that carbon dioxide is only a small fraction of the atmospheric mass. The viewer is left to infer that means it couldn't really matter. But even a beginning meteorology student could tell you that the relative masses of gases are irrelevant to their effects on radiative balance. A director not intending to produce pure propaganda would have tried to eliminate that piece of disinformation.
An example where my own discussion was grossly distorted by context: I am shown explaining that a warming ocean could expel more carbon dioxide than it absorbs -- thus exacerbating the greenhouse gas buildup in the atmosphere and hence worrisome. It was used in the film, through its context, to imply that CO2 is all natural, coming from the ocean, and that therefore the human element is irrelevant. This use of my remarks, which are literally what I said, comes close to fraud.
I have some experience in dealing with TV and print reporters and do understand something of the ways in which one can be misquoted, quoted out of context, or otherwise misinterpreted. Some of that is inevitable in the press of time or space or in discussions of complicated issues. Never before, however, have I had an experience like this one. My appearance in the "Global Warming Swindle" is deeply embarrasing, and my professional reputation has been damaged. I was duped---an uncomfortable position in which to be.
At a minimum, I ask that the film should never be seen again publicly with my participation included. Channel 4 surely owes an apology to its viewers, and perhaps WAGTV owes something to Channel 4. I will be taking advice as to whether I should proceed to make some more formal protest.
Sincerely,
Carl Wunsch
Cecil and Ida Green Professor of
Physical Oceanography
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
quote:Well, I'd be surprised if C4 totally misrepresented anyone on their programme simply because there would be legal ramifications to doing so. However, maybe the director/producer/whoever was daft enough to risk that, I don't know. Besides, the programme didn't claim what the alleged letter you copied out suggests it claimed. Reference to the oceans was just one part of a bigger picture it painted.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Littlelady, you apparently think it is hilarious that Ofcom would take fabrication of data and duping of interview suspects seriously, but call me naieve - I have hope.
quote:Ok, I've got that. However, I am still struggling with this. I know in extremely basic terms how models work. Data is inputted, people do some fancy IT stuff, and out come some graphs showing, well, whatever it is the model is supposed to show. (As I said, extremely basic terms!)
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
If a model reasonably accurately reproduces the current climate, and if run backwards reproduces past climates, then we can be fairly confident that they'll accurately model future climates.
quote:Yes, this was usefully explained in the C4 programme.
And, it's "climates" because they're run for different scenarios - eg: maintain current CO2 emissions, increase of decrease them by 20% in ten years etc.
quote:Huh???
Originally posted by 206:
quote:
What's not helping the debate is the moral tone adopted by the green side, this is not a moral issue, it's a problem to be dealt with.![]()
Amen and amen.
quote:As I've said before, I appreciate the background you provide. Yet in this instance, your post did not link, with one possible exception, to anything that supported your assertions.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
I have researched a great many credible sources of peer-reviewed scientists and provided links and yet am rewarded with "it's too difficult".
quote:Yes, this is what you posted:
I even give a very simple potted precis of one particular issue.
quote:You acknowledged it was brief, but it's hardly anything useful. I still don't know what is supposed to be initiating this warming process, given the 800 year lag before the CO2 we're producing now kicks in.
CO2 is a feedback agent that works in tandem with other warming. So if general warming begins through other sources (the ocean, say), CO2 amplifies.
quote:Yes, I think it is. That you believe it passionately does not mean it makes good sense to count the unsupported opinion of a poster on an internet discussion board as fact.
Is it really fair to THEN claim all I am saying is "believe me because I say so"?
quote:Well, you haven't quoted contributors. You've only quoted one contributor, who apparently allows you to post his emails on the internet.
Even when, in this recent case, I quote the programme's own contributors when they say they have been duped by the programme makers it apparently does not count. And yet - somehow - it is me who is apparently being unfair.
quote:You may be right - I'm not an expert. But to my untrained eye those discrepancies, while perhaps technically significant, do not look like any drastic misrepresentation when used to display what it purports to show. Particularly given the non-technical audience and the length of time it will be visible.
I don't know if it is too much or too little information, but someone has overlaid the programme's bogus global temperature graph claimed to be from NASA with NASA's real temperature graph (note - not only is the Y axis dataset manipulated, but the highlighted years in little white boxes don't even line up with the X axis).
quote:I see no 'swindle'. If Wunsch took this job without checking Durkin's track record, he was taking a risk. It seems from Mr Clingford's link at the top of the page that Martin Durkin's past is no secret. That's not to excuse deception, if that's what occurred, but I'd have thought it was a little idealistic to assume a programme-maker's priorities will coincide with those of a scientist.
By way of conclusion for the moment, Carl Wunsch has now written to the head of WAG TV about his appearance in the programme. I suggest everyone reads this, and reflects on exactly what swindle has been accomplished here.
quote:Excellent work, thanks Noiseboy, I wasn't aware of that letter.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
By way of conclusion for the moment, Carl Wunsch has now written to the head of WAG TV about his appearance in the programme. I suggest everyone reads this, and reflects on exactly what swindle has been accomplished here.
quote:But that wasn't a link to the letter but a link to the blog where the letter was quoted - it could be a letter written by anyone!
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
For today I'll just post the link to the Carl Wunsch letter which is here on posting 109.
quote:Yeah well the morality of the issue one thing, if we want to debate the moral responsibility of how we treat the earth, go ahead, debate till the cows come home. It won't do anything to alleviate the disaster facing us tho.
Originally posted by RuthW:
quote:Huh???
Originally posted by 206:
quote:
What's not helping the debate is the moral tone adopted by the green side, this is not a moral issue, it's a problem to be dealt with.![]()
Amen and amen.
If we really are bequeathing disastrous climate change to subsequent generations, how is it not a moral issue?
quote:As I thought was clear from the paragraph break in my post, I was not linking "earning his money" to Martin Durkin's dealings with Carl Wunsch.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
I absolutely agree that Carl Wunsch was naieve in assuming Martin Durkin's credibility, something he clearly now also feels and is of acute embarrasment to him. He'd obviously never been burned in this way before. But how this justified the director "earning his money" I have no idea.
quote:That sounds like a problem with the system rather than the airline companies though, doesn't it? If airlines weren't forced to actively maintain their slot then they wouldn't need to fly empty planes.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I can't believe this is the only example of airlines operating empty planes to retain airport take-off & landing slots.
quote:I agree - it's the sort of thing governments (or the airports at their behest) can and should do to solve if they are serious about reducing CO2 emissions. In this case the airlines are acting rationally within the system they find themselves in - even though objectively it's utterly mad.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
quote:That sounds like a problem with the system rather than the airline companies though, doesn't it? If airlines weren't forced to actively maintain their slot then they wouldn't need to fly empty planes.
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I can't believe this is the only example of airlines operating empty planes to retain airport take-off & landing slots.
quote:What it shows is the IPCC driving the Global Warming Hoax by getting rid of the MWP...
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:The observations of recent anomalous global warming is based on more than the findings of a single scientist. It's based on the observations of 1000s of scientists in many different countries, using different methods. Some of that data shows the recent warming to be stronger, other data shows it to be weaker. Some data shows features like the LIA and MWP more clearly than other data. All of that data is included in the assessments of what's happening - to do otherwise makes the whole exercise meaningless. To quote the IPCC SPM,
Originally posted by Myrrh:
OK, let me rephrase that. The Global Warming theory based on Mann's data is not even a theory constructed as it is on flawed data and altogether bad science for disregarding data contradicting the global warming scare fantasy.quote:Does that sound like they're ignoring data that shows cooler periods for the LIA?
Average Northern Hemisphere temperatures during the second half of the 20th century were very likely higher than during any other 50-year period in the last 500 years and likely the highest in at least the past 1,300 years. Some recent studies indicate greater variability in Northern Hemisphere temperatures than suggested in the [2001 report], particularly finding that cooler periods existed in the 12 to 14th, 17th, and 19th centuries.
quote:The IPCC's goal is to promote the idea that anthropogenic causes of CO2 are driving a climate change that is unusual and disastrous for mankind so actually admitting that the dramatic changes of the MWP and LIA existed, as shown in the Esper chart, destroys the foundational premise of the Global Warming Theory.
http://www.lavacap.com/climate1.htm 3. New reconstructions of climatic changes over the last millennium based on tree-ring data have been greatly improved and now demonstrate much greater climatic variability during this period than did the reconstruction used to construct the Kyoto protocols. Data summarized by Jan Esper from the Swiss Federal Research Institute, and others show that during historical events such as the “Medieval Warm Interval” and the “Little ice Age”, temperatures were warmer and colder, respectively, than they are today. This indicates that current temperatures remain within normal ranges experienced during past climatic cycles. The figure below shows the difference between the climate reconstruction of Jan Esper and M. E. Mann ( University of Virginia ). Mann’s data, utilized by the IPCC working group, specifically failed to identify the well-known climatic episodes mentioned above, and therefore, are inadequate to demonstrate the nature of climate change, either during the past millennium or over the last 150 years.
quote:
Well then there's an awful lot of bad science going on in this field.
quote:But the IPCC is shown to not take all available data into consideration.. Has in fact been shown to deliberately falsify data by exclusion while still claiming the scientists excluded contributed to its base. It's been proved to be dishonest, so what's its agenda?
I quite agree. But, which science is bad - the science that takes all the available data into consideration, or the oil-producer funded research that seeks to do little more than rubbish the majority of the data that shows an anomalous rise in global temperatures in recent years?
quote:
Er, 1997 old for such a 40 year study?! This conclusion utterly destroys the one thing you've been using here to brow beat me into accepting CO2 as the gun and man as the culprit pulling the trigger!
quote:Yeah right, you mean like Prof Reiter et al?
Ten year old studies are fairly old in a rapidly moving field. Especially studies that purport to demonstrate major procedural problems with the collection of primary data - such studies are always examined carefully by good scientists in the field. And, everything I've seen of the work of bodies such as the IPCC is that they're careful to assess all data, especially that data which contradicts their findings.
quote:"None of the studies cited has shown clear evidence that we can attribute climate changes to increases in greenhouse gases."
The main criticism I've seen of the IPCC from climate scientists is that the recent report cuts out data that shows that the changes observed or predicted are going to be more extreme, rather than less.
quote:
quote:Not what I've been reading
The discussion about the "hockey stick" has been ongoing and lively since the publication of the 2001 IPCC reports (and, indeed, before that). I've not got time to got through recent IPCC publications just now, but I did read somewhere following the release of the summary a few weeks ago that the report includes considerable discussion of the "hockey stick", precisely because it has been so heavily investigated. The conclusion is that the evidence for the "hockey stick" is far stronger than against.
quote:Again, you're using Mann's graph to argue this and he is obviously wrong, no Medieval Warm and no Mini Ice Age. So, as above re MWP and LIA, the hockey stick gives an unreal picture of the known climate during this 1300 year period. It can't be correct because actual facts contradict it.
Then you really need to read some more. Try this Nature article about how the US NAS last year affirmed that the "hockey stick" is an accurate description of recent climate (even though it criticizes the way the graph has sometimes been used. Note that it says the hockey stick "has coloured the climate-change debate for nearly a decade". It really has been discussed to death. The way that the IPCC SPM puts it is "Paleoclimate information supports the interpretation that the warmth of the last half century is unusual in at least the previous 1300 years." ... ie: the hockey stick still holds true.
quote:I think it's strange because I specifically referenced something for you to read as part of my argument.
quote:
I'm going to skip over a set of quotes and links to CO2science.org. Why? Because I can't be bothered to read stuff on a website for an organisation that well known to be neither objective nor impartial, nor even one that draws expertise from relevant disciplines.quote:
MyrrhStrange attitude for a scientist. There's a wealth of information on that site - surely if there are genuine studies of interest to climatologists and they're not being taken into consideration then one needs to ask, why not?quote:
Why do you think that that's strange? Scientists are inundated with information. We simply can't read and assimilate everything, and apply common-sense filters to make the task manageable. The first filter is relevance - if you can't cope with papers in your own field, don't start trying to read tons of stuff from other fields. The second is the source - papers in peer reviewed journals are more likely to be good than other stuff, and some journals are better than others. In the case of the website in question, if their data is any good it'll be published in the peer reviewed journals that the top researchers in the field contribute to and read. If the studies there aren't being taken into consideration (and, it's quite possible that they are being considered) it's going to be largely because they're not good enough science to get into the top peer reviewed publications.
quote:
What are you interested in here? To understand our climate or to prove a theory regardless of the supposed objectivity scientists claim to have?
quote:You keep mentioning these thousands of scientists and this supposed consensus, but you're simply repeating the IPCC propaganda which has been shown to ignore even the contributing scientists when they disagree with the IPCC agenda's misuse of their work.
Here, I'm interested in discussing the causes of climate change. I don't have to prove a theory, that's more than adequately done (to the extent that any theory can be 'proved') by 1000s of scientists in more relevant fields of study than mine.
quote:I think you missed the point Clint. The point in the programme was that the West is now pressurising those in the developing world to opt for the more expensive solar and wind power rather than cheaper fossil fuel based power because the West are linking the use fossil fuels to climate change. Yet meanwhile the West has been enjoying the benefits of cheap fossil fuel based power for years. The point concerned the hypocrisy of the West's position and the resulting pressure it placed upon developing nations. I thought that point was made very clearly. Of course it is a criticism of the pro-manmade climate change lobby, but it's a justifiable one imo and certainly one that needed making.
Originally posted by Clint Boggis:
AIUI, solar panels in places like that are used mostly because there is no mains power and limited by the cost of the equipment, not by climat issues.
quote:So it is not true that contrary data is repressed. What appears to happen is that, when it meets the same rigourous academic standards as any other, it is published. Then, under examination, it falls.
John Christy: Temperature Trends in the Lower Atmosphere - Understanding and Reconciling Differences:
Previously reported discrepancies between the amount of warming near the surface and higher in the atmosphere have been used to challenge the reliability of climate models and the reality of human-induced global warming. Specifically, surface data showed substantial global-average warming, while early versions of satellite and radiosonde data showed little or no warming above the surface. This significant discrepancy no longer exists because errors in the satellite and radiosonde data have been identified and corrected.
quote:You ask for proof and then link to an article written by David L Jones (who? not even a mention of where he works) publised on the website of a winery, of all places. Nevertheless, that article contains the proof you want. The first figure shows N Atlantic sediment over the last 12000 years, with more sediment corresponding to warmer weather (at least, warmer weather in the Arctic, the extent to which that corresponds to globally warmer weather is a seperate question). That show contemporary sedimentation to be higher than any time in the last 12000 years, ie: it's warmer than it has been for 12000 years. Then the second figure shows temperature anomalies, comparing Esper and Mann, over the last 1000 years or so. You'll notice that the contemporary temperature has an anomaly of +0.2°C. Esper has a peak at 1000AD (the MWP) with a temperature anomaly of approximately 0°C. ie: current temperatures are 0.2°C warmer than any other time in the last 1000 years, even using the data of Esper rather than Mann.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
If it is 'likely that it's hotter now than anytime in the last 1300 years, where's proof? ...
quote:
http://www.lavacap.com/climate1.htm
quote:
But part of his scientific audience is uneasy. In talks, articles and blog entries that have appeared since his film and accompanying book came out last year, these scientists argue that some of Mr. Gore’s central points are exaggerated and erroneous. They are alarmed, some say, at what they call his alarmism.
quote:And I keep thinking 'An Inconvenient Theory' would have been a more 'scientific' title.
“Nowhere does Mr. Gore tell his audience that all of the phenomena that he describes fall within the natural range of environmental change on our planet,” Robert M. Carter, a marine geologist at James Cook University in Australia, said in a September blog. “Nor does he present any evidence that climate during the 20th century departed discernibly from its historical pattern of constant change.”
quote:The reason that Gore doesn't 'mention' this is that it's irrelevant. The data points are within the natural range, but the rate of change in them isn't.
Originally posted by 206:
An article from the New York Times (may require free registration):
quote:
But part of his scientific audience is uneasy. In talks, articles and blog entries that have appeared since his film and accompanying book came out last year, these scientists argue that some of Mr. Gore’s central points are exaggerated and erroneous. They are alarmed, some say, at what they call his alarmism.quote:And I keep thinking 'An Inconvenient Theory' would have been a more 'scientific' title.
“Nowhere does Mr. Gore tell his audience that all of the phenomena that he describes fall within the natural range of environmental change on our planet,” Robert M. Carter, a marine geologist at James Cook University in Australia, said in a September blog. “Nor does he present any evidence that climate during the 20th century departed discernibly from its historical pattern of constant change.”
quote:Yes he dose, right at the beginning, even I got the thrust of his argument, 'this is the data so far, if we project things this is what is facing us'
“Nowhere does Mr. Gore tell his audience that all of the phenomena that he describes fall within the natural range of environmental change on our planet,” Robert M. Carter, a marine geologist at James Cook University in Australia, said in a September blog. “Nor does he present any evidence that climate during the 20th century departed discernibly from its historical pattern of constant change.”
quote:Noiseboy, didn't you watch the programme? It was never billed as an objective programme. It was billed as the alternative view. I have no idea why you keep going on about it as if it was biased - of course it was! That was the whole point of the programme! It was a rebuttal of the pro-manmade climate science lobby. That is what it was billed as and it fulfilled its promise in that respect.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
The lack of representation of the mainstream view
quote:Indeed. So with no voice for an alternate view (well, none that weren't edited out), Wunsch is quite right - it was propaganda. As long as it is understood as such, no problem. I do have a feeling though that some have taken it rather more seriously than that. Also, unless you heard the advance warnings, it certainly was not clear that this was propaganda within the programme itself - it masqueraded as a regular documentary, which IMHO was deceiving.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
Noiseboy, didn't you watch the programme? It was never billed as an objective programme. It was billed as the alternative view. I have no idea why you keep going on about it as if it was biased - of course it was! That was the whole point of the programme! It was a rebuttal of the pro-manmade climate science lobby. That is what it was billed as and it fulfilled its promise in that respect.
quote:Apologies, try this.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
PS: your link to Wunsch's article didn't work.
quote:Because the number of peer-reviewed scientists that disagree with the broad conclusions of ACC are infitessimal, as I pointed out. Of the contributors in the programme, some have never been peer-reviewed climate scientists (Nigel Calder, Nigel Lawson etc). Wunsch was deceived, and his views were not represented accurately. John Christy contradicted his own paper for who knows what reason. The remaining handful (if that) contrasts with the many hundreds of others who hold a different view.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
I'd be seriously shocked if professors at Harvard and the other scientists who contributed (with their credentials listed) did not involve themselves in the peer review process. Just because they don't agree with an aspect of the mainstream view does not mean they have not been subject to the same critical processes of other scientists. It's just that they don't agree Noiseboy. Why not simply accept that not all scientists actually agree? What's the problem with accepting that?
quote:What on earth are you talking about Noiseboy? On a programme that was billed as offering the alternative view you wanted the mainstream view included? We hear the bloody mainstream view every day! Why the fuck would anyone want to hear it on a programme billed as offering the alternative view? Some of us found it refreshing to finally hear the alternative view at last!
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
So with no voice for an alternate view (well, none that weren't edited out), Wunsch is quite right - it was propaganda.
quote:So what? Who cares how many or how few disagree? So long as they are allowed the freedom to express their view without censure or any other consequence not befitting a democracy valuing freedom of speech and press then I can't see why you get so riled about real, peer-reviewed scientists supporting another view.
I don't know what the exact number would be, but given the meta-analysis quoted above, it might be reasonable to guess a figure of 0.1% disagree with the conclusions.
quote:Individuals aren't peer reviewed. Journal reports, reviews, letters, grant applications and occasionally books might get peer reviewed - but individuals don't get stamped "reviewed and passed" - and I've not heard of contributions to TV programmes getting reviewed either.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
There were plenty of scientists on the programme, Noiseboy, and all of them will have been peer reviewed.
quote:Nah, really mdijon?
Originally posted by mdijon:
quote:Individuals aren't peer reviewed. Journal reports, reviews, letters, grant applications and occasionally books might get peer reviewed - but individuals don't get stamped "reviewed and passed" - and I've not heard of contributions to TV programmes getting reviewed either.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
There were plenty of scientists on the programme, Noiseboy, and all of them will have been peer reviewed.
quote:Sorry, I didn't watch the programme. And, I know you asked that earlier, I just didn't get round to saying I had nothing to say.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
Alan- I don't know about anyone else, but I'd be interested in hearing your view on the programme, if you watched it, since you are actually a scientist and you have (for your sins!) contributed to this thread.
quote:
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Maybe you're right Little Lady - we should have more propaganda films from extreme minority positions on prime-time TV.
quote:Well, I have pointed out that Carl Wunsch has disowned the programme, and that John Christy contradicted his own research. I have pointed out that the programme appeared to fabricate critical data and attribute it to NASA. I have pointed out that the director was previously censured for misrepresentaion by the ITC. All these points are factual. Sorry that you consider that none of this adds anything to the debate - I disagree. Please tell me why none of this counts and I have wasted hours of my life.
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
Noiseboy, what are you hoping to achieve here? You've brought your views to our attention, you've raised the profile of the global warning debate. But I don't think you've posted anything that's helped my understanding of the issues. Other contributors have, and some links have been useful, but you seem set on pushing and pushing... for what?
quote:You did seem to have the misconception that an individual could be peer reviewed from what you said - perhaps you didn't literally think that, but the implication was that an individual who'd experienced peer review was broadly qualified in some way. They aren't, and I thought that worth correcting.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
Nah, really mdijon?
quote:Such a profoundly societal changing conclusion based on what? That's the whole damn theory. Where was the proof?
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/archives/story.html?id=2f4cc62e-5b0d-4b59-8705-fc28f14da388Allegre's second thoughts
The Deniers -- The National Post's series on scientists who buck the conventional wisdom on climate science
LAWRENCE SOLOMON, Financial Post
Published: Friday, March 02, 2007
Claude Allegre, one of France's leading socialists and among her most celebrated scientists, was among the first to sound the alarm about the dangers of global warming.
"By burning fossil fuels, man increased the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere which, for example, has raised the global mean temperature by half a degree in the last century," Dr. Allegre, a renowned geochemist, wrote 20 years ago in Cles pour la geologie.." Fifteen years ago, Dr. Allegre was among the 1500 prominent scientists who signed "World Scientists' Warning to Humanity," a highly publicized letter stressing that global warming's "potential risks are very great" and demanding a new caring ethic that recognizes the globe's fragility in order to stave off "spirals of environmental decline, poverty, and unrest, leading to social, economic and environmental collapse."
quote:To his surprise? What, he didn't notice that the greater rise of the last hundred years was in the first half when there was minimal global industrialisation and that rise itself was measured against the Mini Ice Age preceding it and no data at the time showed evidence that C02 levels drove temperature? Etc., etc.
With a wealth of data now in, Dr. Allegre has recanted his views. To his surprise, the many climate models and studies failed dismally in establishing a man-made cause of catastrophic global warming. Meanwhile, increasing evidence indicates that most of the warming comes of natural phenomena. Dr. Allegre now sees global warming as over-hyped and an environmental concern of second rank.
quote:..the Sola Scriptura argument.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
OK, so peer review says I should have believed that Global Warming Theory was a fact because a self-collection of scientists 20 years ago decided it was and got themselves printed? Eh? Isn't that the realm of faith?
quote:I'm not sure which post he was reading, either.
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
What an interesting definition of "peer reviewed" you are working with there, Myrrh.
quote:What I said was you haven't helped my understanding of the issues. What you've done (and continue to do) is lift errors out of an opposing view and infer from them that you view must be right.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
I have pointed out that Carl Wunsch has disowned the programme, and that John Christy contradicted his own research. I have pointed out that the programme appeared to fabricate critical data and attribute it to NASA. I have pointed out that the director was previously censured for misrepresentaion by the ITC. All these points are factual ... Please tell me why none of this counts and I have wasted hours of my life.
quote:Um, that's quite a claim. Are you sure 99-100% of climate scientists hold this opinion? You're not just associating a very big percentage with a very broad category to give the impression that your view must be right? Oh, and what exactly is the opinion you're referring to?
I have linked all the science arguments that mainstream scientists have debunked. Although this is opinion, it is the opinion of an estimated 99-100% of climate scientists.
quote:What does that mean? If ACC is Accelerated Climate Change, then that's hardly controversial. What's causing it, and what if anything can be done, is the issue. My impression is that there is little agreement about that because how ACC works is not yet well understood.
I have consistently pointed out that the IPCC report has ACC at greater that 89% probablility, not fact.
quote:Huge disagreement about what? As far as I can tell, there is no broad agreement in the scientific community about what action to take because the processes of ACC are complex and still being worked out.
a great deal of people seem to believe that there is huge disagreement in the scientific community. The result is that genuine action on climate change will be much harder to acheive.
quote:But of course it's only everyone else's arguments and reservations that are 'propaganda', never your own.
People are absolutely free to believe whatever they like to comfort them, but they shouldn't delude themselves that science backs them up. Only propaganda will do that
quote:No, the mainstream view is (almost certainly) right. Which is...
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
What I said was you haven't helped my understanding of the issues. What you've done (and continue to do) is lift errors out of an opposing view and infer from them that you view must be right.
quote:...that mankind is the primary driver of Anthropogenic (man induced) climate change (ACC). I base the guesswork stat on 0% of 928 papers not contradicting the view that ACC is correct. (just to be clear, we are talking about actual bone fide climate scientists here).
Are you sure 99-100% of climate scientists hold this opinion? You're not just associating a very big percentage with a very broad category to give the impression that your view must be right? Oh, and what exactly is the opinion you're referring to?
quote:No, the A in ACC is anthropogenic. Otherwise dealt with above. Within the science, there is a consensus. Science will always improve and modify, but I refer you to all the earlier quoted statistics to assess the degree of certainty. As Carl Wunsch said, policy must be directed by probability, not certainty which is rarely (if ever) possible with science. ACC is extremely probable.
If ACC is Accelerated Climate Change, then that's hardly controversial. What's causing it, and what if anything can be done, is the issue. My impression is that there is little agreement about that because how ACC works is not yet well understood.
quote:I've provided data on meta-analysis of climate science peer reviewed paper to support my position. Do you have anything to support yours that there is actually a much larger number of contrarian climate scientists? There are a few (and more than a few bogus lists), but as a percentage they appear to be minute.
As far as I can tell, there is no broad agreement in the scientific community about what action to take because the processes of ACC are complex and still being worked out.
Any 'genuine action' now is going to be based at best on informed guesswork and at worst on commercially or politically inspired speculation. Hardly good grounds for taking far-reaching decisions unless the outcomes will have positive value in other ways. Which for me, for example, minimising environmental pollution would have.
The question is how high a priority decision-making in this area should give climate change. Your approach seems to be stuff any other considerations. That to my mind is a stupid view, and one that perhaps more people than you realise recognise as such.
quote:Peer reviewed science is not propaganda.
But of course it's only everyone else's arguments and reservations that are 'propaganda', never your own.
quote:I guess you mean all world governemnts agreeing with ACC. Each country sends delegates to the IPCC. On publication of the FAR, all governments endorsed the conclusion that ACC is very likely.
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
Now THAT'S stupid. It's called politics. I'm so glad that the US and North Korean and Iranian and Pakistani governments all agree on something. Citation please.
quote:Oh right.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
the mainstream view is (almost certainly) right.
quote:And you don't see any problem with translating 'not contradicting' as 'agrees with'. If I remember correctly, that report breaks down the figure in a way that presents a somewhat more nuanced, and to my mind fairer, interpretation.
I base the guesswork stat on 0% of 928 papers not contradicting the view that ACC is correct.
quote:'Policy' is a matter for public debate in which such probabilities are reflected in scientific input. But scientists (hopefully) inform that debate; they should never direct it. That in a democracy is the remit of elected government who I hope will take all relevent factors into consideration.
As Carl Wunsch said, policy must be directed by probability, not certainty which is rarely (if ever) possible with science.
quote:Unbelievable. You seriously think 'stuff any consideration other than climate change' (what you've quoted me as saying) is not a stupid view? That any world government is going to ignore for example cost implications? Get real.
have still yet to hear a theory from ANYONE as to why all world governments now have, in your view, a stupid view. Isn't it a bit odd if everyone else is stupid and you are not?
quote:No, I was referring to your posts here. But that's my lot for now on this.
Peer reviewed science is not propaganda.
quote:Don't you have a daughter knocking around here? Maybe I misremember?
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
Mr C. You will have to take that up with my heirs, I'll be 92 then. But done. I might have been twinkled by then, but don't know if I want to stoop to Hell to collect or pay up.
quote:I looked at what I said and all I saw was the same lazy language others have used. I assumed everyone contributing here knew what was meant by the peer review process; I didn't think I'd have to be pedantic about it. I can't remember a time when I didn't know what it meant.
Originally posted by mdijon:
quote:You did seem to have the misconception that an individual could be peer reviewed from what you said
Originally posted by Littlelady:
Nah, really mdijon?
quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
89% of all known scientists use AGW (probably - sponsored by Carlsberg)! You know it makes sense.
quote:I also thought this meant that you felt that there was little scientific agreement on the causes of climate change, so I don't think you should be too hard on NoiseBoy for thinking the same. I would also say that in general the causes of Climate Change in general are pretty well understood - with uncertainty round the edges (hence the rather large range for the predicted figure for temperature rise if we carry on as we are, for example).
What does that mean? If ACC is Accelerated Climate Change, then that's hardly controversial. What's causing it, and what if anything can be done, is the issue. My impression is that there is little agreement about that because how ACC works is not yet well understood.
quote:That was me, JonahMan, not DaveLarge, but yes, I was getting a little short and could have been clearer. I only joined the thread when the Great Global Warming Swindle discussion began, so I had the ACC acronym wrong and have no doubt missed informative contributions from Noiseboy and others.
Originally posted by JonahMan:
DaveLarge, when I readquote:I also thought this meant that you felt that there was little scientific agreement on the causes of climate change, so I don't think you should be too hard on NoiseBoy for thinking the same.
What does that mean? If ACC is Accelerated Climate Change, then that's hardly controversial. What's causing it, and what if anything can be done, is the issue. My impression is that there is little agreement about that because how ACC works is not yet well understood.
quote:Actually, I don't think it was just a language issue. Pointing to a television programme and saying "plenty of those scientists will have been peer reviewed" seems to take too much on faith, to me, and to take too broad a view of the credibility generated by the process.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
I looked at what I said and all I saw was the same lazy language others have used.
quote:
Two eminent British scientists who questioned the accuracy of a Channel 4 programme that claimed global warming was an unfounded conspiracy theory have received an expletive-filled tirade from the programme maker.
In an e-mail exchange leaked to The Times, Martin Durkin, the executive producer of The Great Global Warming Swindle, responded to the concerns of Dr Armand Leroi, from Imperial College, and Simon Singh, the respected scientific author, by telling them to “go and f*** yourself”.
quote:
Dr Leroi was particularly concerned about a segment that featured a correlation between solar activity and global temperatures, which was based on a 1991 paper in the journal Science by Eigil Friis-Chris-tensen. He was surprised that the programme failed to mention that while these findings look convincing superficially, they have been revealed as flawed by subsequent research by Peter Laut
quote:I'm increasingly inclined to believe subtlety and skepticism aren't properly valued on this thread.
Now to return to our regular scheduling of lies, damn lies and statistics! (oh, and the odd inconvenient truth).
quote:But you didn't post the best bit, Mr Clingford! The best bit just has to be this from Durkin:
Originally posted by Mr Clingford:
Here's an article from The Times which has more on this debate.
quote:Great line!
“You’re a big daft cock.”
quote:I don't care what you think. It was a language issue, period.
Originally posted by mdijon:
Actually, I don't think it was just a language issue.
quote:Depends what value you assign to them doesn't it? And how you then measure them.
Originally posted by 206:
quote:I'm increasingly inclined to believe subtlety and skepticism aren't properly valued on this thread.
Now to return to our regular scheduling of lies, damn lies and statistics! (oh, and the odd inconvenient truth).
quote:Now that's a disclaimer: you get to say people who value something you don't comprehend are lying hypocrites.
As for subtlety, too often it's just hypocrisy and dishonesty in disguise. Also, I am as subtle as a half brick between the eyes, so am ill-qualified to spot it!
quote:I'm sorry you misunderstood my jokey attempt at gentle self-mockery there, 206. Was it too subtle for you?
Originally posted by 206:
quote:Now that's a disclaimer: you get to say people who value something you don't comprehend are lying hypocrites.
As for subtlety, too often it's just hypocrisy and dishonesty in disguise. Also, I am as subtle as a half brick between the eyes, so am ill-qualified to spot it!
Well done.
quote:Could be; could be it was too crude.
I'm sorry you misunderstood my jokey attempt at gentle self-mockery there, 206. Was it too subtle for you?
quote:Ah, I think you comprehend the point I made initially.
Originally posted by 206:
quote:Could be; could be it was too crude.
I'm sorry you misunderstood my jokey attempt at gentle self-mockery there, 206. Was it too subtle for you?
How can you assign a value to something like that?
quote:peronally I don't happen to believe that 2+2=4. I have no idea 2+2=, since I'm not a mathematician.
I don't happen to believe that humankind causes global warming. I have no idea what causes global warming, since I can't verify any of the science as I'm not a scientist.
quote:As you've pointed out it is impossible to determine who is 'right' at this point in time; it may remain impossible even decades from now.
Given that CC is complicated, with many inputs and complex interactions between inputs and effects, (not to mention a range of possible outcomes) how should people decide who is right?
quote:206, do you ascribe this view to Creationism also? Evolution is, of course, only a theory. Also, are you arguing that science should never inform political policy? Are you against, for example, the restriction of human freedom that is entailed by having to wear seatbelts in cars? In some accidents, of course, you would be safer without one as you could be flung clear of wreckage. It is a matter only of probability that they might save your life.
Originally posted by 206:
As you've pointed out it is impossible to determine who is 'right' at this point in time; it may remain impossible even decades from now.
Which is all I've ever tried to say regarding this debate and which, I maintain, is continually inadequately acknowledged by many of the 'proponents' of ACC who are perfectly willing to restrict human freedom on the off chance they're 'correct' both in their diagnosis and prescription of the 'problem'.
My concern remains a metaphysical libertarian one much more so than a 'scientific' one and the remarkable allegiance to 'science' some demonstrate continues to surprise and frighten me.
Yeah, science is a wonderful thing overall but it remains about 'theory', not 'fact', no matter how many internet links someone dredges up.
That subtlety seems to have been lost somewhere.
quote:You are either misunderstanding or misquoting me, 206. I do not think it is impossible to tell who is 'right' about ACC, in the broadest sense of the two camps which are 1) Humans emitting greenhouse gases are the main cause of the rapid changes in climate we are seeing at the moment 2) it isn't humans, it's something else.
Originally posted by 206:
As you've pointed out it is impossible to determine who is 'right' at this point in time; it may remain impossible even decades from now.
quote:Human freedoms are not being restricted on the 'off-chance' that climate scientists are right. It is only now, when the evidence is so clear that even the USA (not noted in the past for its allegiance to green issues) has been forced to admit it that any really significant action is being proposed. I would also question which freedoms being restricted? Are they privileges or freedoms anyway? And what about the freedom of others (for example the freedom not to have your country inundated by floods due to the actions of others)? Of course there has to be a debate about what should be done to minimise the effects and if possible reverse climate change; and of course there needs to be further work done to develop even better models of how the climate works, including investigating all the possible causes of climate change in as much detail as possible.
Which is all I've ever tried to say regarding this debate and which, I maintain, is continually inadequately acknowledged by many of the 'proponents' of ACC who are perfectly willing to restrict human freedom on the off chance they're 'correct' both in their diagnosis and prescription of the 'problem'.
My concern remains a metaphysical libertarian one much more so than a 'scientific' one and the remarkable allegiance to 'science' some demonstrate continues to surprise and frighten me.
quote:I don't think this comment is accurate. You do understand that theories are not just ethereal things floating about in scientists' heads but are checked against facts and measurements don't you? And if the theory isn't borne out by these facts, the theory is junked or modified. I quite agree that science (or truth) is not about internet links - heck, anyone can generate a web page with any content they like - but it is about the provenance behind them.
Yeah, science is a wonderful thing overall but it remains about 'theory', not 'fact', no matter how many internet links someone dredges up.
That subtlety seems to have been lost somewhere.
quote:But as I understand it the actual change as a percentage of gas in the atmosphere is a very small number.
Originally posted by JonahMan:
For example, you do understand that people have measured the proportion of CO2 in the atmosphere and have noted that it has increased?
quote:But in terms of actual temperature difference on an infinitessimaly smaller scale.
CO2 in air acts in the same fashion as the glass in the greenhouse.
quote:There may well be broad agreement about these 'facts' as far as they go. What I, and perhaps others, are concerned about is that when presented like this, they give the impression of an effect that is massively disproportionate to the facts because of the illustrations you use.
All facts, with with a theory which explains existing observations and predicts others in the future.
quote:Yes, 'evolution' is only a theory. My understanding is that the hypothesis is very well supported and provides much hueristic value regarding natural selection of entities already in existence but doesn't speak at all to what might be called the 'creation'.
do you ascribe this view to Creationism also? Evolution is, of course, only a theory.
quote:No. Dude, I'll give you this much: you are utterly relentless.
Also, are you arguing that science should never inform political policy?
quote:Yes. I understand the odds and it's my business whether I wear one or not, not some do-gooder's.
Are you against, for example, the restriction of human freedom that is entailed by having to wear seatbelts in cars? In some accidents, of course, you would be safer without one as you could be flung clear of wreckage. It is a matter only of probability that they might save your life.
quote:Whatever.
So it is entirely innacurate to call this an "off chance".
quote:'not allowed to buy conventional light bulbs' is a ridiculously simplistic strawman but you're certainly entitled to your opinion about your children's civil liberties.
I personally feel that the civil liberites of my children will be more infringed by a much more dangerous world caused by ACC that my own liberties are right now if I am not allowed to buy conventional light bulbs.
quote:Actually there is a major cultural difference here between the US and the UK - here it has been the law for many many years to wear seatbelts.
Originally posted by 206:
I understand the odds and it's my business whether I wear one or not, not some do-gooder's.
quote:I think you have a new meaning for the word "subtlety" here.
Originally posted by 206:
That subtlety seems to have been lost somewhere.
quote:What about speeding?
Originally posted by 206:
Yes. I understand the odds and it's my business whether I wear one or not, not some do-gooder's.
quote:This is one of the many areas where the GCCS did not tell anything like the whole story.
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
But as I understand it the actual change as a percentage of gas in the atmosphere is a very small number.
quote:It's an increase of about 25-30%, hardly a small number.
Originally posted by Dave Marshall:
quote:But as I understand it the actual change as a percentage of gas in the atmosphere is a very small number.
Originally posted by JonahMan:
For example, you do understand that people have measured the proportion of CO2 in the atmosphere and have noted that it has increased?
quote:The total net anthropogenic greenhouse effect has, at present, a radiative forcing of +1.5W/m². Given that the natural greenhouse effect is about 150 W/m², that's an increase in of about 1% in the amount of solar energy trapped by the atmosphere. That energy is going to increase air, sea and land temperatures, melt ice and provide extra power to weather systems.
quote:But in terms of actual temperature difference on an infinitessimaly smaller scale.
CO2 in air acts in the same fashion as the glass in the greenhouse.
quote:Alan,
That energy is going to increase air, sea and land temperatures, melt ice and provide extra power to weather systems.
quote:Ah, well, Fred, if you're going to use your very first post to mock someone, it might be wise to do it properly. I'm sure we can all see the link between basic numeracy and, what, advanced physics?
Originally posted by fredwa:
and to Littlelady for this gem
quote:peronally I don't happen to believe that 2+2=4. I have no idea 2+2=, since I'm not a mathematician.
I don't happen to believe that humankind causes global warming. I have no idea what causes global warming, since I can't verify any of the science as I'm not a scientist.
Fred
quote:But I'm sure you understand it perfectly.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
The total net anthropogenic greenhouse effect has, at present, a radiative forcing of +1.5W/m². Given that the natural greenhouse effect is about 150 W/m², that's an increase in of about 1% in the amount of solar energy trapped by the atmosphere.
quote:During the 20th century sea-levels rose by approximately 15cm (6 inches), most of that rise being in the last quarter of the century. Further rises of an additional 20-30cm in the 21st century are almost certain, 40-50cm are possible. These are estimates based on thermal expansion of the oceans and slow melting of continental ice sheets (for good reasons known by Archimedes, melting ice floating on water doesn't raise sea levels - try it with an ice cube or two in a glass of water). If the continental ice sheets break apart and melt more rapidly (eg: water getting under the glaciers allowing them to flow more quickly) then they could melt much more quickly and all bets are off - several metres of sea level rise are then possible.
Originally posted by 206:
quote:Alan,
That energy is going to increase air, sea and land temperatures, melt ice and provide extra power to weather systems.
In your estimation, how much of a rise in sea levels can be expected?
quote:Is it possible to assign a level of probability to that happening?
If the continental ice sheets break apart and melt more rapidly (eg: water getting under the glaciers allowing them to flow more quickly) then they could melt much more quickly and all bets are off - several metres of sea level rise are then possible.
quote:Now, this is the kind of talk that has often been lacking in this whole debate (everywhere, not just on here). According to my bro (himself a scientist of the published, peer reviewed, Phd variety) science is very often about probabilities. If only people spoke in probabilities on this particular subject then personally I could listen to them. Alas, it just doesn't seem to happen. There seems to be so much dogma about.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
science can rarely deal with absolute certainty, but it can with probability.
quote:But the IPCC report does talk in probabilities.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
quote:Now, this is the kind of talk that has often been lacking in this whole debate (everywhere, not just on here). According to my bro (himself a scientist of the published, peer reviewed, Phd variety) science is very often about probabilities. If only people spoke in probabilities on this particular subject then personally I could listen to them. Alas, it just doesn't seem to happen. There seems to be so much dogma about.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
science can rarely deal with absolute certainty, but it can with probability.
quote:Littlelady, please please believe me when I say I have absolutely every sympathy with you on this. But as I was thinking about it, I wonder if this doesn't hit exactly on a lot of the disagreements on this thread.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
My mental maths is fine, but I'll never understand this in a million years: {followed by difficult Alan Cresswell quote}
quote:Good question.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
What do we do about stuff we don't understand?
quote:In terms of academic education, I'm fairly bright too: achieved A grades at both English A Levels, graduated 2:1 Honours in English Language & Literature from a very well respected redbrick university. However: physics lasted two years at school, as did chemistry. Biology managed four years, abandoned because back then it was O Levels and dissection was still required (I was just too damn squeamish). As for maths. Numeracy is fine, but I wasn't even entered for maths O Level and I only kept it up for the whole of my time at high school because it was mandatory. The only science subject I came close to being good at was biology and that is because biology talks in solid terms. A rat's giblets are a rat's giblets. You don't need some three foot long meaningless formula to understand that. Abstract thinking is not in my skill set.
I like to think I'm fairly bright - I passed A level physics and everything.
quote:You read me correctly here.
Now I may read you wrong, but I sort of get the impression that if you hear two apparently qualified people telling you different things about something you personally can't understand, you will conclude that any reasonable adjudication by yourself is impossible.
quote:This isn't correct. I think you might be projecting.
Until everyone agrees on everything, there is nothing more to be done.
quote:Sarcastic?
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
How does that sound?
quote:I think the problem is you want us to say we agree with you. For what I'm not quite sure, but it feels a bit like being doorstepped by JWs - my usual response is 'so what do you want from me?' I've appreciated both your's and Alan's last few posts, but I don't think it's in your power to provide what would make me respond in the way you seem to want.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Marvellous. I suppose a one line summing up of everything I've written over the last 6 pages would be - there is a broad consensus among climate scientists that there is a high probability that mankind is the primary driver behind recent global warming. How does that sound?
quote:Littlelady, this honestly, honestly is not my intention. I'd be seriously interested to know your thoughts on the statement though. My point was that I for one have always tried to put this debate within the context of strong probability, not certainty.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
quote:Sarcastic?
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
How does that sound?
quote:I think you've forgotten your own OP, Noiseboy. Here's a quote from it:
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
My point was that I for one have always tried to put this debate within the context of strong probability, not certainty.
quote:That sounds pretty much like a statement of certainty to me! And you (and others) have made plenty more on this thread and on its predecessors.
The IPCC represents the top 2,500 climate scientists in the world, and thus this represents a consensus of the entire field. The findings have been endorsed by (AFAIK) all governments worldwide, including America, whose right wing Bush administration called the science now "beyond doubt".
quote:Yes, this lead the TV news this morning also (which is where I first learned of it). My first thought was "At last! Some honesty!" I read the link on the Beeb's website and there were a number of points made in the report that I've made on these boards. Such as:
An interesting lead BBC story this morning for the sceptical.
quote:and
They think catastrophism and the "Hollywoodisation" of weather and climate only work to create confusion in the public mind.
quote:and indeed
They argue for a more sober and reasoned explanation of the uncertainties about possible future changes in the Earth's climate.
quote:and of course this
Professor Hardaker also believes that overblown statements play into the hands of those who say that scientists are wrong on climate change - that global warming is a myth.
quote:[my bold] It is interesting to note also that the two scientists criticise the strength of the claims made by the AAAS which reference the IPCC in its statement. Perhaps I've been right to be cautious about the IPCC as well.
They say some researchers make claims about possible future impacts that cannot be justified by the science. The pair believe this damages the credibility of all climate scientists.
quote:I think you misunderstand, Littlelady. What is beyond doubt is the high probability of ACC (also affirmed by the two climatologists in the BBC story). This has been affirmed by all governments of the world etc etc. With the probability has high as it is (and that figure having increased significantly over the past five years), many including the US government shorthand that to the science being beyond doubt (as I quoted accurately in the OP). As the debate has continued, I've been careful to expand on this idea and explain that this is not literal certainty, but is certainty regarding climate scientists according it a high probability (greater than 89%). Others have claimed that this isn't certain at all (including GCCS), but I strongly disagree with that view.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
That sounds pretty much like a statement of certainty to me! And you (and others) have made plenty more on this thread and on its predecessors.
quote:It's interesting to note that the comment they criticised in the BBC article isn't supported by the recent IPCC WGI summary. Here's the AAAS comment
Originally posted by Littlelady:
It is interesting to note also that the two scientists criticise the strength of the claims made by the AAAS which reference the IPCC in its statement. Perhaps I've been right to be cautious about the IPCC as well.
quote:And, here's the IPCC SPM
As expected, intensification of droughts, heatwaves, floods, wildfires, and severe storms is occurring, with a mounting toll on vulnerable ecosystems and societies.
These events are early warning signs of even more devastating damage to come, some of which will be irreversible.
quote:And, in the summary table the IPCC list the likelihood of different phenomena being a) real, b) caused by human activity and c) continuing or worsening in the next century. For some of the things referenced in the AAAS statement these are:
There is observational evidence for an increase of intense tropical cyclone activity in the North Atlantic since about 1970, correlated with increases of tropical sea surface temperatures. There are also suggestions of increased intense tropical cyclone activity in some other regions where concerns over data quality are greater. Multi-decadal variability and the quality of the tropical cyclone records prior to routine satellite observations in about 1970 complicate the detection of long-term trends in tropical cyclone activity. There is no clear trend in the annual numbers of tropical cyclones.
quote:Noiseboy, I don't think that's what the IPCC reference Alan cited actually said. According to Alan's post, the probability of those particular events occurring as a result of human activity is 'more likely than not' where 'more likely than not' = >50% probability. That could mean anything between a 51% probability or a 66% probability. It sounds to me a bit like a scientific version of hedging bets.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Yes, I think the likely stuff is what is at issue here. I think it is just that - likely.
quote:I do irritate you don't I?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:It's interesting to note that the comment they criticised in the BBC article isn't supported by the recent IPCC WGI summary.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
It is interesting to note also that the two scientists criticise the strength of the claims made by the AAAS which reference the IPCC in its statement. Perhaps I've been right to be cautious about the IPCC as well.
quote:Pardon the tangent:
2. The specifics of exactly how bad the effects will be are still not certain.
quote:Could be. However, humans display astonishing ingenuity in overcoming obstacles and given the relatively slow processes which are theorized may largely take all this in stride.
If the climate does change significantly and the 'zones of comfort' move nearer the poles and to higher altitudes, it will mean major upheaval for most of mankind.
I think logistical problems would be immense, particularly re-establishing appropriate agriculture in new areas to feed us all and providing enough water and energy.
quote:
Two leading UK climate researchers say some of their peers are "overplaying" the global warming message and risk confusing the public about the threat.
quote:Sounds reasonable.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
there is a broad consensus among climate scientists that there is a high probability that mankind is the primary driver behind recent global warming.
...
I'd be seriously interested to know your thoughts on [this] statement
quote:My understanding, Martin, is that the issue is CO2's efficiency at absorbing and re-radiating terrestrial radiation.
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
What staggers me is that CO2 rising from 280 to 360 parts per million (ppm), 30% in 150 years = 80 / 1,000,000 - 0.008 % - can increase energy trapping by 1% - 1.5 W/m^2. A factor of 125 from that particular cause to that particular effect, assuming they are causally related.
I'm asking for trouble here, but do we have the evidentiary, forensic, chain of events even in a laboratory that can explain this? I'm CERTAIN we don't. Unless I'm missing something. Which is QUITE likely. Are there even analagous lab experiments, with simple materials exhibiting physical (NON-chemical: non-exothermic, non-catalytic), thermodynamic effects of this magnitude?
OR is it a fact. A repeatable experiment. And how long is the causal chain? And if it ISN'T, where do we get 89% scientiST confidence from? Why should I be confident in their confidence? Is that the same as scientific confidence?
What questions SHOULD I be asking?
Is it really as simple as that and I'm being technically naive, CO2 absorbs solar radiation 125 times more effectively than the other atmospheric gases taken together? If it doesn't, what are the figures?
And how do we get from them to a 1% increase in atmospheric thermal energy?
quote:I want to go on record I don't reject out of hand 'science' because of presuppositions.
The science should be questioned, as long as the answers aren't rejected out of hand if they don't accord with the presuppositions of those who ask.
quote:What sort of qualification would you consider appropriate? I assume you know that the predictions are based on a number of carefully stated scenarios defined by IPCC about 10 years ago (the IPCC defined them as the most appropriate body to do so such that all models were run on an equal footing to allow them to be compared). They are summarised on the last page of the IPCC SPM. Note that all of these are variations on a "business as usual" approach - ie: they explicitely exclude climate initiatives such as the Kyoto Protocol emissions targets.
Originally posted by 206:
I do reject predictions about events decades in the future unless what I subjectively call 'appropriate' qualifications are included.
quote:I note the IPCC left themselves substantial wiggle room by stating 'All (their scenarios) should be considered equally sound'.
What sort of qualification would you consider appropriate?
quote:I think the idea is that the various scenarios they give cover all likely "business as usual" possibilities for population growth, economic development, technological development and transfer etc. They deliberately exclude "disaster scenarios" or other "surprise scenarios" that are very difficult to quantify the chances of. The scenarios were taken from a comprehensive review of the literature in the late 1990s, so weren't just dreampt up by a bunch of climate scientists (who aren't really qualified in the relevant fields of economics etc anyway). If you want to know more about them, the SPM for the 2000 report is available on the IPCC website.
Originally posted by 206:
quote:I note the IPCC left themselves substantial wiggle room by stating 'All (their scenarios) should be considered equally sound'.
What sort of qualification would you consider appropriate?
For instance: is it possible other scenarios could be sound, or is that such a low probability event it doesn't warrant consideration?
quote:Sorry, it's not something I can actually comment on. I've come across discussion of the possibility, but where it falls on any scale of possibility is something I've no idea about.
And you never did answer my question about the likelihood of the ice sheets breaking up and flooding the world with many meters of seawater.
quote:Forgive me, but in that case I don't understand why you are posting on this thread or even reading it. Surely the point of a discussion is to have an open mind to learn something new, sharpen up your own arguments, see other perspectives even if you disagree with them.
... but I don't think it's in your power to provide what would make me respond in the way you seem to want.
I don't think this is about lack of evidence. It's more the nature and scope of the problem. I don't see I need to agree with you, so I want to stay agnostic. When I need to make a decision about something climate change related, I'll make it on the basis of what I know then, not before.
quote:I'm not sure anyone is seriously disagreeing with anyone here, myself, it just looks like a difference in emphasis.
Sir John says he agrees "we must not exaggerate the evidence, and if anything must underplay it". But he adds the evidence of serious climate change is now "very substantial".
Sceptics charge that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change exaggerates the dangers. But Sir John, as one of the founders of the panel, says that it had "deliberately underestimated the problem".
He says the latest projections of the floods and droughts that will result from the heating of the globe are "frightening". And he adds that the 20,000 deaths caused by the 2003 heatwave in Europe justify the view that it is more dangerous than terrorism.
Some confusion surrounded the views of the RMS scientists yesterday after Prof Hardaker told the IoS that he could not think of a case where a scientist had overstated the position. He did however mention a statement by the American Association for the Advancement of Science that described an "intensification of droughts, heatwaves, floods, wildfires and severe storms" as "early warning signs of yet more devastating damage to come".
He said he did not disagree with any of this, but thought the AAAS should have made it clear what could be justified by the scientific evidence and what was based on judgement. He pointed out that he and his colleague were not experts on climate change.
quote:By coincidence, just a few minutes ago I was sitting in our coffee lounge waiting for the microwave to be free to re-heat my lunch, flicking through a recent New Scientist. And, there was a short article about someone complaining that the IPCC SPM had been significantly cut by politicians to remove, or underplay, several positive feedback mechanisms that would make the predictions there out to be best case scenarios. ie: he was complaining that the IPCC was deliberately underestimating the problem. What particularly caught my eye was that the New Scientist article focussed on accelerated ice-sheet flows - exactly the area I was asked about by 206.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
A few interesting things in this morning's Independent. ...
quote:
Sceptics charge that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change exaggerates the dangers. But Sir John, as one of the founders of the panel, says that it had "deliberately underestimated the problem".
quote:Thanks, Alan. If I understood all that they said what you said which is no one has enough data to accurately predict what will happen to the ice sheets.
exactly the area I was asked about by 206.
quote:Alan Betts is a 'real' climate scientist and this perhaps underscores we laymen's confusion about, and resulting distrust of, much of what we hear.
The discovery of the rich source of energy in fossil fuels drove the industrial revolution; and our economy, if it continues with business-as-usual, is on a path to burn all our fossil fuel reserves in a few centuries. This will return to the atmosphere fossil carbon that has been locked in the earth for hundreds of millions of years and propel us to a future with a transformed planet with no ice caps and a sea level 200 feet higher. We don't know all the details, just the broad outlines, but we know enough (and every year the diligent work of tens of thousands of scientists fills in more of the map).
quote:I only said I don't have anything I want to add for now. I (obviously) still read this thread - Dave W's explanation of the greenhouse effect was the first time I've felt I understand it. I spend too much time here anyway, and don't have any special expertese in this area, so - for now - I'm leaving active participation to those of you with this particular interest.
Originally posted by JonahMan:
Forgive me, but in that case I don't understand why you are posting on this thread or even reading it. Surely the point of a discussion is to have an open mind to learn something new, sharpen up your own arguments, see other perspectives even if you disagree with them.
quote:Is there enough ice to do this even if it all melted? I found one quote that the maximum would be 75m, though this wasn't from a source I would particularly trust (a blog) - though I've no particular reason to doubt it either. [Just found another site, the USGS which says 80m and which I would view as more authoratitive]. However this led me onto another interesting site showing how the UK (and the rest of the world if you zoom out) would be affected by different sea level rises. Gives an interesting visual summary; the UK doesn't do too badly (unless you live in East Anglia) for even quite large sea level rises, whereas Bangladesh is swamped.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Interesting article, 206. It raises a big question that is rarely mentioned even in this discussion - what will happen in a few centuries? All the forecasts limit themselves to 2099 in terms of projections. The liklihood of sea-level rises of many metres this century may be extremely remote, but in another few centuries?...
quote:Of all of Martin Durkin's claims, perhaps the one where climate scientists can only get government money if they toe the line with regard to ACC is the most far-fetched (although it does have stiff competition...)
...appear to portray a systematic White House effort to minimise the significance of climate change.
quote:Or just north of Liverpool -- the mosses behind Southport flood fairly early and by 10m my old house is flooded. I might not have liked the place much but I don't wish that on anyone! It doesn't show up very well on the UK sized map as it's only a thin strip
Originally posted by JonahMan:
. However this led me onto another interesting site showing how the UK (and the rest of the world if you zoom out) would be affected by different sea level rises. Gives an interesting visual summary; the UK doesn't do too badly (unless you live in East Anglia) for even quite large sea level rises, whereas Bangladesh is swamped.
quote:And why would one want to live anywhere else?
Originally posted by JonahMan:
(unless you live in East Anglia)
quote:I still haven't seen it. But, I have been asked to provide "expert input" (and, yes I've already told the minister it's not my field of expertise) to a discussion on the programme at a local church at the end of April. So, I'm trying to see it sometime before then, and at least get through the website associated with the programme.
Originally posted by Luigi:
Alan have you seen any of the repeats of the programme - on more4.
quote:I replied:
I can't tell you how many false prophets asserted we'd never make it through the end of the previous millenium
quote:TomOfTarsus picked me up on this, and so I've moved it to this thread. (Being nervous of Hell denizens had nothing to do with the decision, naturally.)
Fair enough. But it wasn't the overwhelming majority of mainstream climate scientists saying there was a big problem then.
quote:Well, it is true that anthropogenic sources of CO2 are very small compared to natural sources, if you only count sources but not sinks. Vegetation and soils (including decomposition of plant matter) produce 60GtC per annum, but absorb 61GtC; 90GtC are released from the ocean per annum, but the oceans absorb 92GtC. Fossil fuels and cement production releases 5.5GtC per annum, and changes in land use produce a further 1GtC net per annum. So, yes, human activity produces 4% the amount of carbon as natural processes - but in terms on net contribution to carbon in the atmosphere the sums are: human +6.5GtC, natural -3GtC.
Originally posted by TomOfTarsus:
CO2 (same source, although supposedly our contibution is incremental compared to natural sources- don't forget that people and animals emit CO2 and water vapor as well!
quote:This DTI document has a fairly accessible summary of UK reductions in carbon emission - currently 15% below 1990 levels. The cuts have come about partly through efficiencies (the current government campaign is aimed at domestic users to do their 20%), helped in part by warmer winters reducing heating use, and changes in generation; increased gas over coal (which produces less CO2 per kWh production) and more efficient coal power stations, an increase in nuclear through the completion of Sizewell B and increasing the output from other stations (note that in 1990 some nuclear stations were temporarily closed or at reduced capacity for safety checks following the Chernobyl accident) and an increase in renewables. In fact electricity production has increased with less CO2 production. Though, as nuclear power production is decreasing as existing plants close down there's going to be a big gap in capacity. And, without additional government measures (which would include a decision to build more nuclear) the prediction is to return to 1990 emission levels in 2050.
If Britian (as Alan Creswell has said) is well on the way to a 20% C02 reduction from 1990 levels, how did they do this? More nuke? Greater efficiency?
quote:On the volcano thing I thought that the claim that they produced more CO2 than humans sounded odd, and a swift google revealed that the first site I came across, The US Geological Survey stated :"Human activities release more than 150 times the amount of CO2 emitted by volcanoes--the equivalent of nearly 17,000 additional volcanoes like Kilauea (Kilauea emits about 13.2 million tonnes/year)! "
Originally posted by TomOfTarsus:
Maybe the chose the year Mt. St. Helens blew her stack! Hey, there's more than one way to find the number you need!
Thanks again, I don't mean to make you rehash the whole thing...
Blessings,
Tom
quote:Well, being of a practical bent myself, that's where I'm at (see my long-winded blather near the end of the previous page).
Suffice to say for now that this is a 'what should we do about climate change' rather than a 'is climate changed caused by humans' question.
quote:Not me ...
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
For those as interested as I am in the ongoing debacle of The Global Climate Change Swindle (if there is anyone!),
quote:And the programme helped by lying (volcano emissions, for instance) and misrepresenting?
Originally posted by Littlelady:
It also represented the 'alternative view', which was needed and welcome to the skeptical and/or confused among us.
quote:Well, you see, the programme didn't refer to volcano emissions alone. It simply referred to them as one of many things that naturally occur which all contribute to global warming (the natural contributions seem to have completely disappeared from the pro-manmade lobby position so it was useful to be reminded of them).
Originally posted by Mr Clingford:
quote:And the programme helped by lying (volcano emissions, for instance) and misrepresenting?
Originally posted by Littlelady:
It also represented the 'alternative view', which was needed and welcome to the skeptical and/or confused among us.
quote:When simple facts like volcanic emissions are very easy to check, and the programme got them wrong, I don't need to do anything as complicated as "thinking".
Originally posted by Littlelady:
As for you accusing the programme of lying and misleading ... you mocked it when it was first shown; you came to it with a kind of "it's all bollocks" attitude so you are bound to think it was all lies, lies and more lies, aren't you?
quote:You say this yet who can check on what you are saying? How do I know exactly that what you say is correct and not what the programme says? How do I know where to go to check on the data presented by the programme? It's always the case when any specialist area is referred to in any medium (TV, radio, the lecture hall ...). Without prior knowledge of the field, or at least a related field, it is almost impossible to know who is accurate and who is not, which is why I watched the programme as a whole production rather than solely for the science. It was simply interesting to hear 'the other side' from the science POV, but I was no more enlightened by it. The most helpful post on here in terms of science is the one Alan Cresswell wrote about probabilities: a concept and some stats I could actually understand and relate to.
Originally posted by Mr Clingford:
quote:When simple facts like volcanic emissions are very easy to check, and the programme got them wrong, I don't need to do anything as complicated as "thinking".
Originally posted by Littlelady:
[qb] As for you accusing the programme of lying and misleading ... you mocked it when it was first shown; you came to it with a kind of "it's all bollocks" attitude so you are bound to think it was all lies, lies and more lies, aren't you?
quote:Yes, you are right. My apologies. It was Clint Boggis whose post was mocking.
I have checked over my posts and I don't think I have mocked it
quote:I've still not had a chance to watch the whole of the programme, though I have found the UTube copy. I have, however sat through a few bits of it.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
The programme also discussed issues like the politics surrounding the debate, the affects of those politics on the developing world, etc, yet the focus on this thread since the programme was shown has been on specific issues of science, which in itself is a reflection of the politics surrounding the debate of course, along with the much-wished-for ticking off of Channel 4 of course.
quote:Some are, in that they see God as the creator behind it all (rather than God as creating individual creatures). My brother is one such: he has a Phd too, and studies the little things in life (viruses, bacteria, etc - he's the family 'poo doc'
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Imagine a programme called The Great Evolution Swindle. It features some scientists who are creationists.
quote:Well, I respect Alan as much as I can respect anyone who isn't an expert in the field and whom I have never met! Sometimes Alan could have been talking Greek for all I understood him! But I could say the same for someone discussing car mechanics or the intricacies of high fashion. As I said earlier, the post of Alan's I fully understood was the one on probabilities. Not only did I understand it but it also seemed far more plausible than much of what I have read on here. I can deal in probabilities when we are talking about something that hasn't happened yet (and may never happen), but I cannot deal in certainties when we are talking about those same things. So any dogmatic statements or persistent assertions sail right over my head. Either that or they annoy me and make me more determined to stick to my guns!
The answer has been said time and again - published science (but if you don't believe Alan on these boards whom you do respect I don't know who you do believe).
quote:Actually, I think to really appreciate the programme's impact it is best to sit through it from beginning to end. As a piece of TV it is pretty compelling and there is sequence to it.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
I've still not had a chance to watch the whole of the programme, though I have found the UTube copy. I have, however sat through a few bits of it.
quote:That and the politics surrounding the current lobby (which include the impact on Africa). I think the issue of Africa hit me hardest because (a) I'm sensitive to cultural colonialism, and (b) I hadn't actually realised African countries might be feeling such pressure in this regard. On the one hand they are under pressure to grow economically - pay back debts, not accrue more debt, etc - yet on the other they are now being told they must do so without (where appropriate) using their natural resources in such a way that would most benefit their country economically. This is especially difficult given that those in the West responsible for the pressure have enjoyed their economic boom times as a result of those same 'wrong' natural resources.
From what I've seen, it's in raising issues about how policies regarding greenhouse gas reduction could affect the development of poorer nations that the programme is at it's strongest.
quote:I agree, though I wasn't really thinking of solutions at the time I wrote my post; more like exploring the issues. But nonetheless, I take your point.
The "what can we do about it?" question is being addressed elsewhere.
quote:As someone who didn't know the arguments until this discussion I've become increasingly irritated by the myth that a) the current warming is 'unprecedented' and b) it's all our fault.
Committee on Energy and Commerce Report
These are the findings of the ad hoc commitee report [27] authored by Edward J. Wegman, George Mason University, David W. Scott, Rice University, and Yasmin H. Said, The Johns Hopkins University in July 2006:
* MBH98 and MBH99 were found to be somewhat obscure and incomplete and the criticisms of MM03/05a/05b were found to be valid and compelling.
* It is noted that there is no evidence that Dr. Mann or any of the other authors in paleoclimatology studies have had significant interactions with mainstream statisticians.
* A social network of authorships in temperature reconstruction of at least 43 authors having direct ties to Dr. Mann by virtue of coauthored papers with him is described. The findings from this analysis suggest that authors in the area of paleoclimate studies are closely connected and thus ‘independent studies' may not be as independent as they might appear on the surface.
* It is important to note the isolation of the paleoclimate community; even though they rely heavily on statistical methods they do not seem to be interacting with the statistical community. Additionally, we judge that the sharing of research materials, data and results was haphazardly and grudgingly done.
* Overall, the committee believes that Mann's assessments that the decade of the 1990s was the hottest decade of the millennium and that 1998 was the hottest year of the millennium cannot be supported by his analysis. http://en.allexperts.com/e/t/te/temperature_record_of_the_past_1000_years.htm
quote:That and the chemistry of the atmosphere of the earth that includes small quantities of potent greenhouse gases sufficient to keep the earth relatively warm (cf the temperature of the Moon, which shares the same solar energy input but has a significantly lower mean temperature - the greater lunar temperature variation is simply an effect of having no atmosphere, an atmosphere of any sort will act as a heat reservoir evening out the temperature extremes). The effect of the magnetic field on the earths climate is minor; though it is significant in terms of reduction in harder radiation levels on the surface, and hence on the evolution and survival of life as we know it.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Let's start at the beginning, the reason the earth has the climate it has and not that of Mars or Venus is primarily its position relative to the sun and a magnetic field which gives us the climate we have
quote:Yeah, cos the sun will burn us up in 5 billion years (give or take a few years) that means we don't have to worry about what we're doing that will impact the next few decades and centuries? Let's just screw most of humanity for our own comfort now, after all it doesn't matter cos we'll all be dead in 5 billion years. What a load of bollocks. I've more respect for Martin PC Not's "Jesus'll fix it" argument than that.
the sun is a effin big star that is half way through its 10 billion year life. One day the earth will get so hot that it will burn up completely, quite regardless of our existence or what we do.
quote:What more proof do you want? I recall you brought out a load of temperature data to "disprove" Mann - and that data still showed that recent temperature rises have been unprecedented. And, that those temperature rises correlate with unprecedented levels of CO2 in the last 20 million years. And, the physics of how CO2 behaves show conclusively that it acts as a greenhouse gas. Oh, and there's tons of evidence that the increase in atmospheric CO2 is a result of fossil fuel burning - not just the temporal correlation that as we burn more fossil fuel CO2 increases, but also things like 14C:12C ratios proving that the mean age of atmospheric carbon is getting older (well, it was until we let off a load of nukes and pumped more 14C back into the atmosphere).
It is not proved that a) there is now unprecedented global warming and b) that this is driven by higher levels of CO2 and c) that this is caused by our increased levels of CO2 production.
quote:Hmmm, if you think that summary of the orbital dynamics of the earth constitutes "real scientific data" I'm really concerned about your understanding of science. It is, of course, a summary of real data. And, a pretty good and accesible one at that. I'm not quite sure what you mean aboput the parting shot. Do you mean this?
Interesting and real scientific data even when presented accurately is spoiled by such unsubstantiated claims as on this page's parting shot in an otherwise rational look at the Milkanovich data. http://geography.about.com/od/learnabouttheearth/a/milankovitch.htm
quote:That seems to be an equally good summary of scientific data. If recent warming is driven by Milankovitch cycles then our understanding of orbital dynamics is up a creek without a paddle - because in relation to Milankovitch cycles we should be at the warmest part of an interglacial, in fact we've been there for centuries, and if the cycle is driving anything it should be getting colder. There's a consistent increase in temperature at the end of each glaciation that's driven by Milankovitch cycles, then an approximatley constant temperature before the cycle sends us into a cooling period leading to another glaciation. We've already had that temperature increase for this interglacial, and we've just had the same level of increase on top of that. That simply can not be explained by the Milankovitch cycle.
Though Milankovitch cycles do explain long-term climate change, they can't account for changes being made by humans, which appear to have an even greater effect than variations in earth-sun interaction.
quote:Yep, I agree. Your pontifications on this thread reveal no science at all, simply Mryhh made wind.
There's no science here, the driving force for this theory is man made wind.
quote:So what? It's happening, and we have to deal with it whether or not it is our fault or it happened before.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
I've become increasingly irritated by the myth that a) the current warming is 'unprecedented' and b) it's all our fault.
quote:Or not - apparently, if we all just sit tight for the next 5 billion years it will all be much of a muchness anyway. Or something.
Originally posted by ken:
quote:So what? It's happening, and we have to deal with it whether or not it is our fault or it happened before.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
I've become increasingly irritated by the myth that a) the current warming is 'unprecedented' and b) it's all our fault.
quote:Er, minor? But of course, the mininmal amount of C02 in the atmosphere isn't minor when its rising levels are driving global warming.. The Moon and Mars lost their magnetic fields and so lost all their atmosphere, the magnetic field is the main line of defence against solar radiation. The earth's magnetic field has been losing strenghth since measurements began in the 1840's and some say we could be in for one of the periodic polar reversals. Seems to me this is far more significant in 'global warming' than rising CO2 levels which by all sensible accounts show an 800 year time lag between periods of warming and playing catch-up CO2 levels.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
That and the chemistry of the atmosphere of the earth that includes small quantities of potent greenhouse gases sufficient to keep the earth relatively warm (cf the temperature of the Moon, which shares the same solar energy input but has a significantly lower mean temperature - the greater lunar temperature variation is simply an effect of having no atmosphere, an atmosphere of any sort will act as a heat reservoir evening out the temperature extremes). The effect of the magnetic field on the earths climate is minor; though it is significant in terms of reduction in harder radiation levels on the surface, and hence on the evolution and survival of life as we know it.
quote:You keep missing my point. Our climate is bigger than us.
Yeah, cos the sun will burn us up in 5 billion years (give or take a few years) that means we don't have to worry about what we're doing that will impact the next few decades and centuries? Let's just screw most of humanity for our own comfort now, after all it doesn't matter cos we'll all be dead in 5 billion years. What a load of bollocks. I've more respect for Martin PC Not's "Jesus'll fix it" argument than that.
quote:
It is not proved that a) there is now unprecedented global warming and b) that this is driven by higher levels of CO2 and c) that this is caused by our increased levels of CO2 production.
quote:I've also shown data which disproves Mann and in my last post showed conclusions by peer review which says that Mann's claim that this temperature rise is unprecedented is UNPROVEN by his, very reluctantly given, work.
What more proof do you want? I recall you brought out a load of temperature data to "disprove" Mann - and that data still showed that recent temperature rises have been unprecedented.
quote:Look at the bigger picture. Global Temperature and Atmospheric CO2 over Geologic Time
And, that those temperature rises correlate with unprecedented levels of CO2 in the last 20 million years.
quote:A truly minor part of the greater whole of greenhouses gases and, actually, in the broader picture showing increased levels are effects, not causes in themselves. That is, temperature rises precede CO2 rises. Past high CO2 levels don't always show high temperatures. That the chemistry proves it has an effect on temperature isn't enough here when we are constantly bombarded by accusations of being irresponsibly driving global warming. Which, global warming, is itself shown to be not a fact by past data.
And, the physics of how CO2 behaves show conclusively that it acts as a greenhouse gas.
quote:This is what p*s me off. Off course fossil fuel burning produces CO2, so does the increase in world animal population farts.
Oh, and there's tons of evidence that the increase in atmospheric CO2 is a result of fossil fuel burning - not just the temporal correlation that as we burn more fossil fuel CO2 increases, but also things like 14C:12C ratios proving that the mean age of atmospheric carbon is getting older (well, it was until we let off a load of nukes and pumped more 14C back into the atmosphere).
quote:
http://geography.about.com/od/learnabouttheearth/a/milankovitch.htm
quote:It's a page showing and explaining real scientific data, by a real scientist. The Milkanovitch cycles are proven and relevant.
Hmmm, if you think that summary of the orbital dynamics of the earth constitutes "real scientific data" I'm really concerned about your understanding of science.
quote:Exactly.
It is, of course, a summary of real data. And, a pretty good and accesible one at that.
quote:But the changes made by humans isn't PROVEN to be the cause of the recent global warming - and to say that these appear to have an even greater effect than earth-sun interactions is, quite frankly, a ridiculously un-scientific statement as nothing of the kind has been shown. Which was my point, a page of sensible scientific information is degraded by such unsubstantiated claims.
I'm not quite sure what you mean aboput the parting shot. Do you mean this?quote:That seems to be an equally good summary of scientific data.
Though Milankovitch cycles do explain long-term climate change, they can't account for changes being made by humans, which appear to have an even greater effect than variations in earth-sun interaction.
quote:But we are in the change from the warmest part and in the slide into cold again if we go for a 20,000 year interglacial. The interglacial began 18,000 years ago, the warmest point was 10,000 years ago and the slide down into cold from that is shown since then, the hiccups of warming and cooling such as the MWP and MIA are still in the general and progressive slide down to colder temperatures.
If recent warming is driven by Milankovitch cycles then our understanding of orbital dynamics is up a creek without a paddle - because in relation to Milankovitch cycles we should be at the warmest part of an interglacial, in fact we've been there for centuries,
quote:This same level of increase you claim isn't proven, see above about Mann. I think I posted a graph earlier showing the current interglacial temperatures slide which showed this, but, and please try looking at this without all the hype, the (now squashed) last 10ky pattern also shows on the longer timescale graph on ice/temperature changes. Interglacials and the future
and if the cycle is driving anything it should be getting colder. There's a consistent increase in temperature at the end of each glaciation that's driven by Milankovitch cycles, then an approximatley constant temperature before the cycle sends us into a cooling period leading to another glaciation. We've already had that temperature increase for this interglacial, and we've just had the same level of increase on top of that. That simply can not be explained by the Milankovitch cycle.
quote:
There's no science here, the driving force for this theory is man made wind.
quote:Again, I'm really sorry Alan, but all I see is unsubstantiated claims, rejection of any contrary data and explanations and, sadly, an awful lot of manipulation from the IPCC which is proved to be dishonest in use of data, there's more than one scientist who has objected strongly to gross misrepresentation and abuse of his work. I found particularly disquieting the obvious conclusion change of the '95 report which new version totally contradicted its original conclusion - and it's been that ever since, the conclusion driving the presentation of data. There reports are simply not scientific protocol.
Yep, I agree. Your pontifications on this thread reveal no science at all, simply Mryhh made wind.
quote:Yes, CO2 is a minor constituent of the atmosphere as a percentage of the whole. But, that it's only 380ppm doesn't reflect it's importance in the global scheme of things. It's something that's common in many areas; most vitamins are very small proportions of our total food intake, yet we'd be very unwell without them. I take it you're not advocating ignoring the advice of nutritionists because they keep harking on about very small parts of our diets. I'm sure I've made that point before.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Er, minor? But of course, the mininmal amount of C02 in the atmosphere isn't minor when its rising levels are driving global warming.. The Moon and Mars lost their magnetic fields and so lost all their atmosphere, the magnetic field is the main line of defence against solar radiation.
quote:I think I've said this before too. But, at the risk of repeating myself I'll try again.
rising CO2 levels which by all sensible accounts show an 800 year time lag between periods of warming and playing catch-up CO2 levels.
quote:Oh please, we've both covered this point before...
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Yes, CO2 is a minor constituent of the atmosphere as a percentage of the whole. But, that it's only 380ppm doesn't reflect it's importance in the global scheme of things. It's something that's common in many areas; most vitamins are very small proportions of our total food intake, yet we'd be very unwell without them. I take it you're not advocating ignoring the advice of nutritionists because they keep harking on about very small parts of our diets. I'm sure I've made that point before.
quote:
rising CO2 levels which by all sensible accounts show an 800 year time lag between periods of warming and playing catch-up CO2 levels.
quote:The problem here is you're not listening to the examples I've given which contradict CO2 as the driving force of which the 800 year time lag is the in your face evidence that the theory doesn't work.
I think I've said this before too. But, at the risk of repeating myself I'll try again.
quote:My bad typo or your use of it to write more gibberish to confuse (do you work for the IPCC?) - I meant to write the obvious correlation between sunspot activity and global warming (CO2 being shown to be an effect of global warming not a cause).
But, in our present situation, something new is happening. There's no largish disturbance of the climate as a result of solar changes resulting in changing CO2 equilibriums.
quote:How can you ignore this? (*)more on this.
"The Sun is in a changed state. It is brighter than it was a few hundred years ago and this brightening started relatively recently - in the last 100 to 150 years." Dr Sami Solanki, the director of the renowned Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research
quote:Enough of this unsubstantiated nonsense given as fact. YOU HAVE NOT PROVED THIS. Nor can you prove it's rising CO2 levels which are driving warming.
We're directly changing the CO2 concentrations by introducing a new source of CO2 - burning the fossil fuel carbon reservoir. Instead of a small temperature rise resulting in a small release of CO2 from the upper oceans with a few centuries of lag before the deep ocean releases some of its CO2, we're releasing the same amount of CO2 that the deep ocean typically releases during the onset of an interglacial. That's rapidly driving temperature upwards as the atmosphere responds quickly to that increased CO2 by trapping more heat through the greenhouse effect.
quote:What's clear is that you a pushing a theory that has already been shown to be false. This makes it null and void. Like all your arguments for it.
Is that clear? Here's the summary:
[list]
...
quote:...
a really long url
Dr Sami Solanki, the director of the renowned Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research in Gottingen, Germany, who led the research, said: "The Sun has been at its strongest over the past 60 years and may now be affecting global temperatures.
"The Sun is in a changed state. It is brighter than it was a few hundred years ago and this brightening started relatively recently - in the last 100 to 150 years."
quote:...
another long url
Another trend scientists have picked up on appears to span several centuries. Late 17th century astronomers observed that no sunspots existed on the Sun’s surface during the time period from 1650 to 1715 AD. This lack of solar activity, which some scientists attribute to a low point in a multiple-century-long cycle, may have been partly responsible for the Little Ice Age in Europe. During this period, winters in Europe were much longer and colder than they are today. Modern scientists believe that since this minimum in solar energy output, there has been a slow increase in the overall sunspots and solar energy throughout each subsequent 11-year cycle.
quote:...
yet another long url
Sun's Output Increasing in Possible Trend Fueling Global Warming
By Robert Roy Britt Senior Science Writer
20 March 2003
In what could be the simplest explanation for one component of global warming, a new study shows the Sun's radiation has increased by .05 percent per decade since the late 1970s.
quote:...
http://www.nationalcenter.org/NPA203.html John Carlisle
The evidence for future cooling is supported by considerable scientific research that has only recently begun to come to light. It wasn't until 1980, with the aid of NASA satellites, that scientists definitively proved that the sun's brightness - or radiance - varies in intensity, and that these variations occur in predictable cyclical patterns. This was a crucial discovery because the climate models used by greenhouse theory proponents always assumed that the sun's radiance was constant. With that assumption in hand, they could ignore solar influences and focus on other influences, including human.
That turned out to be a reckless assumption. Further investigation revealed that there is a strong correlation between the variations in solar irradiance and fluctuations in the Earth's temperature. When the sun gets dimmer, the Earth gets cooler; when the sun gets brighter, the Earth gets hotter. So important is the sun in climate change that half of the 1.5° F temperature increase since 1850 is directly attributable to changes in the sun. According to NASA scientists David Lind and Judith Lean, only one-quarter of a degree can be ascribed to other causes, such as greenhouse gases, through which human activities can theoretically exert some influence.
The correlation between major changes in the Earth's temperature and changes in solar radiance is quite compelling.
Continued HERE
quote:Yes, and one of us seems to be totally ignoring what the other is saying. So, one last fucking time engage your brain and read what I'm saying because I just seem to be speaking to a moron without any ability to comprehend some relatively simple science.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Oh please, we've both covered this point before...
quote:Except that climate scientists do not ignore other atmospheric gases. I'll repeat that incase you missed it; other atmospheric gases are not ignored by climate scientists. Do I need to say it again? I'll accept that out of convenience the various greenhouse gases are lumped together as "CO2 equivalent", which is a long way from ignoring the other gases. Anyone who says otherwise has either misunderstood the science, or is being deliberately untruthful.
The level of CO2 is minor in the the greater constitution of greenhouse gases, water vapour being the greatest. Which other consituents are conveniently ignored by global warming cranks in their modelling to prove it's CO2 the culprit.
quote:No, the problem is that you're failing to read what I said. I never said CO2 is the driving force of the 800 year time lag. The 800 year time lag is a simple reflection of the time it takes deep ocean waters to circulate to the surface. At the end of the glaciations, CO2 is not primarily driving the temperature change but is driven by the temperature change. The atmospheric CO2 concentration only starts to significantly rise when the vast reservoir of CO2 in the deep oceans comes to the surface. That is how the natural system works.
The problem here is you're not listening to the examples I've given which contradict CO2 as the driving force of which the 800 year time lag is the in your face evidence that the theory doesn't work.
quote:Well, I've had a look at the webpages on the C4 site, but they're not very informative. I've not seen it on the schedules for a rerun, and until they put it back on I'm stuffed.
I would have thought you'd have made an effort to look at the Durkin programme
quote:Well, I've seen some contradictory evidence. Probably not all of it, but a fair bit. And, most of it isn't anywhere near as convincing as that which proves beyond any reasonable doubt/ that human activity is a significant contribution to the recent observed changes in the global climate. There are a few questions around the edges about just how much of a contribution and the extent to which other factors such as changes in solar activity are also contributing. But the basic science is IMO totally compelling.
I think you're a part of spin doctoring on this subject since I find it inconceivable that a true scientist would simply refuse to look at contradictory evidence presented by other scientists.
quote:What, and you think referring to greehouse gases by its least constituent is truthful?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Except that climate scientists do not ignore other atmospheric gases. I'll repeat that incase you missed it; other atmospheric gases are not ignored by climate scientists. Do I need to say it again? I'll accept that out of convenience the various greenhouse gases are lumped together as "CO2 equivalent", which is a long way from ignoring the other gases. Anyone who says otherwise has either misunderstood the science, or is being deliberately untruthful.
quote:The bottom line is that anyone looking into this for themselves as I've done has to logical conclude that we are being manipulated because the science itself is actually junk; because they have understood enough of the science to agree with those scientists who are also frustrated by this irrational campaign masquerading as science fact when it is based solely on science fiction perpetuated by modellers who refuse to even look at any data from reality which soundly contradicts their imagined models.
The Great Global Warming Swindle
March 19, 2007
S. Fred Singer
Al Gore’s movie, An Inconvenient Truth, has met its match: a devastating documentary recently shown on British television, which has now been viewed by millions of people on the Internet. In spite of its flamboyant title, The Great Global Warming Swindle is based on sound science by recording the statements of real climate scientists, including me. An Inconvenient Truth mainly records a politician.
The scientific arguments presented in The Great Global Warming Swindle can be stated quite briefly:
1. There is no proof at all that the current warming is caused by the rise of greenhouse gases from human activities, such as the generation of energy from the burning of fuels.
continued on: http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1945
quote:
The problem here is you're not listening to the examples I've given which contradict CO2 as the driving force of which the 800 year time lag is the in your face evidence that the theory doesn't work.
quote:I'm not saying you said that. I'm saying that a) you're not listening to the many examples showing CO2 is not a driving force and b) the 800 year time lag of CO2 levels following global warming is the historical pattern.
No, the problem is that you're failing to read what I said. I never said CO2 is the driving force of the 800 year time lag. The 800 year time lag is a simple reflection of the time it takes deep ocean waters to circulate to the surface. At the end of the glaciations, CO2 is not primarily driving the temperature change but is driven by the temperature change. The atmospheric CO2 concentration only starts to significantly rise when the vast reservoir of CO2 in the deep oceans comes to the surface. That is how the natural system works.
quote:
I think you're a part of spin doctoring on this subject since I find it inconceivable that a true scientist would simply refuse to look at contradictory evidence presented by other scientists.
quote:Please, you have not proved this and I have shown many examples which contradict not least of which is that the steep rise in global warming in the last 150 years since the end of the Mini Ice Age began well before any industrial human imput was on a scale that was anything more than insignificant.
Well, I've seen some contradictory evidence. Probably not all of it, but a fair bit. And, most of it isn't anywhere near as convincing as that which proves beyond any reasonable doubt/ that human activity is a significant contribution to the recent observed changes in the global climate. There are a few questions around the edges about just how much of a contribution and the extent to which other factors such as changes in solar activity are also contributing. But the basic science is IMO totally compelling.
quote:Show me this proof beyond reasonable doubt that has convinced you.
And, most of it isn't anywhere near as convincing as that which proves beyond any reasonable doubt/ that human activity is a significant contribution to the recent observed changes in the global climate.
quote:What the IPCC is denying is basic reason and you continue to parrot their line that you have compelling evidence to prove that it is human activity CO2 driving global warming but do not produce it. Neither do they. Verbiage designed to mitigate the impact of natural causes is not evidence to suggest they are anything but disingenous in their continuing campaign to promote this untenable human driven global warming theory, but most of all it shows they are ridiculous in discounting the brilliant star which our sun and our historical climate from our relationship with it. Which shows nothing amiss, but following the pattern of the last 450,000 years for example.
Your next post simply seems to prove the point at the end of that paragraph. There are factors in addition to human activity that may be contributing to global warming. Which is something noone, not even the IPCC, is denying.
quote:So, for the last time. You have shown no proof of this whatsoever.
Now, are you going to contribute anything sensible? Or are you going to keep pushing a theory that has already been shown to be false? The theory that human activity isn't influencing the climate and contributing to global warming is scientifically tenable as the theory that the earth is a flat disk supported by turtles all the way down.
quote:Prove it.
Alan And, most of it isn't anywhere near as convincing as that which proves beyond any reasonable doubt/ that human activity is a significant contribution to the recent observed changes in the global climate.
quote:
http://brneurosci.org/co2.html
Cold Facts on Global Warming
Introduction
What is the contribution of anthropogenic carbon dioxide to global warming? This question has been the subject of many heated arguments, and a great deal of hysteria. In this article, we will consider a simple calculation, based on well-accepted facts, that shows that the expected global temperature increase caused by doubling atmospheric carbon dioxide levels is bounded by an upper limit of 1.4-2.7 degrees centigrade. This result contrasts with the results of the IPCC's climate models, whose projections are shown to be unrealistically high.
.....
CO2 is more evenly distributed than water, so if CO2 caused warming it would have a proportionately greater effect in areas where there is little water vapor (such as deserts and in very cold regions), while in areas with a lot of water, the effect of CO2 may be insignificant compared to the effect of water vapor. This is one of many factors that mitigate against the idea of a "climate catastrophe."
....
The net effect of all these processes is that doubling carbon dioxide would not double the amount of global warming. In fact, the effect of carbon dioxide is roughly logarithmic. Each time carbon dioxide (or some other greenhouse gas) is doubled, the increase in temperature is less than the previous increase. The reason for this is that, eventually, all the longwave radiation that can be absorbed has already been absorbed. It would be analogous to closing more and more shades over the windows of your house on a sunny day -- it soon reaches the point where doubling the number of shades can't make it any darker.
The analogy with a greenhouse would be that the glass in the roof becomes slightly thicker. The effect of warming also depends on the conditions inside the greenhouse. If the greenhouse were full of ice at exactly -0.01 degrees Celsius, making the glass slightly thicker just might be enough to melt all the ice and flood the greenhouse. But if the greenhouse had some regions that were hot and some that were very cold (as the planet Earth does), it would have a very small overall effect.
As an aside, the term "greenhouse effect" is actually a misnomer. In greenhouses, most of the warming that is observed is not caused by carbon dioxide, or by absorption of infrared radiation by the glass as many people think, but by reduction in convection [11].
quote:Sorry Prof, don't know what you mean by that. What am I doing that breaks the scroll-lock?
Originally posted by Professor Kirke:
Hosting again
Myrrh,
You obviously know how to use the URL button for Instant UBB code, or at least how to code a URL yourself, because you do it every so often. Please make a consistent habit of coding URLs so that they do not break the scroll-lock for others.
Professor Kirke
Purgatory Host
quote:Quelle surprise. Christopher Monkton is an ex-editor of the London Evening Standard, after spending time as Margaret Thatcher's policy advisor. He now writes for the Daily Telegraph. He is completely ignorant of climate science. To see what actual climate scientists make of his nonsense, try this.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Alan, re Durkin programme. An analysis of the 2007 IPCC report by Christopher Monckton
Viscount Monckton of Brenchley, one of the contributors.
http://ff.org/centers/csspp/pdf/20070201_monckton.pdf
quote:Apologies for delay in responding - have been away without access to a computer.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
quote:Quelle surprise. Christopher Monkton is an ex-editor of the London Evening Standard, after spending time as Margaret Thatcher's policy advisor. He now writes for the Daily Telegraph. He is completely ignorant of climate science. To see what actual climate scientists make of his nonsense, try this.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Alan, re Durkin programme. An analysis of the 2007 IPCC report by Christopher Monckton
Viscount Monckton of Brenchley, one of the contributors.
http://ff.org/centers/csspp/pdf/20070201_monckton.pdf
quote:You've debunked nothing, only put forward a rather frightening view that consensus of goverments equals truth.
Fear not Myrrh - I don't feel the need to debunk every spurious link you post, but this was too easy to resist. In the end, my previous list of organisations supporting the consensus - and your inability to counter with a single reputable source - speaks for itself.
quote:But this and your reliance on such as RealClimate above is your own method. You consistently refuse to look at the what real scientists are saying.
If anyone is really interested in how far science can be manipulated by quacks to make it say absolutely anything they want to say, I thoroughly reccomend this stunning page, which makes Monkton look like the amateur that he is.
quote:Physics.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
The whole of this global warming hypothesis rests on the claim that CO2 drives global warming.
Prove it.
quote:OK, so spell it out.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:Physics.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
The whole of this global warming hypothesis rests on the claim that CO2 drives global warming.
Prove it.
quote:No, I'm saying that CO2 is a one of a number of gases that act to raise the global temperature. The mixing of atmospheric gases over the residence time for most greenhouse gases means that theire effects are always going to be global (water vapour is the only one where regional variations can be a factor, because it cycles so quickly in and out of the lower atmosphere).
Originally posted by Myrrh:
All you're saying is that CO2 is part (and actually a minor part) of the greehouse effect which tends to raise local temperature.
quote:Well, if by the "present spell of hot weather" you mean the current early spring, or even the lack of winter (it's just not right to go from Oct-Apr without any snow), then I can't prove it's due to global warming as it's within the range of natural variations. But, the models all predict that global warming will increase the number of warm winters, so if you mean the string of record temperatures over the last 10 years or so, then yes the evidence is very strongly indicative that that's caused by global warming.
Show me actual proof that CO2 drives global warming and show me proof that this present spell of hot weather is man made.
quote:is comtemptable (sorry for the harsh word used, but it is chosen deliberately given my list of genuine sources versus your non-existent ones).
Originally posted by Myrrh:
You consistently refuse to look at the what real scientists are saying.
quote:But not unexpected global warming - these temperatures are measured against a MINI ICE AGE, which indicates a drop from a previous much higher temperature..
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:Well, if by the "present spell of hot weather" you mean the current early spring, or even the lack of winter (it's just not right to go from Oct-Apr without any snow), then I can't prove it's due to global warming as it's within the range of natural variations. But, the models all predict that global warming will increase the number of warm winters, so if you mean the string of record temperatures over the last 10 years or so, then yes the evidence is very strongly indicative that that's caused by global warming.
Show me actual proof that CO2 drives global warming and show me proof that this present spell of hot weather is man made.
quote:It's not the simple physics that floors me - it's your interpretation.
I'm not sure what I can do to prove the role of CO2 and other greenhouse gases if you're not willing to accept relatively simple physics.
quote:Noiseboy, there are a great many scientists debunking global warming. There's not much difference in the political pressures used to promote and that used to debunk it.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Re Monkton - no Myrrh, you have missed the point. Monkton (not a scientist) makes scientific claims, which actual scientists have comprehensively debunked. End of story.
quote:The temperature was rising anyway, coming out of the Mini Ice Age, and there are other reasons for global warming, not least the sunspot activity which shows a remarkable correlation between activity and temperature rise.
John Christy, an IPCC lead author and global warming skeptic, said that "Contributing authors essentially are asked to contribute a little text at the beginning and to review the first two drafts. We have no control over editing decisions. Even less influence is granted the 2,000 or so reviewers. Thus, to say that 800 contributing authors or 2,000 reviewers reached consensus on anything describes a situation that is not reality." [43]Global Warming Controversy
You are strongly influenced by the spin that this theory is supported by actual scientists, but the IPCC is not composed of them and many who did contribute have objected to the crass misuse of their work. And you can't have it both ways, objecting to contradictory views because they are non-scientists or not specifically climate scientists while using such as these to prove your view.
Simple logic shows that global warming itself is not proved and man driven global warming is the emperor's new clothes. Quite frankly, I'm tired of being told there are convincing arguments beyond any reasonable doubt and not having them actually produced.
Note the three steps in this theory: [quote]Step One Scientists for decades have postulated that increases in carbon dioxide and other gases could lead to a greenhouse effect.
Step Two As if on cue, the temperature rose over the course of the 20th century while greenhouse gases proliferated due to human activities.
Step Three No other mechanism explains the warming. Without another candidate, greenhouses gases necessarily became the cause.
quote:Oops, missed of the k. Should be "the same general pattern as for the last 450 thousand years"
Originally posted by Myrrh:
quote:But not unexpected global warming - these temperatures are measured against a MINI ICE AGE, which indicates a drop from a previous much higher temperature..
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:Well, if by the "present spell of hot weather" you mean the current early spring, or even the lack of winter (it's just not right to go from Oct-Apr without any snow), then I can't prove it's due to global warming as it's within the range of natural variations. But, the models all predict that global warming will increase the number of warm winters, so if you mean the string of record temperatures over the last 10 years or so, then yes the evidence is very strongly indicative that that's caused by global warming.
Show me actual proof that CO2 drives global warming and show me proof that this present spell of hot weather is man made.
..and the global temperature since the peak 10k years ago shows a continuing drop into cold in exactly the same general pattern as for the last 450 years - what you're doing is taking natural variation and pretending that it's unusual, it isn't.
quote:Not true of climate scientists. Christy is one of a very tiny handful, whom I cannot take seriously since his own peer reviewed recent research discredits his earlier theories about the troposphere. In 2005, he wrote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Noiseboy, there are a great many scientists debunking global warming.
quote:And yet he went on camera on the GCCS to espouse his earlier theory - which he himself has admitted was false and based on erroneous data. This is contemptable.
John Christy: Temperature Trends in the Lower Atmosphere - Understanding and Reconciling Differences:
Previously reported discrepancies between the amount of warming near the surface and higher in the atmosphere have been used to challenge the reliability of climate models and the reality of human-induced global warming. Specifically, surface data showed substantial global-average warming, while early versions of satellite and radiosonde data showed little or no warming above the surface. This significant discrepancy no longer exists because errors in the satellite and radiosonde data have been identified and corrected.
quote:Wrong on every level.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
If you want to really find out what it's all about you have to go back to the actual data and make up your own mind, you cannot discount all those scientists whose research shows no such thing and it is unconscionable for anyone in this debate, scientist or not, to ignore these or the sites which collate them.
quote:Myrrh, based on the evidence on this thread, I would say that it is reasonably proved that there is no connection between the provability of a proposition and your likelihood of being convinced of it.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Convince me.
quote:Sigh. And it's not contempible to say "First of all, saying "historically" is misleading, because Barton is actually talking about CO2 changes on very long (glacial-interglacial) timescales. On historical timescales, CO2 has definitely led, not lagged, temperature."?
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
quote:Not true of climate scientists. Christy is one of a very tiny handful, whom I cannot take seriously since his own peer reviewed recent research discredits his earlier theories about the troposphere. In 2005, he wrote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Noiseboy, there are a great many scientists debunking global warming.
quote:And yet he went on camera on the GCCS to espouse his earlier theory - which he himself has admitted was false and based on erroneous data. This is contemptable.
John Christy: Temperature Trends in the Lower Atmosphere - Understanding and Reconciling Differences:
Previously reported discrepancies between the amount of warming near the surface and higher in the atmosphere have been used to challenge the reliability of climate models and the reality of human-induced global warming. Specifically, surface data showed substantial global-average warming, while early versions of satellite and radiosonde data showed little or no warming above the surface. This significant discrepancy no longer exists because errors in the satellite and radiosonde data have been identified and corrected.
quote:Well, in the strictly deductive sense this may be true -- we may not have sufficient data to deduce the relationship.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
IT HAS NOWHERE BEEN PROVED THAT CO2 DEFINITELY LED TEMPERATURE
quote:We don't have any.
Originally posted by CrookedCucumber:
quote:Well, in the strictly deductive sense this may be true -- we may not have sufficient data to deduce the relationship.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
IT HAS NOWHERE BEEN PROVED THAT CO2 DEFINITELY LED TEMPERATURE
quote:Show me what we actually "do have"..
But from the data we do have, it seems a sufficiently compelling working hypothesis that it ought at least to be followed up.
quote:Oh please, give me a break. Actual historical data show that CO2 lags behind global warming, through the ups and downs of temperature change. Actual significant global rises of man-made CO2 show decline in temperature.
Your argument seems to me to be along the same lines as that of the Victorian slum landlords who argued that, since it couldn't be proven that shit-infested drinking water was the cause of cholera, it was unnecessary to improve sanitation.
quote:You are never ever ever going to get it, are you?
Originally posted by Myrrh:
IT HAS NOWHERE BEEN PROVED THAT CO2 DEFINITELY LED TEMPERATURE
Please, this is the whole of the theory.
quote:Hopefully for the last time. None of you has proved in any way that man-made CO2 has contributed in any significant way to the warming experienced from the end of the Mini Ice Age.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
quote:You are never ever ever going to get it, are you?
Originally posted by Myrrh:
IT HAS NOWHERE BEEN PROVED THAT CO2 DEFINITELY LED TEMPERATURE
Please, this is the whole of the theory.
The whole point of that "bullshit" article from an actual peer-reviewed climate scientist that contains oh-my-god-real-science is that historically, CO2 has NOT led temperature. It is an amplifier. A feedback agent. It makes it worse. It amplifies what is already going on. It exacerbates it. It contiunes an upward trend. It warms further. My thesorous is not to hand, so that will have to do.
It has always done so, it is provable in simple experiments. Historically, CO2 has lagged temperature. This time, uniquely, we have added extra CO2 to the atmosphere by human intervention, making it warmer in accordance with the laws of physics. It doesn't matter if it comes 1st or 2nd - it just makes the world wamer. It really isn't that hard to understand, as the rest of the non-Myrrh world realises.
Teufelchen -![]()
quote:If you seriously believe that such a table has anything to do with real science then there's little point in continuing this discussion.
1. The following table was constructed from data published by the U.S. Department of Energy (1) and other sources, summarizing concentrations of the various atmospheric greenhouse gases. Because some of the concentrations are very small the numbers are stated in parts per billion. DOE chose to NOT show water vapor as a greenhouse gas!
quote:I've not checked your link, the URL looks like another one-man-in-his-shed type sites. So, I don't know what he's working from when he cites "US DOE data" - most descriptions of the chemical composition of the atmosphere give the composition of dry air for the very good reason that that's effectively uniform across the earths surface, whereas water vapour content is highly variable both regionally and temporally. That doesn't mean that the scientist composing the table has been negligent in omitting water vapour, it's just that including it would make the table impossible to comprehend or relevant to a very specific situation ("on the average June day in Washington DC, at noon, the atmospheric composition is ...", fat lot of good that'll be for a January night in Glasgow).
Originally posted by Myrrh:
For example, why is water vapour excluded from such an important model as the US produced?
Water Vapour
quote:
Water vapour is the most important greenhouse gas, and carbon dioxide (CO2) is the second-most important one. Methane, nitrous oxide, ozone and several other gases present in the atmosphere in small amounts also contribute to the greenhouse effect.
as the atmosphere warms due to rising levels of greenhouse gases, its concentration of water vapour increases, further intensifying the greenhouse effect. This in turn causes more warming, which causes an additional increase in water vapour, in a self-reinforcing cycle. This water vapour feedback may be strong enough to approximately double the increase in the greenhouse effect due to the added CO2 alone.
quote:On this point I must jump as you are misrepresenting something yourself here. The point being made on that occasion was that the West - where cheap, carbon producing fuel has been enjoyed without so much as the bat of an eyelid for how long? - is now dictating to the developing world that because of global warming deposits of things like coal and oil should not be used but instead more expensive and less effective means such as solar panels should be adopted.
Originally posted by Luigi:
and the claim that a solar panel won't solve Africa's problems. A bit like I suppose a lump of coal or a canister of gas won't solve them either.
quote:Called a milk-sop to deflect the vast amount of adverse publicity of contradictory evidence to its original (er, revised 1995 conclusion without change in data) that man-made CO2 emissions are the real driving force of global warming and the whole of mankind should therefore reduce it, hence Kyoto.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:I've not checked your link, the URL looks like another one-man-in-his-shed type sites. So, I don't know what he's working from when he cites "US DOE data" - most descriptions of the chemical composition of the atmosphere give the composition of dry air for the very good reason that that's effectively uniform across the earths surface, whereas water vapour content is highly variable both regionally and temporally. That doesn't mean that the scientist composing the table has been negligent in omitting water vapour, it's just that including it would make the table impossible to comprehend or relevant to a very specific situation ("on the average June day in Washington DC, at noon, the atmospheric composition is ...", fat lot of good that'll be for a January night in Glasgow).
Originally posted by Myrrh:
For example, why is water vapour excluded from such an important model as the US produced?
Water Vapour
It's certainly not true that climate scientists ignore water vapour. Here's a quote from the recently released IPCC WG1 report, from the FAQs pages because I haven't had time to read the rest yetquote:
Water vapour is the most important greenhouse gas, and carbon dioxide (CO2) is the second-most important one. Methane, nitrous oxide, ozone and several other gases present in the atmosphere in small amounts also contribute to the greenhouse effect.
as the atmosphere warms due to rising levels of greenhouse gases, its concentration of water vapour increases, further intensifying the greenhouse effect. This in turn causes more warming, which causes an additional increase in water vapour, in a self-reinforcing cycle. This water vapour feedback may be strong enough to approximately double the increase in the greenhouse effect due to the added CO2 alone.
quote:How accurate this 4 degree rise is for others to confirm or refute, but as the majority component of the greehouse gases its exclusion from actual climate models used in this argument doesn't make any sense, it's 95-98% of the subject matter.
(The Tunguska Event and Ice Crystals)
However, the most potent greenhouse gas is water, explains Shaidurov and it is this compound on which his study focuses. According to Shaidurov, only small changes in the atmospheric levels of water, in the form of vapour and ice crystals can contribute to significant changes to the temperature of the earth's surface, which far outweighs the effects of carbon dioxide and other gases released by human activities. Just a rise of 1% of water vapour could raise the global average temperature of Earth's surface more then 4 degrees Celsius
quote:"Crucial conceptual error" sums up what I've concluded from this discussion.
Saturation, Nonlinearity and Overlap
in the Radiative Efficiencies of Greenhouse Gases
If one pursues the question of how much of the greenhouse effect is due to each of the various greenhouse gases one finds a perplexing variety of answers in the literature. One source says that 95 percent of the greenhouse effect is due to water vapor, another 98 percent. These figures may be referring to the proportion, by weight or volume, of water vapor among the greenhouse gases of the atmosphere. Another source says that proportion water vapor is responsible for is between 36 and 70 percent. Water droplets in clouds account for another 10 to 15 percent so water as liquid or vapor accounts for between 46 and 85 percent of the greenhouse effect. The same source attributes 9 to 26 percent of the greenhouse effect to carbon dioxide (CO2).
The perplexingly wide range is explained by the source as being due to the nonlinearity of the response of the atmosphere to greenhouse gases and the overlap of the absorption spectra of the various greenhouse gases. The phenomenon is explained no further than evoking the terms nonlinearity and overlap. This material below is an attempt to clarify the situation.
.....
Climate Change 2001 gives a figure for the radiative efficiency of CO2 of 0.01548 W/m²/ppmv but emphasizes this figure is to be used only for the computation of global warming potentials. It is incredible how the scientific works on global warming can leave H2O entirely out of the picture. A diligent search of source other than Climate Change 2001 reveals that the radiative efficiency of water vapor is fifty to sixty percent greater than that of CO2. For more on the role of water, in liquid and vapor forms, on the climate see Water.
The climate modelers of course presume that the level of water vapor in the atmosphere is a function of the global temperature and is therefore a derived effect. Even if this were strictly true it would not hurt to have the data on water vapor displayed for comparison. However those modelers, despite the criticality of the assumption, never display a graph showing the data in which global humidity is a function of the level of global temperature. There is a crucial conceptual error involved in those models. It is one thing for water vapor concentration to be a function of global temperature, but an entirely different matter for water vapor concentration to be a function only of temperature. For more on this topic see Water Vapor.
quote:Wrong.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Luigi's point re the solar panel in Africa was entirely fair. We were shown one ridiculous setup, and asked to deduce from this that all attempts to reduce carbon emissions in developing countries are evil.
quote:The actual reason that global warming theorists are against the distribution of the Durkin dvd is that it contains damning evidence of scientific fraud such as this and the mosquito desception.
Chris Lansea, former research meteorologist, NOAA, Science and Operations Officer at the National Hurricane Center, said on PBS, "we certainly see substantial warming in the ocean and atmosphere over the last several decades on the order of a degree Fahrenheit, and I have no doubt a portion of that, at least, is due to greenhouse warming."
Landsea explains his resignation from the IPCC in 2005.
Dear colleagues,
After some prolonged deliberation, I have decided to withdraw from participating in the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). I am withdrawing because I have come to view the part of the IPCC to which my expertise is relevant as having become politicized. In addition, when I have raised my concerns to the IPCC leadership, their response was simply to dismiss my concerns.
With this open letter to the community, I wish to explain the basis for my decision and bring awareness to what I view as a problem in the IPCC process. The IPCC is a group of climate researchers from around the world that every few years summarize how climate is changing and how it may be altered in the future due to manmade global warming. I had served both as an author for the Observations chapter and a Reviewer for the 2nd Assessment Report in 1995 and the 3rd Assessment Report in 2001, primarily on the topic of tropical cyclones (hurricanes and typhoons). My work on hurricanes, and tropical cyclo nes more generally, has been widely cited by the IPCC. For the upcoming AR4, I was asked several weeks ago by the Observations chapter Lead Author---Dr. Kevin Trenberth---to provide the writeup for Atlantic hurricanes. As I had in the past, I agreed to assist the IPCC in what I thought was to be an important, and politically-neutral determination of what is happening with our climate.
Shortly after Dr. Trenberth requested that I draft the Atlantic hurricane section for the AR4's Observations chapter, Dr. Trenberth participated in a press conference organized by scientists at Harvard on the topic "Experts to warn global warming likely to continue spurring more outbreaks of intense hurricane activity" along with other media interviews on the topic. The result of this media interaction was widespread coverage that directly connected the very busy 2004 Atlantic hurricane season as being caused by anthropogenic greenhouse gas warming occurring today. Listening to and reading trans cripts of this press conference and media interviews, it is apparent that Dr. Trenberth was being accurately quoted and summarized in such statements and was not being misrepresented in the media. These media sessions have potential to result in a widespread perception that global warming has made recent hurricane activity much more severe.
I found it a bit perplexing that the participants in the Harvard press conference had come to the conclusion that global warming was impacting hurricane activity today. To my knowledge, none of the participants in that press conference had performed any research on hurricane variability, nor were they reporting on any new work in the field. All previous and current research in the area of hurricane variability has shown no reliable, long-term trend up in the frequency or intensity of tropical cyclones, either in the Atlantic or any other basin. The IPCC assessments in 1995 and 2001 also concluded that there was no global warming signal found in the hurricane record.
Moreover, the evidence is quite strong and supported by the most recent credible studies that any impact in the future from global warming upon hurricane will likely be quite small. The latest results from the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (Knutson and Tuleya, Journal of Climate, 2004) suggest that by around 2080, hurricanes may have winds and rainfall about 5% more intense than today. It has been proposed that even this tiny change may be an exaggeration as to what may happen by the end of the 21st Century (Michaels, Knappenberger, and Landsea, Journal of Climate, 2005, submitted).
It is beyond me why my colleagues would utilize the media to push an unsupported agenda that recent hurricane activity has been due to global warming. Given Dr. Trenberth's role as the IPCC's Lead Author responsible for preparing the text on hurricanes, his public statements so far outside of current scientific understanding led me to concern that it would be very difficult for the IPCC process to proceed objectively with regards to the assessment on hurricane activity.
continued on:(Global Warmer believer who resigned from the IPCC)
quote:Tough on you, but you began this to thread to deal with this.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Before I get a hell warning, I think for my own sanity I think I better skip Myrrh's posts from here on in...
quote:Myrrh
Antarctic sea ice edge expanding
A study published in the American Meteorological Society's Journal of Climate (Yuan, X. and Martinson, D.G., "Antarctic sea ice extent variability and its global connectivity," Volume 13: 1697-1717 (2000)) demonstrated the Antarctic polar ice cap has been expanding. According to the study, 18 years of satellite data indicate the mean Antarctic sea ice edge has expanded by 0.011 degrees of latitude toward the equator each year.
A later study, also published in Journal of Climate (Watkins, A.B. and Simmonds, I., "Current trends in Antarctic sea ice: The 1990s impact on a short climatology," Volume 13: 4441-4451 (2000)) reached a similar conclusion. The study reported significant increases in Antarctic sea ice between 1987 and 1996. The study further indicated the 1990s exhibited increases in the length of the sea-ice season.
Arctic ice thickening, expanding
A study published in Geophysical Research Letters (Winsor, P., "Arctic sea ice thickness remained constant during the 1990s," Volume 28: 1039-1041 (2001)) found the same to be true in the Arctic. The study concluded, "mean ice thickness has remained on a near-constant level around the North Pole from 1986-1997." Moreover, the study noted data from six different submarine cruises under the Arctic sea ice showed little variability and a "slight increasing trend" in the 1990s.
Just off the Arctic polar ice cap, ice coverage in Greenland was also shown to be steady and likely increasing. A study in Journal of Geophysical Research (Comiso, J.C., Wadhams, P., Pedersen, L.T. and Gersten, R.A., Volume 106: 9093-9116 (2001)) concluded that, annual variances notwithstanding, the Odden ice tongue in Greenland exhibited no statistically significant change from 1979 to 1998. Moreover, proxy reconstruction of the ice tongue utilizing air temperature data indicated the ice covers a greater area today than it did several decades ago. (Polar Ice Cap Studies Refute Catastrophic Global Warming Theories
by James M. Taylor (December 16, 2001))
quote:Littlelady - I know you don't accept the IPCC, but if you did (as the overwhelming majority of the rest of the world does) you'd know that action has to be global - the latest document calls for an 85% carbon emission reduction. It may make you personally puke, but what it amounts to is that, unless every country signs up to drastic changes, hundreds of millions more in Africa will probably die. So no offence, but I'd rather have you puke than that. And as I pointed out, African development is perfectly possible without futher buggering up the climate and making their dire situation even worse.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
Wrong.
It was about telling African people what to do when they are trying to crawl out of poverty. That kind of western arrogance makes me puke.
It was a good point well made. You're bound to be derisive as you wrote off the programme before you even watched it!
quote:Right. Yeah. So you say. But even if such melodrama proves to be correct, it is up to Africans to decide for themselves whether they want to do this. It isn't up to hypocritical self-righteous colonialist westerners to start ordering Africans around or depriving them of the means to crawl out of poverty and deprivation. The West doesn't have a God-given right to dictate what other nations do. They only have the right to ask. Politely.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
unless every country signs up to drastic changes, hundreds of millions more in Africa will probably die.
quote:Except it failed to mention that:
It was about telling African people what to do when they are trying to crawl out of poverty. That kind of western arrogance makes me puke.
It was a good point well made.
quote:It failed to omit a thousand and one things. So does every programme. So what? Just because the nations of the developing world were exempt (how gracious of us!) from signing up to a (Western initiated) document - which, from media reports anyway, seems not to be worth the paper it is written on - does not mean African nations are not coming under pressure to avoid developing any [carbon producing] resources they may have available.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
Except it failed to mention that:
(a) In rural parts of Africa, solar panels can be far more cost effective than building an entire transmission network of pylons etc.
(b) The problems could have been solved with an extra solar panel...Africa has a resources problem that is nothing to do with Evil Greens.
(c) Africa is likely to be one of the places hardest (and soonest) hit by global warming.
(d) Africa (and the rest of the developing world) is acknowledged to be a different case to the West, and so the Annex II countries are specifically exempt from Kyoto obligations.
Failing to mention the last point seemed a very big omission.
quote:Not me. I've no idea what the UN is up to. I just get tired of hearing westerners (governments and individuals) pontificate about African nations. I do wish we'd stop thinking of the continent as somehow available to 'our' interference.
The "Western Imperialism crushing the African dream" idea also runs contrary to one of the main objections many people in the West seem to have - that global warming is a UN scam engineered by third world countries to rob the industrial nations of their hard-earned wealth. Remarkably, some people seem to be able believe both ideas, provided it gives them cause to doubt AGW.
quote:It matters because if Durkin is making the case that Africa is specifically being "interfered with" then he needs to show (a) that this is happening, and (b) how it is happening.
Littlelady wrote:
It failed to omit a thousand and one things. So does every programme. So what?
quote:Well, that's what he did within the context of the programme. You are looking for an entirely different programme to justify your own skepticism. If he had wanted to make a dull documentary then that is what he would have done. But his intention appeared to be to counter the party line with a different viewpoint. The way the programme was constructed and the numerous aspects to the debate that were presented made it compelling viewing to someone who watched it with an open mind, as I did.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
quote:It matters because if Durkin is making the case that Africa is specifically being "interfered with" then he needs to show (a) that this is happening, and (b) how it is happening.
Littlelady wrote:
It failed to omit a thousand and one things. So does every programme. So what?
quote:So African nations are free to develop any natural gas or oil or coal reserves they may have? No-one will object?
Btw I do agree with you that the way Africa has often been interfered with is vile. I just don't see any evidence to think this is necessarily one of those times.
quote:Who knows?
Originally posted by Clint Boggis:
In this case, why did the person who specified the components of the solar panel system not do so with regard to the expected load?
quote:Well, at least you sort of got the point that was being put across, even if you appear defensive about it. You missed the implication of hypocrisy, however. For it is hypocritical of Western nations (or organisations within them) to pressurise African nations not to do something those same Western nations have been happily doing for decades just because those same Western nations (according to the pro-manmade lobby) have fucked it all up.
The thing that annoyed me more than the irrelevance, was that it ignored the fact that GW effects will impact the poor most of all, while trying to suggest that the best chance we have to solve the problem is just naughty people wanting to stop this poor man having enough electricity!
quote:You're right, it was compelling viewing, as well as being beautifully filmed. It's caused a massive stir, and doubtless will continue to do so - I just wish that Monbiot's crappy "Greenwash" programme the previous week had been a fraction as good.
You are looking for an entirely different programme to justify your own skepticism. If he had wanted to make a dull documentary then that is what he would have done. But his intention appeared to be to counter the party line with a different viewpoint. The way the programme was constructed and the numerous aspects to the debate that were presented made it compelling viewing to someone who watched it with an open mind, as I did.
quote:Those are strong words. Do you have evidence to show that environmental concerns are currently depriving Africans to this extent? Or any extent?
It isn't up to hypocritical self-righteous colonialist westerners to start ordering Africans around or depriving them of the means to crawl out of poverty and deprivation. The West doesn't have a God-given right to dictate what other nations do.
quote:No idea. I haven't heard of any restrictions though.
So African nations are free to develop any natural gas or oil or coal reserves they may have? No-one will object?
quote:Definately. But are they doing that?
[...] it is hypocritical of Western nations (or organisations within them) to pressurise African nations not to do something those same Western nations have been happily doing for decades just because those same Western nations (according to the pro-manmade lobby) have fucked it all up.
quote:I have to say, that's encouraging. I don't feel quite as
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
You're right, it was compelling viewing, as well as being beautifully filmed. It's caused a massive stir, and doubtless will continue to do so
quote:But why do you ask that? Think of the last year and all that you have heard about the pro-manmade lobby position. How much of it has been based on 'plausible reasoning'? Just think of almost any media mention of global warming and what do we get? Squillions will die within the next X years if we don't all switch off our lightbulbs NOW! The world will be flooded in ten years time if we don't pay huge taxes to stop everyone from flying NOW!
However, as compelling as it was emotionally, it didn't seem to offer much in the way of rational argument. I'm not asking for pages of statistics, just some sort of plausible reasoning.
quote:I know. I get like that sometimes.
quote:Those are strong words.
It isn't up to hypocritical self-righteous colonialist westerners to start ordering Africans around or depriving them of the means to crawl out of poverty and deprivation. The West doesn't have a God-given right to dictate what other nations do.
quote:No idea. We've all just been arguing about a programme which suggested that might just be the case. It wouldn't surprise me. Our government or environmental organisations within the UK are bound to be saying and/or doing something to 'change the behaviour' of African nations. God knows is the theme of the moment just now. But if I get the chance, when I visit Tanzania in June, I'll ask. I'd love to hear what Africans themselves have to say about it.
quote:Definately. But are they doing that?
[...] it is hypocritical of Western nations (or organisations within them) to pressurise African nations not to do something those same Western nations have been happily doing for decades just because those same Western nations (according to the pro-manmade lobby) have fucked it all up.
quote:I wasn't wanting the programme to answer technical questions, just not to mislead people by raising spurious arguments. I was pointing out the lack of connection between a poorly designed solar panel system and Global Warming. Many people will have watched and just accepted that the African man's problem is due to nasty environmental scare people.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
quote:Who knows?
Originally posted by Clint Boggis:
In this case, why did the person who specified the components of the solar panel system not do so with regard to the expected load?
What did people expect of this programme? A degree in physics or electrical engineering or something? It wasn't supposed to be Open University, you know! And with all the elements that people on here have suggested should have been included, the programme would have been about three days long!
quote:So you agree with me? I'm saying that he argues against the proposed solution to the problem and suggests that the people with the most plausible explanation and solution just want to make things worse!
quote:Well, at least you sort of got the point that was being put across, even if you appear defensive about it.
The thing that annoyed me more than the irrelevance, was that it ignored the fact that GW effects will impact the poor most of all, while trying to suggest that the best chance we have to solve the problem is just naughty people wanting to stop this poor man having enough electricity!
quote:I'm not aware of any demands that Africa should make any changes, in fact someone above suggested that Africa is exempted. I assume Africa can't make much of a contribution to CO2 compared with heavily industrialised countries and those with lots of planes, cars and coal or gas power stations. Lots of wood fires can't help but tha's not the main problem.
You missed the implication of hypocrisy, however. For it is hypocritical of Western nations (or organisations within them) to pressurise African nations not to do something those same Western nations have been happily doing for decades just because those same Western nations (according to the pro-manmade lobby) have fucked it all up.
quote:I agree with you here; people who live in very poor conditions cannot be expected to continue in them unnecessarily. My choice would be for the rich west to reduce our CO2 output just a bit more (we've caused it, not them) so the poorest can carry on whatever they have to do (with our help if they want it) to survive and develop, until they start to pollute significantly (or the climate gets unbearable!)
Another issue that the whole programme raised by implication rather than overtly was that of the now -v- future aspect of the global warming debate. How that relates to Africa is what matters more? The relief of poverty, starvation and fatal sickness now (which may mean using fossil burning fuels, if a country has such available to them) or of death by another means (which is not yet tangible) at some point in the future? Which is more important - to the African?
quote:Oh, here we go ...
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Little Lady - is it fair to assume you would also approve of slavery or cannibalism if any African nations were to favour it? Don't want to impose our imperialism after all, so each to their own (literally, if they fancy it). Or perhaps it is not so vomitous to have a few necessary global standards in our global village...
quote:Well, I've never been one to jump on bandwagons, Noiseboy. And believe me, you don't insult me by saying that 'every government in the world' disagrees with me! I take that as a compliment! I'm happy not to be in the same league as politicians. Much as I'm sure there are some honest, decent ones out there.
The point about hypocrisy is rather unfair, also. You, famously, still are unconvinced about the reality of ACC. Every government in the world now disagrees with you, but this is only a very recent thing - even 10 years ago you'd have had the majority on your side.
quote:Because what I want to know is this. Is the liberation you speak of Africa's own idea of liberation (not that a whole continent can share the same opinion of course) or is it the West's version of it? My suspicion is that it may be the West's, not because Africans are somehow ignorant or unaware or have a desire to destroy the world, but because they may have other, more immediately pressing concerns that could actually represent more clearly a sense of liberation to them. It is not our business to determine what liberates Africa. That is Africa's business. Even if we don't like it.
What is your problem with Africa being liberated from the crippling financial tie to oil?
quote:Well, that assumes Africans ARE being asked to cut their carbon emissions. Most contraction and convergence proposals allow them to increase - the idea is that ultimately everyone on the planet gets the same carbon allowance.
Littlelady wrote:
[...] what matters more? The relief of poverty, starvation and fatal sickness now (which may mean using fossil burning fuels, if a country has such available to them) or of death by another means (which is not yet tangible) at some point in the future? Which is more important - to the African?
quote:and
I assume Africa can't make much of a contribution to CO2 compared with heavily industrialised countries and those with lots of planes, cars and coal or gas power stations. Lots of wood fires can't help but tha's not the main problem.
quote:The point the programme was making was that the "until" bit in your second statement could stop Africans from enjoying the content of your first statement: things we have been enjoying for a long time. In other words, what right have we to determine just how far they could develop before they became 'naughty boys and girls' given our track record?
My choice would be for the rich west to reduce our CO2 output just a bit more (we've caused it, not them) so the poorest can carry on whatever they have to do (with our help if they want it) to survive and develop, until they start to pollute significantly (or the climate gets unbearable!)
quote:It doesn't seem odd to me. Science makes some enormous claims. It's making one in this context. If science wants to claim it's virtually certain we're all going to die soon from drowning or heatstroke (depending on where we live) if we don't do this or that then it has to be held accountable to a very high standard for such a life-changing claim. If it can't stand the heat of resistence, it shouldn't make the claim in the first place. I've no sympathy for scientists here. They think they know it then they have to show it. Or not, if they don't feel inclined!
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
It always seems odd to me that people demand the science be proved 100%.
quote:You don't? Gosh. I do! It's because we are living now, not 100 years from now. No-one can stop living in the present because of something which may, or may not, happen in the future. Would people have stopped having sex if they knew AIDS was just around the corner? No. I can guarantee that. But they learned (on the whole) to wear condoms when AIDS arrived and after everyone realised you couldn't catch it through touching someone who had contracted it. That's just human nature.
I just don't get why the UK spends billions and billions on the Olympics, Millennium Dome, Trident etc, when the chance of catastrophe is looming.
quote:Let's say for a moment that we 'generously allow' them to pollute the atmosphere relatively freely for the time being, while they develop move some level of development nearer ours. That will take some years by which time we'll have even more evidence to show whether GW is truly disastrous or not and the extent of humanity's contribution. Maybe this evidence will affect some opinions (or not) In the mean time we fly less, close the most wasteful or polluting power plants and factories, have more efficient homes and transport and try not to pollute or waste things.
The point the programme was making was that the "until" bit in your second statement could stop Africans from enjoying the content of your first statement: things we have been enjoying for a long time. In other words, what right have we to determine just how far they could develop before they became 'naughty boys and girls' given our track record?
quote:The Thread Where Everyone Argues If Man-Induced Climate Change Is Real »
Timothy Ball is no wishy-washy skeptic of global warming. The Canadian climatologist, who has a Ph.D. in climatology from the University of London and taught at the University of Winnipeg for 28 years, says that the widely propagated “fact” that humans are contributing to global warming is the “greatest deception in the history of science.” (The politics of global warming)Bill Steigerwald
TRIBUNE-REVIEW Saturday, February 10, 2007
quote:
Q: The mainstream media would have us believe that the science of global warming is now settled by the latest IPCC report. Is it true?
A: No. It’s absolutely false. As soon as people start saying something’s settled, it’s usually that they don’t want to talk about it anymore. They don’t want anybody to dig any deeper. It’s very, very far from settled. In fact, that’s the real problem. We haven’t been able to get all of the facts on the table. The IPCC is a purely political setup.
There was a large group of people, the political people, who wanted the report to be more harum-scarum than it actually is. In fact, the report is quite a considerable step down from the previous reports. For example, they have reduced the potential temperature rise and they’ve reduced the sea level increase and a whole bunch of other things. Part of it is because they know so many people will be watching the report this time.
Q: Why should we be leery of the IPCC’s report -- or the summary of the report?
A: Well, because the report is the end product of a political agenda, and it is the political agenda of both the extreme environmentalists who of course think we are destroying the world. But it’s also the political agenda of a group of people ... who believe that industrialization and development and capitalism and the Western way is a terrible system and they want to bring it down. They couldn’t do it by attacking energy because they know that would get the public’s back up very quickly. ... The vehicle they chose was CO2, because that’s the byproduct of industry and fossil-fuel burning, which of course drives the whole thing. They think, “If we can show that that is destroying the planet, then it allows us to control.” Unfortunately, you’ve got a bunch of scientists who have this political agenda as well, and they have effectively controlled the IPCC process.
Q: You always hear the argument that the IPCC has several thousand scientists -- how can you not accept what they say?
A: The answer, first of all, is that consensus is not a scientific fact. The other thing is, you look at the degree to which they have controlled the whole IPCC process. For example, who are the lead authors? Who are the scientists who sit on the summary panel with the politicians to make sure that they get their view in? … You’ve got this incestuous little group that is controlling the whole process both through their publications and the IPCC. I’m not a conspiracy theorist and I hate being even pushed toward that, but I think there is a consensus conspiracy that’s going on.
Q: What is your strongest or best argument that GW is not “very likely” to be caused by SUVs and Al Gore’s private planes?
A: I guess the best argument is that global warming has occurred, but it began in 1680, if you want to take the latest long-term warming, and the climate changes all the time. It began in 1680, in the middle of what’s called “The Little Ice Age” when there was three feet of ice on the Thames River in London. And the demand for furs of course drove the fur trade. The world has warmed up until recently, and that warming trend doesn’t fit with the CO2 record at all; it fits with the sun-spot data. Of course they are ignoring the sun because they want to focus on CO2.
The other thing that you are seeing going on is that they have switched from talking about global warming to talking about climate change. The reason for that is since 1998 the global temperature has gone down -- only marginally, but it has gone down. In the meantime, of course, CO2 has increased in the atmosphere and human production has increased. So you’ve got what Huxley called the great bane of science -- “a lovely hypothesis destroyed by an ugly fact.” So by switching to climate change, it allows them to point at any weather event -- whether it’s warming, cooling, hotter, dryer, wetter, windier, whatever -- and say it is due to humans. Of course, it’s absolutely rubbish.
quote:"It's absolutely rubbish", so what proof is there that it isn't?
Q: Is the rising CO2 level the cause of global warming or the result of it?
A: That’s a very good question because in the theory the claim is that if CO2 goes up, temperature will go up. The ice core record of the last 420,000 years shows exactly the opposite. It shows that the temperature changes before the CO2. So the fundamental assumption of the theory is wrong. That means the theory is wrong. ... But the theory that human CO2 would lead to runaway global warming became a fact right away, and scientists like myself who dared to question it were immediately accused of being paid by the oil companies or didn’t care about the children or the future or anything else.
quote:Of course, scientists aren't claiming "it's virtually certain we're all going to die soon from drowning or heatstroke". The claim of science is that is't virtually certain that the average global temperature is increasing, and a substantial part of that increase is explained by human activity (burning fossil fuels and deforestation). Somewhere below "virtually certain" is the quantitative values - how much the average temperature is increasing and how much of that is due to human activity. These quantitative values have significant uncertainties, but not so significant that in either case "none" is anything other than very unlikely.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
Science makes some enormous claims. It's making one in this context. If science wants to claim it's virtually certain we're all going to die soon from drowning or heatstroke (depending on where we live) if we don't do this or that then it has to be held accountable to a very high standard for such a life-changing claim. If it can't stand the heat of resistence, it shouldn't make the claim in the first place. I've no sympathy for scientists here. They think they know it then they have to show it.
quote:Of course, regardless that world governments were coming on board the anti-smoking bandwagon and the claim of the anti-smoking lobby that passive smokers got tobacco related cancer, it is still junk science as is the global warming theory that man-made CO2 is driving us to all to destruction.
(Passive smoking doesn't cause cancer - official)
By Victoria Macdonald, Health Correspondent
THE world's leading health organisation has withheld from publication a study which shows that not only might there be no link between passive smoking and lung cancer but that it could even have a protective effect.
The astounding results are set to throw wide open the debate on passive smoking health risks. The World Health Organisation, which commissioned the 12-centre, seven-country European study has failed to make the findings public, and has instead produced only a summary of the results in an internal report.
Despite repeated approaches, nobody at the WHO headquarters in Geneva would comment on the findings last week. At its International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France, which coordinated the study, a spokesman would say only that the full report had been submitted to a science journal and no publication date had been set.
The findings are certain to be an embarrassment to the WHO, which has spent years and vast sums on anti-smoking and anti-tobacco campaigns. The study is one of the largest ever to look at the link between passive smoking - or environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) - and lung cancer, and had been eagerly awaited by medical experts and campaigning groups.
quote:Gore is certainly no climate scientist - but of course they would probably make boring films. What matters surely is - is the science accurate? In the case of An Inconvenient Truth, the general opinion of climate scientists (see here for article and discussion) is that it is pretty good. There are some errors, but these are pretty minor. There are plenty of details that are skated over, such as the relationship between CO2 and temperature, but the broad thrust is correct (again, see here for article and discussion).
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
to be honest, what I've seen of Gore's film looks much more like propoganda than hard science.
quote:(my emphasis)
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Gore is certainly no climate scientist - but of course they would probably make boring films. What matters surely is - is the science accurate? In the case of An Inconvenient Truth, the general opinion of climate scientists (see here for article and discussion) is that it is pretty good. There are some errors, but these are pretty minor. There are plenty of details that are skated over, such as the relationship between CO2 and temperature, but the broad thrust is correct (again, see here for article and discussion).
Given that the film has to be entertaining and appeal to old and young across the board, I thought it was a very good balance. Certainly, next to the GCCS where pretty much every utterance has been debunked, it is a masterpiece.
quote:But do you apply the same attitude to other areas of your life?
Originally posted by Littlelady:
quote:It doesn't seem odd to me. Science makes some enormous claims. It's making one in this context. If science wants to claim it's virtually certain we're all going to die soon from drowning or heatstroke (depending on where we live) if we don't do this or that then it has to be held accountable to a very high standard for such a life-changing claim. If it can't stand the heat of resistence, it shouldn't make the claim in the first place. I've no sympathy for scientists here.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
It always seems odd to me that people demand the science be proved 100%.
quote:
Now, this is the kind of talk that has often been lacking in this whole debate (everywhere, not just on here). According to my bro (himself a scientist of the published, peer reviewed, Phd variety) science is very often about probabilities. If only people spoke in probabilities on this particular subject then personally I could listen to them. Alas, it just doesn't seem to happen. There seems to be so much dogma about.
quote:So long as that is what is happening then I would be happy to step off my soapbox.
Of course it's vital that people in developing countries make their own decisions about the future.
quote:Yes, well, I confess to using a smidgen of hyperbole there Alan.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Of course, scientists aren't claiming "it's virtually certain we're all going to die soon from drowning or heatstroke".
quote:Absolutely. But some scientists are also propogandists, Alan. They are the people who are the hardest for non-scientists to challenge. We don't have the knowledge or language to do so on equal terms and that exclusivity makes it difficult to counter what they say.
Perhaps you need to get the propogandists to defend those statements.
quote:I haven't seen the film. No way was I going to pay to listen to the same old stuff I hear on the BBC on a regular basis! (I should demand a refund on my TV licence)
what I've seen of Gore's film looks much more like propoganda than hard science.
quote:Charmed, I'm sure. So it's ok for you to imply I should approve of slavery and canabalism just because I passionately believe in the freedom of Africans to choose their future for themselves, but it's not ok for me to point out your obvious bias when it comes to the entertainment version of the global warming debate? Purleese.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
That was low, even by your standards.
quote:Generally speaking, the ones who work for polluting industries and who claim that we aren't harming the enviroment in the face of the dissent of almost all their peers.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
some scientists are also propogandists
quote:With governemnt funding, scientists participate in the proces of peer review so there are solid checks and balances. It is also worth pointing out that different governments would have different biases, so one would expect to see this reflected in "government funded" research were this an issue. It is not. In the case of climate change, as I have relentlessly pointed out (and no-one has refuted) all the world's governments have backed it, from hardline communist North Korea to the US of A. Many have - and do - have motives to surpress the conclusions, and yet they happen anyway. Perhaps this is the best illustration - the proof of the pudding is in the eating.
Originally posted by Papio:
Why anyone thinks that scientists part-funded by governments are more likely to be unprofessionally biased than "scientists" funded wholly or mainly be oil companies and other polluters still beats me, frankly.
quote:Oh for God's sake...
Originally posted by Littlelady:
Charmed, I'm sure. So it's ok for you to imply I should approve of slavery and canabalism just because I passionately believe in the freedom of Africans to choose their future for themselves, but it's not ok for me to point out your obvious bias when it comes to the entertainment version of the global warming debate? Purleese.
quote:Yes.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
But do you apply the same attitude to other areas of your life?
quote:I would suggest you read my post again, Hiro. Nowhere have I demanded or even requested 100% certainty. I have simply stated that if science makes big claims then it has to expect big accountability. How is that saying I am demanding 100% certainty?
If, after a thorough inspection of your car, the mechanic said there was a 95% chance of sudden brakes failure would you risk it because "he wasn't 100% sure"?
quote:I've already responded to you in this regard on the previous page.
You also react with anger in defense of Durkin's claim that environmentalists are holding back Africa's development. But he didn't show any evidence of this, and neither have you. So why the strength of conviction?
quote:I don't see that at all. I argue with anyone, depending on what they say. I'm an equal opportunities arguer. I do, however, acknowledge that Alan*, a scientist, has greater legitimacy to speak on issues of science than has Noiseboy*, who isn't a scientist, and I think my posts reflect that.
It seems that you have very different standards according to who is making the claim.
quote:If you dig into the depths of this thread, you'll find an example I cited which refutes your statement here. It is the only scientific report I have studied in depth. It was compiled by a scientist well known for his anti-smoking stance ( Jamrozik) and it was comissioned by SmokeFree London, which is a lobby group comprising a number of London Boroughs. Strangely enough, the conclusions of the report (cited widely in the press not long before the ban in England was passed) agreed with the views of SmokeFree London. It is naive (and possibly even irresponsible) to believe that because something is commissioned by the government (either on a local or national level) it is somehow beyond reproach. In fact, I would suggest, it needs even greater examination because it is the people's money providing the support.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
It is also worth pointing out that different governments would have different biases, so one would expect to see this reflected in "government funded" research were this an issue. It is not.
quote:This is a good point, and I suspect reflects the view of many people. We've got "fear fatigue". Avian flu, AIDS, Y2K, acid rain, ozone layer, meteor strikes. Then there's all the stories from medical science - nutrition, allergies, ideal weight, carcenogenic toast, cot deaths, MMI, etc etc. It's no wonder people get skeptical.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
While there is an ongoing process of re-examination occurring within science, on the outside the impression this process gives is that science is unreliable. That is, what is stated today does not necessarily hold for tomorrow. I accept the principle of scientific enquiry, but because in practice it often results in change of position or advice, the only option I feel I have is to adopt a 'wait and see' policy. Many non-scientists think as I do, not because they are anti-science or anti-scientists, but simply because they have become slightly skeptical.
quote:Assuming "assulted" is metaphorical (hopefully), that's still crappy IMO. I'm quite happy with the forthcoming pub smoking ban (sorry!), but outside too? That's much too far.
I found out for myself last week how successful that approach has been here in the UK as I was assaulted for smoking a cigarette in the open air (totally minding my own business). It's open season on smokers these days.
quote:
Originally posted by Littlelady:
I would suggest you read my post again, Hiro. Nowhere have I demanded or even requested 100% certainty. I have simply stated that if science makes big claims then it has to expect big accountability. How is that saying I am demanding 100% certainty?![]()
quote:I took this to imply agreement. Was I mistaken? And what do you mean by "accountability" in this context?
Originally posted by Littlelady:
quote:It doesn't seem odd to me.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
It always seems odd to me that people demand the science be proved 100%.
quote:What I meant was that you were far less critical of sources whose conclusions you agreed with, and applied a different standard of proof. Hence my comment that you wholeheartedly accepted Durkin's claims about environmentalists holding back Africa.
I argue with anyone, depending on what they say. I'm an equal opportunities arguer. I do, however, acknowledge that Alan*, a scientist, has greater legitimacy to speak on issues of science than has Noiseboy*, who isn't a scientist, and I think my posts reflect that.
quote:Yes. I said that I could understand why people made such demands while you could not (that is what you said anyway), ie that science makes great claims, etc, etc. Personally, I'm happy when scientists just acknowledge that they aren't sure. Like I said earlier in the thread, I can deal in probabilities.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
I took this to imply agreement. Was I mistaken?
quote:That their word is not simply taken. Scientists should be questioned, not simply deferred to. But I'm not very good at deference, so maybe I'm biased.
and what do you mean by "accountability" in this context?
quote:Not so. If I am less critical it is because I have already wrestled with it and come to agreement. I don't think that's unusual though, do you? If I agree with someone then all I can really do is nod my head or say "I agree with you". No point in arguing with something I agree with!
What I meant was that you were far less critical of sources whose conclusions you agreed with, and applied a different standard of proof.
quote:His point was powerfully made at a time when I hadn't even considered it. He put a thought into my head, which is a good thing. My sensitivity over this subject is because of past western interference in Africa: I don't want it to happen again over this issue. I want us to leave Africa alone to decide its own issues for itself.
Hence my comment that you wholeheartedly accepted Durkin's claims about environmentalists holding back Africa.
quote:Oh yes, I agree with this (though I disagree that it isn't their fault!). What worries me more than what the media says is the ease with which so many people believe it. I hear on a daily basis people spouting statistics about all sorts of things without even questioning what such statistics actually mean, and I confess that my breath is frequently taken.
Unfortunately, the media thrives on fear. It's not their fault - fear sells newspapers.
quote:No, it wasn't metaphorical. He punched my arm hard, leaving a bruise. He objected to a colleague and I smoking in his general vicinity. When I reported him to the owners of the building his poxy shop is a part of, they advised me that I could bring a charge of assault against him and as I had a witness, the chances are the police would listen. I thought about it overnight and decided against bringing a charge. Hopefully the warning the owners gave him will be sufficient.
Assuming "assulted" is metaphorical (hopefully), that's still crappy IMO.
quote:Presumably by the same logic we shouldn't listen too much to anything you say either?
Originally posted by Littlelady:
I do, however, acknowledge that Alan*, a scientist, has greater legitimacy to speak on issues of science than has Noiseboy*, who isn't a scientist, and I think my posts reflect that.
*or any other scientist/non-scientist.
quote:But what has this example (interesting though it is) to do with government funded institutions? This report was comissioned by a lobby group, so you would be right to be suspicious. The thousands of peer-reviewed papers on climate change that all have the same conclusions are not comissioned by lobby groups, they are the product of institutions of science who in turn receive government money. There is no commissioning going on by lobby groups, and if there is elsewhere then it is not to be regarded with the same seriousness as the genuine neutral academic stuff. Of course, it falls down completely on another level too, in as much as there are contradictory motives on the part of governments - this US administration has been downplaying and surpressing climate change information since day 1, and yet every one of its relevent institutions have endorsed the climate change consensus. (side note - I am apalled that you were assaulted. Hopefully as you say the threat is enough to stop any future behaviour, but if you get any sense that it isn't then sue the bastard).
Originally posted by Littlelady:
If you dig into the depths of this thread, you'll find an example I cited which refutes your statement here. It is the only scientific report I have studied in depth. It was compiled by a scientist well known for his anti-smoking stance ( Jamrozik) and it was comissioned by SmokeFree London, which is a lobby group comprising a number of London Boroughs. Strangely enough, the conclusions of the report (cited widely in the press not long before the ban in England was passed) agreed with the views of SmokeFree London. It is naive (and possibly even irresponsible) to believe that because something is commissioned by the government (either on a local or national level) it is somehow beyond reproach. In fact, I would suggest, it needs even greater examination because it is the people's money providing the support.
quote:Please read the bit of my post you quoted again, Noiseboy. Where did I say I wasn't listening much to anything you (or Alan) said, exactly? Of course, if you want to ignore what I say then you are perfectly free to do so. I have likewise stated clearly that I am not a scientist; I don't pretend any particular grasp of science at all. As I've shared with you on this thread, I was totally crap at all the science subjects at school. Nothing has changed.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
quote:Presumably by the same logic we shouldn't listen too much to anything you say either?
Originally posted by Littlelady:
I do, however, acknowledge that Alan*, a scientist, has greater legitimacy to speak on issues of science than has Noiseboy*, who isn't a scientist, and I think my posts reflect that.
*or any other scientist/non-scientist.
quote:A lobby group funded by local government (which is subsidised by central government).
But what has this example (interesting though it is) to do with government funded institutions? This report was comissioned by a lobby group, so you would be right to be suspicious.
quote:Maybe you didn't hit the link, but Jamrozik was (possibly still is) employed by Imperial College in London and has various publications behind him from his time in Australia. So I would say his report would be academic stuff, though clearly not neutral.
There is no commissioning going on by lobby groups, and if there is elsewhere then it is not to be regarded with the same seriousness as the genuine neutral academic stuff.
quote:Thank you. I hope he doesn't do it again either. He was very aggressive.
(side note - I am apalled that you were assaulted. Hopefully as you say the threat is enough to stop any future behaviour, but if you get any sense that it isn't then sue the bastard).
quote:I have no idea where you get this impression from, Papio. I really don't.
Originally posted by Papio:
I see Littlelady is ignoring me, though, so maybe this is a waste of a post...
quote:I would indeed. However, having told them, I wouldn't then pressurise them into learning a lesson from me. If they chose to go their own way, even if it hurt me, I wouldn't do anything to stop them. That is the risk I take sharing a world with other people. It's a risk we all share.
You'd tell your friend if she was about to do something that you had done and then regretted very much, wouldn't you?
quote:There are generally three sources of funding for scientific research - governments (either directly from individual government departments and agencies, or through some form of research council), industry (which might be a companies own labs, or funding of research conducted elsewhere) and philanthropy (eg: charities). In many cases, scientists may get funding from all three sources, maybe even as a collaboration on a single project (I recently was an RA on a project which had funding from several sources including the European Commission, UK Dept of Environment, the Environment Agency, the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency, the Scottish Executive, and British Nuclear Fuels).
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
With governemnt funding, scientists participate in the proces of peer review so there are solid checks and balances.
...
With industry funding, there is a clear motive to make data fit a pre-determined outcome - otherwise, why fund it at all?
It may be imperfect, but I'll go with non-industry every time. Since this is something that keeps coming up, however, I'd be interested to hear Alan's thoughts on it.
quote:I wouldn't.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
PS: Whatever you feel about passive smoking, I sincerely hope you wouldn't sanction thumping someone because they lit up in the open air about 3m from your front door.
quote:Noiseboy, you began this thread specifically to argue whether global warming is real or not. Retreat to your pet thread of believers if you're not up to continuing.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
OK Myrrh, I'll give you one more reply,
quote:Since I haven't followed any of the arguments from the smoking lobby I didn't know this.
as I think I've just clicked. All the references to "Junk Science", a term coined by the smoking lobby, should have tipped me off earlier.
quote:I posted an article on the results of a much awaited and recent UN study on passive smoking.
According to Wikipedia, even the tobacco industry doesn't claim anything like what you have. All studies not funded by the tobacco industry say the same thing - that it kills.
quote:You'll have difficulty here as you've misread my post.
I can only speculate at your motives,
quote:Yet you've rejected all arguments based on science.
but - just to reitorate - I am only interested in discussion based on science,
quote:...and your one argument that 'world goverments' support your view is as political as those you reject.
.. not big business in the oil or tobacco lobbies.
quote:Tim Ball is a climate expert.
Your constant use of these sources (such as Tim Ball) speaks for itself.
quote:This is the route my brother follows. His salary, etc, is paid by the university but every three years his boss has to apply to DEFRA for funding to support the project itself. So far he's managed nine years on the project. Also, his papers have all been peer-reviewed: it is a necessary process in order to help secure future funding.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Research projects basically come from two routes. One is that the research staff in a university department will think up something they want to do, write up a proposal to a funding agency (almost always a research council) and wait 6 months for the funding body to have the proposal reviewed by other experts in the field to see if a) it's worth funding and b) whether the amount asked for is appropriate. If you're lucky and put in a good proposal the funding agency will give you money to do the work.
quote:You know, I rather think that Dr. Alan Cresswell might be onto something, since he is a trained and qualified scientist, and he has repeatedly informed you that your arguements are not real science and that many of your sources are not well regarded by the scientific community.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Back tracking and excuses and er there are other things to take into consideration are not good enough to deflect the solid arguments given against ALL the so called evidence which has been generated in the last few decades to 'prove' this view. Deal with it.
quote:So, this is the thread for the argument - Dr Alan has yet to provide any evidence that man-induced climate change is real.
Originally posted by Papio:
quote:You know, I rather think that Dr. Alan Cresswell might be onto something, since he is a trained and qualified scientist, and he has repeatedly informed you that your arguements are not real science and that many of your sources are not well regarded by the scientific community.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Back tracking and excuses and er there are other things to take into consideration are not good enough to deflect the solid arguments given against ALL the so called evidence which has been generated in the last few decades to 'prove' this view. Deal with it.
I'll go with that view, personally.
Dr. Cresswell is very rarely wrong about such matters, IME.
quote:Well, not quite. They were forced - ie placed under enormous pressure due to complaints - to print an apology for 'irresponsible reporting'. That's a little different to what you suggest, although the outcome is the same.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
This passive smoking report - Littlady has already pointed out that the paper concerned printed a retraction on an innacurate story.
quote:So, what's so special about the rise in temperature since the Little Ice Age?
Hockey Stick, 1998-2005, R.I.P.
The “hockey stick” representation of the temperature behavior of the past 1,000 years is broken, dead. Although already reeling from earlier analyses aimed at its midsection, the knockout punch was just delivered by Nature magazine. Thus the end of this palooka: that the climate of the past millennium was marked by about 900 years of nothing and then 100 years of dramatic temperature rise caused by people. The saga of the “hockey stick” will be remembered as a remarkable lesson in how fanaticism can temporarily blind a large part of the scientific community and allow unproven results to become “mainstream” thought overnight.
The “Hockey Stick” is dead. ......
So compelling was 1,000-yr long “hockey stick” graphic, that it quickly became the poster child for anthropogenic global warming. As such, it was prominently displayed as the first figure of the oft-read Summary for Policymakers of 2001 Third Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The “hockey stick” graphic gives the appearance that left to its own devices, nature displays very little in the way of temperature variation, but that during the past century, humans have come along and thrown everything out of kilter. It is thus the perfect representation of the greenhouse alarmists’ message—humans have caused the weather to be like never before (and this is bad).
However, the shape of the “hockey stick” looked strangely out of place against the existing knowledge of the climate of the past millennium. Where was the Little Ice Age (LIA)—a well-documented cold period lasting from about the 16th to the 19th century? And where was the Medieval Warm Period (MWP)—a relatively warmer period extending from about 11th to the 13th century? By containing little indication that these climate episodes existed, the “hockey stick” presents a completely new picture of the climate of the past 1,000 years. Natural variability is reduced to little more than annual-to-decadal scale fluctuations superimposed on longer-scale constancy. This is not the same story that is told in countless weather and climate textbooks used in classrooms around the world.
.....
The third dissenting voice was that of Jan Esper and colleagues in 2004. Esper is an expert in climate reconstructions based upon tree-ring records (the primary type of proxy data relied upon by Mann et al. in creating the “hockey stick”). It turns out that one must be careful when using tree rings to reconstruct long-term climate variability because as the tree itself ages, the widths of the annual rings that it produces changes—even absent any climatic variations. This growth trend needs to be taken into account when trying to interpret any climate data contained in the tree-ring records. In most cases, the tree-ring records are first detrended to remove this growth trend, and then the remaining variation in the rings is used to derive a climate signal. The problem with this technique is that by detrending the tree-ring record, long-term climate trends are lost as well. Esper et al. point out that this could be one likely reason why the handle of the “hockey stick” is so flat—it lacks the centennial-scale variations that were lost in the standardization of its primary data source. Using an alternative technique that attempted to preserve as much of the information about long-term climate variations as possible from historical tree-ring records, Esper and colleagues derived their own annual Northern Hemisphere temperature reconstruction. The result (Figure 2) is a 1,000-yr temperature history in which the LIA and the MWP are much more pronounced than the “hockey stick” reconstruction—more evidence that the “hockey stick” underestimates the true level of natural climate variation.
The chorus of dissent grew louder with the publication of a paper by Hans von Storch and colleagues in Science in late-2004. Von Storch was interested in how well the temperature reconstruction methodology used in producing the “hockey stick” actually worked. In order to investigate this, he used a climate model, run with historic changes in solar output and volcanic eruptions to produce a temperature record for the past 1,000 years. For von Storch’s purposes, it was not necessary to produce an accurate temperature record, just one that was reasonably representative of what may have happened. Next, he employed a methodology similar to Mann et al.’s, using “proxy” data derived from the climate model temperature record to see how well the Mann et al. methodology could reconstruct the actual data from which it was drawn. What von Storch’s research team found was that the techniques used to construct the “hockey stick” vastly underestimated the true level of variability in the known (modeled) temperature record (Figure 3). It is thus reasonable to conclude that the same techniques, when applied in the real world, would similarly underestimate the true level of natural variability and thus underplay the importance of the LIA and MWP. Again, the von Storch finding adds further evidence that the handle of the “hockey stick” is too flat.
...
And now, with the publication of a paper in Nature magazine in early 2005 by Anders Moberg and colleagues, it’s all over for the hockey stick. .......
Had the original reconstruction by Mann and colleagues looked like the latest reconstruction by Moberg et al., no one would have paid it much attention, because it would have fit nicely with the expectations given all of the prior research on the climate history of the past millennium. It would have been nothing remarkable.
But, the “hockey stick” was remarkable. And as such, it will be remembered as a remarkable lesson in how fanaticism can temporarily blind a large part of the scientific community and allow unproven results to become mainstream thought overnight. The embarrassment that it caused to many scientists working in the field of climatology will not be soon forgotten. Hopefully, new findings to come, as remarkable and enticing as they may first appear, will be greeted with a bit more caution and thorough investigation before they are widely accepted as representing the scientific consensus.
quote:Certainly when it comes to research directly funded by government departments then the decision about which projects to pursue is very much influenced by government policy. The basic sequence of events is government feels the need to make policy about something, they consult relevant experts and find that there are some questions that remain unanswered that need to be addressed before sensible policy can be drawn up, and as a result a government agency asks relevant research groups if they can do the work. Generally, government policy has a hard time influencing the outcome of research - after all, the nature of any issue isn't influenced by government policy. In this instance, no change in government policy will affect the facts that CO2 is a greenhouse gas emitted in vast quantities from burning fossil fuels.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
So (if you can indulge me one further follow up question) have you encountered any evidence that government policy a) dictates which projects are funded and b) can influence their outcomes?
quote:Also on that page there's a post from teqjack which begins "I notice the ASH article mentioned above refers to the EPA and WHO reports.
The problem people have with smoking is not just that it's unhealthy, but that it's immoral.
The smoker, if they are violating a moral rule, is threatening everyone who doesn't; and all the fuss about "passive smoking" is merely dramatising this intuition.
quote:That's a good article. Totally spot on in terms of the underlying reason for the whole anti-smoking issue. I also agree with you on its application to the pro-manmade global warming lobby. There is a growing judgmentalism towards those who don't conform. If we're not checking our 'carbon footprint' every five minutes we're definitely the bad guys.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
I don't particularly want to drag out the passive smoking aside, but I've started looking for what else is available on it and found this comment by Andrew Brown of the Guardian to apply to global warmers against the anties:
quote:
The problem people have with smoking is not just that it's unhealthy, but that it's immoral.
quote:But Noiseboy, harm to whom? The anti-smoking bandwagon slogan is that Passive Smoking Causes Death to Non-Smokers, not by making their clothes smell, but by causing cancer.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
I don't like people smoking next to me indoors because it is horribly unpleasant, and according to non-myrrh studies that even the industry does not deny, it causes harm. Pretty simple really.
quote:This study is actually statistically significant in scientific terms, there is no causal relationship between passive smoking and dying of smoking related causes.
Killing the passive smoking debate
Fraudulent science does not serve the public interest – or end the debate over secondhand smoke by Michael Fumento
The studies behind calls for smoking bans and curbs on secondhand smoke – supposedly to improve human health and save lives – are really little more than smoke and mirrors, argues Michael Fumento. For example, of 48 separate studies of risks from passive or secondhand smoke, only 7 showed a statistically significant increased risk of lung cancer; 41 showed no increased risk. But by looking at the 48 studies all together, the scientists concluded that a significant risk existed. Other studies were similarly questionable or even fraudulent. And yet, the regulations continue to tighten, and headlines continue to scream that “passive smoking kills thousands.”
......
What was really needed was one study involving a huge number of participants over a long period of time using the same evaluation.
We got that in the prestigious British Medical Journal in 2003. Research professor James Enstrom of UCLA and professor Geoffrey Kabat of the State University of New York, Stony Brook presented results of a 39-year study of 35,561 Californians, which dwarfed in size everything that came before. It found no “causal relationship between exposure to [passive smoke] and tobacco-related mortality”
quote:You'd err in trying to find one agenda because this wagon is driven and pushed by many disparate ones, from the pro-nuclear energy to the homespun, but the reasons, the agendas, don't actually matter in understanding why 'all world governments' can be wrong.
Alan, this is all fascinating stuff. I'm trying to imagine a mechanism by which machieavellian government conspiracists skew all the research in the universities, met office etc to invent a notion like anthropogenic climate change. They can influence funding, so off everyone goes to do their research. However (because for the purposes of this fiction ACC does not exist) they discover that there is no such thing. Presumably the logic would go that they then change their findings to invent ACC, thus receive approval from the funding bodies and get more grants, keeping them in a job? OK, it wouldn't get any papers passed peer review, so that doesn't work. Except... wait a minute... all the peers are in on it too!
That seems logical to me. So if this happened in every country in the world - voila, there's your answer. Totally logical - just wildly paranoid and (like most conspiracy theories) reliant on tens or even hundreds of thousands of people to be complicit without blowing the gaffe. Oh, and the belief that all governments (including China, North Korea and the USA) have a vested interest in spreading the lie that ACC is real. Incidentally, on this last point, none of the sceptics on this forum have even speculated why this might be true, which is significant since their whole conspiracy theory relies on a motive. And before she says is... Littlelady, if this is neither a conspiracy and it is not true, then what exactly IS it?! Remember, that bastion of truth Martin Durkin told us "we are being told lies"... sounds like a conspiracy to me.
But, wow, for the first time I can see that it could be possible - merely infitessimally unlikely!
quote:We might never know which came first, the agenda or Mann's Hockey Stick, but it has been discredited by peer review as I showed in my previous post.
The United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) claims that human activities are responsible for nearly all earth’s recorded warming during the past two centuries. A widely circulated image used by the IPCC dramatically depicting these temperature trends resembles a hockey stick with three distinct parts: a flat “shaft” extending from A.D. 1000 to 1900, a “blade” shooting up from A.D. 1900 to 2000, and a range of uncertainty in temperature estimates that envelops the shaft like a “sheath.” [See the figure.] This image was produced by Michael Mann, Ray Bradley and Malcolm Hughes (Nature, 1998; Geophysical Research Letters, 1999). Last year, Mann and Phil Jones claimed to have extended estimates back to A.D. 200 (Geophysical Research Letters, 2003). However, five independent research groups have uncovered problems with the underlying reconstructions by Mann and his colleagues in their 1998 and 1999 work that have persisted through his most recent collaborative efforts, calling into question all three components of the “hockey stick.”
...
The Hockey Stick is Broken. Mann wrote the part of the IPCC Third Assessment Report (2001) that proclaims that nearly all of the climate change seen during the last two millennia occurred during the 20th century and that it is due to human activities. The report contends that industrialization put carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, leading to increasing global air temperatures. Furthermore, based on Mann’s work, the IPCC claimed that the 1990s were the warmest decade of the last millennium and 1998 was the warmest year. But a review of the data shows that these claims are untenable. Mann’s research is clearly the outlier. (Breaking the “Hockey Stick” by David R. Legates
Brief Analysis No. 478 Monday, July 12, 2004
quote:And, as I showed some time back (I can't be bothered to find the links again) Mann's data has been shown to be more-or-less correct in several other peer reviewed papers. Not to mention accepted by a wide number of scientific bodies after careful consideration of all the data. Here's another example ...
Originally posted by Myrrh:
We might never know which came first, the agenda or Mann's Hockey Stick, but it has been discredited by peer review as I showed in my previous post.
quote:followed by several pages of summary of the various papers covering temperature reconstruction for the last 1000+ years. With a conclusion
The ‘hockey stick’ reconstruction of Mann et al. (1999) has been the subject of several critical studies.
quote:Which, summarised simply, translates to "if you look at all the data now available, Northern Hemisphere temperature reconstructions are very similar to the 'hockey stick'". And, indeed the new data suggest that the temperature increase in the last century compared to the previous few centuries is even greater than suggested by Mann's data presented in 2001.
The weight of current multi-proxy evidence, therefore, suggests greater 20th-century warmth, in comparison with temperature levels of the previous 400 years, than was shown in the TAR [Third Assessment Report, the 2001 IPCC report]. On the evidence of the previous and four new reconstructions that reach back more than 1 kyr, it is likely that the 20th century was the warmest in at least the past 1.3 kyr. Considering the recent instrumental and longer proxy evidence together, it is very likely that average NH temperatures during the second half of the 20th century were higher than for any other 50-year period in the last 500 years.
quote:Huh? I was just talking with Myrrh there about people's sense of moral superiority. Like the punch I got for smoking in the open air or the telling I got from someone at work for not watching my stupid carbon footprint.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Littlelady, if this is neither a conspiracy and it is not true, then what exactly IS it?!
quote:Forgive, I was referring to some of your earlier comments that although I kept referring to the claims made in GGWS et al as a conspiracy, it was only I that was giving it that label and you weren't. If collective action to change the world's science papers and the peer review process to supress the truth ("you are being told lies!") isn't a conspiracy, I don't know what is...
Originally posted by Littlelady:
quote:Huh? I was just talking with Myrrh there about people's sense of moral superiority. Like the punch I got for smoking in the open air or the telling I got from someone at work for not watching my stupid carbon footprint.
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Littlelady, if this is neither a conspiracy and it is not true, then what exactly IS it?!
quote:And I keep drawing your attention to the format of that statement and others like it are nonsense, it does not show Mann & Co vindicated and he and his actual method of modelling have been soundly, reasonably and logically discredited by peer review. Have you even bothered to read why? It is spin to cover up the balls up of Mann's hockey stick by first associating it with more or less uncontroversial data. It's a classic example of how to lie with statistics by associating the arguments against the hockey stick by proximity to it.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:And, as I showed some time back (I can't be bothered to find the links again) Mann's data has been shown to be more-or-less correct in several other peer reviewed papers. Not to mention accepted by a wide number of scientific bodies after careful consideration of all the data. Here's another example ...
Originally posted by Myrrh:
We might never know which came first, the agenda or Mann's Hockey Stick, but it has been discredited by peer review as I showed in my previous post.
quote:followed by several pages of summary of the various papers covering temperature reconstruction for the last 1000+ years. With a conclusion
The ‘hockey stick’ reconstruction of Mann et al. (1999) has been the subject of several critical studies.
quote:Which, summarised simply, translates to "if you look at all the data now available, Northern Hemisphere temperature reconstructions are very similar to the 'hockey stick'". And, indeed the new data suggest that the temperature increase in the last century compared to the previous few centuries is even greater than suggested by Mann's data presented in 2001.
The weight of current multi-proxy evidence, therefore, suggests greater 20th-century warmth, in comparison with temperature levels of the previous 400 years, than was shown in the TAR [Third Assessment Report, the 2001 IPCC report]. On the evidence of the previous and four new reconstructions that reach back more than 1 kyr, it is likely that the 20th century was the warmest in at least the past 1.3 kyr. Considering the recent instrumental and longer proxy evidence together, it is very likely that average NH temperatures during the second half of the 20th century were higher than for any other 50-year period in the last 500 years.
But, you're unlikely to want to even consider that as it's from the IPCC report ( chapter 6, starting from page 466).
quote:You said:
20th Century Climate Not So Hot CfA Press Release Release No.: 03-10
For Release: March 31, 2003
Cambridge, MA - A review of more than 200 climate studies led by researchers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics has determined that the 20th century is neither the warmest century nor the century with the most extreme weather of the past 1000 years. The review also confirmed that the Medieval Warm Period of 800 to 1300 A.D. and the Little Ice Age of 1300 to 1900 A.D. were worldwide phenomena not limited to the European and North American continents. While 20th century temperatures are much higher than in the Little Ice Age period, many parts of the world show the medieval warmth to be greater than that of the 20th century.
.....
"Many true research advances in reconstructing ancient climates have occurred over the past two decades," Soon says, "so we felt it was time to pull together a large sample of recent studies from the last 5-10 years and look for patterns of variability and change. In fact, clear patterns did emerge showing that regions worldwide experienced the highs of the Medieval Warm Period and lows of the Little Ice Age, and that 20th century temperatures are generally cooler than during the medieval warmth."
quote:This is simply not true. The Hockey Stick elimates the MWP and MIA - it's flat. That's what's wrong with it. It doesn't correspond to known reality.
Which, summarised simply, translates to "if you look at all the data now available, Northern Hemisphere temperature reconstructions are very similar to the 'hockey stick'".
quote:I'm sorry, I thought I made it clear. I'd quoted the first sentance, and final concluding sentance of a long section of several pages of summary of studies of the climate of the northern hemisphere over the last 1000+ years. The previous reconstruction was the one published in the 2001 IPCC reports (which includes Mann's data), the four new reconstructions are studies published since then covering that time period. Oh, and those several pages also include quite a bit about the MWP and MIA.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
"On the evidence of the previous and four new reconstructions that reach back more than 1 kyr, it is likely that the 20th century was the warmest in at least the past 1.3 kyr."
Which previous and four new reconstructions?
quote:Sorry I hadn't made myself clear. Being more familiar with the material I was asking for more specific information on these. Particularly the four new reconstructions. Who and where can I find them?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:I'm sorry, I thought I made it clear. I'd quoted the first sentance, and final concluding sentance of a long section of several pages of summary of studies of the climate of the northern hemisphere over the last 1000+ years. The previous reconstruction was the one published in the 2001 IPCC reports (which includes Mann's data), the four new reconstructions are studies published since then covering that time period. Oh, and those several pages also include quite a bit about the MWP and MIA.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
"On the evidence of the previous and four new reconstructions that reach back more than 1 kyr, it is likely that the 20th century was the warmest in at least the past 1.3 kyr."
Which previous and four new reconstructions?
quote:
Overall, these observational data underscore the concerns about global climate change. Previous projections, as summarized by IPCC, have not exaggerated but may in some respects even have underestimated the change, in particular for sea level.
quote:Again, I wonder what planet you are on. Did you read that link? It was written by the people who published the research about solar rays that Durkin and you believe causes all the global warming. They say that anthropogenic causes are behind recent warming, and that Durkin fraudulently used their data. Once again, since this does not suit your indefensible prejudices, this magically translates into "there is no evidence whatsoever". And incidentally, The Independent DID go straight to Durkin for his sources, and received only parital information. His stock reply to helpful enquiry is on record as being "go f**k yourself", so this is the level we are on in serious debate.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
You have not yet proved that what we are going through is anything unusual in the the last 450,000 years let alone the last two thousand nor disproved that the rise in temperature of the last 200 is not man made.
quote:Actually the argument that solar activity, not humanity, is entirely responsible for global warming has huge problems with the last 20 odd years as the former has not increased but the latter has.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
The sun's activity shows remarkable correlation to driving the earth's temperature while CO2 shows nothing of the kind, let alone man-made CO2 as has still not been answered by you, but anyway to take the sun and our relationship to it out of modelling is simply daft.
Myrrh
quote:There is perhaps another aspect to what the US is doing: for instance, IIRC Canada is not very close to meeting its agreed to reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.
It is consistent with US policy though.
quote:Canada has a very long way to go, and from what I've read the current Canadian government has effectively said they'll totally ignore the Kyoto Treaty even though it was ratified five years ago. The Canadian target under Kyoto was a 6% reduction*, in 2004 Canadian CO2 emissions were 27% above 1990 levels - where even the US that didn't ratify Kyoto had only increased emissions by 16%. I don't know why this happened - it could be that Canada was starting from a relatively low CO2 emission rate compared to other developed nations.
Originally posted by 206:
IIRC Canada is not very close to meeting its agreed to reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.
Some of what I've read suggests much of Europe isn't either: one article said the vast majority of net reductions have come from East bloc countries, although I'd like to hear Alan's take on that.
quote:Well, if you don't sign up for difficult targets you can't be told off when you fail to meet them. It probably is more honest to say "we can't meet those targets" and not sign than sign up and then fail to act to achieve them. But, signing up for a difficult target (or self-imposing a difficult target, where there isn't then international sanction for failure) should focus the political mind on finding ways to meet it.
So maybe we're 'bastards' but we're less disingenuous than some.
quote:Fair point. And good on the UK.
But, signing up for a difficult target (or self-imposing a difficult target, where there isn't then international sanction for failure) should focus the political mind on finding ways to meet it.
quote:Just to be clear, this was referring to the Bush Administration (who so deserve it) in particular not Americans in general. After all, America gave us The Simpsons. And Team America - who in turn also reminded us that America gave the world McDonalds, Wal-Mart, The Gap, Baseball, NFL, Rock and roll, The Internet, Slavery, Starbucks, Disney world, Porno, Valium, Reeboks, Fake Tits, Sushi, Taco Bell, Rodeos, Bed bath and beyond, Liberty, White Slips, The Alamo, Band-aids, Las Vegas, Christmas, Immigrants, Columbine, Democrats, Republicans and Sportsmanship.
Originally posted by 206:
It's just the 'bastard bastard bastard bastard' stuff wears me out.
quote:So now what you said is a subtle joke? If you think so.
Just to be clear, this was referring to the Bush Administration (who so deserve it) in particular not Americans in general. After all, America gave us The Simpsons. And Team America - who in turn also reminded us that America gave the world McDonalds, Wal-Mart, The Gap, Baseball, NFL, Rock and roll, The Internet, Slavery, Starbucks, Disney world, Porno, Valium, Reeboks, Fake Tits, Sushi, Taco Bell, Rodeos, Bed bath and beyond, Liberty, White Slips, The Alamo, Band-aids, Las Vegas, Christmas, Immigrants, Columbine, Democrats, Republicans and Sportsmanship.
Oh, and my personal favourite - Books.
quote:Not necessarily. This government sets itself targets and then changes them when they realise they aren't going to meet them. So don't be fooled by our self-righteous posturing (I'm talking about the government here and not Alan, btw!).
Originally posted by 206:
quote:Fair point. And good on the UK.
But, signing up for a difficult target (or self-imposing a difficult target, where there isn't then international sanction for failure) should focus the political mind on finding ways to meet it.
quote:They've cahnged them? To the best of my knowledge the 2001 Labour manifesto commitment of a 20% reduction in CO2 by 2010 still holds, even though it's becoming increasingly likely we'll miss it.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
This government sets itself targets and then changes them when they realise they aren't going to meet them.
quote:Do you have any evidence whatever for this even split of opinion?
Originally posted by tfbundy:
The scientific world seems ever increasingly divided about CO2, with as many saying CO2 increases global warming as those who say global warming increases CO2.
quote:Horseshit.
The credibility of science therefore diminishes as time goes by and the global warming message and its insistence we all adopt altered behaviours seems unconvincing.
quote:That's a simplification. And we can do something about the destruction of the rainforests - we can boycott the industries that promote it, we can lobby businesses and politicians, and we can draw attention to the seriousness of the issue in public forums such as this.
The bigger problem seems to be something we have no control over, namely the destruction of rain forests, something I always understood to be the lungs of the earth.
quote:The scientific world seems ever increasingly divided about CO2, with as many saying CO2 increases global warming as those who say global warming increases CO2.
quote:As I understand it the science suggests that CO2 increases global warming and global warming increases CO2. That is the really worrying bit.
quote:They don't. But it's a great opportunity for them to add to their list of excuses. As I found when I booked my flight to Tanzania and the tax had doubled (airport tax plus darling Mr Brown's eco tax).
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
What makes you think that governments need the spectre of global warming to justify raising taxes?
quote:Good heavens, 206. I made a serious comment about the Bush administration (about which I am still very angry). I was concerned you'd misinterpreted this as referring to all Americans, so I clarified. I added some - ya Gads - light hearted comments in defence of a couple American things I love, The Simpsons and Team America. So sorry if all this befuddled you.
Originally posted by 206:
So now what you said is a subtle joke? If you think so.
But I hope you understand there are people of 'good will', trying to hear whatever point you have, who won't because of your flippancy.
quote:I know it can be very dull to re-read entire long threads when joining late, but tfbundy, it might be a good idea if you'd read at least a little bit of this one before posting.
Originally posted by tfbundy:
I'm REALLY not convinced by this global warming idea. The green message is long overdue to be adopted, but now it is an ideal way for Governments to add yet further to the burden of tax rather than anything else. The scientific world seems ever increasingly divided about CO2, with as many saying CO2 increases global warming as those who say global warming increases CO2. The credibility of science therefore diminishes as time goes by and the global warming message and its insistence we all adopt altered behaviours seems unconvincing. The bigger problem seems to be something we have no control over, namely the destruction of rain forests, something I always understood to be the lungs of the earth.
quote:After all you've done to prolong this thread I feel some obligation to help out: those hundreds of millions of dying Africans have given me pause.
So sorry if all this befuddled you.
quote:My turn to not be quite sure what you mean, 206! I think you are saying that the projected negative consequences for Africa have made you re-evaluate (indeed, wasn't it you that started the "it's happening, what should we do?" thread?) If so, good for you.
Originally posted by 206:
After all you've done to prolong this thread I feel some obligation to help out: those hundreds of millions of dying Africans have given me pause.
And if I've got the numbers wrong I'm sure you'll point it out.
quote:There were no immigrants or slavery before America?
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
quote:Just to be clear, this was referring to the Bush Administration (who so deserve it) in particular not Americans in general. After all, America gave us The Simpsons. And Team America - who in turn also reminded us that America gave the world McDonalds, Wal-Mart, The Gap, Baseball, NFL, Rock and roll, The Internet, Slavery, Starbucks, Disney world, Porno, Valium, Reeboks, Fake Tits, Sushi, Taco Bell, Rodeos, Bed bath and beyond, Liberty, White Slips, The Alamo, Band-aids, Las Vegas, Christmas, Immigrants, Columbine, Democrats, Republicans and Sportsmanship.
Originally posted by 206:
It's just the 'bastard bastard bastard bastard' stuff wears me out.
Oh, and my personal favourite - Books.
quote:Well, not before Team America, anyway.
Originally posted by Papio:
There were no immigrants or slavery before America?
quote:Indeed, the government of the day that signed the accord refused to do anything about meeting the goals, prefering to dither away the years.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Canada has a very long way to go, and from what I've read the current Canadian government has effectively said they'll totally ignore the Kyoto Treaty even though it was ratified five years ago. ...
quote:But their computer models can't forecast the weather for last year, or any other year that we already know the result.
Drake's equation.
Drake's equation is an interesting critter named for Dr. Frank Drake, an astrophysicist who received an "extraterrestrial" radio signal, later discovered to be a false alarm, but who went on to organize several SETI conferences and ultimately to shape a government program around this search. A Drake Equation is generally accepted to be any formidable looking equation that really doesn't mean anything. Why? Because many, if not all, of the variable terms mean nothing or can never be quantified...at best their values can only be guessed. When we have an equation of variables that can't be quantified all we have is meaningless felgercarb.
We're pummeled with Drake Equations when the greenies attempt to prove to us that if we don't do something now about our greenhouse gas emissions, the gasses they proclaim to be greenhouse gases, the planet will be uninhabitable in another hundred years. They give us computer models showing the truth, and proof, of their theories. They give us high sounding speeches by intelligent sounding people using five dollar words proclaiming the debate is over because they've determined their theories to be proven.
But their computer models can't forecast the weather for last year, or any other year that we already know the result. Many of us are taken in, though, because everything looks impressive, and we don't have the background to know or understand that it's all hooey. (Frosty Burrage Jnr)
quote:Whereas for Myrrh, if the majority of people believe it, it must be a conspiracy.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Ah democracy, if the majority of people believe something then it must be true.
quote:O Canada!
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:Indeed, the government of the day that signed the accord refused to do anything about meeting the goals, prefering to dither away the years.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Canada has a very long way to go, and from what I've read the current Canadian government has effectively said they'll totally ignore the Kyoto Treaty even though it was ratified five years ago. ...
Now, it is impossible to meet the targets, and the current government has determined a realistic target. This seems to me to be a reasonable thing.
Also, I can't idle my car now for more than 3 minutes or I will get a fine - unless it is very hot or very cold. So, that would be May and September.![]()
quote:He ends: "Clearly, the federal government must immediately convene open, unbiased hearings into the science of climate change, something that has never happened in Canada. If the science driving CO2 reduction plans is as ‘solid’ as environmental lobbyists would have us believe, then they have nothing to fear.
Dr. Tim Ball,
Former climatology professor at the University of Winnipeg.
“Stopping climate change” may be all the rage with celebrities and environmental lobbyists, but fortunately for the rest of us, the scare’s scientific foundation is rapidly disintegrating.
One of the fundamental pillars of the hypothesis that humanity is causing dangerous climate change is the belief that levels of carbon dioxide (CO2), the greenhouse gas of concern in countries such as Canada, have been rising steadily since the start of the industrial revolution. ....
In a new scientific paper in the journal Energy and Environment, German researcher Ernst-Georg Beck, shows that the pre-industrial level is some 50 ppm higher than the level used by computer models that produce all future climate predictions. Completely at odds with the smoothly increasing levels found in the ice core records, Beck concludes, “Since 1812, the CO2 concentration in northern hemispheric air has fluctuated, exhibiting three high level maxima around 1825, 1857 and 1942, the latter showing more than 400 ppm.”
In a paper submitted to US Senate Committee hearings, Polish Professor Zbigniew Jaworowski, a veteran mountaineer who has excavated ice from 17 glaciers on six continents, stated bluntly, “The basis of most of the IPCC conclusions on anthropogenic [human] causes and on projections of climatic change is the assumption of low level of CO2 in the pre-industrial atmosphere. This assumption, based on glaciological studies, is false.” continued on (Continued on Tim Bell)
quote:Quoted in full, to exhibit its idiocy.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Ah democracy, if the majority of people believe something then it must be true.
quote:But their computer models can't forecast the weather for last year, or any other year that we already know the result.
Drake's equation.
Drake's equation is an interesting critter named for Dr. Frank Drake, an astrophysicist who received an "extraterrestrial" radio signal, later discovered to be a false alarm, but who went on to organize several SETI conferences and ultimately to shape a government program around this search. A Drake Equation is generally accepted to be any formidable looking equation that really doesn't mean anything. Why? Because many, if not all, of the variable terms mean nothing or can never be quantified...at best their values can only be guessed. When we have an equation of variables that can't be quantified all we have is meaningless felgercarb.
We're pummeled with Drake Equations when the greenies attempt to prove to us that if we don't do something now about our greenhouse gas emissions, the gasses they proclaim to be greenhouse gases, the planet will be uninhabitable in another hundred years. They give us computer models showing the truth, and proof, of their theories. They give us high sounding speeches by intelligent sounding people using five dollar words proclaiming the debate is over because they've determined their theories to be proven.
But their computer models can't forecast the weather for last year, or any other year that we already know the result. Many of us are taken in, though, because everything looks impressive, and we don't have the background to know or understand that it's all hooey. (Frosty Burrage Jnr)
quote:You can fool all of the people some of the time..
Originally posted by JonahMan:
quote:Whereas for Myrrh, if the majority of people believe it, it must be a conspiracy.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Ah democracy, if the majority of people believe something then it must be true.
quote:
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Climate models and weather forecasting models are completely different beasts (even if they share some underlying physical principles). To discount climate models because they can't make weather predictions is akin to rejecting Newtonian mechanics because it can't predict the outcome of the 3.30 at Haydock.
quote:Garbage in, garbage out.
You state in your section on Climate Change: "Carbon dioxide concentrations have risen from an estimated 280 parts per million (ppm) before the industrial revolution, to 380 ppm today. During the last century, the earth’s surface temperature rose by about 0.6°C. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) estimates that it could rise by between 1.4 and 5.8°C by the end of this century."
Are you not aware of the lack of correlation between global temperature and atmospheric CO2? The data are clearly uncorrelated during the 20th century record. While correlation cannot PROVE cause and effect, lack of correlation will DISPROVE cause and effect.
Data over the 600,000-year Vostok ice core record show temperature changes LEAD changes in both methane and carbon dioxide by 200-800 years, i.e., temperature changes first, then methane and CO2.
In the scientific method, a theory is shown to be invalid if one can cite a single contrary example. There is a record spanning 500 million years that is contrary to the theory that rising CO2 causes climate change.(Bob Webster)
quote:Who the hell are you?
Originally posted by Teufelchen:
1. Who the hell is Frosty Burrage Jnr?
quote:The garbage in data for global warming is as arbitrary and deliberately excludes conflicting evidence.
2. I've never seen Drake's equation used in the way he describes, for the excellent reason that it can't be done. Drake's Equation takes a set of numbers - some of them wild guesses - and multiplies them together to get an expectation for the number of inhabited planets in the galaxy. It has nothing to do with specific conditions here on earth, and takes the expected lifetime of a civilisation as an input - so it can't possibly deliver it as an output. Mr Burrage (whoever the hell he is) is lying.
quote:Lack of correlation may indicate lack of cause and effect; it certainly shows a complex system. And, the "lack of correlation" isn't quite as clear in the data as some armchair 'scientists' claim, especially once the effects of particulate pollution and other complicating factors are taken into account.
Are you not aware of the lack of correlation between global temperature and atmospheric CO2? The data are clearly uncorrelated during the 20th century record. While correlation cannot PROVE cause and effect, lack of correlation will DISPROVE cause and effect.
quote:Now, how many times should it need repeating. In the natural system where a temperature rise allows the release of CO2 from oceans there will be a time lag of several centuries because of the time scale of circulation between deep oceans and surface waters. If you get your carbon from another reservoir (eg: fossil carbon in coal, oil and gas) then you're talking about a different system with different dynamics.
Data over the 600,000-year Vostok ice core record show temperature changes LEAD changes in both methane and carbon dioxide by 200-800 years, i.e., temperature changes first, then methane and CO2.
quote:And, that is such a wildly bizarre description of "scientific method" that it beggars belief. At best it can be described as "Popularised Popperian Falsification", though Popper himself would be the first person to describe it as unscientific.
In the scientific method, a theory is shown to be invalid if one can cite a single contrary example.
quote:Absolutely. Now, if perhaps you'd start to take in some decent science rather than the garbage thrown up by sad-gits-in-their-sheds-running-a-website ...
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Garbage in, garbage out.
quote:He could be meaning the Jan Esper and Von Storch work which shows the hockey stick doesn't correspond to the reality of our weather.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Climate models and weather forecasting models are completely different beasts (even if they share some underlying physical principles). To discount climate models because they can't make weather predictions is akin to rejecting Newtonian mechanics because it can't predict the outcome of the 3.30 at Haydock.
quote:Picky picky picky, you're beginning to sound weather-beaten.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
The Hockey Stick may not correspond to the realities of our weather. It does a pretty fair job of corresponding to the realities of our climate. And, as I said, weather and climate are different things; anyone who's failed to understand that has no real basis to make pronouncements on subjects such as climatology or meteorology.
quote:Myrrh
Two more global warming false alarms
By Dennis T. Avery
web posted December 18, 2006
The global warming debate has developed a pattern: In part A, a scientist makes a scary claim and gets headlines for himself, and his funding source, across the known world. In part B, a few months later new evidence blows the scary claim away—but with no press coverage of its demise.
Two more global warming scares have just been quietly blown away: the claim that global warming is causing more and bigger hurricanes; and the claim that warming threatens to shut down the great Atlantic Ocean conveyor currents.
....
Keep this "scare-now and discredit-later" pattern of global warming press releases firmly in mind for the future. Weather is highly variable, and the climate's constant changes only reveal trends over long periods—but the global warming scare tactics have wrung $18 billion out of recent federal budgets for climate change research. ([qb]Two more global warming false alarms)
quote:OK, so it was a comment rather than a pronouncement. And, Frosty Burrage Jr (who???) has a right to his opinion as much as anyone else. But, you quoted the comment as though it somehow indicated something important for consideration. Why should we consider the opinion of someone who's making comments about climatology without even showing any evidence of recognising the difference between weather and climate?
Originally posted by Myrrh:
It was comment, not pronouncement, and everyone has a right to his opinion.
quote:I'm a Shipmate, which to the best of my knowledge Mr Burrage Jr is not. I've also studied cosmology, which it appears Mr Burrage Jr has not. I've no idea why you think anyone should take this nonentity's opinion seriously.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
quote:Who the hell are you?
Originally posted by Teufelchen:
1. Who the hell is Frosty Burrage Jnr?
quote:There's a saying about two wrongs; it's on the tip of my tongue...
quote:The garbage in data for global warming is as arbitrary and deliberately excludes conflicting evidence.
2. I've never seen Drake's equation used in the way he describes, for the excellent reason that it can't be done. Drake's Equation takes a set of numbers - some of them wild guesses - and multiplies them together to get an expectation for the number of inhabited planets in the galaxy. It has nothing to do with specific conditions here on earth, and takes the expected lifetime of a civilisation as an input - so it can't possibly deliver it as an output. Mr Burrage (whoever the hell he is) is lying.
quote:Because he's an ordinary oik just like you and I and I liked what he said. His only credentials being that in a poor school he was taught how to think and teachers put in their own time to give their pupils science lessons not on the curriculum.
Originally posted by Teufelchen:
quote:I'm a Shipmate, which to the best of my knowledge Mr Burrage Jr is not. I've also studied cosmology, which it appears Mr Burrage Jr has not. I've no idea why you think anyone should take this nonentity's opinion seriously.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
quote:Who the hell are you?
Originally posted by Teufelchen:
1. Who the hell is Frosty Burrage Jnr?
Do you have the faintest idea how the Drake Equation is properly used?
quote:There's a saying about two wrongs; it's on the tip of my tongue...
quote:The garbage in data for global warming is as arbitrary and deliberately excludes conflicting evidence.
2. I've never seen Drake's equation used in the way he describes, for the excellent reason that it can't be done. Drake's Equation takes a set of numbers - some of them wild guesses - and multiplies them together to get an expectation for the number of inhabited planets in the galaxy. It has nothing to do with specific conditions here on earth, and takes the expected lifetime of a civilisation as an input - so it can't possibly deliver it as an output. Mr Burrage (whoever the hell he is) is lying.
Mr Burrage Jr's article claims that 'greenies' (whatever those are) assert that the Drake Equation predicts an imminent demise for our civilisation. As I've mentioned, it does no such thing, and Mr Burrage Jr fails to cite any actual examples of anyone asserting otherwise. The Drake Equation, in fact, has nothing to do with global warming. So a (probably false) assertion that the Drake Equation is being misused by some anonymous person tells us precisely squat about the accuracy or otherwise of anybody's climatology.
So why on earth did you copy and paste a slab of Burrage's diatribe?
T.
quote:"Mr Burrage Jr's article claims that 'greenies' (whatever those are) assert that the Drake Equation predicts an imminent demise for our civilisation. As I've mentioned, it does no such thing, and Mr Burrage Jr fails to cite any actual examples of anyone asserting otherwise."
A Drake Equation is generally accepted to be any formidable looking equation that really doesn't mean anything. Why? Because many, if not all, of the variable terms mean nothing or can never be quantified...at best their values can only be guessed. When we have an equation of variables that can't be quantified all we have is meaningless felgercarb.
quote:He's giving the Drake Equation as a type. And I agree with him, I've found nothing scientific in the mishmash of 'supporting evidence' that proves any such thing as global warming let alone anything that proves there's been a dramatic rise in CO2, anything that proves rising CO2 levels are catastrophic for the planet, anything that proves that man-made CO2 levels bear any correlation at all to the global warming of the last couple of hundred years since we've been warming up after the recurring theme in our climate history of a mini-ice age, anything, well, you get my drift. Like the Drake equations, the so called scientific facts produced have a dream like quality of the non-real and the nightmare it's creating for us ordinary oiks bears a remarkable correlation to the effect he produced with his nonsense science.
We're pummeled with Drake Equations when the greenies attempt to prove to us that if we don't do something now about our greenhouse gas emissions, the gasses they proclaim to be greenhouse gases, the planet will be uninhabitable in another hundred years.
quote:One point that strikes me. These are discussion boards, where people are free to share their opinions and ideas. But, in doing so those opinions and ideas are opened to being challenged. When challenged, it's expected that you support your ideas and opinions - either by restating them in a clearer way explaining why you believe that, or by providing some authority beyond yourself to support your position. Many people here have done both on many occasions. Quoting some "ordinary oik like you and I" does neither; it simply shows that others agree with you, which doesn't help take the discussion forward unless they have some reasonable credentials to make their opinion meaningful.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
quote:Because he's an ordinary oik just like you and I and I liked what he said.
Originally posted by Teufelchen:
So why on earth did you copy and paste a slab of Burrage's diatribe?
quote:No, please, not the bl**dy physics of greenhouse gases again. The claim to disaster by the global warmists is that it is man induced. That the global warming of the last century and a half or two is UNPRECEDENTED in the last 1000 years and it's all the fault of man pumping out extraordinary levels of CO2 since the industrial revolution.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
What, other than the physics of greenhouse gases? Because I've gone over that line of evidence repeatedly. And, you consistently fail to see the plain correlation between CO2 concentrations and mean global temperatures in the 20th century(though not perfectly exact, it's a complex phenomenon afterall so exact is never going to happen). And, you seem to consider models as totally unreliable so the correlation between model outcomes and historical records won't be impressive either.
quote:http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/corporate/pressoffice/myths/index.html
Originally posted by Myrrh:
OK, one last time of requesting this.
Please show me just one specific line of reasoning in the global warming theory claims, prove that man-made CO2 since the industrial revolution has actually made the earth a hotter place than it was at the end of the mini ice age we came out of, has been driving that rise in temperature - which is what this is all about.
Is that too much to ask?
Myrrh
quote:As I said, there seems little point going through it again. It's just that, for me the physics is the strongest part of the argument (maybe that's because I'm a physicist). The physics says "greenhouse gases warm the planet" with "all else being equal, more greenhouse gases -> a warmer planet". The fact that the models (albeit imperfect because of the complexity of the system) more or less match the observations is the nail in the coffin.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
No, please, not the bl**dy physics of greenhouse gases again.
quote:It's this "compelling" you've used before that I have a problem with.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:As I said, there seems little point going through it again. It's just that, for me the physics is the strongest part of the argument (maybe that's because I'm a physicist). The physics says "greenhouse gases warm the planet" with "all else being equal, more greenhouse gases -> a warmer planet". The fact that the models (albeit imperfect because of the complexity of the system) more or less match the observations is the nail in the coffin.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
No, please, not the bl**dy physics of greenhouse gases again.
But, others are likely to find other lines of argument more convincing. That there are several lines of argument all pointing in the same direction is, in itself, extremely compelling.
quote:Maybe it'll help if we went through each of your disputed points in turn and see where that gets us.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
What's in dispute is how that plays in your theory of Global Warming which positively says that it is the unprecedented latest rise (in dispute) created by man's industry (in dispute) which has driven (in dispute) the current temperature rise of the the last 150-200 years (in dispute) and the consequences we are bombarded with are dire for all humanity (in dispute) and we should curtail our production of it to maintain a constant norm of climate (in dispute) which preceded the hockey stick (in dispute) and any who object to this are worse than holocaust deniers (in dispute).
quote:Alan, you've given me a hard time here for using inappropriate terms when discussing this pretence to science theory, so, whether in standard, colloquial or scientic English what don't you understand in the phrase "in dispute"?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:Maybe it'll help if we went through each of your disputed points in turn and see where that gets us.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
What's in dispute is how that plays in your theory of Global Warming which positively says that it is the unprecedented latest rise (in dispute) created by man's industry (in dispute) which has driven (in dispute) the current temperature rise of the the last 150-200 years (in dispute) and the consequences we are bombarded with are dire for all humanity (in dispute) and we should curtail our production of it to maintain a constant norm of climate (in dispute) which preceded the hockey stick (in dispute) and any who object to this are worse than holocaust deniers (in dispute).
quote:Myrrh, that's just rubbish. Complete and utter rubbish. Alan has patiently explained endlessly that the evidence is overwhelming. It is not watertight proof, which is impossible, but it IS overwhelming. It is the opinion of 99% of an academic discipline versus people in tin hats in sheds. There is no equivalence. If there is a dispute at all in the field, it is the opinion of a tiny minority compared with a huge majority. You seem to equate the two as equal - no wait, that the minority is, for no reason whatsoever, correct (because you can't stay away from that great far-right phrase "Junk Science") Every question you have raised has been answered (and dutifully passed on by Alan), there is no great unknown mystery here.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Alan, you've given me a hard time here for using inappropriate terms when discussing this pretence to science theory, so, whether in standard, colloquial or scientic English what don't you understand in the phrase "in dispute"?
As I've noted before, I find your cavalier attitude to contradictory and conflicting data inexplicable, for a scientist that is.
quote:Hi Mudfrog,
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
Simple question.
How come the temperatures have gone up so much over the last few decades, allegedly because of fossil fule burning, when we have been burning less and less fossil fuels over that same period compared to the first half of the 20th century.
quote:We're burning them at a faster rate than the most pessimistic IPCC forecasts. At the same time, the north pole is melting faster than the worst case of their models.
CO2 emissions from fossil-fuel burning and industrial processes have been accelerating at a global scale, with their growth rate increasing from 1.1% y-1 for 1990-1999 to >3% y-1 for 2000-2004. The emissions growth rate since 2000 was greater than for the most fossil-fuel intensive of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions scenarios developed in the late 1990s.
quote:And, as I'm pretty sure I've said before, there's nothing unusual in science about contradictory and conflicting data - especially in a subject dealing with complex phenomena such as the climate. Scientists routinely build up massive bodies of data and seek to make sense of that data through the processes of drawing up theories, hypotheses and models - which in turn leads to clarity about what new data is needed to test those means of making sense of the data. Whenever a scientist draws up a hypothesis to explain the data available there's practically always some data that doesn't fit. What's not known is whether the hypothesis is wrong or incomplete, or whether the data is wrong. Generally the only wat to proceed if you have a good fit between theory and the vast majority of the data is to examine the data that doesn't fit in intense detail - and, even after that examination you might just have to accept the anomaly. One piece of contradictory data doesn't invalidate a theory. Even a relatively large body of contradictory data doesn't invalidate a theory, though it would almost always result in some minor modification to the theory.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
As I've noted before, I find your cavalier attitude to contradictory and conflicting data inexplicable, for a scientist that is.
quote:People died because coal was burned directly in cities. As Alan said, now there is much less visible pollution because the power plants are further away, and they extract most of the obviously nasty stuff (particulates, NOx, SOx). The UK's coal use has plummetted over the 20th century - partly because of the discovery of North Sea oil and gas. This hasn't happened in most countries, including the developing world and the US.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
My point about buring fossil fuels comes from simpl observation. In the last 50 years fewer and fewer households are burning coal. Industries have closed and those that remain are not using the same technology as they once were - pollution has significantly decreased from what it was in the 200 years up until the war.
I simply cannot see how we are polluting the atmosphere no more than we were when pollution was so bad people died in the smogs of London.
quote:Um. We are 'getting other countries' to make goods for us? Were you around in the UK during the 1980s? It isn't a question of us 'getting' others to make stuff; they started to make stuff cheaper than our own manufacturing companies and so we started buying from 'them'. The UK isn't some energy overlord. Like everyone else, we didn't want to pay a fortune for something when we didn't have to.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
As you point out, the UK's manufacturing industries have largely closed - but that only means we're getting other countries to make the goods for us, and so exporting the CO2 emissions. Also, energy use in homes, offices and (especially) shops has gone up hugely.
quote:How has the development of technology influenced the recording of temperature rises?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Between 1800 and 1900 there was no significant temperature rise. Between 1900 and 1940 about 0.4°C then a 40 year approximately level period (partly due to economic factors from post-war recovery and the oil crises). Since 1980 temperatures have increased about 0.8°C at a fairly steady 0.3°C per decade.
quote:Agreed (and 'energy overlord' is a great phrase). But the result is that we export services which are relatively low energy, and import goods which aren't. This means that we've effectively outsourced CO2 production, and this doesn't show up in the statistics.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
It isn't a question of us 'getting' others to make stuff; they started to make stuff cheaper than our own manufacturing companies and so we started buying from 'them'. The UK isn't some energy overlord. Like everyone else, we didn't want to pay a fortune for something when we didn't have to.
quote:One of the awful double-binds of climate change is that all that nasty stuff (aerosols) used to have an effect in reducing global temperatures. So in order to clean up the atmosphere and save lives, we at the same time (unknowingly) made the global warming problem even worse.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
People died because coal was burned directly in cities. As Alan said, now there is much less visible pollution because the power plants are further away, and they extract most of the obviously nasty stuff (particulates, NOx, SOx). The UK's coal use has plummetted over the 20th century - partly because of the discovery of North Sea oil and gas. This hasn't happened in most countries, including the developing world and the US.
quote:What other issues? What could they realistically do?
The scene is set for a showdown between the US and other G8 countries who want early action on climate change. Germany's environment minister, Sigmar Gabriel, said the country was prepared to block decisions on other issues unless the US and other G8 members made concessions on the environment. "America doesn't want to commit to firm goals. We can't put the global future of our children at risk because of the narrow-mindedness of individual negotiating partners."
quote:Did you expect anything different? This is the government that's effectively blocking California's new vehicle standards, driving Arnie and the Governor of Connecticut to write in the Washington Post:
Originally posted by Noiseboy:
Are we completely buggered, then?
The US rejects all G8 proposals on Climate Change
quote:The only real question is what will the next administration do.
It borders on malfeasance for [the federal government] to block the efforts of states such as California and Connecticut that are trying to protect the public's health and welfare. [...] that again sounds like more of the same inaction and denial, and it is unconscionable.
It's high time the federal government becomes our partner or gets out of the way.
quote:Yes, I've wondered that too. It seems the best way to stay competitive with countries that aren't tackling emissions, as well as putting political pressure on them. But I bet it'd be hellishly hard to do in the current political climate - lots of free-trade agreements to leave, as well as the possibility of a trade war.
On the issue of carbon markets, I have wondered if only countries who are part of carbon markets can trade with each other, or at least other countries would be subject to a levy on all traded goods. Don't think this is what the Germans have in mind though...
quote:In most instances, very little. Remember, when you're talking about "global mean temperatures" (or even mean temperatures for a fairly localised area such as "south east England") you're talking about a mean of a wide range of actual temperatures (irrespective of how well they're measured). Technology has improved the precision of individual measurements, but most importantly increased the frequency and geographical distribution of measurements. This has been an enormous benefit to weather forecasting, but except where there are now measurements being taken that formerly were absent from the data (and, that's mostly the oceans where before weather buoys you had to rely on measurements made on passing ships) very little impact on climate science. For weather forecasting, being able to know how the temperature at a given location is varying in realtime to within 0.1°C precisions is useful, for climate studies where you're interested in the mean temperature over an extended area and time period that's just way more data than you need.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
How has the development of technology influenced the recording of temperature rises?
quote:So there we go, and I am intrigued. A vast collection of eminent scientists (including John Houghton) has already written to Ofcom (and have published their submission here). I wonder if this new submission to Ofcom is more detail from this group, or another group? Anyone know?
Thank you for contacting us with your concerns about this programme. We have received a considerable number of complaints raising similar issues to those addressed by you. We have also had notice of a substantial complaint about the programme from a group of scientists. We have been told not to expect this complaint in full before the end of June.
I am writing to let you know that, as the issues to be considered by Ofcom under its Broadcasting Code by this later complaint are likely to be similar to those you have already raised, we have decided - in order to avoid any duplication in our work - to consider all complaints about this programme only once this later complaint has been lodged.
This will clearly lead to some delay in our final response to you and I thought it would be helpful if I could make you aware of this at this stage. I will be in touch with you further when we have completed any investigations into the programme which we may find necessary to carry out.
quote:and I don't think anyone has answered directly yet, but it's a good question.
And why is .7 degree rise over 100 years such a catastrophe?
quote:
(NASA) Administrator Griffin elaborates on his position on global warming by saying "I guess I would ask which human beings - where and when - are to be accorded the privilege of deciding that this particular climate that we have right here today, right now is the best climate for all other human beings. I think that's a rather arrogant position for people to take."
quote:Ooh, measurement and instrumentation! Keep in mind that accuracy and precision are actually two different things. As Alan said, we now have access to more data from more precise instruments. If the measurements are reasonably precise, the average of those measurements won't change significantly whether you take 10 measurements or 10,000. Whether or not the data is accurate is a separate issue, and that's established by calibrating the instrument. A quick and dirty way to do that is to measure the temperature of something that is known to be a particular temperature e.g. ice water (0C) or boiling water (100C). These particular reference points have been used by scientists for more than 200 years. OliviaG
Originally posted by Littlelady:
Alan - thanks for the explanation. Would the availability of more accurate data relating to mean temps of the oceans influence the recording of global climate change to any significant degree? Over the longer term, I mean.
quote:It's not fear of the unknown that drives my concern so much as fear (or alarm) at the projected results from the world's scientists. The figure of a total rise of a 2 degrees rise seems to have been settled on in order to stay within what is manageable (but still very serious). Above that, and there is a very serious risk of the runaway effect. So not so much "unknown" as "predicted" from my perspective.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
206 - interesting perspective, though it's a shame the link didn't elaborate more on Griffin's comments. I do think he has a point, though I'm not sure it's necessarily arrogance that is at the root of any assumption that today's climate is the best for human beings (in some areas of the world, of course, it isn't: the Sahara maybe or the Arctic). It's hard to know how well we would survive under different climatic conditions and perhaps this fear of the unknown is what motivates many into a need to 'do something' about climate change?
quote:It would be nice to think that the US is actually taking a lead, but I remain cynical as it does seem very strange to start a process outside an existing one, and try to tackle a global problem without working with the global organisation already taking action (though I am not a fan of some of the proposals such as carbon permit trading as they seem to me to miss the point and be liable to misuse and corruption, at least the forum for negotiation and discussion is there).
Bush kills off hopes for G8 climate plan US recognises global warming danger but wants to lead response outside UN
quote:Here's my theory: the US recognizes the hypocrisy of the political posturing from nations who say they'll do what is 'necessary' but don't and feels a different approach may actually lead to 'practical measures'.
From Bush's speil, it sounds like they don't want to do any of the things that the rest of the world thinks is necessary, instead saying the solution is technology. Whatever that means.
quote:I fear you may be right (interesting commentary on this very subject today on the BBC website). However, I'm far from convinced that the US has the balls to address the shortcomings in other countries either. Ironically perhaps the greatest motivation might come from self-interest - the US is politically determined to reduce reliance on foreign oil, so may well drive through greener alternatives for that reason.
Originally posted by 206:
Because IMO very few nations who badmouth the US are practicing what they preach.
quote:I'm not suggesting the US is hypocrisy free, by any stretch.
However, I'm far from convinced that the US has the balls to address the shortcomings in other countries either. Ironically perhaps the greatest motivation might come from self-interest - the US is politically determined to reduce reliance on foreign oil, so may well drive through greener alternatives for that reason.
quote:Yes, indeed. And I think the the politics is driven by the thought that supply is (or will be) unreliable, and will potentially be very expensive too.
Originally posted by 206:
And unfortunately I think you are too optimistic about politics being an adequate motivator: IMO the US and the world will use primarily oil until it either becomes unavailable or something else becomes less expensive.
quote:Which seems somewhat strange given that, with the exception of Canada, those nations that have ratified the Kyoto agreement have at least cut their carbon emissions. Even if many are struggling to actually cut them enough to meet the requirements of the Kyoto agreement. Now, one could indeed argue that only those few nations (such as the UK) who are going to reach their Kyoto commitments are practicing what they preach, but I'd extend that to say that those nations which are trying hard. People who are trying to do the right thing, even if they're failing, stand on higher moral ground than those who declare it too hard and don't even attempt it.
Originally posted by 206:
Here's my theory: the US recognizes the hypocrisy of the political posturing from nations who say they'll do what is 'necessary' but don't and feels a different approach may actually lead to 'practical measures'.
Because IMO very few nations who badmouth the US are practicing what they preach.
quote:Well, there's some debate as to exactly how much needs doing. The best estimate for stabilising temperatures at 2°C above the historic mean by 2050 is a cut of carbon emissions to about 50% that of 1990, which is still a long way above carbon emission levels of the 1950s. If 20% cuts can be achieved without any significant economic harm to developed nations (and, the UK is close to that) then 50% shouldn't be too bad either. The UK, incidentally, already has a 60% reduction by 2050 commitment irrespective of any international agreements; if other developed nations took a similar stance it would allow developing nations a chance to increase their emissions slightly while meeting the overall 50%target, which seems only fair to me.
Further, if the environmental situation is as bad as some allege ONLY measures which will harm economies are going to be effective and there aren't many, if any, national leaders willing to use the power of the state necessary to achieve those measures.
quote:The US culturally isn't keen on such things as caps generally, so far as I can remember from my time there. Such an approach, I would imagine, smacks of too much state (ie federal) control. Aside from any issues America has concerning reliance on external sources of fuel (and the UK potentially has a similar issue to consider viz gas supply from Russia) and assuming the administration are genuine, America appears to be choosing a route most appropriate to their own situation and approach to perceived problems. There does seem to be recognition that, along with China and India, they are the biggest producers of emissions so it does make sense to connect with others who share their position in the first instance rather than with those who do not. I find it perfectly understandable that America are opting to work out their own way of dealing with the issue. Asserting that the approach initiated by European nations is the only and/or best way forward is arrogance on the part of those nations.
However, he was critical of using emission caps or setting temperature control, the main instruments of Europe's approach, and repeated Washington's opposition to the European goal of limiting climate change to 2C. "We don't think that's a very practical approach," he said. "You can't manage the temperature."
quote:Alan Cresswell: Master Of Understatement.
Well, there's some debate as to exactly how much needs doing.
quote:Basically, the solar cycles affect the amount of energy incident on the Earth. There are two groups of cycles.
Originally posted by 206 on another thread:
quote:Alan,
Besides, at present, solar activity is reducing anyway through its own natural cycles (not that it's stopping the earth warming).
If you don't mind I'd like to hear you unpack this a bit. I assume the sun's changing cycles causally affect the earth by either heating or cooling it?
If yes, is there a time lag? Any other thoughts on the topic appreciated.
quote:There is no single "global warming theory". There is a compilation of models.
"You really need to have a look at a bit of basic philosophy of science. Because you're statement there makes no sense at all. No theory is 'proved', much less 'becomes fact'. And, if a theory is contradicted it is, by definition, not a good theory. A good theory fits and explains known data, and makes testable predictions for new measurements."
quote:Show me these people who have "dedicated their lives". Did they take a vow of celibacy? University professors are (well) paid to present a certain world view.
"Again, Myrrh has ignored the central and most crucial question of why we - the humble laypeople - should believe the analysis of someone who starting looking into this subject a week ago rather than the thousands of people who have dedicated their lives to studying the science."
quote:Hi DmplnJeff, and welcome to the never-ending climate change thread!
Originally posted by DmplnJeff:
JonahMan wrote, "Cheap air travel like this is clearly unsustainable[]."
Now your starting to upset the apple cart. Technical and economic progress can largely be tied to increases in mobility, communications, and energy production. Before you start to limit these, you had better have a replacement for them.
No, forcing people wait in long socialist lines and take days to travel across a large country is not going to win friends.
quote:From media coverage it's understandable why that view is so common - it's those damn hippy treehuggers, obviously.
Instead of trying to solve this problem by limiting people, why don't we try empowering them. Nuclear energy is roughly one million times as efficient as burning carbon.
Yet the same type of people who said "No Nukes" are the type saying "Global Warming". The U.S. largely abandoned nuclear power in the '70s on the fears of a few possible future deaths and small amounts of radiation.
Now, with thousands of dead people due to burning coal, they say that burning coal could kill us all. They have cried wolf once to often.
quote:I'd not seen any reference to the last interglacial being warmer than today, let alone by as much as 5°C. Though having just looked back at the IPCC report, it does seem there was a temperature peak in Antarctica near the start of the last interglacial warmer than today - though there are big questions about how an Antarctic record relates to the globe generally, that's one reason why they're drilling Greenland to see if the same pattern appears in the northern hemisphere. They should have temperature records for the core corresponding to the levels with the pollen and insects, though it's possible those samples are still being processed.
Studies suggest that even during the last interglacial (116,000-130,000 years ago), when temperatures were thought to be 5C warmer than today, the ice persevered, keeping the delicate samples entombed and free from contamination and decay.
quote:The article is discussing the break up (ie: very rapid melting) of the ice-sheet. At the moment, like all ice sheets, the surface melts slightly in the spring and summer as temperatures rise above freezing. And, in winter as temperatures fall again the ice reaccumulates as snow falls. As temperatures rise the period of time when melting occurs gets longer, and the time for snow to replace melted ice gets shorter. Meaning that the amount of ice slowly decreases, except that warmer seas produce more water vapour and hence more snow when it does actually snow resulting in a thickening of ice inland even though the edges (which are exposed to the warmer air from the sea) are melting. Which makes for a confusing picture, but at the moment it seems that the melt rate is marginally exceeding the build up rate (on average for all ice sheets - though some will be melting much faster and others building up). The warmer it gets the greater that differential will be.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
This is telling:
"Research by Australian scientists has suggested that a 3C rise in global temperatures would be enough to trigger the melting of the Greenland ice sheet."
So, there needs to be a 3% rise BEFORE the melting is even triggered? Not before then?
quote:Well, I'd be in that 56%. Though I'm convinced human activity is a large factor in global warming, I do think the apocalyptic greens are going to far with their dire warnings of the end of human civilisation.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
I'm glad to say that in the UK over half of the population (56%) do NOT believe that global warming is man made or nearly as bad as the apocalyptic greens are telling us.
quote:I do get frustrated by attitudes like this. The science is proven - increased CO2 in the atmosphere traps more solar radiation, the level of CO2 in the atmosphere is increasing, and the main cause for the rise in atmospheric CO2 is the burning of fossil fuels and removal of carbon sinks.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
Talk about brainwashing millions of gullible people. It's the old adage that if you shout loud enough and say it often enough everyone will believe it.
I'm glad to say that in the UK over half of the population (56%) do NOT believe that global warming is man made or nearly as bad as the apocalyptic greens are telling us.
quote:If I remember correctly from the interview, the scientist commented along the lines that now this new insight into the situation on Greenland has been obtained, similar specific research is going to be undertaken on ice sheets elsewhere around the globe to ascertain whether melting is happening faster in other areas. The impression I gained when listening to the interview (which I just happened upon) was that the conclusion drawn concerning the effects of warming on Greenland's ice sheet was almost incidental: the study appeared to be primarily concerned with something else. Perhaps I got the wrong end of the stick since I hadn't been watching from the outset of the interview, but that was certainly the impression I got. I don't think that would necessarily be a new phenomenon in science though would it? Looking for one thing but finding something else either instead of or during the process of conducting the original research?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
though there are big questions about how an Antarctic record relates to the globe generally, that's one reason why they're drilling Greenland to see if the same pattern appears in the northern hemisphere.
quote:Which bit?
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
The science is proven
quote:I was having a chat with my parents (both retired) about green issues just last week and we got on to the kind of things that had changed in daily life between their youth and today. During the chat I realised that my parents' generation were, in some ways, greener than now. Ok, so industrialisation was pounding away at a major rate at that time, but in terms of ordinary family life they recycled and reused almost everything in some way or another.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
And, I also believe that changes in human behaviour (especially in the industrialised countries) can slow the rate of global warming allowing time for people to adapt
quote:The bit you glossed.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
quote:Which bit?
Originally posted by Doc Tor:
The science is proven
quote:
increased CO2 in the atmosphere traps more solar radiation, the level of CO2 in the atmosphere is increasing, and the main cause for the rise in atmospheric CO2 is the burning of fossil fuels and removal of carbon sinks.
quote:Countless scientists have been studying this for decades. They have literally put in tens of thousands of man-years work into researching, debating, attending conferences, and general bickering. It's probably the most examined scientific question ever. And the result?
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
Talk about brainwashing millions of gullible people. It's the old adage that if you shout loud enough and say it often enough everyone will believe it.
I'm glad to say that in the UK over half of the population (56%) do NOT believe that global warming is man made or nearly as bad as the apocalyptic greens are telling us.
quote:
American Meteorological Society:
Human activities have become a major source of environmental change. Of great urgency are the climate consequences of the increasing atmospheric abundance of greenhouse gases [which will cause] significant impacts on our natural and societal systems.
quote:
Academia Brasileira de Ciéncias (Brazil), Académie des Sciences (France), Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei (Italy), Russian Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Sciences (USA), Royal Society of Canada, Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina (Germany), Science Council of Japan, Academy of Science of South Africa, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Indian National Science Academy, Academia Mexicana de Ciencias (Mexico), Royal Society (UK):
The problem is not yet insoluble, but becomes more difficult with each passing day ... even [with urgent action] warming would be likely to have some severe impacts.
quote:
American Geophysical Union:
Human activities are increasingly altering the Earth's climate. ... A particular concern is that atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide may be rising faster than at any time in Earth's history, except possibly following rare events like impacts from large extraterrestrial objects. ... Moreover, research indicates that increased levels of carbon dioxide will remain in the atmosphere for hundreds to thousands of years. [...These] constitute a real basis for concern."
quote:I could include similar quotes from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Union of Concerned Scientists (representing its 200,000 members), the American Academy for Advancement of Sciences, National Research Council, the Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society...and so on. No major scientific body disputes that we are causing it, except (possibly) the Society of Petroleum Engineers.
Stratigraphy Commission - Geological Society of London:
Global climate change is increasingly recognised as the key threat to the continued development – and even survival - of humanity. ... We find that the evidence for human-induced climate change is now persuasive, and the need for direct action compelling.
quote:The primary study would almost certainly be paleoclimatic - studying air bubbles trapped in the ice allows one to determine the temperature when the ice was deposited via the ratios of abundances of different oxygen isotopes, along with other data such as CO2 concentrations. There are cores being drilled through practically every ice sheet on the planet to get such data, which is vital to better understanding the past climate - which in turn further constrains the models used to understand current climate forcing and predict future changes.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
The impression I gained when listening to the interview (which I just happened upon) was that the conclusion drawn concerning the effects of warming on Greenland's ice sheet was almost incidental: the study appeared to be primarily concerned with something else.
quote:No, it certainly wouldn't be unusual. It's safe to say that in many areas of science collecting data is a labourious and expensive process. That means that scientists are going to try and get whatever they can from the data they collect. As an example, I recently developed a new visualisation technique for the sort of data I collect, and have gone through old data to try it out and get some examples for a paper I'm putting together. The data wasn't collected for that, but using old data means I can do the work without applying for any additional funding in spare time - if I was to collect new data to demonstrate it I'd need to get someone to pay about £20k.
I don't think that would necessarily be a new phenomenon in science though would it? Looking for one thing but finding something else either instead of or during the process of conducting the original research?
quote:There was an article in the paper a few weeks ago about reducing waste. It was written primarily about the loss of weekly rubbish collection, and how to make a bin last two weeks, rather than specifically about climate change and reducing carbon footprints but it would apply to that. They had a little box of "top tips", included in that were to get hold of house-keeping books from the 1940s when rationing was still inforce, or even produced as recently as the 1970s, because they were stuffed full of ways to make the most of limited resources.
I was having a chat with my parents (both retired) about green issues just last week and we got on to the kind of things that had changed in daily life between their youth and today. During the chat I realised that my parents' generation were, in some ways, greener than now.
quote:That's quite understandable, especially considering all the conflicting media coverage we're bombarded with.
Originally posted by DmplnJeff:
I'm still undecided on human global warming
quote:All excellent ideas, although I'd probably prefer carbon cap-and-trade. If we went for taxes, we should gradually reduce income tax as carbon taxes were phased in. "Tax pollution, not work."
I support a steadily increasing tax structure on burning hydrocarbons, along with the massive development of nuclear power.
This will give free markets both the time and incentive to change.
An exception might be made for necessary air travel where fast, cheap alternatives are impossible.
quote:It makes me curious again: have scientists been able to determine precisely how much human activity is contributing to climate change?
The seven-point pledge announced by Al Gore to rally support against global warming:
I pledge
1. To demand that my country join an international treaty within the next two years that cuts global warming pollution by 90 percent in developed countries and by more than half worldwide in time for the next generation to inherit a healthy earth;
2. To take personal action to help solve the climate crises by reducing my own C02 pollution as much as I can and offsetting the rest to become ''carbon neutral'';
3. To fight for a moratorium on the construction of any new generating facility that burns coal without the capacity to safely trap and store the C02;
4. To work for a dramatic increase in the energy efficiency of my home, workplace, school, place of worship, and means of transportation;
5. To fight for laws and policies that expand the use of renewable energy sources and reduce dependence on oil and coal;
6. To plant new trees and to join with others in preserving and protecting forests; and,
7. To buy from businesses and support leaders who share my commitment to solving the climate crises and building a sustainable, just and prosperous world for the 21st century.
quote:I know this was addressed to Alan, but until he turns up...
Originally posted by 206:
[Snipped the seven-point pledge announced by Al Gore to rally support against global warming.]
It makes me curious again: have scientists been able to determine precisely how much human activity is contributing to climate change?
And IYO is Al fairly representing the science?
quote:A carbon tax would need to be quite high to alter behaviour, and people will quite naturally resent this. To make it clear that the scheme isn't just another "stealth tax", any revenue can be passed directly back as a reduction in income tax. (Particularly to lower and mid-income families, who spend a greater proportion of their money on energy.)
Originally posted by DmplnJeff:
Hiro's leap wrote, "All excellent ideas, although I'd probably prefer carbon cap-and-trade. If we went for taxes, we should gradually reduce income tax as carbon taxes were phased in. 'Tax pollution, not work.'"
I'm sorry, I meant a punitive tax. The idea was to eliminate wasting a valuable resource, not to make money. Ideally, few would pay the tax, so it wouldn't generate much income.
quote:Alternative energy can fill part of the gap, and aren't THAT expensive. Solar PV technology is expensive, but the cost steadily falling. Wave/wind/tidal power is cheaper, although they suffer from high capital costs (especially tidal).
Encouraging nuclear energy is even more important than the tax. [...]
Alternative energy sources will not get the job done. The only reason they exist is subsidies. If they really worked, everyone with a backyard would be using them.
quote:Not sure what you mean by the last part? Caps have the big advantage in that the emissions are...well...capped. It's vague as to exactly how much tax you'd need to levy to reduce fossil fuel use by the required amount, but a cap is much clearer. Then people can bid for the rights, and the price will find its own level. Corruption etc depends on the system that is introduced, which is admittedly tricky.
Oh, and caps are just taxes with cheating and corruption added in. If they worked honestly, the fuel would be sold with the tradable part attached as an added tax. But with a little bookkeeping magic... [/QB]
quote:I want someone to say exactly (or as close as you can get given our current knowledge) how much is anthropogenic and how much is natural or cyclical because the second question hinges on the first.
Are you asking whether or not Al Gore is right in saying AGW is largely man-made, or asking if his seven point plan is going to be any use at addressing climate change?
quote:The science only really comes into the first pledge. The Working Group III report from the IPCC covered "Mitigation of Climate Change". That report has a set of targets politicians may wish to aim for (remember, the role of the IPCC is to provide policy makers with the information such as "if we do this, this is likely to happen" or "what will we need to do to get that to happen?" rather than tell policy makers what to do) and what emissions targets will be needed. To reach an equilibrium mean global temperature less than 3°C warmer than 2000 CO2(equivalent) emissions would need to be cut by 50% or more by 2050. A 3°C rise in temperature would still impact many people considerably, but is still less than most predictions of catastrophe.
Originally posted by 206:
And IYO is Al fairly representing the science?
quote:Somewhere I've seen plots of model results for the last couple of centuries compared to measurements, which match almost perfectly until 50 years ago without any anthropogenic input, but significantly underestimate the temperature rises of the last 50 years. These have already been mentioned, but I can't find the plots.
Originally posted by 206:
quote:I want someone to say exactly (or as close as you can get given our current knowledge) how much is anthropogenic and how much is natural or cyclical because the second question hinges on the first.
Are you asking whether or not Al Gore is right in saying AGW is largely man-made, or asking if his seven point plan is going to be any use at addressing climate change?
Is 'largely' the answer? Does the science 'prove' it?
quote:Is this the page?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Somewhere I've seen plots of model results for the last couple of centuries compared to measurements, which match almost perfectly until 50 years ago without any anthropogenic input, but significantly underestimate the temperature rises of the last 50 years. These have already been mentioned, but I can't find the plots.
quote:It shows what I was saying. Though the what I've seen recently was a set of plots for each continent plus the oceans, rather than global mean, shown on a map of the earth. But, that was at a seminar rather than online, so it may not even be online (though it was a cool graphic). ... aha, found it. It was at the SAGES launch, in the "Centre for Earth System Dynamics" presentation (there's a Powerpoint file from the link at the bottom of the page).
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
quote:Is this the page?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Somewhere I've seen plots of model results for the last couple of centuries compared to measurements, which match almost perfectly until 50 years ago without any anthropogenic input, but significantly underestimate the temperature rises of the last 50 years. These have already been mentioned, but I can't find the plots.
quote:I hear you. If I followed Alan's estimate and it's accurate we're responsible for roughly 3/4 of global warming.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
This isn't a scientific question, it's about value judgements: if we do decide carbon must be limited, what's a fair way to do so? What is politically feasible?
quote:I think the introduction of plastics has also played a major part. Plastic has been so abundant, its use so pervasive and its waste so unrecyclable that a kind of throw-away culture has evolved which causes problems at many levels.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
You're right about older generations being greener than us in lots of ways. It's a symptom of how cheap energy is nowadays - the real cost of things like car ownership and domestic heating has fallen markedly, so our expectations are much higher and we don't think twice about using them the whole time.
quote:I think this is sad, in a 'look what it's come to' kind of way. But on the other hand I think the only way forward it to go backwards in some respects. I'm not sure fortnightly rubbish collections is the answer though. I certainly hope they aren't introduced where I live. I can imagine what will happen if they are: rubbish dumped on the pavements, possibly set alight, and people stealing wheelie bins so as to have two for themselves.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
There was an article in the paper a few weeks ago about reducing waste. It was written primarily about the loss of weekly rubbish collection, and how to make a bin last two weeks, rather than specifically about climate change and reducing carbon footprints but it would apply to that. They had a little box of "top tips", included in that were to get hold of house-keeping books from the 1940s when rationing was still inforce, or even produced as recently as the 1970s, because they were stuffed full of ways to make the most of limited resources.
quote:Even if we assume that Al Gore is a pagan ecologist, it doesn't make the science wrong.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
paganism and ecology.
Not true?
Refute it then.
quote:I think 90% is a good target, but it does assume everyone on the planet ends up with the same carbon allowance. Fair, but as you say, unlikely. Allowing rich countries to buy some carbon from poorer countries is one alternative that might be more acceptable. Some people think that's a cop-out, but as far as I can see...
Originally posted by 206:
It remains my concern that industrialized nations aren't going to adequately reduce emissions until they're forced to either by running out of oil or something approaching police states. Gore's 90% is IMO wildly optimistic.
quote:In the sense of "May you live in interesting times"? But yes, it's grimly fascinating what'll happen.
It's going to be very interesting to see how all this ends up in a few decades.
quote:As far as I can tell, no.
Originally posted by Clint Boggis:
Has he given up work so he can evangelise for his (and our) final few days. No point in starting to read a book as he'll never get to the end. Why take the time to look after his house, car, his body?
And I assume no savings, no pension, no insurance, no subscriptions to anything, no memberships. Why bother when it all ends so soon? Does he bother shaving, cleaning his teeth and having a shower?
quote:
A new scientific study concludes that changes in the Sun's output cannot be causing modern-day climate change.
It shows that for the last 20 years, the Sun's output has declined, yet temperatures on Earth have risen.
It also shows that modern temperatures are not determined by the Sun's effect on cosmic rays, as has been claimed.
Writing in the Royal Society's journal Proceedings A, the researchers say cosmic rays may have affected climate in the past, but not the present.
quote:
Originally posted by Clint Boggis:
Presumably he lives as though there is almost no future left for us on Earth then.
Has he given up work so he can evangelise for his (and our) final few days. No point in starting to read a book as he'll never get to the end. Why take the time to look after his house, car, his body?
And I assume no savings, no pension, no insurance, no subscriptions to anything, no memberships. Why bother when it all ends so soon? Does he bother shaving, cleaning his teeth and having a shower?
Surely we have to assume there's some future or everything would be pointless and society would collapse.
quote:I note you're happy to accuse another Christian of hypocrisy. Now there's a sense in which all of us are guilty of that, but I rather think you had something more specific in mind.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
This is what should have appeared under the above quote:
Very funny. I actually recycle, have those new lightbulb thingies and believe that as far as caring for the environment there i nothing wrong with green concerns whatever. What I worry about is the 'meltdown' scenario of so-called man-made climate change and the rush to believe the almost spiritual doctrine of caring for mother earth - and if you don't do it in the zealous way Al Gore (hypocrite) tells you, then you are akin to a holocaust denier.
So, don't worry - ecology is fine - plant trees, recycle, reduce fishing, be good stewards etc, etc, all that stuff, but don't tell me that if I don't do it enough it's my fault if all the ice melts and floods Nepal. I do not believe the doomsday scenario nor do I believe that we are responsible for its causes - certainly not the Church!!
quote:Yes, his home is a large user of electricity. But, the other side of the coin is that it's also his (and his wifes) place of business and because of his position as a former US VP he also needs to employ some security measures. So, you can't really compare his 'domestic' energy use with a regular house (even in the US, let alone elsewhere in the world). If you compare his energy use with that of a small business, including the domestic use at the business owners home and travel, then it's a much better comparison. And, all that electricity Gore uses at home comes from low-carbon sources (he buys from green energy suppliers, and is installing renewable power at his home). He does carbon offset, and although I think that carbon offsetting is a bit of a con he's at least consistent in advocating that approach to becoming greener.
Originally posted by Mudfrog, presumably to explain why he considers Al Gore to be a hypocrite:
The amount of energy he uses (from 'green' sources or not)
quote:As I understand it, not having seen the concert, most of the performers were already near the venues they performed at - either because they live near them, or were on tour in that part of the world. So, no 'rock stars jetting around the world' to perform - unlike the stunt at the first Live Aid with stars performing in one venue then hopping on Concorde to perform at another one.The venues also installed renewable generating capacity, and carbon-offset the deficit - again, although I personally consider offsetting a con it's consistent with the message Gore preaches.
and the fact that he encouraged that ridiculous set of concerts last week with rock stars all jetting around the world
quote:You haven't presented anything capable of being rigorously refuted.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
paganism and ecology.
Not true?
Refute it then.
quote:So are you criticising an amazing, historic event which actually raised money to meet actual and real needs in the developing world just because everyone involved didn't think about something no-one was actually thinking about at the time?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
unlike the stunt at the first Live Aid with stars performing in one venue then hopping on Concorde to perform at another one.
quote:No, I'm comparing a concert to raise awareness and funds for one cause (famine in Africa) with the recent one. What was appropriate for one event would have been inappropriate for the other. For Live Aid it was a cool stunt. It demonstrated very clearly how small the world actually is, and that just because someone's in Africa that doesn't make them distant and their needs none of our concern.
Originally posted by Littlelady:
quote:So are you criticising an amazing, historic event which actually raised money to meet actual and real needs in the developing world just because everyone involved didn't think about something no-one was actually thinking about at the time?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
unlike the stunt at the first Live Aid with stars performing in one venue then hopping on Concorde to perform at another one.
![]()
quote:Hi Mudfrog,
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
I actually recycle, have those new lightbulb thingies and believe that as far as caring for the environment there i nothing wrong with green concerns whatever. What I worry about is the 'meltdown' scenario of so-called man-made climate change and the rush to believe the almost spiritual doctrine of caring for mother earth - and if you don't do it in the zealous way Al Gore (hypocrite) tells you, then you are akin to a holocaust denier.
So, don't worry - ecology is fine - plant trees, recycle, reduce fishing, be good stewards etc, etc, all that stuff, but don't tell me that if I don't do it enough it's my fault if all the ice melts and floods Nepal. I do not believe the doomsday scenario nor do I believe that we are responsible for its causes - certainly not the Church!!
quote:Doesn't the fact that virtually every relevant scientific body disagrees with you make you pause?
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
Countless scientists have been studying this for decades. They have literally put in tens of thousands of man-years work into researching, debating, attending conferences, and general bickering. It's probably the most examined scientific question ever.
[snip very worried quotes from:These are bright people, and it's their job to study this stuff. Thousands of them. For years and years.
- American Meteorological Society
- Academia Brasileira de Ciéncias (Brazil)
- Académie des Sciences (France)
- Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei (Italy)
- Russian Academy of Sciences
- National Academy of Sciences (USA)
- Royal Society of Canada
- Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina (Germany)
- Science Council of Japan
- Academy of Science of South Africa
- Chinese Academy of Sciences
- Indian National Science Academy
- Academia Mexicana de Ciencias (Mexico)
- Royal Society (UK)
- American Geophysical Union
- Stratigraphy Commission (Geological Society of London)
- The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
- The Union of Concerned Scientists
- The American Academy for Advancement of Sciences
- National Research Council
- The Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society]
And yes, they MIGHT be wrong, as most would acknowledge. Climate is complicated. But you sound extremely confident that they're virtually all wrong and it's not a significant problem. Where do you get that certainty from? And if you're not 100% certain, then how sure are you?
quote:Not a particularly neutral introduction, that. And I can't find any explanation on that website of why, and in what degree, they're sceptical about any or all elements of "the global warming hysteria". And Rhodri Morgan (First Minister of Wales, on your list) hasn't done any scientific research since 1974, because he became a civil servant that year; his actual contribution to the debate was to say:
These are names of scientists who are questioning the global warming hysteria.
quote:His spokesman later added, in clarification:
"If our climate in Wales is going to be more like Spain's or southern California's in the summer, then Spain will be more like the Sahara.
If that is the kind of climate shift we cannot avoid having by 2050, it will hardly be unhelpful to Wales."
quote:Can we have facts, please, not ill-conceived, poorly-researched blancmange?
"He was stressing that even if climate change has advantages for Wales it will be catastrophic for other parts of the world."
quote:OK, this is not a random choice from Mudfrog's list - the word "founder" always triggers alarm bells for me.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
Dr. Art Robinson, Founder, Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine
quote:ETA link: http://www.oism.org/oism/s32p15.htm
The Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine is a small research institute founded in 1980 to conduct basic and applied research in subjects immediately applicable to improvements in human life — including biochemistry, diagnostic medicine, nutrition, preventive medicine, and aging.
The Institute is supported by donations and the independent earnings of its faculty and volunteers. It does not solicit or accept tax-financed government funds.
The Institute has six faculty members, several volunteers who work actively on its projects, and a large number of volunteers who help occasionally...
quote:OliviaG
The Oregon Petition, sponsored by the OISM, was circulated in April 1998 in a bulk mailing to tens of thousands of U.S. scientists. In addition to the petition, the mailing included what appeared to be a reprint of a scientific paper. Authored by OISM's Arthur B. Robinson, Sallie L. Baliunas, Willie Soon, and Zachary W. Robinson, the paper was titled "Environmental Effects of Increased Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide" and was printed in the same typeface and format as the official Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Also included was a reprint of a December 1997, Wall Street Journal editorial, "Science Has Spoken: Global Warming Is a Myth, by Arthur and Zachary Robinson. A cover note signed "Frederick Seitz/Past President, National Academy of Sciences, U.S.A./President Emeritus, Rockefeller University", may have given some persons the impression that Robinson's paper was an official publication of the academy's peer-reviewed journal. ...
In reality, neither Robinson's paper nor OISM's petition drive had anything to do with the National Academy of Sciences, which first heard about the petition when its members began calling to ask if the NAS had taken a stand against the Kyoto treaty. Robinson was not even a climate scientist. He was a biochemist with no published research in the field of climatology, and his paper had never been subjected to peer review by anyone with training in the field. In fact, the paper had never been accepted for publication anywhere, let alone in the NAS Proceedings. It was self-published by Robinson, who did the typesetting himself on his own computer. (It was subsequently published as a "review" in Climate Research, which contributed to an editorial scandal at that publication.)
quote:
As a result of the burning of coal and oil, the driving of cars, and other human activities, the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is increasing at a rate of about half a percent per year. … The physical effects of carbon dioxide are seen in changes of rainfall, cloudiness, wind strength, and temperature, which are customarily lumped together in the misleading phrase "global warming." This phrase is misleading because the warming caused by the greenhouse effect of increased carbon dioxide is not evenly distributed. In humid air, the effect of carbon dioxide on the transport of heat by radiation is less important, because it is outweighed by the much larger greenhouse effect of water vapor. The effect of carbon dioxide is more important where the air is dry, and air is usually dry only where it is cold. The warming mainly occurs where air is cold and dry, mainly in the arctic rather than in the tropics, mainly in winter rather than in summer, and mainly at night rather than in daytime. The warming is real, but it is mostly making cold places warmer rather than making hot places hotter. To represent this local warming by a global average is misleading, because the global average is only a fraction of a degree while the local warming at high latitudes is much larger
quote:Many thanks for the reply Mudfrog.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
But what about this list:
<snip list>
What's a muggle supposed to believe?
quote:Maybe instead of a comelete list of those vaguely connected with science who are uncomfortable to some degree with the "hysteria" as presented by Mudfrog, (where listing those on the pro-AGW side is not really feasible due to the numbers), we need a histogram to show the balance of opinion.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
quote:Many thanks for the reply Mudfrog.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
But what about this list:
<snip list>
What's a muggle supposed to believe?
There are certainly individual scientists who dispute AGW - no-one would claim otherwise. But in any recent scientific theory will have opponents...the key thing is to realise what a tiny minority they're in here.
code:as my first crap attempt at graphical representation? (Yes, Mudfrog's impressive list of those who aren't convinced and have little or no knowledge of climate science but still feel their opinion should be heard, is represented by a dot).-------------------- (pro AGW)
. (anti AGW)
quote:And, I wish some of that global warming would come my way..
On January 31, ‘07 the National Geographic Channel presented a special on global climate change. The first half-hour was a good representation of paleoclimate variation. The program then devolved into a Al Goresk type anthropogenic global-warming tirade. With the Vostok ice core record presented graphically, it was claimed that the temperature curve follows carbon dioxide, despite the obvious fact that didn’t. (CARBON DIOXIDE DOESN’T CAUSE GLOBAL TEMPERATURES TO RISE:)
quote:Have a go at a sarky comeback to my remarks a few posts ago, would you, there's a dear?
Originally posted by Myrrh:
On a whim? On the contrary, I spent a great many hours over several weeks comparing data and very soon concluded that the recent rise in hot air was due to political spin and not man-made CO2.
Really sad, that some now think Carbon Dioxide a toxic gas because of all the hype...
And Maggie must be smirking now that even the environmentalist lobby is backing the building of nuclear energy plants.. (see some pages back for the background).
This an example of where spin which passes for your "consensus of scientists" turns into farce:
quote:And, I wish some of that global warming would come my way..
On January 31, ‘07 the National Geographic Channel presented a special on global climate change. The first half-hour was a good representation of paleoclimate variation. The program then devolved into a Al Goresk type anthropogenic global-warming tirade. With the Vostok ice core record presented graphically, it was claimed that the temperature curve follows carbon dioxide, despite the obvious fact that didn’t. (CARBON DIOXIDE DOESN’T CAUSE GLOBAL TEMPERATURES TO RISE:)
Myrrh
quote:A list is a list, so look them up and see what they have to say.
Originally posted by Archimandrite:
Have a go at a sarky comeback to my remarks a few posts ago, would you, there's a dear?
quote:'Open to question, something we have yet to figure out', is the consensus I've noted from real scientists.
Dr Veizer's article, which appeared in the December 7, 2000 edition of Nature, was titled “Evidence for decoupling of atmospheric CO2 and global climate during the Phanerozoic eon” and described the development of new databases for understanding the temperature of seawater and climate change over the last 550 million years. Based upon these new data-bases, Dr.Veizer was able to postulate in his article that CO2 was not the main driver of climate cycles on geological time scales. On December 7, 2000, the front-page headline of the Toronto Star announced: “Climate change theory stuns scientists.” The next day, a Calgary Herald headline further sensationalized Dr. Veizer’s research by stating:“Scientist deflates greenhouse theory.” Rather than celebrating his research achievement, Dr.Veizer found himself struggling to explain the true meaning behind his years of research. What he ultimately found is that front-page headlines do not always capture the full scope of scientific findings.
“What most people don’t understand,” says Dr.Veizer,“is that there is a natural greenhouse effect of 33°C, without which the Earth would be a frozen wasteland. About two-thirds or more of this temperature enhancement is due to water vapour, not CO2. And how much of the superim-posed 0.6°C temperature rise over the last century can be attributed solely to the 70 ppm (or 30 %) CO2 rise believed to be of anthropogenic origin is an open question. The situation is very complex. We are not saying that CO2is not a greenhouse gas. It is. But so is water vapour. How much each contributes to the greenhouse, let alone to climate change is something that we have yet to figure out
(Dr Veizer, see page 8)
quote:It's this attitude I find baffling. You spent "a great many hours over several weeks"?
Originally posted by Myrrh:
On a whim? On the contrary, I spent a great many hours over several weeks comparing data and very soon concluded that the recent rise in hot air was due to political spin and not man-made CO2.
quote:OK, a couple of brief comments.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Let's take the first I googled:quote:
Dr Veizer's article, which appeared in the December 7, 2000 edition of Nature, was titled “Evidence for decoupling of atmospheric CO2 and global climate during the Phanerozoic eon” and described the development of new databases for understanding the temperature of seawater and climate change over the last 550 million years. Based upon these new data-bases, Dr.Veizer was able to postulate in his article that CO2 was not the main driver of climate cycles on geological time scales.
quote:That sort of caution is representative of good science. Especially 7 years ago when the picture was not as clear as it is today. If such work was published today, I'd expect the author to make very little in the way of comment on how their findings relate to modern climate change - because the findings on geological timescales simply aren't really relevant. Of course, people (especially journalists) will ask him the question. But, this work alone doesn't provide any data directly relevant to the answer.
continuing the quote from the site Googled
And how much of the superim-posed 0.6°C temperature rise over the last century can be attributed solely to the 70 ppm (or 30 %) CO2 rise believed to be of anthropogenic origin is an open question. The situation is very complex. We are not saying that CO2is not a greenhouse gas. It is. But so is water vapour. How much each contributes to the greenhouse, let alone to climate change is something that we have yet to figure out
quote:It doesn't take an an expert in climatology to analyse an argument. As you say, there are many disciples involved here and one of the first things I found was that some were dramatically and woefully unscientifically misrepresenting data and the chief offender was the IPCC itself which has even been taken to court for this by scientists who contributed information. That rang alarm bells, for me anyway, and a closer look at what was being said continued confirming this was the actual base of global warming crackpot thinking - decide on the result and then manipulate data to fit. I gave up trying to find real science to back up this theory.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
It's this attitude I find baffling. You spent "a great many hours over several weeks"?
Why do you even start to think that a couple of weeks self-study of dodgy websites gives you the skills needed to assess this? And to claim with such dazzling 100% certainty that you're right, and that the thousands of atmospheric physicists and paeleoclimatologists etc who spent decades debating this are liars or morons? And that they're part of a giant conspiracy that spans every scientific institution on the planet?
None of us here have a tiny fraction of the expertise needed for our opinions to be relevant to actual climate science.
quote:Yes it does, if the argument is about technical aspects of climatology. You and I can listen to the experts' explanations, but we're in no way qualified to judge between conflicting theories. That may be a bitter pill, but it's the simple truth: we're irrelevant to the science of it.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
It doesn't take an an expert in climatology to analyse an argument.
quote:I've looked, to no avail, for anything about this. Have you any information about who took the IPCC to court, when and over what issue? I've tried a Google search and trawl of BBC News and other potentially useful sites. But nothing about any scientist (or anyone else for that matter) suing the IPCC. A case where the US EPA was sued for not being tough enough on CO2 pollution.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
one of the first things I found was that some were dramatically and woefully unscientifically misrepresenting data and the chief offender was the IPCC itself which has even been taken to court for this by scientists who contributed information.
quote:One of the people Myrrh is refering to is possibly Paul Reiter, a malaria specialist who had some difficulty getting his name removed from the list of authors after disagreeing with the conclusions. The IPCC wasn't taken to court, but some sources say Reiter threatened to do so.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:I've looked, to no avail, for anything about this. Have you any information about who took the IPCC to court, when and over what issue?
Originally posted by Myrrh:
one of the first things I found was that some were dramatically and woefully unscientifically misrepresenting data and the chief offender was the IPCC itself which has even been taken to court for this by scientists who contributed information.
quote:Are you at all reminded of the lists YECcies produce of scientists who are YECcies? Which look impressive until you realise just how many scientists there are in the world and that there are more scientists called Steve who think YEC is horsefeathers than are in the list of YECcie scientists?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
That's what, about 80 names. Some of whom aren't really qualified (at least according to the job titles you've given) - "Applied Mathematics Professor", "Emeritus Professor of Molecular Genetics", "Associate Economics Professor" etc.
quote:Well know,they aren't. In addition to those whose who have been mentioned, Bjorn Lomborg for one doesn't doubt the existence of anthropogenic global warming - he just thinks that it'll be easier to cope with the effects once it happens than is generally appreciated. So he's a Kyoto Sceptic rather than an AGW sceptic. The actual science still isn't in doubt.
Originally posted by Mudfrog:
These are scientific men who are entirely unconvinced about this stuff, say that it's a myth or at the very least say the science is unsafe and that global warming has little to do with man's activities.
quote:I'm reminded from a scene in Blackadder in which Lord Percy is attempting to discover the secrets of alchemy 'this very afternoon'.
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Myrrh:
It doesn't take an an expert in climatology to analyse an argument.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yes it does, if the argument is about technical aspects of climatology. You and I can listen to the experts' explanations, but we're in no way qualified to judge between conflicting theories. That may be a bitter pill, but it's the simple truth: we're irrelevant to the science of it.
quote:It'd be good to think so.
Originally posted by Zealot en vacance:
Option 5. In fifty years time it has become evident that the overwhelmingly powerful effect described by the Milankovitch cycle is moving the planet into re-glaciation, and 'we' are all worrying about that.
quote:What science there is shows that CO2 is index linked to rises in temperature, with a time lag of around 800 years, and, I'm fed up with the pseudo science produced by the IPCC bandwagoneers which makes ridiculous statements such as "likely to be anthropogenic" and so on WITHOUT the slightest bit of uncontroversial actual science to back it up, and, etc. etc.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
I'm replying here as an attempt to keep the "Is it real?" questions separate to the other climate thread...
quote:It'd be good to think so.
Originally posted by Zealot en vacance:
Option 5. In fifty years time it has become evident that the overwhelmingly powerful effect described by the Milankovitch cycle is moving the planet into re-glaciation, and 'we' are all worrying about that.
Sadly, I can't discuss the Milankovitch cycle with you. I don't have the expertise in orbital physics, solar radiation, atmospheric heat exchange, atmospheric fluid dynamics, statistics and God knows what else for the conversation to be meaningful.
But I know that the Milankovitch cycles have been known about for a long time, and studied and debated extensively by people who do have the right skills. And the consensus from these countless fairly bright specialists is that the cycles explain ice ages quite nicely, but current warming is very different.
Why do you believe you are right, and almost the entire scientific community is so wrong? If you're wrong, 50 years in the future is likely too late to take meaningful action - so what level of certainty have you got that you know the real answer?
And hi Myrrh. The same question goes to you, again.
(Btw, I hope this doesn't come across as antagonistic. For what it's worth, I can entirely sympathise with people who say "pah, this can't be real". Most people I've come across like that are sincere, genuinely concerned for development in the third world, and intelligent. But it's still amazingly arrogant to so confidently dismiss the people who have spent decades studying this.)
quote:First, apologies for the snipey "Occam's razor" comment - it came out more harshly than intended. But which option do you go for? And how confident are you?
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
You and I can listen to the experts' explanations, but we're in no way qualified to judge between conflicting theories. That may be a bitter pill, but it's the simple truth: we're irrelevant to the science of it.
Unless of course the theories are so obviously nonsense that a specialist would need to be either a moron or a liar to advocate it.
So as far as I can see there are three choices:
(a) The thousands of scientists contributing are all irredeemably idiots, and the leading international scientific bodies that universally endose their views are equally idiotic. This is despite them generally being recognised as some of the brightest people on the planet, with a culture that strongly favours cautious claims and neutrality. Similarly, the numerous corporations backing it (despite it potentially damaging their interests - e.g. BP) are doing so out of collective madness, while governments who don't agree on anything have decided to take part in the ruse as an excuse for taxes (despite the fact that it's plainly against most of their interests too).
(b) As above, except that the thousands of scientists are all, almost without exception, involved in a gigantic fraud. This is despite the fact that pressure to blow the whistle would be incredible, and people don't really go into atmospheric physics motivated by money.
(c) The science is fairly good, and you're mistaken after your few weeks of reading.
Occam's razor is relevant here.
quote:Not my claim to be able to, that there are conflicting theories is my main point, therefore no consensus.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
Hi Myrrh,
...
Here's the question you didn't answer last time:
quote:
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
You and I can listen to the experts' explanations, but we're in no way qualified to judge between conflicting theories. That may be a bitter pill, but it's the simple truth: we're irrelevant to the science of it.
quote:And this is what I've found re 'global warming'.
Unless of course the theories are so obviously nonsense that a specialist would need to be either a moron or a liar to advocate it.
quote:
So as far as I can see there are three choices:
(a) The thousands of scientists contributing are all irredeemably idiots, and the leading international scientific bodies that universally endose their views are equally idiotic. This is despite them generally being recognised as some of the brightest people on the planet, with a culture that strongly favours cautious claims and neutrality. Similarly, the numerous corporations backing it (despite it potentially damaging their interests - e.g. BP) are doing so out of collective madness, while governments who don't agree on anything have decided to take part in the ruse as an excuse for taxes (despite the fact that it's plainly against most of their interests too).
(b) As above, except that the thousands of scientists are all, almost without exception, involved in a gigantic fraud. This is despite the fact that pressure to blow the whistle would be incredible, and people don't really go into atmospheric physics motivated by money.
(c) The science is fairly good, and you're mistaken after your few weeks of reading.
Occam's razor is relevant here.
quote:See answer above.
First, apologies for the snipey "Occam's razor" comment - it came out more harshly than intended. But which option do you go for? And how confident are you?
quote:And that's what I've found all through this, the global warming theory disappears when additional data is introduced.
A Major Deception on Global Warming
Last week the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United Nations organization regarded by many as the best source of scientific information about the human impact on the earth's climate, released "The Science of Climate Change 1995," its first new report in five years. The report will surely be hailed as the latest and most authoritative statement on global warming. Policy makers and the press around the world will likely view the report as the basis for critical decisions on energy policy that would have an enormous impact on U.S. oil and gas prices and on the international economy.
This IPCC report, like all others, is held in such high regard largely because it has been peer-reviewed. That is, it has been read, discussed, modified and approved by an international body of experts. These scientists have laid their reputations on the line. But this report is not what it appears to be--it is not the version that was approved by the contributing scientists listed on the title page. In my more than 60 years as a member of the American scientific community, including service as president of both the National Academy of Sciences and the American Physical Society, I have never witnessed a more disturbing corruption of the peer-review process than the events that led to this IPCC report.
continued on:
(A Major Deception on Global Warming
Op-Ed by Frederick Seitz Wall Street Journal, June 12, 1996)
So first, let's debunk the myth that has been cultivated in the last decade. There is no scientific consensus on global warming nor, if there is such a thing, on the cause being attributable to anthropogenic driving.
Scientific consensus is not the same creature as intent to produce consensus which is the apparent understanding of the IPCC...
(Statement Concerning Global Warming
Richard S. Lindzen
Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology July 10, 1997)
All of this might not be relevant if models were trustworthy, but satellite measurements of upper level water vapor show profound discrepancies in model results. Under the circumstances, it is surprising that there is any agreement among scientists, but, in fact, most scientists working on climate dynamics would agree that increasing levels of carbon dioxide should have some impact on climate. The real argument is over whether the impact will be significant. The word `significant,' in this context, has a rather specific meaning. The climate is a naturally variable system. That is to say, it varies without any external forcing. Human society already has to deal with this degree of variability over which it has no control. For anthropogenic climate change to be `significant,' it must be as large or larger than natural variability. ...
..Let us begin by quoting this statement (which, in contrast to earlier IPCC reports, gives considerable more attention to important caveats):
"Our ability to quantify the human influence on global climate is currently limited because the expected signal is still emerging from the noise of natural variability, and because there are uncertainties in key factors. These include the magnitude and patterns of long-term natural variability and the time-evolving pattern of forcing by, and response to, changes in concentrations of greenhouse and aerosols, and land-surface changes. Nevertheless, the balance of evidence suggests that there is a discernible human influence on global climate."
...
The specific feature which led Santer (the lead author of Chapter 8 of IPCC 95) to claim discovery of the discernible impact of anthropogenic forcing fails the most elementary test of statistical robustness: namely, it disappears when additional data is considered.
quote:From the top of the page (13).
Writing in the Royal Society's journal Proceedings A, the researchers say cosmic rays may have affected climate in the past, but not the present.
quote:This seems to be a non sequitur. "Consensus" does not usually imply unanimity.
Originally posted by Myrrh:Not my claim to be able to, that there are conflicting theories is my main point, therefore no consensus.
quote:There will be a handful of people who hold conflicting theories for any scientific question - e.g. Frederick Seitz and Richard Lindzen, who you quote.
From dictionary.com:
con·sen·sus /kənˈsɛnsəs/
1. majority of opinion: The consensus of the group was that they should meet twice a month.
2. general agreement or concord; harmony.
quote:OK. So based on you reading a few websites over several months (ones proudly quoting Op-Ed pieces from the...wait for it...Wall Street Journal eleven years ago), you're in a position to call the thousands of scientists liars and/or morons.
Originally posted by Myrrh:quote:And this is what I've found re 'global warming'.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:Unless of course the theories are so obviously nonsense that a specialist would need to be either a moron or a liar to advocate it.
quote:I'm sure I've said this before. But, perhaps it needs repeating as the "800 year lag" thing's still getting said. The science is very clear. In the natural system the biggest reservoirs of carbon are the deep oceans and fossilised carbon (coal, oil, limestone). Without human activity the fossil carbon is largely unavailable to affect climate, which leaves the deep oceans in the game. Because ocean water circulates between the deep and surface relatively slowly, it takes 500-1000 years (depending on which bit of the oceans you're in) for the reservoir to return carbon to the surface. This means that as surface waters begin to warm, there isn't initially a large source of CO2 available to be released to the atmosphere. But, several centuries later the deep ocean carbon begins to return to the surface and get released into the atmosphere where it reinforces warming that's already happening. This is a very well understood phenomenum that provides the feedback needed to amplify the small changes in solar energy input due to Milankovich cycles into climate changing atmospheric temperature changes.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
What science there is shows that CO2 is index linked to rises in temperature, with a time lag of around 800 years
quote:Er-hum. There's oodles and oodles of scientific papers in peer reviewed journals, by thousands of qualified scientists, working in practically every country in the world. They all provide scientific backing to the fact that CO2 has increased dramatically due to human activity (it correlates strongly with industrialisation, the carbon isotope ratio is clearly from fossil-carbon, and it makes sense that if we burn lots of fossil carbon generating CO2 it'll end up in the atmosphere), the fact that CO2 is a greenhouse gas, the fact that temperatures are increasing globally at an unprecedented rate that correlates with CO2, and presenting a range of models that all reproduce the observed data fairly well. With an enormous weight of evidence behind them, the biggest problem the IPCC has in maintaining scientific credibility is that they're over-cautious and aren't strong enough in asserting the scientific evidence. Forget "likely to be anthropogenic", the science is stronger than that - "certainly anthropogenic" is much closer to the mark.
I'm fed up with the pseudo science produced by the IPCC bandwagoneers which makes ridiculous statements such as "likely to be anthropogenic" and so on WITHOUT the slightest bit of uncontroversial actual science to back it up, and, etc. etc.
quote:The primary role of the IPCC is to collate scientific evidence produced by researchers around the world, mostly published in peer reviewed journals, and present it in a manner accessible to non-scientists (primarily international policy makers; initially to give scientific input to the Rio Earth Summit, but later other international summits such as Kyoto; but also national governments and private individuals). That's why the reports are very strictly "this is what's happening" and "if you do this, this is what's predicted to happen", without any "you must do this" - the decision of what to do is a policy issue and is outwith their remit. The IPCC commissions a small amout of research, but primarily systematises the research others are doing. Because it's very difficult to access the output of models based on different scenarios, the IPCC did produce a set of standard scenarios most modellers use (often with other scenarios as well) - but if the IPCC hadn't done this someone else would have as it's essential for good science.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
What is it's [the IPCCs] purpose - do you know? It certainly isn't to further knowledge about climate change.
quote:The names of the contributing authors, and reviewers, are given in the reports themselves. For the WGI report, you can find them in the annexes (pdf file) starting from p15 of the file. The names and institutions are given, assuming you're familiar with Google you can find out as much information about them as you want - but as there are a few names there it may take you some time.
p.s. Please, anyone, can you show me the list of scientists who contributed to the last report and their work?
quote:I meant consensus as in 'scientific consensus', that the science isn't disputed. It is disputed. There are good reasons for it being disputed. Those reasons haven't been answered.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
quote:This seems to be a non sequitur. "Consensus" does not usually imply unanimity.
Originally posted by Myrrh:Not my claim to be able to, that there are conflicting theories is my main point, therefore no consensus.
quote:There will be a handful of people who hold conflicting theories for any scientific question - e.g. Frederick Seitz and Richard Lindzen, who you quote.
From dictionary.com:
con·sen·sus /kənˈsɛnsəs/
1. majority of opinion: The consensus of the group was that they should meet twice a month.
2. general agreement or concord; harmony.
But so what? They're in a tiny minority who have made themselves vocal, telling us what we ALL want to hear. That doesn't prevent a consensus, and in this case an overwhelming consensus.
quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:quote:And this is what I've found re 'global warming'.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:Unless of course the theories are so obviously nonsense that a specialist would need to be either a moron or a liar to advocate it.
quote:Phew. Those who forget history... Even history 11 years ago?!
OK. So based on you reading a few websites over several months (ones proudly quoting Op-Ed pieces from the...wait for it...Wall Street Journal eleven years ago), you're in a position to call the thousands of scientists liars and/or morons.
Oh, and not just the actual climate scientists, but every major scientific institution in the world, that collectively represent God knows how many hundred thousand scientists.
And you're utterly convinced of it, with not a sliver of doubt.
You seem like a decent person Myrrh - compassionate, and prepared to stand up for causes you believe in. But can't you see the phenomenal arrogance that you're displaying here?
quote:This is the critical moment in the saga so far - think about it. The data hadn't changed, but the above was taken out of the IPCC report and from then on the opposite has become a campaign to fudge the actual scientific evidence available to further a particular agenda. Those, the majority of people, who have no reason to doubt the integrity of the IPCC will continue to be deceived here. This is the moment the IPCC became dishonest.
MYTH 6: The UN proved that man–made CO2 causes global warming.
FACT: In a 1996 report by the UN on global warming, two statements were deleted from the final draft. Here they are:
1) “None of the studies cited above has shown clear evidence that we can attribute the observed climate changes to increases in greenhouse gases.”
2) “No study to date has positively attributed all or part of the climate change to man–made causes”
To the present day there is still no scientific proof that man-made CO2 causes significant global warming.
(Myths / Facts
COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT GLOBAL WARMING)
quote:It's a myth that all scientists agree with the global warming theory, but how will you ever see this if you take a deliberate con as objective science? What chance does an ordinary oik have of understanding this when he is being deliberately conned and intimidated because all questioning it are accused of arrogance and worse, likened to Holocaust deniers? And that's quite apart from the rubbishing of scientists who dare say their reports were manipulated - this is proof that the science has been junked for someone's agenda. And it all happened only 11 years ago...
A comparison between the report approved by the contributing scientists and the published version reveals that key changes were made after the scientists had met and accepted what they thought was the final peer-reviewed version. The scientists were assuming that the IPCC would obey the IPCC Rules--a body of regulations that is supposed to govern the panel's actions. Nothing in the IPCC Rules permits anyone to change a scientific report after it has been accepted by the panel of scientific contributors and the full IPCC.
The participating scientists accepted "The Science of Climate Change" in Madrid last November; the full IPCC accepted it the following month in Rome. But more than 15 sections in Chapter 8 of the report--the key chapter setting out the scientific evidence for and against a human influence over climate--were changed or deleted after the scientists charged with examining this question had accepted the supposedly final text.
Few of these changes were merely cosmetic; nearly all worked to remove hints of the skepticism with which many scientists regard claims that human activities are having a major impact on climate in general and on global warming in particular.
quote:Myrrh
(Release Date: February 5, 2007
London, UK - An independent review of the latest United Nations report on climate change shows that the scientific evidence about global warming remains uncertain and provides no basis for alarmism.
In 2006, independent research organization The Fraser Institute convened a panel of 10 internationally-recognized experts to read the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) draft report and produce an Independent Summary for Policymakers. The result, released today, is a detailed and thorough overview of the state of the science. This independent summary has been reviewed by more than 50 scientists around the world and their views on its balance and reliability are tabulated for readers.
“While a lot of effort goes into producing the large IPCC reports, its complex message is often obscured by its accompanying Summary for Policymakers. That summary report does not come from the scientific community. Instead it is developed through political negotiations by unnamed bureaucrats from various governments. Critics of past summaries point out they downplay and gloss over areas of uncertainty and data limitations,” said Dr. Ross McKitrick, coordinator of the independent review and senior fellow with The Fraser Institute.
“The debate around climate change has become highly politicized and alarmist. So we asked a team of highly qualified scientists to look at the IPCC report and produce a summary that they felt communicates the real state of knowledge. Our intent with this document is to allow people to see for themselves what is known and what remains highly uncertain within climate change science.”
continued on:Independent summary shows new UN climate change report refutes alarmism and reveals major uncertainties in the science
Contact(s):)
quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:
quote:I meant consensus as in 'scientific consensus', that the science isn't disputed. It is disputed. There are good reasons for it being disputed. Those reasons haven't been answered.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
quote:This seems to be a non sequitur. "Consensus" does not usually imply unanimity.
Originally posted by Myrrh:Not my claim to be able to, that there are conflicting theories is my main point, therefore no consensus.
quote:There will be a handful of people who hold conflicting theories for any scientific question - e.g. Frederick Seitz and Richard Lindzen, who you quote.
From dictionary.com:
con·sen·sus /kənˈsɛnsəs/
1. majority of opinion: The consensus of the group was that they should meet twice a month.
2. general agreement or concord; harmony.
But so what? They're in a tiny minority who have made themselves vocal, telling us what we ALL want to hear. That doesn't prevent a consensus, and in this case an overwhelming consensus.
quote:
Originally posted by Myrrh:quote:And this is what I've found re 'global warming'.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:Unless of course the theories are so obviously nonsense that a specialist would need to be either a moron or a liar to advocate it.quote:Phew. Those who forget history... Even history 11 years ago?!
OK. So based on you reading a few websites over several months (ones proudly quoting Op-Ed pieces from the...wait for it...Wall Street Journal eleven years ago), you're in a position to call the thousands of scientists liars and/or morons.
Oh, and not just the actual climate scientists, but every major scientific institution in the world, that collectively represent God knows how many hundred thousand scientists.
And you're utterly convinced of it, with not a sliver of doubt.
You seem like a decent person Myrrh - compassionate, and prepared to stand up for causes you believe in. But can't you see the phenomenal arrogance that you're displaying here?
This is when the policy change came into being, from an objective look at the science available to a conclusion pushed through in spite of it. This is when the agenda of some became reality and it wasn't based on the science available. This is what was taken out of the report's conclusion:
quote:This is the critical moment in the saga so far - think about it. The data hadn't changed, but the above was taken out of the IPCC report and from then on the opposite has become a campaign to fudge the actual scientific evidence available to further a particular agenda. Those, the majority of people, who have no reason to doubt the integrity of the IPCC will continue to be deceived here. This is the moment the IPCC became dishonest.
MYTH 6: The UN proved that man–made CO2 causes global warming.
FACT: In a 1996 report by the UN on global warming, two statements were deleted from the final draft. Here they are:
1) “None of the studies cited above has shown clear evidence that we can attribute the observed climate changes to increases in greenhouse gases.”
2) “No study to date has positively attributed all or part of the climate change to man–made causes”
To the present day there is still no scientific proof that man-made CO2 causes significant global warming.
(Myths / Facts
COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT GLOBAL WARMING)
This is the moment the science died.
From then on the IPCC has been working to someone else's agenda, the contrary conclusion decided and promoted ad nauseam by the myth of global warming presented as a fact without solid science to back it up. This is the moment it became junk science.
You really want to ignore this?:
quote:It's a myth that all scientists agree with the global warming theory, but how will you ever see this if you take a deliberate con as objective science? What chance does an ordinary oik have of understanding this when he is being deliberately conned and intimidated because all questioning it are accused of arrogance and worse, likened to Holocaust deniers? And that's quite apart from the rubbishing of scientists who dare say their reports were manipulated - this is proof that the science has been junked for someone's agenda. And it all happened only 11 years ago...
A comparison between the report approved by the contributing scientists and the published version reveals that key changes were made after the scientists had met and accepted what they thought was the final peer-reviewed version. The scientists were assuming that the IPCC would obey the IPCC Rules--a body of regulations that is supposed to govern the panel's actions. Nothing in the IPCC Rules permits anyone to change a scientific report after it has been accepted by the panel of scientific contributors and the full IPCC.
The participating scientists accepted "The Science of Climate Change" in Madrid last November; the full IPCC accepted it the following month in Rome. But more than 15 sections in Chapter 8 of the report--the key chapter setting out the scientific evidence for and against a human influence over climate--were changed or deleted after the scientists charged with examining this question had accepted the supposedly final text.
Few of these changes were merely cosmetic; nearly all worked to remove hints of the skepticism with which many scientists regard claims that human activities are having a major impact on climate in general and on global warming in particular.
Since then the IPCC cannot be trusted to give real science on the subject, but its technique has been refined and you'll be hard pressed to spot it liberal as it is with such conclusions as 'anthropogenic causes the most likely to account for global warming' while the data it presents produces no evidence to support it.
Read through this analysis also (and for Alan, the hard graft has been done):
quote:Myrrh
(Release Date: February 5, 2007
London, UK - An independent review of the latest United Nations report on climate change shows that the scientific evidence about global warming remains uncertain and provides no basis for alarmism.
In 2006, independent research organization The Fraser Institute convened a panel of 10 internationally-recognized experts to read the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) draft report and produce an Independent Summary for Policymakers. The result, released today, is a detailed and thorough overview of the state of the science. This independent summary has been reviewed by more than 50 scientists around the world and their views on its balance and reliability are tabulated for readers.
“While a lot of effort goes into producing the large IPCC reports, its complex message is often obscured by its accompanying Summary for Policymakers. That summary report does not come from the scientific community. Instead it is developed through political negotiations by unnamed bureaucrats from various governments. Critics of past summaries point out they downplay and gloss over areas of uncertainty and data limitations,” said Dr. Ross McKitrick, coordinator of the independent review and senior fellow with The Fraser Institute.
“The debate around climate change has become highly politicized and alarmist. So we asked a team of highly qualified scientists to look at the IPCC report and produce a summary that they felt communicates the real state of knowledge. Our intent with this document is to allow people to see for themselves what is known and what remains highly uncertain within climate change science.”
continued on:Independent summary shows new UN climate change report refutes alarmism and reveals major uncertainties in the science
Contact(s):)
quote:Agreed, a handful of scientists dispute it - out of thousands. That is pretty much the definition of "overwhelming scientific consensus". It's not unanimity. It's not disputed because it's no longer considered a scientifically interesting topic to discuss at academic conferences or in the journals: the scientists overwhelming agree. Real debate has moved to other issues, and did so long ago.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
I meant consensus as in 'scientific consensus', that the science isn't disputed. It is disputed.
quote:Now in the other corner, you're giving us links from:
The NAS was signed into being by President Abraham Lincoln on March 3, 1863, at the height of the Civil War. As mandated in its Act of Incorporation, the NAS has, since 1863, served to "investigate, examine, experiment, and report upon any subject of science or art" [...] The Academy membership is composed of approximately 2,100 members and 380 foreign associates, of whom nearly 200 have won Nobel Prizes.
quote:Not proved that we have any SIGNIFICANT effect.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:I'm sure I've said this before. But, perhaps it needs repeating as the "800 year lag" thing's still getting said. The science is very clear. ...
Originally posted by Myrrh:
What science there is shows that CO2 is index linked to rises in temperature, with a time lag of around 800 years
The importance to the question of anthropogenic forcing of the climate is marginal, because we're accessing a completely different carbon reservoir. Though it does mean that even if we stabilise our anthropogenic input to the system, because of the temperature increase we've already caused ..
quote:The very language is unscientific.
When the AGW lobby was confronted with this "problem" that it had attempted to conceal behind the thickness of the graph line, the response is typified by that of the pro-AGW web site realclimate.org:
"All that the lag shows is that CO2 did not cause the first 800 years of warming, out of the 5000 year trend. The other 4200 years of warming could in fact have been caused by CO2..." (The 800-Year Lag)
quote:Again - Quantify the "temperature change we've just induced", give me actual concrete data to show that we have actually changed the global temperature by anthropogenic forcing.
..there's going to be releases of CO2 from that deep ocean reservoir in the coming centuries as that deep water circulates back to the surface. Not that you or I are going to be around in 800 years to see the natural system add CO2 to the atmosphere in response to the temperature change we've just induced.
quote:
I'm fed up with the pseudo science produced by the IPCC bandwagoneers which makes ridiculous statements such as "likely to be anthropogenic" and so on WITHOUT the slightest bit of uncontroversial actual science to back it up, and, etc. etc.
quote:There effin isn't!!!!! There is no effin correlation between industry and rise in global temperature! YOU have yet, after countless times of asking, to produce anything to prove this. All these 'countless scientists that you agree with' disagree with those who don't see any correlation. The science is not conclusive to back up your claim. If there was you would be able to point to a peer reviewed report which dealt with each rebuttal by facts not fudge.
Er-hum. There's oodles and oodles of scientific papers in peer reviewed journals, by thousands of qualified scientists, working in practically every country in the world. They all provide scientific backing to the fact that CO2 has increased dramatically due to human activity (it correlates strongly with industrialisation, the carbon isotope ratio is clearly from fossil-carbon, and it makes sense that if we burn lots of fossil carbon generating CO2 it'll end up in the atmosphere), the fact that CO2 is a greenhouse gas, the fact that temperatures are increasing globally at an unprecedented rate that correlates with CO2, and presenting a range of models that all reproduce the observed data fairly well. With an enormous weight of evidence behind them, the biggest problem the IPCC has in maintaining scientific credibility is that they're over-cautious and aren't strong enough in asserting the scientific evidence. Forget "likely to be anthropogenic", the science is stronger than that - "certainly anthropogenic" is much closer to the mark.
quote:How, as a scientist, can you continue to ignore the renowned scientists who dispute the theory?
The Industrial Revolution really began after the Second World War which was followed by four decades of temperature decrease. This confounds the theory somewhat.
Since the mid 19th century, the Earth's temperature has risen by about half a degree Celsius. This warming began long before cars and planes had been invented. What's more, most of the rise in temperature occurred before 1940 when industrial production was relatively insignificant.
Why do we suppose that carbon dioxide is responsible for our changing climate? CO2 forms only a very small part of the Earth's atmosphere. In fact changes in CO² levels are measured in tens of parts per million. It measures about 0.054% of the atmosphere.
Although CO² is a greenhouse gas, it is a relatively minor one, water vapour is, by far, the biggest player
A scientist largely responsible for measuring the Earth's atmosphere is Professor John Christy. In 1991, he was awarded NASA's Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement and in 1996 he received a Special Award from the American Meteorological Society for fundamentally advancing our ability to monitor climate. He reports "What we've found, consistently, in a great part of the planet, is that the atmosphere is not warming as much as we see on the surface". This suggests that the warming is not a result of greenhouse gases. (The Great Global Warming Swindle
Carbon Dioxide is not the Culprit!)
quote:Seriously Hiro. I'm at a loss here, it doesn't bother you at all that what these few voices point out is that the IPCC altered its original conclusion which showed there was no case for the anthropogenic claim and that since then it's conclusions continue the hype unsupported by the actual facts in subsequent reports.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
Now in the other corner, you're giving us links from:
- The Wall Street Journal
- The Frasier Institute (Right-wing think tank, run by economists and an 'econometrist'.)
- Friends of Science (Set up in 2002 specifically to oppose AGW ideas. Funded by oil companies.)
Seriously Myrrh - step back and pause. Don't you see the mis-match here?
Don't you see that right-wing newspapers, think tanks and small oil-company funded pressure groups, who have never published a single paper in a respected journal between them, might not be an entirely unbiased source of scientific information?
quote:The Fraser Institute is well known for producing reports that are ideologically based, and are sometimes fit for nothing but wiping one's ass with. They're opposed to government regulation of tobacco and they're obsessed with ranking schools by examination results, among their other goofy ideas. OliviaG
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Independent summary shows new UN climate change report refutes alarmism and reveals major uncertainties in the science
Contact(s):)
quote:Shrug. You might see those as goofy...
Originally posted by OliviaG:
quote:The Fraser Institute is well known for producing reports that are ideologically based, and are sometimes fit for nothing but wiping one's ass with. They're opposed to government regulation of tobacco and they're obsessed with ranking schools by examination results, among their other goofy ideas. OliviaG
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Independent summary shows new UN climate change report refutes alarmism and reveals major uncertainties in the science
Contact(s):)
quote:Hi Myrrh,
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Seriously Hiro. I'm at a loss here, it doesn't bother you at all that what these few voices point out is that the IPCC altered its original conclusion
quote:It must have been quite an experience. But controlling the media in a (near) war zone is one thing, and one we know happens; controlling every scientific institution on the planet for years and years is an entirely different thing. Scientists can be herded like ferrets.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
I was in Laos when the US was in the middle of its genocide of the northern Laotian people and yet the US presence in Laos and Cambodia remained hidden to the vast majority of people in the world.
quote:That's a perfectly fair comment, and I have no doubt it goes on a lot. But it's a million miles from lying about results, and that's that you're suggesting - on a massive scale.
I've lost track of the amounts of research I've read by scientists who prefer to concentrate on their interests, and show amazing years of hard work in doing so, and add a line at the end as a milk sop to the global warming theory.
quote:So you keep asserting. (Along with "It's junk science!" and "None of it is proven!")
It hasn't answered even the most simple of objections.
quote:When are you talking about exactly?
Originally posted by Myrrh:
the US presence in Laos and Cambodia remained hidden to the vast majority of people in the world.
quote:When exactly?
This is fact, it was several years later went the stink came out, that the US had been secretly and illegally bombing two nations it wasn't at war with.
quote:By their frutis shall ye know them
I'm really not at all impressed by huge lists of "those who support" the global warming theory...
quote:Name one.
From what I've read most support it from expediency
quote:Proved is for courts. Science is aa matter of probabilities statistics.
As long as it's disputed science it isn't proved.
quote:Yes it has and you know it has.
It hasn't answered even the most simple of objections.
quote:Yes, it's been proved that we're having a significant effect on global climate (or, more scientifically "the data is consistent with human activity having a significant effect on the global climate, and inconsistent with the view that human activity is having no effect" - see, for example, figure SPM4.5 on p11 of this report - which has already been discussed on this thread).
Originally posted by Myrrh:
quote:Not proved that we have any SIGNIFICANT effect.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:I'm sure I've said this before. But, perhaps it needs repeating as the "800 year lag" thing's still getting said. The science is very clear. ...
Originally posted by Myrrh:
What science there is shows that CO2 is index linked to rises in temperature, with a time lag of around 800 years
The importance to the question of anthropogenic forcing of the climate is marginal, because we're accessing a completely different carbon reservoir. Though it does mean that even if we stabilise our anthropogenic input to the system, because of the temperature increase we've already caused ..
quote:It seems very clear to me. I open my eyes, look at the data and models and lo and behold the data fits one model but not the other. That's what science does - postulate a theory, make a prediction and compare with data. When the data matches a theory and doesn't match the alternative theories that makes it "very clear" that the theory that matches the data is much better than the one that doesn't.
And, no, it's not "very clear" at all.
quote:Because the arguments are bloody good science. I take good science seriously.
How, as a scientist, can you take such arguments seriously?
quote:I'm not in a position to judge the accuracy of climate models: I'd be surprised if more than one person in 100,000 is.
Originally posted by Mad Geo:
Not advocating any position on this, but I'm not sure if anyone posted This or the Response (bottom of page)
quote:Really Myrrh? So no regulation of alcohol, or tobacco, what about cannabis, or coke, or opium? Do you really think there should be no legislation on lead, even in children's toys, or what about arsenic? Presumably uranium trading should be completely unfettered?
Personally, I don't see any government has a right to legislate on the use of any natural substance found on earth - to claim one has control over something one hasn't created is tyranny.
quote:I think you meant here "can't be herded"? Well, I know I keep coming back to this, but the Hockey Stick was a scam. And scientists since have been herded into toeing the party line. Not for the first time in our history, it takes a certain greatness to become a Sakharov.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
It must have been quite an experience. But controlling the media in a (near) war zone is one thing, and one we know happens; controlling every scientific institution on the planet for years and years is an entirely different thing. Scientists can be herded like ferrets.
quote:
That's a perfectly fair comment, and I have no doubt it goes on a lot. But it's a million miles from lying about results, and that's that you're suggesting - on a massive scale.
quote:This is the man who was advisor to Maggie Thatcher when she was looking for ways to screw the coal miners and annoyed that Britain was reliant on Mid East oil and Britain was very much against nuclear power stations (see Sellafied/Windscale). So when she read that someone thought CO2 would contribute to global warming, and at that time it was seen as a good thing, Monckton was one of those sent to investigate if this could be of any use to her politically. Politically.
So to the scare. First, the UN implies that carbon dioxide ended the last four ice ages. It displays two 450,000-year graphs: a sawtooth curve of temperature and a sawtooth of airborne CO2 that's scaled to look similar. Usually, similar curves are superimposed for comparison. The UN didn't do that. If it had, the truth would have shown: the changes in temperature preceded the changes in CO2 levels.
Next, the UN abolished the medieval warm period (the global warming at the end of the First Millennium AD). In 1995, David Deming, a geoscientist at the University of Oklahoma, had written an article reconstructing 150 years of North American temperatures from borehole data. He later wrote: "With the publication of the article in Science, I gained significant credibility in the community of scientists working on climate change. They thought I was one of them, someone who would pervert science in the service of social and political causes. One of them let his guard down. A major person working in the area of climate change and global warming sent me an astonishing email that said: 'We have to get rid of the Medieval Warm Period.' "
So they did. The UN's second assessment report, in 1996, showed a 1,000-year graph demonstrating that temperature in the Middle Ages was warmer than today. But the 2001 report contained a new graph showing no medieval warm period. It wrongly concluded that the 20th century was the warmest for 1,000 years. The graph looked like an ice hockey-stick. The wrongly flat AD1000-AD1900 temperature line was the shaft: the uptick from 1900 to 2000 was the blade. Here's how they did it:
continued on:(Climate chaos? Don't believe it
By Christopher Monckton, Sunday Telegraph)
quote:Sure, for the majority of scientists it is, but you err if you think the IPCC is run by scientists, it's not, it's a politically organisation making use of science, and several have accused it of misrepresenting their work.
Why do people go into science? After all, the pay's pretty crappy and the jobs are hard. One answer is that that they're fascinated by it, and want to find out how things work. Fabricating results is an anathema to that.
quote:Fine, I agree with all that. But the IPCC has no such compunction, nor have the many journalists who prefer a good story to accuracy, ditto politicians. But, as above, their are scientists who don't have this integrity. And it's they who are driving this scam.
Another driving force is for prestige within the scientific community. Again, this generates a respect for careful statements and accuracy: if you claim too much, or are sloppy, you lose big kudos.
quote:Most keep their noses clean and don't get involved in the politics as long as they can continue doing their research unhindered, as I've said and seen many times. A milk sop to the work being relevant in the "global warming" issue is enough to get funded.
Occasionally someone fakes results - but it's a huge scandal when that happens. The idea of getting virtually every climate scientist and every scientific organisation to simultaneously do so is beyond belief.
quote:Since when has that bothered any government? As long as it can maintain power .. Anyway, all this is practically irrelevant, why it's being taken to the extent it has is too complicated - the OP is still whether man-induced climate change is real or not.
But even beyond that, now governments worldwide support the findings. Regardless of their ideology, and even though they never agree on anything, and that it's against most of their interests to do so. Nobody wants this to be true. Aside from economic slowdown, they'll have to set targets, they'll fail to meet them, and they'll look inept.
quote:So you keep asserting. (Along with "It's junk science!" and "None of it is proven!") [/QB][/QUOTE]
It hasn't answered even the most simple of objections.
quote:I was in Laos and Cambodia in January and February 1971, when was it in all the papers?
Originally posted by ken:
quote:When are you talking about exactly?
Originally posted by Myrrh:
the US presence in Laos and Cambodia remained hidden to the vast majority of people in the world.
I seem to remember that we heard about it every day. The US government may have denied ti but we didn't believe them
quote:As above, I was there beginning 1971, and we were told by mainstream media reporters in Laos that they knew about the US carpet bombing of Norther Laos, but their editors wouldn't print it. The following month we went to Cambodia and among our fellow travellers from the border to Phnom Penh was a pilot who'd flown on these raids, over 500 a day he also told us. This corroborated the information we'd been given the previous month in Laos. This was more each day than the amount of bombs dropped on Germany in WWII.
quote:[When in Phnom Penh we used to go and sit on the roof for an after dinner smoke and watch the US bombs fall around the city perimeter, but not attacking the Cambodians - they were 'impersonating' the 'N. Vietnamese' to gain popular support for their presence, (not long after I'd returned to Thailand they'd messed up and bombed the airport by mistake). There was a six o'clock curfew for the Vietnamese, 10 o'clock for the Cambodians.]
As Viet Cong activity grew, the United States became concerned, and in 1969, the US began a fourteen month long series of bombing raids targeted at Viet Cong elements. The US claims that the bombing took place no further than ten, and later twenty miles inside the border. (The truth of what actually took place is detailed in the following article – THE CLANDESTINE WAR).
quote:
Solid estimates of the numbers who died between 1975 and 1979 are not available, but it is likely that hundreds of thousands were brutally murdered by the regime, while hundreds of thousands died of starvation and disease. It is probable that the figure is around 1.7 million deaths. That does not include the 1 million peasant farmers and their families who died as a consequence of the US carpet-bombing raids over Cambodia between 1969 and 1973 (see the following article – THE CLANDESTINE WAR).(Appendix D)quote:
And, Appendix E, (same link)
Kissinger embarked on a plan to wipe out the Viet Cong activity inside Cambodia, but the extentto which the operation would reach needed to be shrouded in secrecy, away from the eyes and ears of an already hostile public. From March 1969, through to May 1970, US B-52’s conducted 3,630 sorties inside Cam-bodian territory, dropping massive amounts of explosives on Cambodian areas suspected of harbouring North Vietnamese forces. In April 1970, Nixon announced to the American public that US and South Vietnamese ground forces had entered Cambodia in a campaign aimed atdestroying North Vietnamese bases in Cambodia. Demonstrations took place across collegecampuses in the US, culminating in the death of four students at Kent State, lending support for US withdrawal from Vietnam.The North Vietnamese moved further into Cambodia, and the US stepped up the tempo bycarpet-bombing deeper into the country, indiscriminately inundating rice fields and villages alike. In The Rise and Demise of Democratic Kampuchea , Craig Etcheson writes: ‘The fact is that the United States dropped three times the quantity of explosives on Cambodia between 1970 and 1973 than it dropped on Japan for the duration of World War II. Between 1969 and 1973 – 539,129 tons of high explosives rained down on Cambodia; that is more than one billion pounds. This is equivalent to some 15,400 pounds of explosives for every square mile of Cambodian territory. Considering that probably less than 25 percent of the total area of Cambodia was bombed at one time or another, the actual force per area would be fourtimes this level.’
GENOCIDE AND PROPAGANDAThe relentless US bombing campaign (that progressed for nearly five years, continuing evenafter the 1973 Paris Accords) contributed greatly to the destabilisation of the country. It was duly noted by some scholars that it provided the Khmer Rouge ‘with the psychological ingredientsof a violent, vengeful, and unrelenting social revolution’ (David Chandler). However,for the mainstream media, the bombing campaign never happened; Cambodian history began with the Khmer Rouge genocide starting in 1975. This media stance continues today, although it is sometimes admitted in passing that the US dropped some bombs on Cambodia before 1975. In The Long Secret Alliance, John Pilger writes; ‘The US not only helped create conditions that brought Cambodia’sKhmer Rouge to power in 1975, but actively supported the genocidal force, politically and financially.’quote:When exactly?
Originally posted by ken:
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Myrrh:
This is fact, it was several years later went the stink came out, that the US had been secretly and illegally bombing two nations it wasn't at war with.
quote:
I'm really not at all impressed by huge lists of "those who support" the global warming theory...
quote:Well, as you can see I don't have the same faith you have in journalists..
By their frutis shall ye know them
Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos taught us that when the US government said one thing and the journalists and scientists another the journalists and scientists were more likely to be telling the truth.
quote:As I said, I don't believe we have a completely free press, so why should I believe we have a completely free scientific community?
The same US government and business interests who tried AND FAILED to lie about Laos have since been trying and FAILING to lie about the environment.
If your story about Laos back then is true then you seem toi have changed sides. You are not saying you believe the peopel who were lying to you back then.
quote:
From what I've read most support it from expediency
quote:In general, as last post - I've seen too many objective reports which then add a short paragraph of how this 'might be relevant' to global warming..
Name one.
quote:
As long as it's disputed science it isn't proved.
quote:Well then, lets see the stats, and I hope you remember to include the plus side for those that would benefit.
Proved is for courts. Science is aa matter of probabilities statistics.
To want to take action I don't have to believe that the global warming story is 100% likely to be true.
If, say, I thought that the cost of taking action to reduce the damage was X trillion dollars, and there was a 1 in 5 chance of global warming costing 10X trillion dollars, then it woudl be rational to take the action, even though I though that damage was not very likely to happen.
quote:
It hasn't answered even the most simple of objections.
quote:But it really hasn't. There is absolutely no proof that a) that there is such a thing as manmade global warming, not even b) that there is such a thing as CO2 driving global temperature even if C) any proof could be shown that this temperature rise since the last Mini Ice Age was at all out of norm.
Yes it has and you know it has.
quote:Exactly. Because no government has the right to decide which herbs we choose to use.
Originally posted by fredwa:
quote:Really Myrrh? So no regulation of alcohol, or tobacco, what about cannabis, or coke, or opium?
Personally, I don't see any government has a right to legislate on the use of any natural substance found on earth - to claim one has control over something one hasn't created is tyranny.
quote:And exactly what has it revealed of my political views?
Do you really think there should be no legislation on lead, even in children's toys, or what about arsenic? Presumably uranium trading should be completely unfettered?[quote]
That's not the same thing. Obviously lead in childrens toys is unacceptable, although I don't know how long a child would need to suck his barbie doll before getting poisoned. Arsenic used to be, perhaps still is, available over the counter - it has a role in pest control other than slowly poisoning great uncle to speed up inheritance and the downside is that several herbs have been banned because they're upsetting the pharmaceutical companies - comfrey, St John's Wort, and a couple of days ago I found out ginko had been added to that list (Ireland).
[quote]It's an interesting position to take but rather revealing of your political views. Or it might be you don't really mean it and it was sloppy thinking.
I'd love to know which.
Fred
quote:What exactly do you mean by a 'scam'? The "Hockey Stick" has been repeatedly demonstrated to be consistent with other multi-regional estimates of temperature over the last 1000 years or so. Admittedly, some regional estimates (eg: those for NW Europe) do show a different pattern with a distinctly warmer period in the Middle Ages and a later cooler period, it's just that these regional variations don't have an enormous impact on hemispheric and global mean temperature estimates. Besides, even the data you've shown previously has demonstrated a significant temperature rise over the last 50 years that's been faster than other rises (or falls) and puts the current temperature at the warmest in recent history (last few thousand years). If even the skeptics data shows the same broad picture as Manns Hockey Stick (even if there's slight difference in the amount of temperature increase compared to 200 years ago) why keep bashing the Hockey Stick? Especially as the IPCC doesn't even use the Hockey Stick exclusively, it's one of about a dozen reconstructions that went into the report - some showing the same pattern as Mann, others showing the MWP and MIA more clearly; I think you've even used some of the data the IPCC used to try and demonstrate that the IPCC weren't using all the data!
Originally posted by Myrrh:
I know I keep coming back to this, but the Hockey Stick was a scam.
quote:OK, so let me try and get this straight. You're willing to accept the authority of a non-scientist who you clearly acknowledge as being a political advisor. Yet, you're not willing to accept the authority of qualified scientists because they also advice politicians. What is your position on the issue of political advice? Are you going to reject the opinions of anyone who advises politicians? In which case, stop quoting Monckton. Or, are you going to accept that it's perfectly proper and reasonable for people with relevant expertise to advise politicians? In which case, stop knocking the IPCC for doing exactly that.
This [Monckton] is the man who was advisor to Maggie Thatcher...
quote:It's the "Maggie dunnit" theory! I haven't seen that since The Great Global Warming Swindle.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
This is the man who was advisor to Maggie Thatcher when she was looking for ways to screw the coal miners [...] Monckton was one of those sent to investigate if this could be of any use to her politically. Politically.
And the scam has growed and growed like topsy ever since
quote:Several people? Out of the thousands of contributors, and the doubtless impressive egos knocking around, and the potential of honest mistakes and confusion, only a few were unhappy? That seems pretty impressive to me.
you err if you think the IPCC is run by scientists, it's not, it's a politically organisation making use of science, and several have accused it of misrepresenting their work.
quote:Quoted because it's good to see that you think most of them are honest.
By Myrrh:quote:Fine, I agree with all that.
By Hiro's Leap:
Another driving force is for prestige within the scientific community. Again, this generates a respect for careful statements and accuracy: if you claim too much, or are sloppy, you lose big kudos.
quote:Ah. So we're all being oppressed by The Mann?
Mann took control of all that at the IPCC and has pushed it for whatever reasons best known to himself but he cannot be called a scientist. He spent the next years obfuscating, refusing to produce his method and data for corrobative testing, until the whole man-made global warming acquired such momentum that even those who can now prove he produced a scam [...] And as I've posted above, something nasty politics happened around '95 [...] around this time that Mann taking control of the process.
That's the reality here.
quote:Alan, please, the beginning of the Hockey Stick was clearly a scam, deliberately ironing out the Medieval Warm and Mini Ice Age - that's how this theory got off the ground! There was a distinct change in emphasis around '95/96 - this was when Mann and his coterie, whoever they were, came to direct the agenda. For goodness sake man, how can it not ring warning bells for you when it's pointed out that two crucial statements were deliberately taken out of the '96 IPCC report? Based on the same data it was originally summarised that there was no provable or significant connection between man's imput and global warming. Then the original Mann Hockey Stick became the flag for the campaign to prove the opposite by manipulating data and creating unsubstantiated scares, and it really has been thoroughly discredited as we've already been over here. The Hockey Stick is still a joke, a scam which denies extremes of climate variation of which we're in but one phase, not at all out of the ordinary.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
What exactly do you mean by a 'scam'? The "Hockey Stick" has been repeatedly demonstrated to be consistent with other multi-regional estimates of temperature over the last 1000 years or so. ..
quote:I don't take anyone's authority here.. I do take note of the political reality of his insider knowledge to pertinent background history of the rise and rise of global warming and you are being disingenous to keep presuming that "qualified scientists" refers to those who support the theory. There are many qualified scientists who think the theory is junk. Since the basic premise is non-existent, that the three claims above are even rational, it's not even a theory.
OK, so let me try and get this straight. You're willing to accept the authority of a non-scientist who you clearly acknowledge as being a political advisor. Yet, you're not willing to accept the authority of qualified scientists because they also advice politicians. What is your position on the issue of political advice? Are you going to reject the opinions of anyone who advises politicians? In which case, stop quoting Monckton. Or, are you going to accept that it's perfectly proper and reasonable for people with relevant expertise to advise politicians? In which case, stop knocking the IPCC for doing exactly that.
quote:Where's the correlation between man-made CO2 and global warming?
Believe global warming is primarily caused by natural processes
Reid Bryson, emeritus professor of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison: "It’s absurd. Of course it’s going up. It has gone up since the early 1800s, before the Industrial Revolution, because we’re coming out of the Little Ice Age, not because we’re putting more carbon dioxide into the air."
David Legates, associate professor of geography and director of the Center for Climatic Research, University of Delaware: "About half of the warming during the 20th century occurred prior to the 1940s, and natural variability accounts for all or nearly all of the warming."
Marcel Leroux, former Professor of Climatology, Université Jean Moulin: "The possible causes, then, of climate change are: well-established orbital parameters on the palaeoclimatic scale, ... solar activity, ...; volcanism ...; and far at the rear, the greenhouse effect, and in particular that caused by water vapor, the extent of its influence being unknown. These factors are working together all the time, and it seems difficult to unravel the relative importance of their respective influences upon climatic evolution. Equally, it is tendentious to highlight the anthropic factor, which is, clearly, the least credible among all those previously mentioned."
quote:Simple. The theory is built on the following solidly established scientific facts.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
What the f. are you building this theory on?
quote:Well, this is exactly my gripe here about all aspects of the claim which supposedly back the anthropogenic global warming theory, not one can be held up as reasonable.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
You actually believe this Myrrh? Rather than the infinitely simpler alternative that the science is reasonable?
quote:So far, it is not reasonable to claim our current global temperature is anything out of the ordinary, it is not reasonable to claim that the industrial revolution has driven this current rise in temperature, it is not reasonable to claim our current levels of CO2 are unprecedented, (to come - and it not reasonable to claim that CO2 is significant in driving global warming) and it is not reasonable to conclude that the scientists who dispute the theory are fools especially in light of the proven manipulation of science by the IPCC and global warming protagonists.
(Climate Change: Incorrect information on pre-industrial CO2)
Statement written for the US Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation March 2004 Statement of Prof. Zbigniew Jaworowski
....
The notion of low pre-industrial CO2 atmospheric level, based on such poor knowledge, became a widely accepted Holy Grail of climate warming models. The modelers ignored the evidence from direct measurements of CO2 in atmospheric air indicating that in 19th century its average concentration was 335 ppmv[11] (Figure 2) . In Figure 2 encircled values show a biased selection of data used to demonstrate that in 19th century atmosphere the CO2 level was 292 ppmv[12]. A study of stomatal frequency in fossil leaves from Holocene lake deposits in Denmark, showing that 9400 years ago CO2 atmospheric level was 333 ppmv, and 9600 years ago 348 ppmv, falsify the concept of stabilized and low CO2 air concentration until the advent of industrial revolution [13].
Improper manipulation of data, and arbitrary rejection of readings that do not fit the pre-conceived idea on man-made global warming is common in many glaciological studies of greenhouse gases. In peer reviewed publications I exposed this misuse of science [3, 9]. Unfortunately, such misuse is not limited to individual publications, but also appears in documents of national and international organizations. For example IPCC not only based its reports on a falsified "Siple curve", but also in its 2001 report[14] used as a flagship the "hockey curve" of temperature, showing that there was no Medieval Warming, and no Little Ice Age, and that the 20th century was unusually warm. The curve was credulously accepted after Mann et al. paper published in NATURE magazine[15]. In a crushing criticism, two independent groups of scientists from disciplines other than climatology [16, 17] (i.e. not supported from the annual pool of many billion "climatic" dollars), convincingly blamed the Mann et al. paper for the improper manipulation and arbitrary rejections of data. The question arises, how such methodically poor paper, contradicting hundreds of excellent studies that demonstrated existence of global range Medieval Warming and Little Ice Age, could pass peer review for NATURE? And how could it pass the reviewing process at the IPCC? The apparent scientific weaknesses of IPCC and its lack of impartiality, was diagnosed and criticized in the early 1990s in NATURE editorials [18, 19]. The disease, seems to be persistent.
quote:Mann set out to answer a seemingly simple question - "what was the climate, specifically temperature, like in the past?" He wasn't the first, nor the last, to ask that question and seek to answer it. But, it's not an easy question to answer. There are two big problems to be addressed, and how they're addressed will affect the answer.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
That it [Mann's reconstruction of past climate] was finally proved to be ridiculous, flawed methodology etc. and even deliberately created to give this view
quote:Alan, I have read quite a lot of the 'history' of this dispute and try as you will to convince me that Mann's concern was for good science I now think otherwise.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:Mann set out to answer a seemingly simple question - "what was the climate, specifically temperature, like in the past?" He wasn't the first, nor the last, to ask that question and seek to answer it. But, it's not an easy question to answer. There are two big problems to be addressed, and how they're addressed will affect the answer.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
That it [Mann's reconstruction of past climate] was finally proved to be ridiculous, flawed methodology etc. and even deliberately created to give this view
quote:And by 1998 Mann had accomplished exactly that.
In 1995, David Deming, a geoscientist at the University of Oklahoma, had written an article reconstructing 150 years of North American temperatures from borehole data. He later wrote: "With the publication of the article in Science, I gained significant credibility in the community of scientists working on climate change. They thought I was one of them, someone who would pervert science in the service of social and political causes. One of them let his guard down. A major person working in the area of climate change and global warming sent me an astonishing email that said: 'We have to get rid of the Medieval Warm Period.' "
quote:The article also gives more background about the Mann data as manipulated by so called peer review and together with the above and the Seitz link below, tell me again that the global warming theory is based on solid peer reviewed science...
(Holocaust Or Hoax? - The Global Warming Debate Heats Up By Leland Lehrman 4-26-7)
..
Let's start with the infamous 1992 quote of Richard Sandor, Chairman and CEO of the Chicago Climate Exchange, the commercial brainchild of Al Gore's supposedly well-intentioned efforts to alert the world to "global warming:"
"Air and water are no longer the free goods that economics once assumed. They must be redefined as property rights so that they can be efficiently allocated."
.....
Adding to my confusion, the normally reputable and fearless Alex Jones and his brilliant young British colleague Paul Joseph Watson of infowars.com recently attacked both the science and the policy objectives behind global warming. They cited a perceptive article by Daniel Taylor which spells out concerns which I share:
"In a report titled "The First Global Revolution" (1991) published by the Club of Rome, a globalist think tank, we find the following statement: "In searching for a new enemy to unite us, we came up with the idea that pollution, the threat of global warming, water shortages, famine and the like would fit the bill.... All these dangers are caused by human intervention... The real enemy, then, is humanity itself"
quote:What's this "received wisdom"? That European records show a relatively warm period in the Middle Ages (around 800-1300AD) and a relatively cold period around 1650-1800AD? Well, it's received wisdom ... the big question is "is it right?" That Europe (or, Western Europe at least) experienced these temperature variations isn't in dispute. The big question is to what extent these events affect the mean global (or even Northern Hemisphere) temperature? The answer appears to be "not all that much really". Should that be a surprise? Probably not, if anyone was to think about it carefully. We know from direct observations that there are ocean current influenced climate events that are global in effect, but the effects aren't uniform. In the current epoch the El Nino/La Nina oscillation in the southern Pacific is the biggest one; during El Nino years, South America is generally warmer and drier than usual; warmer winters in Northern USA and Canada, cooler in the SW States; drier and cooler summers in Australia; etc. Clearly if the biggest climate variations we regularly see now warm some areas of the globe and cool others, why would we expect the MWP and LIA to be global? If they weren't global, or even limited to the Northern Hemisphere, then we'd expect global/NH reconstructions of climate to flatten out these events.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Mann's 1998 Hockey Stick completely flattened out the MWP and the MIA - even a non-expert like myself could recognise that this was really weird as it went against all received wisdom.
quote:Hang on, if Deming was so shocked then why didn't he keep a copy of this explosive email? And why isn't naming the person? "Oh yeah, someone I won't name but is REALLY important said something about getting rid of the MWP, but I won't give you the quote in its full context because...uhh...". Again, this is not convincing in the least.
The above quote from Deming is available in several places and it was in Monckton's piece I posted above
quote:So what's your explanation for the disappearance of the global MWP and MIA as produced by the IPCC 1995 report?
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
quote:What's this "received wisdom"? That European records show a relatively warm period in the Middle Ages (around 800-1300AD) and a relatively cold period around 1650-1800AD? Well, it's received wisdom ... the big question is "is it right?" That Europe (or, Western Europe at least) experienced these temperature variations isn't in dispute. The big question is to what extent these events affect the mean global (or even Northern Hemisphere) temperature? The answer appears to be "not all that much really". Should that be a surprise? Probably not, if anyone was to think about it carefully. We know from direct observations that there are ocean current influenced climate events that are global in effect, but the effects aren't uniform. In the current epoch the El Nino/La Nina oscillation in the southern Pacific is the biggest one; during El Nino years, South America is generally warmer and drier than usual; warmer winters in Northern USA and Canada, cooler in the SW States; drier and cooler summers in Australia; etc. Clearly if the biggest climate variations we regularly see now warm some areas of the globe and cool others, why would we expect the MWP and LIA to be global? If they weren't global, or even limited to the Northern Hemisphere, then we'd expect global/NH reconstructions of climate to flatten out these events.
Originally posted by Myrrh:
Mann's 1998 Hockey Stick completely flattened out the MWP and the MIA - even a non-expert like myself could recognise that this was really weird as it went against all received wisdom.
quote:The whole point was to make the Medieval Warm disappear..
And, as an aside, the 1998/99 Mann papers covered a period from 1000AD onwards. That means that, at best, he'd have picked up on the end of the MWP (if it had the hemispheric effect in temperature needed to not be flattened out). Therefore, it seems strange that that data would be used to comment on the MWP at all - you'd really need the data to go back further so you get the start of the MWP too.
quote:See above re global. But you're not taking into account the history of this argument. It was imperative for Mann & Co (for whatever agenda) to get rid of the MWP and MIA as they show the theory for the nonsense it is.
I'm not sure what to make of people repeating the "we must get rid of the MWP" quote. Clearly people are quoting it as though it proves a conspiracy. But, as I don't know the original context I can see several innocent explanations for why Mann would say that - especially if it was in the context of an informal chat with a colleague about what the data he had was showing. The most obvious being that the data shows that the MWP (and LIA) weren't global temperature events, and therefore climatologists need to "get rid of" talk that implies that they were anything other than phenomena that affected temperatures in Europe.
quote:So you tell what happened here to peer review.
In every other science when such a drastic revision of previously accepted knowledge is promulgated, there is considerable debate and initial scepticism, the new theory facing a gauntlet of criticism and intense review. Only if a new idea survives that process does it become broadly accepted by the scientific peer group and the public at large.
This never happened with Mann's `Hockey Stick'. The coup was total, bloodless, and swift as Mann's paper was greeted with a chorus of uncritical approval from the greenhouse industry. Within the space of only 12 months, the theory had become entrenched as a new orthodoxy.
The ultimate consummation of the new theory came with the release of the draft of the Third Assessment Report (TAR-2000) [11] of the IPCC. Overturning its own previous view in the 1995 report, the IPCC presented the `Hockey Stick' as the new orthodoxy with hardly an apology or explanation for the abrupt U-turn since its 1995 report. They could not even offer any scientific justification for their new line.
quote:This is the history of the change - we have documentary evidence showing what actually happened. This is not ancient history, but only a DECADE. We have the story as recorded.
And, of course, if you're sticking with the conspiracy hypothesis then you need to not just include Mann in the conspiracy. You need to prove that the other teams of scientists independently reconstructing the past temperature record also deliberately falsified or mis-analysed their data to produce plots similar to Mann's Hockey Stick. One data set being hyped is bad science. But, most people recognise reproducibility as a mark of good science, and therefore a dozen independent data sets showing a consistent picture of the past temperature is a mark of good science - ie: despite some minor statistical errors and potentially poor choice of bristle cone pines as one of his proxies, Mann got it about right.
quote:I'm not sure where I'd get a copy of the 1995 IPCC report, the IPCC website has the SPMs but not the full report. Nevertheless, the 1995 SPM from WGI doesn't mention the MWP or MIA as far as I can see from a quick read. It does, however, have this to say about the 20th century data then available
Originally posted by Myrrh:
So what's your explanation for the disappearance of the global MWP and MIA as produced by the IPCC 1995 report?
quote:Note that last sentence. That means that in 1995 the IPCC didn't consider it possible to estimate pre-1400 global mean temperatures because of insufficient data then available. No pre 1400 global data means no comment on the MWP outwith western Europe. Of course, we now have a load more data. Mann, and other groups, had produced proxy data going back to 1000AD which went into the 2001 IPCC report, and even more data pushing that back even further has gone into the most recent one.
The limited available evidence from proxy climate indicators suggests that the 20th century global mean temperature is at least as warm as any other century since at least 1400 A.D. Data prior to 1400 are too sparse to allow the reliable estimation of global mean temperature.
quote:When I look at that figure on the John Daly site there is one thing that strikes me. That is, he says it's drawn from a US National Assessment, he even gives a citation. Here is the National Assessment he cites. Read through chapter 1 of that report, which is where the evidence for climate change is presented and you'll find a plot including Mann's Hockey Stick. In the USGCRP report it's clearly labelled "Northern Hemisphere". Admittedly it doesn't have the error bars that Mann includes in his original paper (and that are reproduced in the 2001 IPCC report). Put quite simply, John Daly produces a graph that he claims comes from a USGCRP report and procedes to criticise it. That graph is not in the report he claims to have taken it from.
Why was the Hockey Stick which covered the Northern Hemisphere relabelled (Fig.5 The `Hockey Stick' according to the U.S. `National Assessment' in link below) - "1000 Years of Global CO2 and Temperature Change"?
quote:As I've just said, I've had a look at that site. If the fact that he reproduces a graph that doesn't exist in the report he claims it comes from isn't enough to raise questions about the value of his contribution to the debate, his arguments against the use of tree rings are practically identical to the words of caution about tree rings in the 2001 IPCC report. He's not exactly telling climate scientists something they didn't already know, and something for which they had already taken steps to attempt to minimize the impact of on the data they wanted and included within their uncertainty estimates.
Please see the following page for received wisdom - (The `Hockey Stick': A New Low in Climate Scienceby John L. Daly)
And please, read it, then we can discuss whether or not the MWP and MIA were global or not. And please, don't detract by attacking the messenger if you have a gripe about him, look at the argument.
quote:Here is one such issue, with theological overtones, which may warrant a new thread. (It actually came up in a meeting of church leaders from Pacific Island countries.)
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
It's not disputed because [the question 'is climate change real'] is no longer considered a scientifically interesting topic to discuss at academic conferences or in the journals: the scientists overwhelming agree. Real debate has moved to other issues, and did so long ago [/QB]
quote:I might not know much about this religious stuff, but Bartholomew I sounds like a great bloke. I'll definitely be voting for him as next Pope. Sadly, it was somewhat overshadowed by recent Greenland research showing the IPCC projections may be pretty conservative:
From The Guardian:
Yesterday Christian, Shia, Sunni, Hindu, Shinto, Buddhist and Jewish religious leaders took a boat to the tongue of the glacier for a silent prayer for the planet. They were invited by Bartholomew I, the spiritual leader of 250 million Orthodox Christians worldwide.
quote:This makes the IPCC sea-level rise predictions look optimistic. Adios Amsterdam?
The Greenland ice cap is melting so quickly that it is triggering earthquakes as pieces of ice several cubic kilometres in size break off.
The glacier at Ilulissat, which supposedly spawned the iceberg that sank the Titantic, is now flowing three times faster into the sea than it was 10 years ago.
[...] the quakes were triggered because ice had broken away after being fused to the rock for hundreds of years. The quakes were not vast - on a magnitude of 1 to 3 - but had never happened before in north-west Greenland and showed potential for the entire ice sheet to collapse.
quote:Which, is hardly surprising. The nature and role of the IPCC will naturally make it conservative. It's role is to inform policy makers by presenting the best supported scientific data. That would naturally mean that data that's not been well documented or where the uncertainties are very large won't feature prominantly.
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
it was somewhat overshadowed by recent Greenland research showing the IPCC projections may be pretty conservative
quote:Absolutely. If it wasn't so conservative, it wouldn't carry the weight it does.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
The nature and role of the IPCC will naturally make it conservative. It's role is to inform policy makers by presenting the best supported scientific data.
quote:
I suggest that a `scientific reticence' is inhibiting the communication of a threat of a potentially large sea level rise. Delay is dangerous because of system inertias that could create a situation with future sea level changes out of our control. I argue for calling together a panel of scientific leaders to hear evidence and issue a prompt plain-written report on current understanding of the sea level change issue.
There is, in my opinion, a huge gap between what is understood about human-made global warming and its consequences, and what is known by the people who most need to know, the public and policy makers. The IPCC is doing a commendable job, but we need something more. Given the reticence that the IPCC necessarily exhibits, there need to be supplementary mechanisms. The onus, it seems to me, falls on us scientists as a community.
quote:
If you were asked to name the biggest global-warming villains of the past 30 years, here’s one name that probably wouldn’t spring to mind: Jane Fonda. But should it?
quote:Bullshit. The effect of CO2 on atmospheric temperatures has been known for 100 years or more.
Originally posted by Myrrh on another thread:
Alan, to be precise, CO2 as a greenhouse gas has not been proved to have any significant effect on global warming.
quote:I wouldn't call something over 30% increase in CO2 concentrations in the last 100 years a "piddling amount". That's a 30+% increase over the highest levels of CO2 in the last 450ky, 30% or more over what the natural cycle of recent times has produced.
If you really think that our piddling amount of extra CO2 has the capability of changing that pattern
quote:And the logic of that is? We're screwing massively with the climate, making it less hospitable for the species that have evolved over the last few million years (including humans), and so therefore we should screw it all up even more????
... then we should be pumping more of it into the atmosphere
quote:You're referring, again, to the work of Mann et al I take it, and the so-called "hockey stick" that their data shows. I notice you haven't responded to my last reply to you. The one where I point out that the source you give supporting your claim of 'scientific fraud' on the part of Mann et al makes that claim based largely on a plot from a USGCRP report that, a plot that simply doesn't exist in the report he claims he took it from. Do you realise how unconvincing a claim of scientific fraud is from someone who fabricates figures? Do you really you want to try and convince me to accept people who fake data to prove other people have faked data?
Sigh, not only have you decided to go with those whose express purpose was to flatten out our recent 2000 year high of the Medieval Warm to create data for this silly concept
quote:If you read what I've said on this thread then you'll see that I'm perfectly happy to talk about the natural cycles of warming and cooling. In fact, the whole thing about those cycles is that they show how unusual the current changes in atmospheric chemistry and the associated warming are. Yes, the warming is small compared to the rise at the end of previous glaciations, but it's occuring in the middle of an interglacial rather than the start of one. Yes, the rise on CO2 concentrations is similar to that following the end of a glaciation, but it's happening in the middle of an interglacial. Basically, from the pattern of temperature and atmospheric chemistry over the last 450ky we can easily deduce that the current changes will take us out of that cycle completely. Which is distinctly unnatural.
you are still completely ignoring the fact that temperatures rise and fall dramatically over time with or without our imput and have nothing to say of the pattern of warming and cooling we are in which has been going on for the last 450,000 years without our last 50 years of industrial extra CO2.
quote:Seems to be a disconnected set of concepts.
in section IV Climate Models Are Unconvincing - "The burden of proof rests with those claiming anthropogenic warming. Because mitigating climate change would entail huge costs, and because past warming episodes have been natural, it is up to climate scientists to dispel all reasonable doubts---not to climate skeptics to prove them wrong."
quote:Well, taking your points ...
As I have said to you many times before: a) you have not proved that there is such a thing as global warming (we're in a similar pattern of cooling as clearly shown in for the last 450ky), b) you have not proved that CO2 drives global warming, c) you have not proved either the amount of CO2 we have now is significantly different to the last century nor proved that the amount claimed for the last century is accurate and c) you still cannot show any correlation of man-made CO2 to rising temperatures
quote:No, I have a whole heap of extremely good scientific data, theory and models all telling the same story. And, you have a handful of cranks and oil-industry funded "think tanks" producing ill-informed, ignorant and down-right fraudelent claims. Where's the fantasy?
In other words you don't have a theory, you have fantasy masquerading as science.
quote:In which case, why don't you shut up?
And that's all I have to say about it.
quote:It won't change everyone's
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
Excellent news, although I wonder if it'll make much difference to people's opinions.
quote:
In an interim decision, the British High Court ruled that such partisan works cannot be presented in schools without identifying them for what they are.
Teachers who mislead their pupils into thinking that Gore's film accurately represents the science of global warming are in violation of the "Political indoctrination" section of the country's Education Act of 1996, which explicitly requires that: "The local education authority, governing body and head teacher shall forbid ... the promotion of partisan political views in the teaching of any subject in the school."
quote:
Should children become tools of propagandists, their schools able to serve as indoctrination centres that teach students to parrot the views of the powers-that-be rather than think for themselves?
quote:By the dictionary definition of propaganda you're quite right. However, I suspect for most people propaganda is synonymous with lying and distorting facts, and so makes it seem much less accurate as science.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Al Gore's film is undeniably propoganda, which doesn't make it any more or less accurate as science.
quote:Surely any documentary film is political (and perhaps propaganda) in the broadest sense? They're produced intending to influence thought and discussion about human issues. And simply influencing the debate in one direction doesn't (IMO) make something party political. If a non-politician produced a documentary about (say) abortion, it might benefit one party more than the others - but that's a side-effect to the main issue.
But, it's produced with two aims - one, non-political, is to present the findings of climate scientists to the general public. The other aim is much more political, Gore wants his film to make global climate change a political issue in the US; if that happens then Gore (and those politicians he publically endorses) are sitting in the green seat, which if the US public takes on board the science he presents will probably win votes.
quote:In a sense, the debate is over. Well, the first part of the debate - there's no credible scientific basis to deny that human activity is affecting the global climate. The questions relating to how badly we're affecting the climate, to what extent particular parts of the climate system (eg: hurricane frequency) is attributable to the changes we've set in motion, how much worse it'll get and what we can do about it are still more open. That said, I think it's probably a mistake by Gore not to engage in debates on the subject (if, indeed, he has refused to do so) given the number of poorly informed people who aren't aware of the science and the importance of the question. It just makes him look scared of facing the questions, even if the questions themselves are based on poorly supported science.
Originally posted by New Yorker:
Al Gore refuses to debate anyone on global warming, claiming that the debate is over and there is no need to debate it.
quote:I don't think it's a mistake. For one thing, "Gore Vs Joe Denier" proves nothing. If someone is inclined to ignore the mass of scientists, why should they take any notice of Gore? And Gore isn't a scientist: he'd doubtless get some of the science wrong, and then opponents would have rhetorical ammunition.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
I think it's probably a mistake by Gore not to engage in debates on the subject (if, indeed, he has refused to do so) given the number of poorly informed people who aren't aware of the science and the importance of the question.
quote:That's just it. In my above post I linked to a well respected scientist who says that the question whether human activity is affecting the climate is still wide open.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
In a sense, the debate is over. Well, the first part of the debate - there's no credible scientific basis to deny that human activity is affecting the global climate.
quote:Hi New Yorker,
Originally posted by New Yorker:
That's just it. In my above post I linked to a well respected scientist who says that the question whether human activity is affecting the climate is still wide open.
quote:I'd tend to agree with your first two points. Such a debate wouldn't necessarily prove anything, and that such debates aren't conducive to sound-bite rhetoric. But,
Originally posted by Hiro's Leap:
quote:I don't think it's a mistake.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
I think it's probably a mistake by Gore not to engage in debates on the subject (if, indeed, he has refused to do so) given the number of poorly informed people who aren't aware of the science and the importance of the question.
quote:Unfortunately, this cuts both ways. Such debates let the maverick view be heard, and could lend some people to doubt the certainty of the science. But also, not holding the debates lets the mavericks say "they can't answer these questions" which also gives them undue legitimacy. It's one of those situations where, whatever you do, you could lose. But, I think letting the mavericks be heard in the open, and refuted, is the better option.
Lastly, these debates give an undue legitimacy to the opposing viewpoint, and make people think there's significant uncertainty to the basic science.
quote:The scientific process is something that happens in learned journals and academic conferences, with scientists beavering away at their little bits of the big picture in their labs and out in the field. But, especially in relation to something like global climate change, the scientific process runs in parallel with a public discussion. The IPCC exists to foster that discussion, principally with policy makers but the wider public as well. Al Gore launched himself into the public discussion with his Inconvenient Truth. We're involved here on this thread. You can't seperate the two areas neatly, both discussions need to be had and both discussions feed each other - the science informs the public discussion, the public discussion would also prioritise some areas of the scientific process.
IMO Gore has no need to debate this - that's what the scientific process is for.
quote:Yes - damned if you do, damned if you don't. Unfortunately, I doubt Gore could conclusively refute the arguments in the time available. The Great Global Warming Swindle was very persuasive to the lay public, even if the scientists knew it was crap.
Originally posted by Alan Cresswell:
Unfortunately, this cuts both ways. [...] But, I think letting the mavericks be heard in the open, and refuted, is the better option.
quote:OK, that's true. However, it's a not a public discussion that's well suited to brief adversarial debate. Michael Crichton, Richard S. Lindzen, and Philip Stott certainly got the upper hand over three mainstream climate scientists in a debate earlier this year. It was painful.
[...] the scientific process runs in parallel with a public discussion. The IPCC exists to foster that discussion, principally with policy makers but the wider public as well. Al Gore launched himself into the public discussion with his Inconvenient Truth. We're involved here on this thread. You can't seperate the two areas neatly
quote:He's actually correct, depending on the data set used. The average near surface temperature has, indeed, levelled of (after a rapid increase). But, that reflects a slight cooling of the oceans, land temperatures continue to rise rapidly. Since the oceans cover 70% of the surface of the earth, they tend to dominate the global average. The usual explanation given is that the increased temperatures have increased evaporation - this cools the surface waters slightly bucking the global trend. But, with increasing radiative forcing inexorably driving the temperatures upwards the oceanic evaporation effect won't last long term.
the Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction has come up against an “inconvenient truth”. Its research shows that since 1998 the average temperature of the planet has not risen, even though the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has continued to increase.
quote:Yes, that's true. On the other hand, if it turns out they're right and we didn't act, the consequences will be much worse than simply a loss of respect for scientists.
Originally posted by John Spears:
I just think that if this one turns out to be wrong in a few years time, the 'Scientists' perspective on things will be regarded as completely unreliable - which imo, will be a very bad thing.
quote:Sure about what? By-and-large, they're sure that we're responsible for part of the late 20th century warming. They're also pretty certain if we keep increasing CO2 it's going to get a LOT hotter. The argument is how quickly that'll happen.
If wholesale changes are going to be made and billions of dollars spent fighting it, they better be damn sure.
quote:There are very few experts in the field who don't believe we're responsible for some of the warming, even amongst the remaining 'Skeptics'.
What I don't understand however, is why many Scientists who clearly aren't funded by oil,coal etc are not yet convinced and why we should know something they don't?
quote:I read the
Originally posted by dj_ordinaire:
What 'have nots' were you thinking of? All the representatives of the Developing World I've heard mention Global Warming are adamant that the Developed World has a duty to stop it.
quote:to mean that the "global warming thing" is "spend money trying to reduce our contribution to global climate change". ie: he's saying that those without money are saying those of us with money should be spending that money cutting carbon emissions, and those of us with money are saying we shouldn't. Any other way of reading the sentance that I can see makes no sense at all.
I find it odd that the "haves" seem against the global warming thing while the "have nots" are for it.
quote:Yeah, what a good idea. Combat one form of pollution by deliberately polluting another ecosystem
Originally posted by DmplnJeff:
If we were serious about sinking CO2, we would fertilise the central Pacific. Huge amounts of bio-mass would form and fall to the bottom of the sea removing CO2 from the atmosphere. This would also be good for the world fishing economy.
quote:So amongst the "have-nots" you're counting those noteable anti-capitalist lefties:
Originally posted by DmplnJeff:
I find it odd that the "haves" seem against the global warming thing while the "have nots" are for it. The plan for dealing with it seems to be to transfer wealth.
quote:My money too! Caution (and even suspicion) are understandable. However, look at it this way...
Hiro's Leap wrote, "In other words, there only has to be reasonable cause to make the issue worth acting on, and I'm happy to take a scientific consensus as enough."
That's my money your talking about spending (well a small amount of it is).
quote:Perhaps this shows the basic problem. The global warming people have decried it a an unprecedented disaster. Yet when solutions are proposed they decline them because they affect the pristine environment.
Yeah, what a good idea. Combat one form of pollution by deliberately polluting another ecosystem You do know that the trials of ocean fertilisation (usually with iron which is the main nutrient missing in oceanic waters) have been disappointing? The increased algal growth has been minimal, the iron disperses very quickly in all but the stillest conditions, and when the algae do bloom they tend to produce toxic environments for other marine life - ie: they kill off the fish, which hardly seems to be good for fishing communities.
quote:Between our being a democracy and a (more or less) free market, I don't think the scientist get much of a vote. Their track record is weak when it comes to complex issues where they've left the scientific method behind. (You know... the test the hypothesis step.)
[T]heir opinions are irrelevant to the science - it's only the scientists who count.
quote:Well, not exactly. It would be more correct to say that there was a time when the wave theory of light accounted for all experimental observations. Then when the photoelectric effect was observed, and the wave theory was unable to account for it, Einstein suggested another theory. Now, we have wave-particle duality, which posits that all matter (and energy) may have characteristics associated with particles and waves. Does that make Einstein "wrong"?
Originally posted by DmplnJeff:
There was a time when nearly all scientists thought that light was a wave. They were wrong. (Thank you Einstein.)
quote:
Originally posted by DmplnJeff:
...I think it's time we, as a species, developed the ability to have some controls in place to both raise and lower the temperature of the planet.
quote:
I'm an electrical engineer. I build large complex systems. They are not nearly as complex as the weather. Yet we never get it right the first time. Not even the tenth time. We go back again and again until it works.
quote:You are aware that such experiments have been conducted since the early 1980s? It's hardly a novel idea to scientists to run experiments to test a hypothesis. And, in this case, the hypothesis has been proved partially right - yes, iron fertilises algal blooms, yes those blooms remove CO2 from the atmosphere (sometimes in measurable quantities as happened following fertilisation by the Pinatubo eruption which covered a vast area compared to the experiments), and the effect would certainly have been enough to help keep CO2 levels down in glacial periods (when dry conditions resulted in significantly greater dust and sand storms fertilising the oceans). But, the experiments also showed that the algal blooms had significant impacts on oceanic ecosystems (including deep ocean ecosystems beneath the blooms that became anoxic), that the vast majority of the carbon was eaten and never entered long term sequestration in the deep oceans, and that the amount of iron fertilisation needed to offset human CO2 production would be unfeasible (ie: it would totally wreck marine ecosystems on which we rely for some of our food, and cost billions of dollars per year).
Originally posted by DmplnJeff:
I know, let's run some tests. For only a few million dollars we could fertilize strips of ocean with different methods and concentrations and monitor the results. But that would be too much like real science ... way too boring.
quote:And, you're clearly not only unaware of the extensive scientific investigations into iron fertilisation to sequester carbon, you're woefully ignorant how well tested the science behind our knowledge of global climate change is. There have been literally hundreds of computer models run with different parameters (because we don't know all the parameters precisely and they interact in complex ways) which show the same general result. There are loads of measurements reconstructing past climates stretching back 450000 years through glaciations and interglacials against which we can see that the current changes are unprecedented in that time. And, we can use that record of a large range of different climates to test models - and show them to reproduce the past reasonably accurately. About the only test left to do is the one that says "if we do this ('this' including the option to carry on as normal), then in 100 years the climate will be like that". Without a time machine we can't test that. But then, a lot of science works perfectly well without being able to test every little bit of theory against experimental results.
[the scientists] track record is weak when it comes to complex issues where they've left the scientific method behind. (You know... the test the hypothesis step.)
quote:I think you need to learn a wee bit more about the scientific process. Because your little 4 step summary has no comparison to how science has ever been done. Science is a far more complex process of incomplete and inconclusive data, educated guess work, intuition, getting by with the tools (including mathematical models and other scientific theories) that aren't quie perfect, and umpteen other complexities.
From a subsequent post
Science is a process:
1) Observe.
2) Formulate an hypothesis.
3) Test the hypothesis.
4) Start over unless your test proves the current hypothesis. (It almost never does the first time.)
quote:Of course, that's only sensible. Next time you get a new car, buy one that's more fuel efficient and drive it very rarely. Put energy efficient light bulbs in. Turn your TV off rather than leave it on standby. Adjust your central heating (or AC). Walk to the store and buy stuff that hasn't been shipped across the world. Make sure your home is properly insulated. Recycle. Compost stuff that'll compost. These'll actually save you money.
Originally posted by DmplnJeff:
And let's try the cheaper solutions first.
quote:Sorry, I knew I missed a step: First, get the funding.
I think you need to learn a wee bit more about the scientific process. Because your little 4 step summary has no comparison to how science has ever been done. Science is a far more complex process of incomplete and inconclusive data, educated guess work, intuition, getting by with the tools (including mathematical models and other scientific theories) that aren't quie perfect, and umpteen other complexities.
quote:That's what your position comes down to. Stop pretending that you pay the slightest attention to science and what scientists say.
Originally posted by DmplnJeff:
I don't disbelieve in climate change.