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Comments 64451 to 64500:

  1. Climate change policy: Oil's tipping point has passed
    All interesting but still doesnt address the question of would be the cost per kWh of the energy, even when considering just the mining cost alone. The bigger objection is that Kulcinski's reactor is not a demonstration of viability - it needs 3 orders of magnitude more energy than it produces. It shows He3-He3 fusion is possible but not yet that it is practical. I dont think you could regard this as "short term" solution at all. Long term, maybe. Getting off oil isnt really quite so much of the problem. (The price you will pay for it by the end of 2012 will help). Getting off coal is and I think fusion is going to have come a long way very very fast to be competitive in price with that.
  2. Peter Hadfield on Himalayan glacier melt
    andylee @ 29 Thanks for the explanation. I wondered how the ratio became so skewed. Is that a Tea caddy he is shaking, perchance?
  3. Climate change policy: Oil's tipping point has passed
    scaddenp- If sufficient manufacturing infrastructure was built on moon, it is easily conceivable that a rail-gun or coil-gun could launch simple capsules all the way to earth. They would only need a heat-shield, parachutes, and a landing area. - an He-3 reactor uses an electrostatic field to confine the plasma, since the particles are charged. Gerald Kulcinski, a professor at the University of Wisconsin, has built one in his lab. The reason that an industrial scale reactor has never been built is that the only He-3 on earth comes from decaying Tritium i.e. old H-bombs. -Also, I was mistaken when I said that all the known He-3 on the moon would power the global power grid for 1000 years. It would only power the US for that long, and since the US is about 1/4th of the global power supply, the real figure would be 250 years. But, you will frequently see in blogs that the He-3 on the moon is only about a meter deep. This comes from the Apollo core samples only going to down to 1M, and there is no reason to think that it all stops there.
  4. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    Getting away from the details of how surface temperature varies from proxy to instrumental on Greenland, there are three proxy pieces of evidence that splat Camburn's bowhead whales of 1ka idea (let alone St Roch): 1: exposed shorelines round NE Greenland indicate ice-free conditions furthern north than present between c. 8.5-6ka BP (Funder 1989, ref in Polyak et al 2010). 2: Wood in the collapsing remnants of Canadian Arctic ice shelves is several thousand years old, indicating the shelves have been continuously stable for that period of time. 3: Small ice caps in the Canadian Arctic are exposing land not exposed for several thousand years (can't seem to locate refs, if anyone has them feel free to comment or corrent me!). Polyak et al does detail some evidence for summer temperatures in the Arctic being notably warmer than mid-20th Century at some point in the early Holocene, but proxy evidence would indicate that the Arctic has not been this warm for at least about 3,000 years, possibly longer. Since there was a good reason for the Arctic to be relatively warm in the early-mid Holocene (orbital forcing), and given the rapid trajectory of warming we are presently observing, it does not make good news, and we'll soon see the mid-Holocene in the rearview mirror too unless we can change Earth's energy balance.
  5. NASA Mission Takes Stock of Earth's Melting Land Ice
    Note: This will be my last post on this conversation, as it is both off-topic and, in my opinion, settled. Norman - The figures for groundwater depletion definitely have uncertainties. I have seen figures from 0.15 to 0.8mm/year, although the 0.8 you point to is, again, on the upper border. Where you are seriously distorting the data is in not recognizing or incorporating other factors, such as reservoir impoundment, or as Tom Curtis has shown, groundwater replenishment. I'll leave the replenishment portion to Tom Curtis, who has shown a great deal of the data. On impoundment, Church et al 2001 estimate a net water usage contribution of -1.1 to 0.4 mm/yr contribution, with impoundment ~-0.3 (Table 11.8), and Chao et al 2008 show an average rate of impoundment of -0.55 mm/yr. Groundwater mining, on the other hand, has been estimated at 0.2-0.3mm/yr (Vemeer & Rahmstorf 2009) - just about equal to impoundment. So yes, you are cherry-picking, not presenting all of the data. You only once mentioned increases in impoundment, dismissing it offhandedly (when it is of equal scale, and opposite in sign), and have only presented groundwater mining without replenishment. And what's worse, you continue not to recognize your cherry-picking. I no longer have any expectation that you will.
  6. NASA Mission Takes Stock of Earth's Melting Land Ice
    KR @58 "Norman, you continue to present just one side of the picture - and hence you are distorting it." Are you certain of this. You use this one source which uses a super low figure for water depletion that no one else seems to agree with (you can check my previous links on this if you so choose). I am not using one data point (Ogallala aquifier) to make a point. In the links I have posted, they all deal with estimates of global water depletion from aquifiers. Your article would be correct if the water depletion was at the very low value of slightly more than 61 km^3 per year but I have listed more than one source that shows it to me much higher and they are including recharge rates. They have a medium condifence for Groundwater mining even though no other source I linked to is even close to this low level. That is why they do not find any change in SL from water mining. They are using the super low value of 0.25 SLR even though other experts in the field have this number much higher. For irrigation alone the figure was around 245 km^3. Wouldn't it be a "cherry pick" to use just one source of data as your refute of mine and then claim I am wrong, when your data source is considerably lower than other researchers in the same field?
  7. NASA Mission Takes Stock of Earth's Melting Land Ice
    Norman - Let's look at all the data. I'm using Milly 2010 as the reference, rather than the dozens of papers they reviewed. This is the data I pointed Norman to, the data from which he quoted but a single number for a particular, quickly depleting, aquifer. Primary among Norman's omissions is the expansion of reservoir filling - both direct containment and in the rise of local water tables around reservoirs. I invite everyone to view this summary - and compare it to Norman's cherry-picked presentation of just aquifer depletion, just one side of the equation. Groundwater adds to sea levels (as per your reference), but reservoir filling subtracts from it - and they appear to cancel out. Norman, you continue to present just one side of the picture - and hence you are distorting it. --- External constraints - Some uncertainties, for example the recent GRACE data indicates that ice cap contributions may be ~10% lower than previously thought. Table 8.1 Sea-level rise (mm/year) / 1961–2003a / 1993–2003b / 2003–7c 1. Observed / 1.8 ± 0.3 / 3.1 ± 0.4 / 2.5 ± 0.4 2. Thermal expansion / 0.4 ± 0.06 / 1.6 ± 0.25 / 0.35 ± 0.2 3. Glaciers / 0.5 ± 0.1 / 0.8 ± 0.11 / 1.1 ± 0.25 4. Ice sheets / 0.2 ± 0.2 / 0.4 ± 0.2 / 1. ± 0.15 5. Sum of 2 + 3 + 4 / 1.1 ± 0.25 / 2.8 ± 0.35 / 2.45 ± 0.35 Note that this leaves ~0.05mm/yr +/- 0.35 unaccounted for over the last eight years, including the GRACE data. There is very little room for water usage contributions! Now looking that the Milly summary of ground water contributions, excluding cryosphere contributions: Estimated potential contributions of changes in terrestrial water storage to sea-level change during the decade of the 1990s. Trends assigned “medium confidence” are probably of correct sign and order of magnitude. Trends assigned “low confidence” cannot be constrained by available data to be smaller than multiple tenths of a millimeter per year in magnitude, nor are data sufficient to be sure that any of these terms is large enough to be a factor in sea-level rise. “Essentially unidirectional” trends are those whose sign and order of magnitude are probably dominated by decadal and longer timescales, as opposed to interannual variations. Table 8.2 1990s sea-level trend (mm/year) / Essentially unidirectional? Medium confidence Reservoir filling: −0.25 yes Groundwater mining: +0.25 Yes Fifteen largest lakes: +0.1 No Climate-driven change of snow pack, soil water, and shallow groundwater: −0.1 No Atmospheric water storage: −0.05 Yes (under projected warming) Low confidence, but possibly substantial magnitude Irrigation: <0 Yes Dam-affected groundwater: <0 Yes Permafrost thaw and drainage: >0 Yes Lake-affected groundwater: ? No Wetland drainage: >0 Yes Deforestation, urbanization: ? No Low confidence, probably not substantial magnitude Post-glacial desiccation on millennial scale: >0 Yes
  8. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    Ok, thanks Dana.
  9. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    RE - the sun's magnetic field deflects cosmic rays, which hypothetically seed clouds. See the cosmic rays rebuttal.
  10. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    I wonder if this is what he meant... "This is why the sun's magnetic field has continued to weaken since 2000. As a result, this magnetic field doesn't shield us against cosmic radiation quite as well, which in turn leads to stronger cloud formation and, therefore, cooling." I think he means the Earth's magnetic field, right? (which has decreased in the past few years). How would the Sun's magnetic field protect us?
  11. It's methane
    16 - Heircide Have a look at the wedges
  12. NASA Mission Takes Stock of Earth's Melting Land Ice
    Tom Curtis @55 and KR @56 Before you continue to believe my argument to be flawed. Please read this material and remember what I had claimed in Post 21. Maybe you will find my thinking ability is not so poor after all and that I do have a valid point. "Because most of the groundwater released from the aquifers ultimately ends up in the world’s oceans, it is possible to calculate the contribution of groundwater depletion to sea level rise. This turned out to be 0.8 mm per year, which is a surprisingly large amount when compared to the current sea level rise of 3.1 mm per years as estimated by the IPCC. It thus turns out that almost half of the current sea level rise can be explained by expansion of warming sea water, just over one quarter by the melting of glaciers and ice caps and slightly less than one quarter by groundwater depletion. Previous studies have identified groundwater depletion as a possible contribution to sea level rise. However, due to the high uncertainty about the size of its contribution, groundwater depletion is not included in the latest IPCC report. This study confirms with higher certainty that groundwater depletion is indeed a significant factor." source. Please note I stated that groundwater use of aquifiers was close to the same amount of SLR from ice caps and glaciers and this material says the very same thing.
  13. citizenschallenge at 06:46 AM on 15 February 2012
    Climate mythbusting at Lane Cove, Sydney on Feb 28
    Usually I try reading the comments before posting, but Daniel's comment #2 & images had me laughing too much to notice #6 or #9. Well, John Cook if not this event, it is something you should be considering, for future talks and such. cheers
  14. It's methane
    Is there any research into estimating what percent each of the greenhouse gases is due to anthropomorphic activity? If the intent is to stabilize the concentrations of greenhouse gases it would be nice to know how much of an effect our actions have on each molecule. IE is there a study that shows us what policy will give us the most bang for our buck?
  15. citizenschallenge at 06:35 AM on 15 February 2012
    Climate mythbusting at Lane Cove, Sydney on Feb 28
    DMCarey I finished typing out my two sentences before noticing your comment. You beat me to it. John ditto on that video idea... how about it, we don't want to be left out in the cold hehehe just because we're on the other side of the planet.
  16. CO2 is plant food? If only it were so simple
    layzej- "Limiting the search to 2010 onward reduces the results to about 14,000.' Once you start going through them you'll find there are far less than that. I normally go through the first 100 pages of hits. Gives one a very good idea of what the scientific literature says. Time consuming but necessary, if facts are what you are interested in. "The literature appears to be as inconclusive" Nope. All the recent literature finds limited evidence for the CO2 fertilization effect in the 20 the century, and forests that did once benefit during that century, have stopped doing so. Suggesting some sort of threshold, or acclimation, to elevated CO2. Probably what you are doing is looking at the literature without regard to its chronology. "Some find a net gain for specific species" Undoubtedly. Liana for instance, which are woody tropical vines, are growing like crazy. But that's not John Nielsen-Gammon's contention is it? He claims a net global benefit. "One found that approximately 20 percent of sites globally exhibit increasing trends in growth that cannot be attributed to climatic causes" That's undisputed. It has been the subject of considerable scientific debate over the years - whether this might be the consequence of elevated CO2. Trouble is, the latest global forest inventory finds the CO2 is currently going into forest re-growth and is not due to CO2 fertilization. This tallies with recent (last 2 years) studies which find no fertilization effect at a global scale. "showed a large increase in wheat yields for a doubling of CO2" Yes, Dawei's post is well-balanced. The title of it says it all really.
  17. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    Robert Way @25, there are only two issues: 1) Was the original graph so bad that it did not show Camburn's suggested 3 degree over modern Arctic temperatures did not apply to Greenland 9000 years ago. The answer is no. The methodology used by Renowden was poor, hence my caution against over interpreting the graph, but it still represents information about the relationship between the present and the past. Imperfect information is not no information. To put this into perspective, for Camburn's claim to be true of Greenland, modern temperatures would have had to be at or below Easterbrook's claimed "modern temperatures". So, for the original graph to be so bad as to not refute a generalization of the CAA temperatures, Renowden's methodology would have to have been worse than simply taking the 1905 temperature as being the modern (2001-2010) temperature. Whilst Renowden's method certainly requires caveats (which I gave) any argument that requires it to be worse than Easterbrooks (as yours does) is patently absurd. 2) Does the corrected graph not support my argument against Camburn. The yellow line in the corrected graph is the temperature determined as the modern temperature by Kobashi et al, and indicated as such on their graphs. While their methodology may have differed from Alley et al's (the data on the original graph), there data is from a ice core at the same site, so a modern temperature for Kobashi et al, is also the modern temperature for Alley et al. Quite plainly, then indicating the modern temperatures as determined by Kobashi et al is appropriate, and equally plainly it supports my argument. Hence your criticisms have no bearing on the discussion. Like it or not, this is not a scientific paper, and we do not do science in commenting on this blog. It is absurd to expect all the formal requirements of scientific papers to apply to any presentation of information in comments on a blog (not a post, but a comment). It is reasonable to expect us to present as accurate information as we can, and to provide suitable caveats, but I have done exactly that. That, so far as I am concerned, is the end of the matter. If you want to reduce yourself to silence by making the perfect the enemy of the good, by all means go ahead. But I do not have either the time or patience for such folly.
  18. New research from last week 6/2012
    The abrupt 60ppmv rise in CO2 during de-glaciation is interesting. Could this be the reason. http://mtkass.blogspot.co.nz/2011/08/end-of-ice-ages.html
  19. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    Robert Way wrote: "Concludes the rate of change is greater than any time over the last 1200 years but that periods of warmth on the century scale have equaled present." See, this is where phrasing gets dicey. Presumably, what you mean is that the Ljungqvist study found that there were hundred year periods in the past 1200 where the average global temperature anomaly was equal to that of the most recent hundred years. Which, frankly, falls into the category of, 'um, yeah... we knew that already'. However, your statement could also be read as saying that there were hundred year periods in the past 1200 where the average global temperature anomaly was equal to that of the past few years. This seems IMO very likely to be the 'skeptic' take on the study, despite it being completely false. Indeed, there are grounds for such confusion here. Most people generally don't interpret the "present" to mean, 'the past 100 years'.
  20. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    You can't take GISP2 and just tack on thermometers onto them. There's so many processes at play that it just doesn't work. Using a model similar to Kobashi et al (2011, of which Jason Box is a co-author) is a better solution, not perfect but better. GISP2 and Kobashi are also using different proxies but anyways... My issue is with the graph you presented. Whether you're proving a point that you're right about or not, it doesn't warrant using something that is dubious to support your argument. Yes we know that there wasn't thousands of years where temps in the Arctic were significantly above the present (especially 9000 ca BP like Camburn suggests) but the graph presented above has a series of significant issues: (1) The temperature provided as Current Greenland Temperature is not comparable with GISP2 From the author: "The green line represents an estimate of current temperatures in central Greenland. I looked at the nearest station with a 100+ year record in the GISS database (Angmagssalik), and used a Mk 1 eyeball to estimate a 2.5ºC increase over the century (I’d welcome a more accurate estimate, if anyone’s prepared to dig one up). The difference between the green and blue lines is the warming that Easterbrook wants to ignore." -That's just not acceptable. (2) A dot was placed for the 2010 temperature on a graph which is not annually resolved. If annually resolved would the dot stick out as much? no... so why show it? You can't compare an instrumental temperature from one year to GISP2 without a rigorous method (3) Kobashi's paper itself shows that the 2010 temperature was around the average of a few decades over the last 4000 years, yet in the figure shown it is the highest by far over the last 12,000... That isn't true nor is it scientifically accurate. The reason I bring it up is because I think that this is an example of how proponents get themselves in trouble. That's all I was doing. I was not trying to argue with the main point of your conversation but just needed to point out that being right but using faulty evidence does not help anyone. Sorry if I was harsh. Kobashi et al "The estimated average Greenland snow temperature over the past 4000 years was −30.7°C with a standard deviation of 1.0°C and exhibited a long‐term decrease of roughly 1.5°C, which is consistent with earlier studies. The current decadal average surface temperature (2001–2010) at the GISP2 site is −29.9°C. The record indicates that warmer temperatures were the norm in the earlier part of the past 4000 years, including century‐long intervals nearly 1°C warmer than the present decade (2001–2010). Therefore, we conclude that the current decadal mean temperature in Greenland has not exceeded the envelope of natural variability over the past 4000 years, a period that seems to include part of the Holocene Thermal Maximum. Notwithstanding this conclusion, climate models project that if anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions continue, the Greenland temperature would exceed the natural variability of the past 4000 years sometime before the year 2100." RE: Ljungqvist. I saw this paper a few weeks ago. Interesting stuff. Has the most available proxies out of any study and uses a method superior to Mann's work. Concludes the rate of change is greater than any time over the last 1200 years but that periods of warmth on the century scale have equaled present. Interesting stuff.
  21. Katharine Hayhoe, Intent to Intimidate
    MattJ wrote: "Luther himself did the same thing [i.e. 'completely miss the most fundamental messages in the bible'] when he created Protestantism, and his bad example has been followed by not just Protestants since then." Frankly, I found this statement offensive... and I'm an agnostic. Ironically, 'the Reformation' itself was largely due to perceived instances of failing to follow fundamental biblical messages. Let's please not rehash centuries of Catholic/Protestant bigotry here. also: "I am all too aware that far too few ever do embrace this spiritual struggle" Or, as my muslim friends call it, jihad. and: "raising beef cattle is a large cause of global warming" Not really. Any land use and/or methane release issues are constrained by current total cattle population. There is no cumulative effect in play here, and thus the GW impact is small compared to (for instance) increasing CO2 levels.
  22. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    owl905@13: More (and more recent) about proxy data from Ljungqvist et al.: Northern Hemisphere temperature patterns in the last 12 centuries
  23. NASA Mission Takes Stock of Earth's Melting Land Ice
    Readers - The preceding exchanges with Norman can perhaps be most useful as a demonstration in cherry-picking. When you see someone making an assertion without qualifications, when you see someone base their argument on a single number without looking at or discussing whether that is representative, and (in this particular case) when the single factum presented is an extreme that appears to support their argument, when a more complete look at all of the data demonstrates the opposite: Then - you should suspect cherry-picking. Norman - As I have noted, and as Tom Curtis has so very clearly demonstrated, you have repeatedly selected single numbers from only one side of the water usage mass balance equations, the withdrawal side. And those numbers are extrema, outliers, which you have presented without context or even mention of the averages. All in pursuit of your first, unsupported/unsupportable assertion - claiming that groundwater withdrawal was sufficient to cause sea level rise even without cryosphere melt. That assertion is clearly incorrect when all of the data, including groundwater replenishment and external constraints on the mass balance, is viewed. Your repeated presentations of this flawed argument indicate (IMO) either an inability or unwillingness to actually consider the data, and readers should keep that in mind.
  24. New research from last week 6/2012
    In other non scientific news, the world's driest dessert experiences flooding, it's almost as if the climate is changing or something...
  25. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    Robert Way @22, with respect, the argument being made was:
    "As clearly indicated, by the green line, central Greenland temperatures where not warmer than current temperatures about 9,000 years ago. The green line should not be taken as an exact indicator, based on the methodology used to produce it. But it is accurate enough to show the 3 degree C difference was not universal in the Arctic."
    The argument is clearly about temperatures 9,000 years ago, not over the whole intervening interval. I clearly expressed reservations about the indication of modern temperature, indicated that those reservations where because of the methodology employed, and linked to the report of the methodology so people could make their own assessment. My final conclusion was not even that there was not a period of time thousands of years long in which the Candadian Archipelago was not 3 degrees warmer than modern times, but only that such an episode, if it occurred was not universal. Your criticism seems to me to be for the most part irrelevant as being based on a clear misinterpretation of my argument. And, quite frankly, what little of it which is relevant seems to me to be mere carping. Finally, the graph to which you refer is not "wrong". It correctly shows Easterbrook's claimed modern temperatures. It correctly shows Renowdon's estimate of modern temperatures, and it correctly shows the 2001-2010 average as measured for Kobashi et al, and as shown on their graphs by the black line. By what contortion of illogic you consider the same line shown by Kobashi at al to be appropriate, but inappropriate when it appears on my graph I cannot imagine.
  26. Katharine Hayhoe, Intent to Intimidate
    I see people are waking up to the sad reality that one can be a so-called "bible believing Christian", yet completely miss even the most fundamental and important messages in that book. Some of us, though, figured this out a long time ago. Luther himself did the same thing when he created Protestantism, and his bad example has been followed by not just Protestants since then. Interestingly enough, there IS a connection between the answer to the question (how to avoid falling into that trap of missing the messages) and what the world needs to do to mitigate climate change. For both require the same fundamental approach: to recognize the need for spiritual struggle. Now I know such a statement will cause some readers to spit out their coffee if they happen to be reading while sipping at the same time;) But think about it: raising beef cattle is a large cause of global warming, eating a mainly vegetarian diet (at least for large parts of the year, e.g. Lent/Advent) IS a classic first step in spiritual struggle. So the two coincide here. But it gets better: the only time-tested way to deal with the human tendency we lament here, the tendency to believe what you want to believe (this is what AGW denialists rely on) while ignoring all the facts of the "inconvenient truth" is self-denial wrought by spiritual struggle. Learned discussion in scientific journals has never been enough, even the skillful use of rhetoric (in the best sense of the term) to create and guide a political movement is not enough. Then again, I am all too aware that far too few ever do embrace this spiritual struggle, so many remain in their ignorance. But this is why I keep returning to imagery from that same Book of the Apocalypse mentioned above, warning that we are facing the most stressful time we have ever faced since the beginning of human civilization, as AGW induced famine, war and pestilence spread over the Earth. You can tell I don't place much hope in 'geo-engineering', either.
  27. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    I've lost long comments twice now and I don't have time to write another one. The point about tacking on modern temperatures is about this graph: http://www.skepticalscience.com/pics/GISP2rescaled997.png Which is wrong. The tacking on is not done appropriately and the graph cannot be used to substantiate ones argument because of it. Kobashi et al (2011) which I cited provides a better solution to the issue. We all agree there wasn't millennia of warmer temperatures than present. But in the last 4000 years in Greenland there were at least century long portions which were about a degree warmer than present. My point is that it is not as straightforward as the argument that is being made. Natural variability has been larger in the past than we sometimes talk about and it is important for us to point out the irrelevancy of these past warm periods, not argue about which period was warmer than which. Natural variability or not, you can't escape the physics...
  28. Climate mythbusting at Lane Cove, Sydney on Feb 28
    Should be a good show. Would you consider uploading a video of the event on youtube for those of us who live on the wrong side of the planet?
  29. CO2 is plant food? If only it were so simple
    Rob Painting: No need to rely on trust. You can search for yourself, just limit your search from 2010 onwards ... If you can find any paper that observes a net global benefit from increased CO2 I'd be interested. I haven't found one. Limiting the search to 2010 onward reduces the results to about 14,000. Still more than I can possibly review. I took a look at the first few dozen. The literature appears to be as inconclusive as it is encyclopaedic. Most studies conclude that the future is uncertain. One found considerable increase with mechanistic process-based models but reduced habitat suitability from niche-based models. Some found a net gain for certain local environments. Some find a net gain for specific species. One found that approximately 20 percent of sites globally exhibit increasing trends in growth that cannot be attributed to climatic causes, nitrogen deposition, elevation, or latitude, which we attribute to a direct CO2 fertilization effect. This of course does not mean that 80% are stable or declining, just that the growth could not be attributed to CO2. None of the first few dozen were global in scope and were able to conclude that a net global increase or decrease should be expected. One that was interesting to me (because I don't eat tree's but I do drink beer) showed a large increase in wheat yields for a doubling of CO2: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378377409001991 I think I'm going to have to rely on the IPCC to distill this all down. Regarding SkS overstating things - I never implied that they do. I'm just pointing out that a great deal of credibility and trust can be gained by calling out cases where ones own position is being overstated by others. The source is no longer seen as an advocate for his "side" but is seen as an advocate for the truth.
  30. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    Robert Way @19, With regard to tacking on modern temperatures, I do not know which graph you are referring to, nor to which statement you refer. Never-the-less, appending instrumental temperatures to a graph is necessary if you are going to compare paleo-temperature series with modern temperatures as it is impossible to get proxies extending to the current decade, and even then they need to be compared to instrumental temperatures for validation (and hence for which the instrumental temperatures should be shown). The temperature differences reported by Camburn were for 9000 years before present (see 14 above) and hence cannot be contradicted by Kobashi et al. Further, Camburn was suggesting elevated temperatures for "several thousand years", so a decade or two at that level is not particularly relevant. Given the long time scale Camburn had in mind, the centenial average (green line) is the appropriate comparison. As you can see, it only exceeds modern values occasionally, and never by more than 1 degree C. What is more, my comment about 0.5 to 1 degree specifically addressed Camburn's comment, and hence was also about 9000 years BP. Specifically I was pointing out that if you adjusted Camburn's 3 degrees above modern benchmarked on the 1950s to be benchmarked on the 2000s, it becomes 0.5 to 1 degree above modern (based on the Arctic temperature graph). On a side note it is about 1.5 degrees above modern based on Kobashi et al, but Camburn was not discussing Greenland temperatures so that is not particularly relevant. Finally, your report on Kobashi et al's findings is overstated. Kobashi et al do not show temperatures exceeding modern (2001-2010) plus 3 degrees C at any point over the four thousand years, although twice it comes close. Those two decades are the only occasions the uncertainty interval exceeds modern plus 3, although they do not exceed modern plus 4. It only exceeds modern plus 1 in about 10 of the 400 decades shown. While I appreciate your concern about our interests, I am still perplexed as to why you have taken exception to what I said, beyond some clear examples of your having misunderstood what I said. This is particularly the case as I took care to introduce a caveat about Renowdon's method in 18, and to indicate that the 2010 temperature was not properly comparable with what are effectively decadal averages (although still, I believe of interest, as Sphaerica points out). Given the topic of this thread, Kobashi et al's reconstruction of the last thousand years may be of interest:
  31. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    Good to finally see a journalist being truly skeptical about the "skeptic" claims. What a refreshing change from the unquestioned denier drivel that is allowed into the newspapers and magazines every single day.
  32. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    No, elsa, you were given those links as an experiment (sorry, no IRB approval). The first hypothesis was that you would pick a decadal series that showed as much cooling as possible, ignore the series that showed warming, and then come here and make a big deal out of it. It would then be pointed out to you that ten years of simple temp record tell us very little about the climate--unless of course we take into account the likely sources of short-term noise (see Foster and Rahmstorf (2011)). The second hypothesis was that you would ignore this point and continue to harp about a carefully-selected ten-year period of one of the temp records. These two hypotheses have been established. What has not been established, and what you have been careful not to discuss, is what your carefully-selected decade means re climate. If you do not wish to discuss the implications of that decade, or discuss a reading of that decade within the context of both other temp records and solar forcing, aerosols, etc., then one can only conclude that you are fishing for "SkS admits that globe has cooled!" Since there is no physical evidence for such a claim (even taking ocean heating out of the equation), I doubt if you're going to have much luck. So what's it going to be, elsa? Are you willing to defend what appears to be your implicit theory, that global warming has stopped?
  33. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    If you go to GISTEMP, you'll see that temperatures in summer, 2011 right at the coast, were about 4˚C greater than the 1950-1981 baseline (roughly the same baseline, but not quite, as the proxy studies graphed on the OP). Temps in winter 2011 were 5.5˚C greater. So you can argue all you want about temps being 3˚C greater 9,000 years ago, because we're blowing past that. And what Camburn and Norman and others always like to distract from is the future. Their line is always "it doesn't look so bad to me right now." We're not talking about global had-been-warming, we're talking about global ongoing-warming. We're not talking about temperatures today... they're already bad enough, but we're saying that we're going to raise temperatures by a factor of 3 beyond where they are today if we hit 450 ppm. The warming we see today in the Arctic is a fraction of the warming that we have already committed to, and we keep piling it on. When you add the warming that is currently being absorbed/masked by the ocean depths and massive ice melt (500 billion tons per year), and then double down on everything due to the additional influence of another 50 years of emissions of CO2, it means you will see 10˚C to 12˚C to 20˚C of warming in the Arctic... depending on when people like Camburn and Norman finally wake up and stop promoting a philosophy of "wait and see." I can't believe Camburn is sitting here bandying about nonsense like the MWP and the Holocene. The Holocene was a light sweater compared to the oven we're creating.
  34. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    I think the point of what I said is that Kobashi's data does show times in the last 4000 years where temperatures were about 3 degrees warmer than present. Personally as a glaciologist I find tacking on the present temps in the way done on that graph is misleading and not strong enough evidence to support this statement "Note also that by convention, reports of modern temperatures in paleo studies are based on 1950 temperatures unless otherwise specified, so the 3 degree difference reported by Camburn may in fact be a 0.5 to 1 degree difference from current temperatures in the 2000s." As kobashi et al makes clear there are plenty of times when temperature was 0.5 to 1 above present and some when it is as much as 3 degrees and that is only in the last 4000 years. I'm just trying to protect our interests here. We really ought to be careful here with statements like those and graphs like that... another issue is the graph is not annual air temperature but yet 2010 is included as well as an annual mark.
  35. The Year After McLean - A Review of 2011 Global Temperatures
    Ken, Sphaerica's whole point was that these 'deductive analyses' of temperature trends still contain some variability because there are some factors which we don't have nailed down accurately enough to 'subtract out'. He focused on the remaining natural variations while one of those you cite is anthropogenic, but the issue is the same... until we can nail down the influence of these remaining (comparatively minor) factors to a narrow uncertainty range we can't separate them out. BTW, I doubt either Trenberth or Hansen would argue that the factors cited by the other 'do not exist' as you claim... the uncertainty is over how much impact each has. If you believe otherwise you are free to provide the quotation of Trenberth saying that there are no Asian aerosols rather than falsely describing his position.
  36. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    elsa#6: Whether 'the hottest year' was 1934 or 1998 is irrelevant. What is important and you still seem to be missing is the overall positive trend in temperature and in global heat content. That is what the 'escalator' graphic illustrates.
  37. The Year After McLean - A Review of 2011 Global Temperatures
    Sphaerica #31 What about taking out Jim Hansen's Asian aerosols, and his 'delayed Pinitubo rebound effect' which are supposed to also be masking the CO2GHG warming effect? Problem is that for other experts such as Dr Trenberth - neither exist!
  38. NASA Mission Takes Stock of Earth's Melting Land Ice
    Norman @54: 1) "Groundwater is water located beneath the ground surface in soil pore spaces and in the fractures of rock formations." Because it is located beneath the surface of the Earth, it is not subject to evaporation. The fact that one estimate of total evaporation from "land sources", ie, from lakes and rivers, is similar in magnitude to one estimate of total recharge of groundwater globally is coincidental, and irrelevant. 2) "The water table is the surface where the water pressure head is equal to the atmospheric pressure (where gauge pressure = 0). It may be conveniently visualized as the 'surface' of the subsurface materials that are saturated with groundwater in a given vicinity." Water tables may fall, but they may also rise. (Curiously, that can also be bad for farming. In large sections of Southern Australia, agriculture is threatened by rising water tables carrying salt to the surface.) Clearly concern about the viability of groundwater based irrigation is focused on those areas in which the water table is falling. But falling water tables are not universal, nor even necessarily typical. Indeed, I do not know the proportion of water tables world wide which are rising, or falling. The global balance of ground water is determined by the simple equation : dGW =Rn + Ra - Wn - Wa, where dGW is the change in ground water, Rn is the natural recharge, Ra is the artificial recharge, Wn is the natural withdrawals and Wa is artificial withdrawals. Artificial recharge includes such measures as pumping water into oil wells to sustain well pressure, and the flooding of old mines. Natural withdrawal consists of natural springs and the like. To have a reasonable estimate of global dGW you need a reasonable estimate of all four relevant factors. Instead of providing them, you have consistently proceeded under the assumption that: dGW =~= Wa. Quite frankly, that is like assuming that all you need to know to know if a population is rising or falling is the number of homicides. As it stands I know of at least three areas in the world with rising water tables (Southern Australia, Tasmania and Nigeria), and have no reason to think they are the only ones. I also know that there are rising water tables in Texas, although on average ground water in Texas is decreasing. Given that natural recharge may be up to 20 times greater than artificial withdrawals globally, you are certainly not entitled to assume that areas in which ground water is building up exceeds areas in which ground water is depleting by a sufficient factor that it can be neglected. As it happens I think there is good reason to think global change in ground water is negative. In many aquifers, increased recharge will simply result in increased discharge from water seeps and springs, resulting in little net change. But that is not certain, there is certainly no justification for assuming, as you consistently have, that global change in groundwater is approximately equal to human withdrawals. That much is very clear, and very simple. What is more, consideration of the simple equation above shows very clearly that you have not done "...a fairly decent job of research to show my point in global context." Neglecting three terms of the equation is not fairly decent research, and constitutes ignoring the global context. Turning now to your misrepresentations: 1) Patricia Muir, ie, your source, do not state that "... over 75% of irrigation uses these slowly recharging wells" (your claim). Rather she states that:
    "About 62 % of water used in agriculture, globally, comes from surface sources (e.g., rivers) while about 38 % comes from ground water (underground aquifers). However more of Earth's freshwater is in aquifers than in surface sources -- in fact, about 99 % of all liquid freshwater is in groundwater. (Issues in Ecol (9) 2001). Much (> 75 %) of this groundwater is "fossil water;" -- water that is not being recharged but is relic from wetter ancient climate conditions and from melting ice after the Pleistocene ice ages. Once we use it, it is "gone" for all practical purposes."
    Read it carefully. The claim is that >75% of ground water is fossil water, but she earlier indicates that only 38% of water used in agriculture comes from groundwater directly contradicting your claim. She never mentions what proportion of groundwater extraction comes from fossil water. Indeed, another of your sources (linked in post 43, as it happens) informs that total world water consumption is 3,560 km^3/year (table 7.3; 2,480 km^3/year for agriculture), and that non-renewable water extraction from ground water is 200 km^3/year, yielding only 5.6% of total world consumption coming from non-renewable ground water (or 8% for agriculture assuming all non-renewable ground water extraction is used for agriculture). It should be noted that much of the non-renewable ground water extraction is not from "fossil water", but simply from ground water which is being exploited faster than in can be replenished due to the sheer scale of exploitation, as is occurring in India. As can be seen from the graph below (fig 3 from the previously linked paper), ground water recharge is more than capable of replenishing more than a years withdrawal in a year in northern India, but on average recharge is less than withdrawal so the total groundwater is reduced, in this case by 109 km^3 over the period of study (or 17.7 km^3/year): It follows that the point you were trying to make with your cherry picked example is false. With brings us back to the cherry pick. So, please, if you learn nothing else, learn this: 1) When presenting data, always present the data which is most representative of the sample from which you drew the data, of the sample which is worst for the point you wish to make (if you do not present all the data); 2) If for some reason you cannot follow rule one, always explain that the data you present is not representative, and is more favourable for your case than the other data, and state very clearly why you never-the-less regard it as important to present that sample rather than some other sample form the data (or all of the data). If you do not follow rules (1) and (2) you are cherry picking. End of story. There are no subtleties about this. Applying these rules to what you did, it is clear that your chosen sample was neither representative (it was the most extreme case), nor the worst for your case. It is equally clear that you did not explain that when you presented it. Ergo, you cherry picked. Sometimes we all cherry pick by accident. I expected you to respond to my challenge by pointing out that you had been lazy, and had just picked the first entry on the table. Had you said that, and apologized for the unintentional deception, that would have been the end of the matter. But you have dug your heals in either because you are so intent on deception you do not recognize how transparent you have been, or because you are so foolish that you genuinely do not know what cherry picking is. In either case it makes no difference for the reader, your word, and your data is not to be trusted because you will not, or are incapable of handling it with integrity. So learn, apologize and move on. Or dig your heals in further and show you have no place in discussions that value rationality. Your choice!
  39. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    Actually, 1934 is no longer the hottest year in the US anyway - it has been overtaken by 1998 and 2006. The relevant page on Skeptical Science (here) possibly needs updating, but the information is shown via a comment there from NewYorkJ.
  40. Peter Hadfield on Himalayan glacier melt
    Doug @ 28 Humanity is doomed. :( Can we have a new planet with intelligent life on it please? This one is broken.
  41. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    elsa at 21:15 PM on 14 February, 2012 You have to compare apples to apples. Figure 2 is a graph showing global temps where "statistical methods have been used to 'take out' the effects of volcanic eruptions, Pacific Ocean cycles and the Sun", as the subtitle says. Not a raw global mean temp graph like the escalator. And 1934 was the hottest year on record in the US. The graph in Figure SPM.4 you mention refers to the entire North America.
  42. 2000 Years of Climate Reconstructed from Pollen
    Robert Way @17, as I desire to be accurate, thank you for mentioning Kobashi et al, which I did not know (or had forgotten) about. Here is the image updated to include Kobashi et al's measured temperatures for central Greenland. It shows the 2001-2010 average (yellow line), but also the 2010 temperature (yellow dot indicated by the red arrow) for comparison: Click on the image for a clearer view. Revisiting my comments, 1) The revised figure shows GISP2 temperatures similar to current 9000 years ago, occasionally going as much as 0.5 degrees higher. No past temperature is as high as the 2010 temperature, but as the ice cores only show decadal resolution, that is not significant. 2) Despite the inaccuracy of Renowdon's estimate, at no time in the last 12 thousand years has central Greenland temperatures been 3 degrees C above the current decadal average. Alley et al (the data shown) do not show temperatures more than 1 degree C higher than present, while Kobashi et al's higher resolution reconstruction shows temperatures as much as 1.5 degrees C above present for very brief periods. 3) I cannot for the life of my figure out why Kobashi might take exception to my last comment in my previous post, which is a simple statement of fact.
  43. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    I like this picture illustrating the solar influence. They got the "Sun big, me small" argument quite litterally... And they even have the nerve to call climate science weak!
  44. Captain Pithart at 21:17 PM on 14 February 2012
    Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    btw, i have a website for collaborative debunking of the book online: http://de.kaltesonne.wikia.com/wiki/KalteSonneCheck all that is needed now are German-speaking experts that own the book and have free time at hand ;) Vahrenholt indeed was quite an important environmentalist, writing the influential "Seveso ist überall" (Seveso is everywhere) in 1978, which was quite good i hear. my best guess is that he's been dining with the wrong people for too long, buying into the "they want to impose on our lifestyles" meme. i think he's honest, but that does not make him less wrong or dangerous. the interesting thing is that while he's employed at RWE, one of the biggest coal polluters of Europe, he's working at the renewable energy section. nevertheless he pleads against the "demonisation" of coal. lie down with dogs, get up with fleas. p.
  45. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    Readers may remember that in another recent section of this website there were extracts from articles in the Wall Street Journal. Having dared to ask the question of how the two sets of scientists views could be reconciled I was pointed to a website that gave a searcheable database of temperature. When I looked for this I could find little or no evidence of warming for the period 2001 to 2011 and it seems to have been generally if grudgingly accepted by posters to the blog that this was the case, at least as far as surface temperatures were concerned. Elsewhere this site has reprduced a graph that it call the escalator which also describes a flat temperature period from 2002 to 2010. Interestingly the final graph of this particular section shows no such pause in the increasing temperature. This section also has a graph of temperatures in North America which, needless to say, has the most recent years as the highest. Yet elsewhere on this site it is conceded that the 1930s had the hottest years there. What explains these inconsistencies?
    Moderator Response: [Sph] The text around the final graph clearly explains the answers to your questions about it, and also directs you in two places to the post on Foster and Rahmstorf (2011) where that figure (and others) first appeared.
  46. Captain Pithart at 21:06 PM on 14 February 2012
    Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    »We should note that while we are flattered that Die Zeit has described Skeptical Science as "an internet platform close to the IPCC" in their figure caption, we are in no way affiliated with the IPCC.« the caption is not from Die Zeit, but from the KalteSonne website, probably from Lüning. They label everybody that does not subscribe to their fringe views as "IPCC", trying to discredit it this way.
  47. New research from last week 6/2012
    Invaluable, as usual. Thanks!
  48. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    The ever-sensible Germans have taken to calling Fritz Vahrenholt 'feuer-fritz'. If I have it right, that's the nickname for a fireman or stoker: one who shovels coal. Whatever he's shoveling, it sure isn't science.
  49. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    Delingpole called him Germany's George Monbiot*! And 'a well-known green activist'. I suppose we must allow that, even with the delightful James' claiming it, there is still an outside possiblity that there might be some truth in it? Any of our Deutsche freunde know more of Vahrenholt's pedigree? *given the opinions he's expressed of Monbiot this is rather an odd compliment...
  50. Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
    citizenschallenge: thinking people take this sort of crazy-talk seriously because most of them really have no idea what this climate change thing is all about. The few who pay more than cursory attention rarely ever look up & read the actual scientific reports (such as the IPCC's AR4). As is common in so many fields, they rely on media commentators to tell them what they should think about an issue. Sadly, in this case, the vast majority of those commentators are misrepresenting the science (whether deliberately, by omission, or by seeking a false 'balance', the outcome is the same).

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