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All IPCC definitions taken from Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Working Group I Contribution to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Annex I, Glossary, pp. 941-954. Cambridge University Press.

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Comments 56951 to 57000:

  1. Climate change is simple: We do something or we’re screwed
    @9 SW, I think we don't need much science to prove that 2c is way beyond the carrying capacity for global civilization. Even at the current rate of extreme events societies globally are going to collapse. We are just arriving at 1c. Not even there yet. Do you really think that another 1c is not going to be absolute mayhem? Then also add the accelerating sea level. Tusha. No need to even then address a 4c scenario.
  2. It's the sun
    Icyhot @976: If the Earth's orbit decayed by one inch per annum since 1750, it would be 6.65 meters closer to the Sun, on average than in 1750. Incoming solar radiation varies with the inverse square of distance. So, a decay of 6.65 meters in the approx 150 billion meters radius of the Earth's orbit would result in a 0.00000001 increase incoming solar radiation, or a forcing of 0.000000024 W/m^2. This is compared to the approx 1.8 W/m^2 forcing from increased CO2 over the same period. Therefore such a decay in the Earth's orbit would not have a detectable effect the Earth's climate (and probably would not be detectable to begin with). However, that is beside the point. There is, SFAIK, no evidence that the Earth's orbit is decaying. Indeed, if anything the solar tide on the Earth would cause the Earth's orbital distance to increase, just as the Lunar tide result in the measured increase in distance to the moon. The increase in distance, however, is very small so that there is no reason to think the Earth's orbit will increase or decay significantly at any time in the past or future several million years.
  3. Climate change is simple: We do something or we’re screwed
    Sceptical Wombat, the special report by the WGBU, Solving the Climate Dilemma: The budget approach, directly addresses the second point, and contains relevant discussion on the other two points.
  4. It's the sun
    Hello Ladies and Gentlemen. What is the truth to the assertion/hypothesis that the Earth's orbit is degrading by approximately 1 inch per year. I am at a loss for the location of the publication that provided this information. I do find it curious. Have any of you interested parties read about or researched this hypothesis? Although I find myself wondering about the validity of the assertion/hypothesis, it would seem to be a logical,if not complete cause of warming. What would the effects of increased or decreased solar flare activity have on the Earth with this hypothesis. An interesting point for further investigation.
  5. Sceptical Wombat at 12:29 PM on 8 July 2012
    Climate change is simple: We do something or we’re screwed
    One of the problems with cross postings like this is that SKS's usual policy of justifying everything by references to the peer reviewed literature goes by the board. This is a pity and I think detracts from the quality of your site. Could anyone give me some references to justify the following: 2 degrees Celsius would be unbearable We have to start reducing emissions in 5 to 10 years We are on target to reach 4 degrees by the end of the century I'm not saying that the evidence is not there - I would like to be able to refer to it.
  6. Climate change is simple: We do something or we’re screwed
    The heat across most of the eastern US (east of the Rockies to the Atlantic coast) has been historic. I know so many people that 'believe in global warming' but know so little about what is really happening. I have been looked at as 'alarmist' 'obsessive' discussing to others about the dire danger we are in. Now I am gloating - my attitude is simply...'I told you so' 'you snickered' at me and thought I was a 'radical environmentalist' trying to destroy the 'American way of life'. With C02 levels this high ( though this is in the pipeline) We are seeing Carbon in the atmosphere from 1990- or before before when C02 had passed 350ppm. As the decade progresses that warming in the pipeline will rear its ugly head. Is the climate beginning to unravel quicker then many thought? Perhaps- but there is really little time left to stop the worst outcomes that climate change will bring to us.
  7. Climate change is simple: We do something or we’re screwed
    Sphaerica @2, uncertainty is often misinterpreted. Fake "skeptics" think that if the science is uncertain, the future will be less bad than scientists predict; but of course it may be much worse. On the other hand, we are only almost "out of time" if the scientist's predictions are accurate and not overestimating the problem. While the low side uncertainty exists, it is always too soon to say too late. (And while the high side uncertainty exists, it is never correct to say that we have time to spare.) This is also on top of Chris G @1, with whom I agree. One point that needs to be mentioned, however, is too late for what? Assuming scientists central projections are accurate: We are already too late to avoid a collision (zero damage from climate change), and passed that point around 1990. We are not yet too late to avoid the collision writing of our car, but if we don't brake now a our car is toast. If we don't mind the radiator being concentened into the rear fender, we still have time to spare. In this situation, policy settings around the world are for steady acceleration.
  8. Roy's Risky Regression
    Rob, Stephen & Tom Thanks Sol
  9. Roy's Risky Regression
    sol @18: Declining C14 ratio indicates old, hence fossil fuel or volcanic (ie, not oceanic outgasing or deforestation; Declining C13 ration indicates organic, hence not volcanic; Declining O2 concentration indicate combustion, hence not volcanic; Measured CO2 emissions from all (surface and beneath the sea) volcanoes are 1 hundredth of antrhopogenic CO2 emissions; hence not volcanic; Partial pressure of CO2 in the ocean is increasing, hence not oceanic outgassing; Known changes in biomass too small by a factor of 10, hence not deforestation; and as the icing on the cake, The start of the growth in CO2 concentration coincides with the start of the industrial revolution, hence anthropogenic; and Increase in CO2 concentration over the long term almost exactly correlates (corr.: 0.998; R^2: 0.997) with cumulative anthropogenic emissions: (Source) and finally, Annual CO2 concentration growth is less than Annual CO2 emissions, hence anthropogenic. In all, six independent lines of evidence preclude a volcanic source for the increased CO2; five independent lines of evidence preclude a source from the non-fossil biosphere; and three lines of evidence are only consistent with an anthropogenic source.
  10. Climate change is simple: We do something or we’re screwed
    If George Monbiot (or, rather, Leonardo Maugeri) is right, the worst may have gotten much worse: http://www.monbiot.com/2012/07/02/false-summit/.
  11. Climate change is simple: We do something or we’re screwed
    ...nothing to be done about it anyway, ... as though we are already committed to the worst that could possibly happen, which I would like to think is not the case.
  12. Climate change is simple: We do something or we’re screwed
    Hi Sphaerica, If you put it that way, OK. It bothers me when people say that there is nothing to be done about it anyway, and the 'out of time' concept can be used (abused?) as leverage by them. I do not wish to give them any leverage.
  13. Dikran Marsupial at 06:34 AM on 8 July 2012
    Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    Stephen Baines wrote "Strictly speaking, I'm sure one could construct a mathematical budget that could reconcile a natural source with a CO2 increase less than human emissions." No, this is not possible, without contravening conservation of mass. The increase cannot be less than human emissions without the natural environment as a whole taking in more CO2 than it emits. It is important not to confuse the cause of the rise with the source of the molecules actually in the atmosphere (yes, I know that sounds odd). There are vast exchange fluxes that swap CO2 from the oceans/terrestrial biosphere and atmosphere each year, so anthropogenic CO2 only lasts on average about 4-5years in the atmosphere. However the exchange is a straight swap, so it doesn't have any effect on the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. In my paper I have a simulation of a very basic model of the carbon cycle that shows that even though the rise is 100% anthropogenic, only a small percentage of the excess in the atmosphere consists of CO2 of directly anthropogenic origin; this is a result of the exchange fluxes.
  14. Dikran Marsupial at 06:29 AM on 8 July 2012
    Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    @Marco, even if some part of the natural environment had become a stronger emitter of CO2, and some other part a greater CO2 sink, the mass balance analysis still tells us that the natural environment is a net carbon sink, in which case how can it be causing the rise while taking more CO2 out of the atmosphere than it puts in? I think part of the problem is that the mass balance argument is so simple some find it hard to accept that it proves unequivocally that the rise is anthropogenic, but it does.
  15. Dikran Marsupial at 06:26 AM on 8 July 2012
    Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    @oarobin The mass balance argument is sufficient as it proves that natural emissions must be smaller than natural uptake, and hence the net action of the natural environment is opposing the rise in atmospheric CO2. "that is another possibility is that all Ea is taken up by the environment which also emits excess carbon equal to C'." There is no physical mechanism by which the natural environment could preferentially take up all of anthropogenic emissions. However, even if it could, in order to have conservation of mass natural emissions would still have to be less than natural uptake, in order for the observed rise to be less than anthropogenic emissions. Bart has frequently tried to dismiss the mass balance argument as being static rather than dynamic, however this simply isn't true. Figure 1 is the results of the mass balance argument, not that the net environmental sink has inter-annual variability and is gradually strengthening over time. One wonders how this is possible in a static analysis. Essentially introducing a time index variable is an attempt at obfuscation. The key result is that conservation of mass tells us that: En - Un = C' - Ea This is true for any time, i.e. En(t) - Un(t) = C'(t) - Ea(t) so if at any time the right hand side is negative, we know the left hand side is as well. You don't need a more complicated model, the only reason Bart intrduces it is to avoid discussion of the mass balance argument.
  16. Dikran Marsupial at 06:09 AM on 8 July 2012
    Simply Wrong: Jan-Erik Solheim on Hansen 1988
    @angusmac As IIRC I mentioned in an earlier post, it is unreasonable to specify any percentage as being a reasonable error range without an anlysis of the physics of the problem. In this case, even if the model physics were perfect and the model had inifinite spatial and temporal resolution, it would only be reasonable to expect the projection to be within the range of effects that can arise due to internal climate variability (a.k.a. weather noise, unforced response etc.). The best estimate we have of this is the spread of the model runs, if the observations fall within the spread of the model runs then the model is as accurate as it can claim to be. As I said, the spread of Hansen's model runs, had he the computational power at the time to have run them, is unlikely to be smaller than those of the current generation of models. At the end of the day, given the state of knowledge available at the time, Hansen's projections do a pretty good job. If you disagree, and want to perform a solid scientific/statistical evaluation of the model, then download the code, adjust for the differences in the estimated and observed forcings etc., and generate some model runs and see if the observations lie within the spread. As I said, rules of thumb are all very well, but they are no substitute for getting to grips with the physics.
  17. Bob Lacatena at 05:58 AM on 8 July 2012
    Climate change is simple: We do something or we’re screwed
    Chris G, In your analogy, there is a point, however gray and fuzzy it may be, at which the electric shock becomes unbearable, a point at which you would never, ever consider putting up with that much pain. That is the point Dave Roberts is talking about. That is what he means by "out of time." If we wait too much longer before taking action, the price and the suffering will be way, way beyond anything we would ever choose to endure.
  18. Climate change is simple: We do something or we’re screwed
    I have a slight objection to the phrasing of the problem as being out of time or not. As long as we don't hit a tipping point which would make any effort on our part moot, the damages are not binary, they are analog. Or, put another way, it is not like tossing a coin, you win or you lose; it is more like electric shock. A very little hurts a little, the more you apply, the more it hurts, and there is no real upper limit to the pain, until you are dead. It is never a bad idea to slow down the car even if you think you may crash anyway. I do not think that Dave Roberts says we are out of time. Out of time would imply that we are already committed to hitting a tipping point that would overwhelm anything we might try to do, and he specifically says that he doesn't think that is very likely, at present. An interesting talk. Not much new there, but he has reached most of the same conclusions I have, but then, we all have to watch out for our own confirmation biases.
  19. Stephen Baines at 03:55 AM on 8 July 2012
    Nil Illegitimi Carborundum
    Stephen Baines, USA
  20. Stephen Baines at 03:51 AM on 8 July 2012
    Roy's Risky Regression
    Exactamundo.
  21. Stephen Baines at 03:42 AM on 8 July 2012
    Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    Oarabin Strictly speaking, I'm sure one could construct a mathematical budget that could reconcile a natural source with a CO2 increase less than human emissions. But to be relevant such a budget should be realistic from a biophysical and chemical point of view, and it must be consistent with data in hand on reservoir sizes, stable isotopes etc. To summarize then, for a natural source to be responsible for the recent CO2 increase 1) The anthropogenic CO2 to be taken up almost exclusively by natural sinks, while the natural CO2 remains in the atmosphere. I can think of no mechanism that could cause that to be true. 2) The source must be terrestrial (because surface acidification of the ocean indicates net uptake of atmsopheric CO2 while C isotopes and atmspheric oxygen trends are inconsistent with oceanic outgassing) 3) The net loss from this terrestrial source must amount to >40% of living terrestrial biomass (!!!) or >15% of soil organic carbon. It would have to be much larger as there should be some compensatory uptake by other reservoirs, and release from the mystery reservoir does not seem to be reaching some limit. 4) That source must look like very old plant carbon interms of isotopic composition. 5) Atmospheric oxygen must be consumed in rough proportion to release. That's a pretty hard list of requirements to satisfy, and I don't think you even can get past #1, which is why the budget approach has power. Then again, why look for an alternative explanation when we already have an explanation in hand that is consistent with everything we know about the carbon cycle?
  22. Roy's Risky Regression
    Stephen Baines @ 16 Thanks. So a relative decrease in C14 = old and a relative increase in C12 = plant Therefore, if the rise were due to volcanoes then C14 would still decline but C12 would stay relatively constant. Sorry for dragging this off-topic
  23. Nil Illegitimi Carborundum
    Another thought: why are the scumbags' emails "redacted"? They choose to make threatening statements using a non-secure channel. A fair number look to me to have potential for criminal prosecution. They deserve to be exposed.
  24. Nil Illegitimi Carborundum
    Happy to add my name: Philip Machanick, South Africa You may also want to sign my pro-scientist petition.
  25. Stephen Baines at 02:29 AM on 8 July 2012
    Roy's Risky Regression
    DM @8 Ugg... Well, that Spencer comment is a classic case of poisoning the well, and does not reflect well on his intentions. You do not judge the merit of an argument by its tone, but its content and you cannot assess content by ignoring everything else we know about a suject. The "strength and vehemence" of the objections to his ideas largely reflects frustration at Spencers unwillingness to engage in rational discourse through peer reviewed channels. To his credit, he did not dismiss "well-reasoned" objections as politically motivated. I think your approach here and in several posts on this issue are safe by his standards! The Salby comment is fine as it is. Of course, by ignoring evidence accumulated over a century of research on the issue, he is essentially doing exactly what he warns against. How is holding your hands over your ears less distructive to discourse than telling someone to shutup? The fact that he has not responded to you also hoists him by his petard.
  26. Stephen Baines at 02:10 AM on 8 July 2012
    Roy's Risky Regression
    Sol, The volcanic carbon and the fossil plant carbon are both depleted in C14, because the carbon is so old the radioactive C14 has decayed. Plant carbon is depleted in a different isotope, C-13, for a different reason, because plants accumulate C-12 preferentially over the heavier C-13 during photosynthesis. During the recent increase in atmospheric CO2, C14:C12 and C13:C12 ratios have both declined. Together, these two patterns indicate that the CO2 added to the atmosphere is 1) old and 2) derived from plants. Thus, the source must be fossil plant material, ie fossil fuels. The increases also agree with what is expected based on known emission rates and natural exchange rates, although the C-14 has been complicated by addition atomic bomb testing in the 60s. You are correct that the observation that O2 has declined in proportion to increasing CO2 is one more line of evidence that oxidation of organic material. There are so many consistent lines of evidence that it still beggars belief that people question the anthropogenic source of the recent CO2 increase.
  27. Nil Illegitimi Carborundum
    You are a hero and vital to the continued security, if not the existence, of humankind and countless other species. Thank you. M.L., Canada
  28. Roy's Risky Regression
    Rob Painting @ 13 Thanks for your comment. Why would carbon from volcanic activity be less depleted of c14 than fossil fuel carbon?
  29. Nil Illegitimi Carborundum
    Jim Naylor, USA
  30. Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    oarabin @20: Let Un(t+1)= En(t)+3.5*Ea; Let En(t+1)=En(t)+3*Ea This satisfies the conditions of the argument that you describe. However, even in this case atmospheric CO2 concentrations would decrease if it where not for anthropogenic emissions. Ergo, this argument as framed does not rebut mass balance argument. However, if we introduce the factor that the increase in Un is caused by Ea, then absent the increase in En, anthropogenic emissions would indirectly cause a reduction of atmospheric CO2. Alternatively, and more probably, increase in C' causes an increase in Un which drives C' towards an equilibrium value. A sufficiently large and rapid response in Un could have restricted C' to an increase one years anthropogenic emissions. In this case (only), a concurrent and coincidental rapid increase in En could be the cause of the increase in atmospheric CO2. However, an increase in concentration from natural sources would drive an increase Un as well. Therefore the increase in En must be orders of magnitude larger than the increase in En to overwhelm the tendency to return to equilibrium. As antrhopogenic emissions are 100 times larger than natural emissions (excluding equilibrium exchanges), that means the rate of increase of natural emissions must be many orders of magnitude larger than their initial (and measured) rates. In other words, the mass balance argument is an inductive argument (its conclusion could be false with true premises); but the probability of its leading to a false conclusion is very remote. What is more, if it where invalid the consequences would be immediately obvious as noted by Marco. Quite apart from that, as has been pointed out other measurements have also confirmed the mass balance argument.
  31. Roy's Risky Regression
    Alexandre @ 2. Further to Dana's reply, the connoisseur of 'how far will they' go may also enjoy Tim Curtin's '[CO2 and H2O] do not [trap heat] because they cannot, given the 2nd Law. Remember that photons are largely a fiction as they have no mass.' Well, that would also explain how they've escaped the Higgs Boson! Here, (comments page 6), June 23, 12.42pm (post NG's takeover ScienceBlogs no longer features permalinks, sadly.)
  32. Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    Oarobin & Marco, it really does not matter whether natural emissions and/or uptake are changing over time. That has no impact on the mass balance argument. We know that the rate at which humans are releasing fossil fuel carbon into the atmosphere is GREATER than the rate that carbon is accumulating in the atmosphere. Pick a year for the past few decades... there is sufficient data to calculate both of those values and show that human emissions have consistently exceeded atmospheric accumulations. Ergo, we also know that for that time period natural carbon sequestration has exceeded natural carbon emission and the atmospheric increase has been due to human emissions. Could the accumulation of human emissions in the atmosphere be causing the natural absorption and emission values to change? Absolutely. In fact, they definitely are changing. That just doesn't impact the mass balance argument at all. If the mass of human emissions is greater than the mass of atmospheric accumulation then human emissions ARE responsible for the atmospheric accumulation. The only options for 'defeating' the mass balance argument are; 1 - Disprove (or deny) the data showing that humans have been emitting CO2 at a greater rate than the atmosphere has been accumulating it for decades. 2 - Invalidate the law of conservation of mass. 3 - Introduce a new variable... e.g. carbon emissions from aliens.
  33. Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    Rob and oarobin - in principle it is possible that one natural source has increased its emissions, whereas another has increased its uptake. For example, it is possible that the oceans are a net emitter with this net emission being larger than the anthropogenic emissions. However, that requires an ENORMOUS net uptake from another source, such as the biosphere. We know, however, that this is not plausible: the biosphere would have had to take up hundreds of gigatons of CO2 in the last decade alone. Moreover, we should not have seen a decrease in ocean pH in that case. But how about the reverse situation? That is, the biosphere being the net emitter, larger than that of the anthropogenic emissions? It is possible that the oceans take up this much CO2. However, the biosphere would have had to decrease with several hundreds of gigatons of CO2 in the last decade alone. This should have been directly visible. Now, imagine that this net loss must have been sustained over several decades (at the very, very least since 1959): we must have observed such an enormous decrease in the biosphere (hundreds of gigatons of C, thousands of gigatons of CO2).
  34. Rob Painting at 18:48 PM on 7 July 2012
    Roy's Risky Regression
    Sol - the 3 carbon isotope ratios tell us that the increase in atmospheric CO2 is due to fossil fuel emissions. Carbon 14 forms in the upper atmosphere due to bombardment by cosmic rays (high energy particles from distant, but powerful, stars). This isotope is radioactive so it emits and loses energy over time. Its half-life is about 6000 years. Fossil fuels are depleted in Carbon 14 because they formed over hundreds of millions of years underground. Burn fossil fuels and we should see a decline in the ratio of Carbon 14 in the atmosphere relative to the two other isotopes. This is what is observed. Plants favour the lighter Carbon 12 over Carbon 13 because it is energetically more efficient. Fossil fuels are made of dead organic matter, therefore a fossil fuel source should see an increase in the relative concentration of Carbon 12. Once again, this is observed. So that discounts volcanoes as a source. And most critically of all we actually have detailed inventories of the coal, oil, natural gas etc that we are burning and these match the observations too.
  35. Rob Painting at 18:30 PM on 7 July 2012
    Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    oarobin - so in essence that claim is that some mysterious mechanism absorbs all of human carbon emissions, and that natural emissions increase to compensate for this. I am curious as to how this mystery mechanism is able to identify and target only human carbon emissions, and more importantly, why?
  36. Roy's Risky Regression
    Some of the comments on this thread have left me a little confused. My understending is that the isotpoic changes in atmospheric co2 show that increases in co2 come from fossil carbon, either fossil fuels or volcanic. And that the decrease in atmospheric o2 in lockstep increases in co2 showed that co2 increases were coming fossil carbon being burned in the atmosphere and not coming from volcanoes ie. fossil fuels.
  37. Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    Dikran, in the Judith Curry thread link above there was a disagreement between Bart and Ferdinand Engelbeen on the mass balance argument that i think should be mentioned. the disagreement hinges around the issue that the mass balance argument alone is insufficient to conclude that C' is due to Ea. that is another possibility is that all Ea is taken up by the environment which also emits excess carbon equal to C'. of course no physical mechanisms are described to explain this possibility. as far a i can make out, the argument is that since |En|,|Un| >> |Ea| or |C'| i.e. the absolute magnitude of natural emissions or uptake is so much more massive than the anthropogenic emission or the net emission rate all the following can be simultaneously satisfied |En - Un| can be bounded and decreasing En > E(n-1) and Un > U(n-1) there is a increasing trend in both emission and uptake over the last 50 yrs trend in Un rises faster than the trend in En this will allow a more complicated model of rise in net emissions where all Ea is absorbed by the natural environment Un but En is responsible for all of C'.
  38. Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    Tony O, I do not think the channel is Salby's. More likely to be that of The Sydney Institute
  39. Nil Illegitimi Carborundum
    Trevor Woodward, Australia: Mr Jones and colleagues, thank you for doing what you do, and for doing it undeterred in the face of the ignorance, spite and fear stirred up by Big Carbon propagandists. Know that these cowards can't debunk your work in the peer-review forums, so they remotely snipe at your person from behind keyboards. Thank you for your contribution to our growing understanding of the physical world, so that we can address the problems that beset it. Thank you on behalf of my children and those that will come after them. Keep the flame strong.
  40. Simply Wrong: Jan-Erik Solheim on Hansen 1988
    Dikran Marsupial @71 It is a reasonable request that I elaborate on ±30% error range. However, before I do, it would be very useful if I could have your estimate of what you consider to be a reasonable error range?
  41. Christy Exaggerates the Model-Data Discrepancy
    Climate without global warming and the anthropogenic forcing as seen in the data is like biology without evolution - nothing makes sense without that key piece.
  42. Philippe Chantreau at 11:56 AM on 7 July 2012
    Lindzen and Choi 2011 - Party Like It's 2009
    "Even if the authors lost confidence in getting the paper into PNAS, it would be unthinkable to ignore the review comments and turn the same text over to another journal, whether more or less prestigious." Very well said, Lambda. That is indeed, one aspect of how science works, and of why peer review is useful.
  43. Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    So if your business has revenue of $10 a week and costs of $9, but I steal $2 a week the reason you go broke is those costs and not my theft.
    Moderator Response: [Dikran Marsupial] Accusation of dishonesty deleted. Please lets keep to the science and avoid discussion of motives.
  44. Christy Exaggerates the Model-Data Discrepancy
    empirical_bayes: I agree with you, more or less completely at the conceptual and logical levels. If climate drives weather (which I conclude it does) and the climate is changing, it follows that every weather event will be affected by the climate change. All I was stating was that this is hard to show, statistically speaking, at the level of individual weather events, for the same reason that it's hard (perhaps not even possible) to show a causal chain between tobacco smoking and lung cancer incidence when examining individual patients in isolation. Of course, elsewhere on this site caerbannog has shown that with a tiny handful of weather stations one can produce a temperature series much like the global GISS series, so linking AGW with individual weather events may not be nearly as difficult as I imagine.
  45. Nil Illegitimi Carborundum
    Michael Fabiankovits. Australia
  46. empirical_bayes at 07:40 AM on 7 July 2012
    Christy Exaggerates the Model-Data Discrepancy
    @Composer99, Regarding "As far as I can see, tying any single weather event to global warming is a bit like tying an individual smoker's lung cancer to his or her smoking habit - you can't really do it" ... It takes a bit of a mind warp, but as Dr Trenberth pointed out to me, if the physics underlying climate change is as solid as we believe it to be, and the evidence is as solid as it seems, then there is nothing in the world which can properly be interpreted in the absence of the fact of climate change. Indeed, the idea of trying to "prove climate change" or attribute this or that phenomenon to climate change kind of misses the point. If the physics implying climate change are wrong, then there should be many other experimental and engineering things we see and do which also don't work. To the degree they do, this bolsters our confidence that we really understand how the world works. If we do that, then climate change is part of our basic engagement with that world, and we should be surprised if something is NOT connected with climate change. A climate denier does more than deny climate: The denier is claiming physics really doesn't know what it is doing. To be a proper scientific claim, the denier needs to offer not only an alternative explanation of the data they are challenging, but also an alternative physics. Dr Trenberth isn't the only one who feels this. Dr Jennifer Francis observes that how can the Arctic melt NOT affect the weather? It would be a basic violation of physical law if dumping this amount of carbon into the atmosphere did NOT cause increase in energy. See the "Physical Chemistry of Climate Change" by Dr Fritz Franzen. He in fact wrong a guest column for Skeptical Science, but the PDFs at the site that links to are broken. A current link is: http://edu-observatory.org/Franzen/GWPPT10.pdf
    Moderator Response: [DB] Hot-linked articles.
  47. The GLOBAL global warming signal
    Yes Tristan. The rate I refer to though is the average over the last couple of decades ie the 3mm compareded to the 1mm previous to that....
  48. DaneelOlivaw at 05:42 AM on 7 July 2012
    Murry Salby's Correlation Conundrum
    Seems to me that the problem is that anthropogenic emissions are (roughly) constant during the analysis period. If we look at the broader picture and compute a correlation coefficient with a dataset that spans a period of time with and without human emissions, then we would get a nicer fit, right? As an analogy, what Salby is doing seems to me like taking the temperature of a sick child during a week and computing the rate of increase and decrease. Then try to correlate it with , let's say, influenza virus counts in his blood and with time of day. Let's assume that there's a day-night cycle in our body temperature and that the rate of increase in temperature produced by the virus is constant. Then the variations in rate of increase in temperature would be only explained by the night-day cycle and the influenza virus would have nothing to do with it. This way we can conclude that cause of his fever is not influenza, but the night-day cycle. There's no need to give this child any treatment. Also, any treatment would cripple his family's economy... and the rise in temperature is plant food... I mean, it's good for him.
  49. mike@planet-hydrogen.org at 02:19 AM on 7 July 2012
    Nil Illegitimi Carborundum
    Having visited UEA several times from my base in Manchester, and talked with the excellent folk at the CRU, I'd like to add my voice to this letter of support for Phil Jones, the best of scientists traduced by the worst of our fellow men. My hat is doffed too to Michael mann and all the others who have had to endure these threats and insults.Mike Koefman, hydrogen advocate, Manchester UK
  50. Roy's Risky Regression
    That's the one, Tristan. I don't mean to take these comments off-topic though.

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