"Warm winds are rapidly melting and breaking up the ice over the Beaufort Sea, and Amundsen's historic Northwest Passage is on the point of opening up"
Edited by mike250, 12 August 2008 - 01:25 PM.
Posted 12 August 2008 - 01:22 PM
Edited by mike250, 12 August 2008 - 01:25 PM.
Posted 22 January 2009 - 01:21 AM
New evidence on Antarctic warming
By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News website
The continent of Antarctica is warming up in step with the rest of the world, according to a new analysis. Scientists say data from satellites and weather stations indicate a warming of about 0.6C over the last 50 years.
Writing in the journal Nature, they say the trend is "difficult to explain" without the effect of rising greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere.
Meanwhile, scientists in Antarctica say a major ice shelf is about to break away from the continent.
The Wilkins Ice Shelf is said to be "hanging by a thread" from the Antarctic Peninsula, the strip of land pointing from the white continent towards the southern tip of South America.(excerpt)
Posted 22 January 2009 - 12:46 PM
This year is coolest since 2000
By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News website
The world in 2008 has been cooler than at any time since the turn of the century, scientists say.
Cooling La Nina conditions in the Pacific brought temperatures down to levels last seen in the year 2000.
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) notes that temperatures remained about 0.3C above the 1961-1990 average.
Computer models suggest that natural cycles may cool the Earth's surface in the next few years, masking the warming impact of rising greenhouse gas levels.
One recent analysis suggested there may be no warming for about the next decade, though other scientists dispute the conclusion.
What is beyond dispute is that 2008 saw temperatures a shade below preceding years.
Using data from two major monitoring networks, one co-ordinated by the UK's Hadley Centre and University of East Anglia (UEA) and the other by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa), the WMO reports that despite the cooling, 2008 still ranks among the 10 warmest years on record.
At 14.3C, the average temperature for the year was significantly above the 14.0C average for the 1961-1990 period, a commonly used baseline.
Temperatures are about 0.7C above pre-industrial times. (excerpt)
Posted 22 January 2009 - 12:55 PM
Posted 23 September 2009 - 03:32 AM
Posted 23 September 2009 - 06:58 AM
I am convinced that it is too late to remedy this situation, that the fatal blow has already been struck, and that there will be an inevitable, large and sudden change in climate, resulting in megadeath tolls in the thousands. It may be a good way to take our species to its next stage of evolution, though I doubt I, or my children will get to see it.
Posted 24 September 2009 - 03:53 AM
Or put SO2 into the upper atmosphere to reflect sunlight. This has the advantage of being pretty cheap and pretty well understood, since volcanoes have been doing it forever and we have a good understanding of what they do to the climate. There are fixes available to us if things really start getting bad quickly. The more likely scenario is that things just get somewhat bad, and we don't do much. Like Mind, I'm also not pessimistic.I am convinced that it is too late to remedy this situation, that the fatal blow has already been struck, and that there will be an inevitable, large and sudden change in climate, resulting in megadeath tolls in the thousands. It may be a good way to take our species to its next stage of evolution, though I doubt I, or my children will get to see it.
I am not so pessimistic. If CO2 is the primary cause, well then, there are already known methods of taking CO2 out of the air, not to mention what we might invent a couple years from now. We can just take the CO2 out of the air. Won't be cheap, but it can be done.
Posted 24 September 2009 - 03:59 AM
Or put SO2 into the upper atmosphere to reflect sunlight. This has the advantage of being pretty cheap and pretty well understood, since volcanoes have been doing it forever and we have a good understanding of what they do to the climate. There are fixes available to us if things really start getting bad quickly. The more likely scenario is that things just get somewhat bad, and we don't do much. Like Mind, I'm also not pessimistic.I am convinced that it is too late to remedy this situation, that the fatal blow has already been struck, and that there will be an inevitable, large and sudden change in climate, resulting in megadeath tolls in the thousands. It may be a good way to take our species to its next stage of evolution, though I doubt I, or my children will get to see it.
I am not so pessimistic. If CO2 is the primary cause, well then, there are already known methods of taking CO2 out of the air, not to mention what we might invent a couple years from now. We can just take the CO2 out of the air. Won't be cheap, but it can be done.
Edited by valkyrie_ice, 24 September 2009 - 04:02 AM.
Posted 24 September 2009 - 05:58 PM
Posted 24 September 2009 - 07:38 PM
Well, that's a minority view. I would only point out that Mars and Saturn are so tremendously different in the nature of their atmosphere compared to Earth that I don't think comparisons of warming trends mean very much. On Earth, we have climate records that go back centuries in the form of e.g. ice and sediment cores, but our records of Mars/Saturn temperatures are far shorter, probably only a handful of decades.Too be honest, since I don't think man has much at all to do with global heating and cooling trends, as I am certain the electromagnetic interplay between the earth the sun and the other planets controls such processes, or why would both Mars and Saturn be experiencing warming trends simultaneously with Earth, I don't really think there is much we can do about it one way or another, except cope, adapt and move on.
Posted 24 September 2009 - 07:53 PM
Posted 24 September 2009 - 08:28 PM
Not that many aspects, really. We consider the scientific evidence, and conclude that there are no laws of physics that prevent life extension. I'm not sure that's a minority view among biogerontologists, though it might be. When a view is in the extreme minority among people who are knowledgeable in the field, there is a pretty good chance that it's wrong. A pretty good chance, but not a 100% chance. Sometimes people who are knowledgeable in the field haven't seen the evidence that we've seen. Other times they understand something that we have missed, or misinterpreted.Keep in mind that immortalists represent the minority view in many aspects.
Posted 24 September 2009 - 10:21 PM
Not that many aspects, really. We consider the scientific evidence, and conclude that there are no laws of physics that prevent life extension. I'm not sure that's a minority view among biogerontologists, though it might be. When a view is in the extreme minority among people who are knowledgeable in the field, there is a pretty good chance that it's wrong. A pretty good chance, but not a 100% chance. Sometimes people who are knowledgeable in the field haven't seen the evidence that we've seen. Other times they understand something that we have missed, or misinterpreted.Keep in mind that immortalists represent the minority view in many aspects.
Posted 24 September 2009 - 10:28 PM
Posted 25 September 2009 - 12:29 AM
*sigh* so which of the various 2012 theories do you subscribe to? The one where the galactic alignment will cause a pole reversal and destroy most of the world (which according to some people has been averted due to a cease of using stargates and looking glass time viewers) or the one where the Annunnki return and wipe out us uppity slave race for daring to rebel against them in the distant past before planet x went out of the solar system, or the one where the alignment unlocks all human potential and we self destruct like the Krell from Forbidden Planet, or the one where Aliens invade and enslave us, or where the reptile men from another dimension finally assume control and reveal were just food cattle, or the one where the sunspot cycle will spit out a huge coronal burst and fry all electronics on the earth and drive us into the stone age again?
In my opinion, the exact same thing will happen at 11:11 am 12 21 2012 as happened at 12:01am 01 01 2000.
Nothing.
As for the sun controlling our Global temperatures, I'm a subscriber to the Electric Universe theory, so all of Mans contributions only adds to things, but is not the primary cause.
Posted 29 September 2009 - 05:43 PM
More Disreputable “Science” From The AGW Alarmist Crowd
Last week I pointed to the fact that the “scientist” who provided much of the basis for the AGW crowd’s alarmist appeal (as incorporated in the UN’s 2007 IPCC report) refused to provide the original data on which that model was based to peers. He later claimed that the original data had been lost because it was unable to be transferred to newer data storage (an unmitigated crock). IOW, peers can’t review his data and check out his theory to ensure what he’s theorizing has a valid basis in fact. That’s a cardinal sin in real science circles.
And now, in less than a week, a second cardinal sin is uncovered. That of cherry-picking data. In the cross-hairs is Keith Briffa. Steve McIntyre explains the problem:
The Briffa temperature graphs have been widely cited as evidence by the IPCC, yet it appears they were based on a very carefully selected set of data, so select, that the shape of the graph would have been totally transformed if the rest of the data had been included.
In fact, as with Phil Jones who I reported about last week, Briffa refused repeated requests for his original data (from tree rings). And it was the Briffa graphs which were used to support the contention that the “hockey stick” was valid.
When others finally got a hold of all the data and graphed it out, their findings were quite different than Briffa’s:
And, of course, when they were merged they told quite a different story than was Briffa and the IPCC:
My, what a difference using all the data makes, no?
Steve McIntyre and Anthony Watts have all the gory details, but as one commenter on Watt’s site says:
Coming just after the “lost” data from the Hadley Centre by Phil Jones, this is beginning to look more than just carelessness.
I call it the “great unraveling”. The hoax is coming unglued. And this shameful conduct will set real science back 100 years.
The question is, will the politicians see it before it is too late? Will the administration which promised that science would again take the forefront actually keep its word and ensure that happens? Methinks we’re going to find out that a political agenda and ideology are much more powerful than science. Science, quite honestly, is only useful to politicians – any politician – as long as it advances their agenda. If it doesn’t then the politician will claim it to be false science – regardless of how overwhelming the evidence is to the contrary.
~McQ
Posted 19 January 2010 - 10:28 AM
World misled over Himalayan glacier meltdown
A WARNING that climate change will melt most of the Himalayan glaciers by 2035 is likely to be retracted after a series of scientific blunders by the United Nations body that issued it.
Two years ago the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) issued a benchmark report that was claimed to incorporate the latest and most detailed research into the impact of global warming. A central claim was the world's glaciers were melting so fast that those in the Himalayas could vanish by 2035.
In the past few days the scientists behind the warning have admitted that it was based on a news story in the New Scientist, a popular science journal, published eight years before the IPCC's 2007 report.
It has also emerged that the New Scientist report was itself based on a short telephone interview with Syed Hasnain, a little-known Indian scientist then based at Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi.
Hasnain has since admitted that the claim was "speculation" and was not supported by any formal research. If confirmed it would be one of the most serious failures yet seen in climate research. The IPCC was set up precisely to ensure that world leaders had the best possible scientific advice on climate change.
Posted 19 January 2010 - 10:46 AM
Well yeah but did you check the IPCC AR4 for the discussion about glaciers in Asia and the references? Almost all glaciers in the world are in retreat with a few exceptions. Especially Greenland and Antarctica are losing mass in an accelerated way and people are worried that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) will destabilise in the future giving humanity +3 meters of sea level rise quite quickly.Oh you crazy IPCC guys... you really crack me up!
http://www.timesonli...icle6991177.ece
Posted 19 January 2010 - 03:18 PM
Well yeah but did you check the IPCC AR4 for the discussion about glaciers in Asia and the references? Almost all glaciers in the world are in retreat with a few exceptions. Especially Greenland and Antarctica are losing mass in an accelerated way and people are worried that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) will destabilise in the future giving humanity +3 meters of sea level rise quite quickly.Oh you crazy IPCC guys... you really crack me up!
http://www.timesonli...icle6991177.ece
Posted 24 January 2010 - 10:26 PM
The IPCC had warned that climate change was likely to melt most of the Himalayan glaciers by 2035 - an idea considered ludicrous by most glaciologists. Last week a humbled IPCC retracted that claim and corrected its report.
Since then, however, The Sunday Times has discovered that the same bogus claim has been cited in grant applications for TERI.
One of them, announced earlier this month just before the scandal broke, resulted in a £310,000 grant from Carnegie.
Posted 24 January 2010 - 10:31 PM
The implication here is that the grant was the result of the bogus claim. That is unlikely.Since then, however, The Sunday Times has discovered that the same bogus claim has been cited in grant applications for TERI.
One of them, announced earlier this month just before the scandal broke, resulted in a £310,000 grant from Carnegie.
Posted 25 January 2010 - 02:05 AM
The implication here is that the grant was the result of the bogus claim. That is unlikely.Since then, however, The Sunday Times has discovered that the same bogus claim has been cited in grant applications for TERI.
One of them, announced earlier this month just before the scandal broke, resulted in a £310,000 grant from Carnegie.
Posted 25 January 2010 - 04:33 AM
I sure seem to be missing a lot of points considering that I didn't defend, deny, or excuse anything. What you're asking us to accept is that a mountain of evidence and clean science be dismissed because, as far as I've heard in this case, one guy put a sloppy/erroneous claim at best, or lie at worst into his section of a very large report. I'm in full and complete agreement with everyone who thinks this should not have happened and the guy or guys(?) responsible should be disciplined. Where I diverge from some of you is that I don't think that this event or the previous tempest in a teapot are sufficient cause to dismiss all of the good science that has been done.*sigh* the point you are missing here Niner is that more and more of these exaggerated claims are coming to light, only to be excused repeatedly by true believers.The implication here is that the grant was the result of the bogus claim. That is unlikely.Since then, however, The Sunday Times has discovered that the same bogus claim has been cited in grant applications for TERI.
One of them, announced earlier this month just before the scandal broke, resulted in a £310,000 grant from Carnegie.
Science is not ADVOCACY. Science is finding the facts. As more and more advocacy comes to light, and more and more of this "science" is proven to be wildly inaccurate and overhyped, it undermines the validity of ALL science, not just that of climatology.
Do you really relish the thought of funding cut to life extension research because the public has decided that all science is a scam? That's where this is headed so long as the mounting evidence is continually denied by the climate change believers.
This is a mockery of the scientific method. Defending it by denial of the evidence of chicanery is a pure and simple refusal to face a reality you don't want to believe.
And the thing you really don't seem to get is that this is neo-ludditism pure and simple. It's an agenda to suppress technological development. And the big point I think you are missing is that it's not really even about climate science per se so much as it is climate science has been usurped by a neo-luddite movement which has used it as a front man for a larger anti-technological movement. And I've been watching this movement from a long time before climate change became an issue. I can remember it way back when Hydrochlorofloracarbons (or however the damn word is spelled) was the big huge threat depleting the Ozone and we were all gonna die from virulent sunburn.
andBut the Rowland-Molina hypothesis was strongly disputed by representatives of the aerosol and halocarbon industries. The chair of the board of DuPont was quoted as saying that ozone depletion theory is "a science fiction tale...a load of rubbish...utter nonsense". Robert Abplanalp, the president of Precision Valve Corporation (and inventor of the first practical aerosol spray can valve), wrote to the Chancellor of UC Irvine to complain about Rowland's public statements (Roan, p. 56.)
Sounds like the fossil fuel industry, doesn't it?But the CFC industry did not give up that easily. As late as 1986, the Alliance for Responsible CFC Policy (an association representing the CFC industry founded by DuPont) was still arguing that the science was too uncertain to justify any action. In 1987, DuPont testified before the US Congress that "we believe that there is no immediate crisis that demands unilateral regulation."[citation needed]
Posted 25 January 2010 - 06:42 AM
I sure seem to be missing a lot of points considering that I didn't defend, deny, or excuse anything. What you're asking us to accept is that a mountain of evidence and clean science be dismissed because, as far as I've heard in this case, one guy put a sloppy/erroneous claim at best, or lie at worst into his section of a very large report. I'm in full and complete agreement with everyone who thinks this should not have happened and the guy or guys(?) responsible should be disciplined. Where I diverge from some of you is that I don't think that this event or the previous tempest in a teapot are sufficient cause to dismiss all of the good science that has been done.
You bring up the threat of ozone depletion due to CFCs as though it was "another trumped up danger" or something. That was a problem that was real, and the entire world got together, enacted the Montreal Protocol, and ceased all manufacture and use of an entire class of chemicals. The ozone problem is getting better now, because we acted. It is thought that the ozone hole will be healed by 2050. That's a success story, not another example of chicken little-ism. It's an interesting comparison study, though. Here are a couple paragraphs on it cribbed from Wikipedia:
andBut the Rowland-Molina hypothesis was strongly disputed by representatives of the aerosol and halocarbon industries. The chair of the board of DuPont was quoted as saying that ozone depletion theory is "a science fiction tale...a load of rubbish...utter nonsense". Robert Abplanalp, the president of Precision Valve Corporation (and inventor of the first practical aerosol spray can valve), wrote to the Chancellor of UC Irvine to complain about Rowland's public statements (Roan, p. 56.)
Sounds like the fossil fuel industry, doesn't it?But the CFC industry did not give up that easily. As late as 1986, the Alliance for Responsible CFC Policy (an association representing the CFC industry founded by DuPont) was still arguing that the science was too uncertain to justify any action. In 1987, DuPont testified before the US Congress that "we believe that there is no immediate crisis that demands unilateral regulation."[citation needed]
Posted 25 January 2010 - 08:28 AM
Edited by valkyrie_ice, 25 January 2010 - 09:24 AM.
Posted 25 January 2010 - 08:32 AM
Posted 08 February 2010 - 02:31 AM
FEBRUARY 07, 2010
More Exaggerated Climate Change Claims Causing Backlash as More Are Debunked
The Times UK online reports on more potential errors IPCC Synthesis Report to government leaders
The most important is a claim that global warming could cut rain-fed north African crop production by up to 50% by 2020, a remarkably short time for such a dramatic change.
This weekend Professor Chris Field, the new lead author of the IPCC’s climate impacts team, told The Sunday Times that he could find nothing in the report to support the claim. The revelation follows the IPCC’s retraction of a claim that the Himalayan glaciers might all melt by 2035.
The Sunday Telegraph reveals new factual errors and poor sources of evidence in the IPCC reports.
Last weekend, the Telegraph revealed that the panel had based claims about disappearing mountain ice on anecdotal evidence in a student’s dissertation and an article in a mountaineering magazine.
And on Friday, it emerged that the IPCC’s panel had wrongly reported that more than half of the Netherlands was below sea level because it had failed to check information supplied by a Dutch government agency.
The Globe and Mail and other sources that are usually very pro-environmentalism and climate change are reporting "The Great global Warming Collapse"
Walter Russell Mead has coverage
The Dutch government has demanded that the IPCC correct its erroneous assertion that half of the Netherlands is below sea level. Actually, it’s only about a quarter. A prediction about the impact of sea level increases on people living in the Nile Delta was taken from an unpublished student dissertation. The report contained inaccurate data about generating energy from waves and about the cost of nuclear power
But many climate scientists now sense a sinking ship, and they're bailing out. Among them is Andrew Weaver, a climatologist at the University of Victoria who acknowledges that the climate body has crossed the line into advocacy. Even Britain's Greenpeace has called for Mr. Pachauri's resignation. India says it will establish its own body to monitor the effects of global warming because it “cannot rely” on the IPCC.
None of this is to say that global warming isn't real, or that human activity doesn't play a role, or that the IPCC is entirely wrong, or that measures to curb greenhouse-gas emissions aren't valid. But the strategy pursued by activists (including scientists who have crossed the line into advocacy) has turned out to be fatally flawed.
By exaggerating the certainties, papering over the gaps, demonizing the skeptics and peddling tales of imminent catastrophe, they've discredited the entire climate-change movement. The political damage will be severe. As Mr. Mead succinctly puts it: “Skeptics up, Obama down, cap-and-trade dead.” That also goes for Canada, whose climate policies are inevitably tied to those of the United States.
Alfin Cites Evidence of Black Carbon and Stratospheric Water Vapour Effects
A new study of the effect of black carbon on the melting of Himalayan glaciers demonstrates that 90% of melting is due to aerosols -- not CO2. More than 30% of melting is due to black carbon aerosol, and probably considerably more than 30%.
There is also new climate science on stratospheric water vapour.
scientists from NOAA have published research in Science that challenges the core assumptions of the global warming camp...
...the fundamental assumption in global warming dogma, that carbon dioxide is the most important factor in global warming, is simply not true...the research does allude to human emissions having a much smaller role in climate change than previously thought...
Miskolczi is not the first scientist to introduce the idea of "negative feedback" into atmospheric studies. MIT's Richard Lindzen has been discussing negative feedbacks in climate for many years.
In fact, wherever you look in the atmosphere, the biosphere, or the oceans, you find negative feedbacks are predominant in climate. Otherwise by now the Earth would have experienced runaway climate change in various directions, and never have come back. Instead, when one looks at the history of Earth's climate, one sees fractal cycles that repeat over several overlapping time scales.
Posted 08 February 2010 - 06:11 AM
Posted 08 February 2010 - 07:38 AM
Sadly, it seems AGW is going to be allowed to die in silent obscurity, instead of dragged kicking and screaming into the light and publicly executed in hopes of preventing a repeat of this abuse of the public's trust. In five years, it's probably going to be "AGW? Nobody REALLY believed that hype" and the public will be off and crying "kill kill kill" at some new manufactured terror.
Posted 08 February 2010 - 04:47 PM
Sadly, it seems AGW is going to be allowed to die in silent obscurity, instead of dragged kicking and screaming into the light and publicly executed in hopes of preventing a repeat of this abuse of the public's trust. In five years, it's probably going to be "AGW? Nobody REALLY believed that hype" and the public will be off and crying "kill kill kill" at some new manufactured terror.
Well said. Three years ago I said to people that the same newspapers you now see promoting the AGW theory will be criticizing it in five years, and the people who then thought I was crazy will be telling me they always knew AGW was a hoax.
They laughed at the idea then, but the tide is already turning.
Some errors will inevitably creep in, says Jürgen Willebrand, an oceanographer at the Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences in Kiel, Germany, and a coordinating lead author of the 2007 report. "IPCC reports are written by humans," he says. "I have no doubt that similar errors could be found in earlier IPCC reports, but nobody has bothered to look in detail because at the time of these reports the IPCC was less visible to society, politics and media." But he says the IPCC should have a more formal process for ensuring each flagged error is dealt with promptly.
He also calls for the IPCC to develop a policy on potential conflicts of interest.
Andrew Weaver, a climate scientist at the University of Victoria in Canada, wants more far-reaching procedural changes. Rather than carrying out "monolithic" assessments, he says, the IPCC should focus on more specific problems such as describing emissions pathways required to avoid a given temperature rise. The distinction between different working groups should also be revised, he suggests
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