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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 67301 to 67350:

  1. Models are unreliable
    @Tom Curtis #446: You have just written a blog post. Go for it!
  2. Myth of the Mini Ice Age
    Cornelius Breakbasket @7, I have read a bit of their paper, and commented in more appropriate thread. Short answer is that the paper as a whole is pseudo-scientific nonsense.
  3. Models are unreliable
    I have now looked briefly at Kramm and Delugi. One thing I noted is that large sections of the introductory material is more diatribe than discussion. More troubling to me, however, where sections like the following:
    "The notion “global climate”, however, is a contradiction in terms. According to Monin and Shishkov, Schönwiese and Gerlich, the term “climate” is based on the Greek word “klima” which means inclination. It was coined by the Greek astronomer Hipparchus of Nicaea (190-120 BC) who divided the then known inhabited world into five latitudinal zones—two polar, two temperate and one tropical—according to the inclination of the incident sunbeams, in other words, the Sun’s elevation above the horizon. Alexander von Humboldt in his five-volume “Kosmos” (1845-1862) added to this “inclination” the effects of the underlying surface of ocean and land on the atmosphere."
    Of course, it is obvious that in modern usage that climate does not mean "inclination" as in the angle of the sun. In fact, it currently means, as defined by the IPCC and WMO:
    "Climate Climate in a narrow sense is usually defined as the average weather, or more rigorously, as the statistical description in terms of the mean and variability of relevant quantities over a period of time ranging from months to thousands or millions of years. The classical period for averaging these variables is 30 years, as defined by the World Meteorological Organization. The relevant quantities are most often surface variables such as temperature, precipitation and wind. Climate in a wider sense is the state, including a statistical description, of the climate system. In various chapters in this report different averaging periods, such as a period of 20 years, are also used."
    Now, patently it is possible to determine the mean and variability of temperature, precipitation, wind speed, frequency and types of extreme events for the Earth's surface just as it is possible to do so for some subpart of the Earth's surface, say Texas. It follows that the only way “global climate” can be "a contradiction in terms" is if, for example, the "the climate of Texas" is a contradiction in terms, or indeed, if "the climate of Houston" is a contradiction in terms. As it happens, the Ancient Greek word "οἰκονομία" from which we derive the term "economics" means "household management". Kramm and Dlugi's argument that global climate is a contradiction in terms is as coherent as an argument that there is no such thing as the world economy because the world is not a household, and economics means household management. Such nonsense verbal arguments are a clear sign of pseudoscience, and their prominent presence and Kramm and Delugi shows that it is ideology, not science that drives their work. However, that is not the reason I am discussing their work on this thread (which would be off topic). Rather it is because of their critique of the WMO definition of the greenhouse effect. In that critique they correctly develop a zero dimensional model of the global energy balance. They then proceed to criticize it because: 1) Surface storage of energy is not considered in the zero dimensional model; 2) The zero dimensional model assumes the entire Earth's surface has the same temperature; 3) The albedo used in the equation includes contributions to the Earth's total albedo from the atmosphere, and not just those from the surface only (I kid you not); 4) Comparing Te, the predicted temperature required to maintain equilibrium temperature with Tns is inappropriate because Te is the theoretically predicted temperature and Tns is the actually observed temperature. (Again, I kid you not!) 5) The observed mean surface temperature of the Moon is 31 degrees Kelvin lower than that predicted for the moon using the Zero dimensional model. I note that all five objections are true. Some are bizarre stated as objections, or course. For instance, it is always true in any prediction that the prediction is not the measurement. To conclude from that, as Kramm and Dlugi do in their fourth objection is breath taking, to say the least. It shows a gall not found even in creationists. One objection, the fifth, does need a small comment. It is well known that surfaces with variable temperatures will radiate away more energy than similar surfaces with even temperatures given that they have the same mean temperature. This is so well known that planetary scientists never use the zero dimensional model used by Kramm and Dlugi for planetary bodies known to have very large heat differences at their surface (such as the moon). Further, because of this it is also known that the estimate of the greenhouse effect obtained by zero-dimensional models are an underestimate of the full strength of the greenhouse effect, although still a good first approximation. And that is the point, really. Zero dimensional models are only intended to provide a first approximation. They make counter factual but convenient assumptions for simplicity knowing that they are not determining the exact effect. In this regard they are like other physics models that ignore friction, or wind resistance, or (as famously done by Newton) the extended nature of planetary bodies. Of course, climate scientists do not rest on first approximations and zero dimensional models. Instead they develop more complex models which eliminate the simplifying assumptions used in zero dimensional models. Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Global Circulation models (AOGCM) include, for example, (1) heat storage and transport by atmosphere and ocean; (2) variable surface temperatures; and (3)surface only albedo at the surface, with atmospheric contributions to albedo included in the modeled atmosphere. In other words, not one of Kramm and Dlugi's objections (that can be taken at all seriously) is an objection to AOGCMs. That being the case, Kramm and Delugi's argument logically devolves to this: The predictions of AOGCMs are necessarily wrong because zero dimensional models are only first approximations. Nothing more need be said to refute them, and having stated their argument, nothing could ever make me take them seriously again.
  4. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    I know it's a rather an indirect indication of heat build-up compared to the graphs in the article above, but to a layman like me this NOAA graph is much more compelling and -- if I was a US citizen living in the Southern States -- very frightening. [Note to moderator: please insert the graph if you think it's worth it.]
    Response:

    [DB] Graph inserted:

    Click to enlarge

  5. Myth of the Mini Ice Age
    skept.fr @6, around 7,500 years ago, atmospheric CO2 levels hit a low point for the period since the last major glaciation. By best estimates, CO2 levels have increased since then in large part due to human agricultural activities, particularly wet land farming (rice), herding (cattle) and general deforestation. The total addition of CO2 to the atmosphere by these means has amounted to about 200 Giga-tonnes of Carbon, or 734 billion tonnes of CO2. That represents an atmospheric concentration of CO2 of approx 94 ppmv. In other words, without human activity, there is a significant probability that in 1750 CO2 concentrations could have been as low as 190 ppmv. Of course, reduced atmospheric concentrations would have resulted in net out gassing rather than absorption of CO2 by the ocean, so the CO2 level absent a human presence in 1750 may have been as high as 230-40 ppmv. (Information derived from Indermühle et al 1999.) The crucial point here is that although Berger and Loutre 2002 found no example of a new glacial (ice age) under known orbital forcings with a CO2 concentration equal to preindustrial levels, with a CO2 concentration of 210 ppmv they found renewed glaciation. That is an intriguing number, for while CO2 levels may have stayed above that level in the absence of man, it is by no means certain that they would have. Indeed, given that CO2 levels would fall with falling sea surface temperatures, it is probably more likely than not that, absent the presence of man the Earth would now be entering its next glacial stage. It should be noted that Berger and Loutre did not set out to, and do not claim to refute this possibility. Rather, they set out to refute belief among some paleoclimatologists in 1972 that "a slide into the next glacial seemed imminent", ie, that given 1970's CO2 concentrations a new ice age was imminent but for industrial emissions.
  6. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    @23 mreisner, a 2011 paper published in Nature looked at human influence on precipitation extremes in North America: Human contribution to more-intense precipitation extremes Seung-Ki Min, Xuebin Zhang, Francis W. Zwiers & Gabriele C. Hegerl
  7. Cornelius Breadbasket at 23:01 PM on 4 January 2012
    Myth of the Mini Ice Age
    Tom Curtis @5 Thank you.
  8. Myth of the Mini Ice Age
    Nice video. There is sometimes a related "myth", that GHGs prevent us from entering to the next glacial period, that alternates (normally) with interglacial periods during the Quaternary, due to solar orbital forcing also called Milankovic cycles. But in fact, Berger et Loutre 2002 calculated that the present interglacial should last for 50.000 yrs, because of solar parameters. So, no need to worry an ice age if GHGs' emissions are cut (for a free paper of the same authors on the same theme, Loutre et Berger 2000)
  9. Myth of the Mini Ice Age
    Cornelius Breadbasket @4, Science of Doom has posted the first part of a multi-part examination of Kramm and Dlugi 2011. I may comment later and in a more appropriate thread once I have read the paper.
  10. Cornelius Breadbasket at 22:30 PM on 4 January 2012
    Myth of the Mini Ice Age
    Thank you! Sinclair is excellent - as is his blog. I'm sorry if this is a little off-topic but I don't have any other way of communicating with Skeptical Science. I have been 'made aware' of this a paper which looks extremely suspicious to me and I wondered what your take on it is. Natural Science, Vol.3 No.12, December 2011 Scrutinizing the atmospheric greenhouse effect and its climatic impact by Gerhard Kramm, Ralph Dlugi It seems to conclude that "energy-flux budgets for the Earth-atmosphere system do not provide tangible evidence that the atmospheric greenhouse effect does exist" - which strikes me as nonsense. Any more enlightened opinions than my own would be very welcome.
  11. actually thoughtful at 16:58 PM on 4 January 2012
    Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    A truly frightening perspective. If you wonder how the deniers will deny, it will look like this: "There isn't one shred of evidence that ties the increased heat to CO2 emissions. It is more likely ... (probably the Cosmic Ray thingy - that seems popular these days).
  12. Myth of the Mini Ice Age
    Thanks! Excellent video.
  13. Science and Distortion - Stephen Schneider
    barry @39, indeed, not ideologues at all. Our purpose is to enable people to access the evidence as determined by the consensus of climate scientists based on the overwhelming body of evidence, rather than the message from fossil fuel funded think tanks based on cherry picked data which gets 50% of the time in mainstream media, and 100% in Fox News. As Stephen Schneider indicates, when 97% of relevant scientists agree on something, and less than 1% of relevant scientists plus a few non-qualified people only in the debate for ideological reasons and accorded a position of expertise they demonstrably do not warrant get the same amount of the time on mainstream media to get their idea out as to the 97%, with no reporting of the relevant qualifications credibility of the two position, that "...is not balance, it is utter distortion!" (3:40 fwd). What we are trying to do here is to restore the balance by reporting the science.
  14. Science and Distortion - Stephen Schneider
    climatehawk1 @38, you are quite right about some ordinary people and mention of 4 Watts. What should be recognized is that it is 4 Watts per square meter over the approximately 510 trillion square meters of the Earth's surface, or 2040 trillion Watts. That represents more than 150 times the total human primary production of energy in 2008 (EIA figures), including renewable energy. Primary production includes energy lost as waste heat as well as that actively used. That should place the ordinary persons 100 Watt bulb into perspective.
  15. Science and Distortion - Stephen Schneider
    Interesting to be discussing climate change PR on a website nominally dedicated to an objective explanation of the science. It seems just a tad off-key - not that there should be a bar on such discussion, but a first time visitor reading this thread would likely get the impression that this is an advocacy site. Which it is, but almost always only by implication. The committed contrarian might read this thread as an unwitting expose on the motivations of the regulars, commenters and contributors alike. "See, they're ideologues" (Message for contrarians - they're not ideologues)
  16. Science and Distortion - Stephen Schneider
    tmac57 - #35 - You're right, Climate Denial Crock does mention the myth, at least sometimes. An excellent example is the "Myth of the Mini Ice Age," just posted today. Compare it with the Schneider video, and the difference is quite striking--it mentions the myth once or twice, but it cuts off the non-scientist gentleman from the fossil-fuel-funded Competitive Enterprise Institute after a single sentence and then goes into straight debunking. The ratio of debunking to myth is far higher. Rob Honeycutt - #36 - You know, you should just show it to a couple of focus groups and see what they tell you. I think you will be amazed at how little average folks know and how easily they are confused. Only when the video gets about 2/3 of the way through and shows the cigarette spokesman (or reporter, whichever it was) does it really become clear what is being shown. EOttawa - #37 - I agree, excellent motivator for scientists who know the score. For ordinary people as an intro? Sorry, won't work. I can just see one saying, "What, 4 watts? That's tiny! I have a bunch of 100-watt light bulbs in my own house! ... " No disrespect to Dr. Schneider intended here--I agree he was a giant in the field. But setting that aside, this is simply not a suitable or effective tool for communicating climate science to a general audience.
  17. CO2 is plant food
    "Inputs to Photosynthesis" The first stage involves the photolysis of water by sunlight (this is the only place where oxygen is released to the atmosphere). This diagram: http://www3.sympatico.ca/n.rieck/images/photosynthesis-chloroplast.jpg ...is proof that sunlight (input 1) and water (input 2) are more important than CO2 (input 3) but each ingredient is considered a limiting factor to maximum photosynthetic productivity. "Push vs Pull" Just as eating (push) a protein supplement will not make you muscular unless you exercise (pull) which creates a demand for protein. So simply adding more CO2 (push) will not make photosynthesis run at a higher rate, unless CO2 was the only limiting factor. On top of that, CO2 has risen 24% since I've been alive (395/315) so we should have seen an explosion of plant life as compensation for the additional CO2 but we have not. "Drop in Photosynthesis due to Temperature" There is considerable published evidence showing that C3 photosynthesis production drops by 10% for every "F" degree over 76. Why? The stoma on the underside of leaves is the place where "CO2 enters" and "H20 can escape". At 86F most C3 plants have closed their stomas 100% to stop water loss (but this also stops photosynthesis). C4 and CAM plants have adaptations to deal with higher temperatures but the adaptations come at a cost (some of the solar energy powers the additional molecular machinery). Pineapple is one example of a CAM plant (hint: CO2 is pulled in at night). BTW, 85% of all plants are C3
  18. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    #29 Sphaerica. It should scare people, after all, this paper documents observations of increasing extremes, and is not a prediction of the future. Perhaps JamesWilson does not believe that the 2003 European heatwave happened, or the 2010 heatwave, or the 2011 southern US heatwave? After all, it's in a Hansen paper. It couldn't actually have happened, could it? #28: Jose_X - looks like you more-or-less answered your own question. If you want to analyse the variability within the two different datasets, then you'd use a baseline calculated from within those datasets, but that would tell you nothing of how the datasets' absolute values changed from one to another. For documenting how different one datset is from another, the Hansen approach is perfectly valid. We can see that 2010 and 2011 have a lot more warm extremes across the globe compared to individual years before 1980, and that this trend is increasing.
  19. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    25, JamesWilson, The majority of your comment is in clear violation of the comments policy, and should be deleted. That said... a) What paragraph are you talking about? I see nothing remotely like an attack. You quoted the word "opponents" but it does not occur in the paper. Please support or withdraw your assertion. b) "...there is no equations or real description of how to reproduce his numeric model." There rarely is. Anyone competent should do so on their own, not by replicating Hansen's methods exactly but by approaching the problem themselves. That's how science is normally done. Your complaint is invalid, and uneducated. The rest of your comment is a tiresome rant of its own, and a clear violation of the comments policy. It represents your personal opinion, and is at odds with the clear and inarguable data presented by the paper. Do you have anything to say about the content, rather than your perception and opinion of the way it is phrased, or an otherwise unsupported dismissal of the results? Doesn't it scare you just a little?
  20. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    I am confused. If the sigmas are calculated based on one set of values (50-80) and then the temperatures go up on average (global warming). Then the 03-11 values are very likely to be skewed up and at a greater sigma value. The paper mentioned something about removing the linear trend in one scenario. Even with that removal, the values are a little more likely to be extreme. Now, perhaps the extremes have become worse, but why would you use the sigma of one set of points to judge a different set? I am not a statistician, but let me give an extreme example to show what I mean. If you calculate sigma off a set of values like 9, 11, 12, 13, 13, and 13, you get a small value near 1. If you then test that sigma on a new set of numbers, for example, a set that is proportionally equivalent to the first: 90, 110, 120, 130, 130, and 130, then every data point in this second set will generally be off by many of the sigmas calculated on the first set. .... On the other hand, if humans are adapted to a sigma of 1 and you jump to a sigma of 10, while the 10 might be absolutely sane and logical, the organisms that were adapted to sigma of 1 would likely be in trouble. .. OK, I am not so confused any longer. [Thankfully, these numbers I just used for the demonstration were much much more extreme than what we are experiencing in temp readings worldwide.]
  21. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    James, The data for the analysis are freely available at GISS. I have described the analysis in sufficient detail to reproduce Hansen's data. Hansen gives more detail than I have included. If you do not understand how to calculate a standard deviation you should hold back on your comments, my students in High School are required to learn standard deviations. This paper has been on the web for two months. Can you point to a serious criticism of it?
  22. Philippe Chantreau at 10:11 AM on 4 January 2012
    Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    What are you talking about James Wilson? The paper simply looks at temp anomalies. All the data are readily downloadable from GISTEMP. Get the data, calculate the averages, subtract the baseline averages from them and you get the anomalies. That's what the numerical model is. The time periods considered are clearly indicated in the paper. I expect the gridding is the usual GISTEMP 200 km boxes (is it 200? I forget). Not that a different gridding would make much difference anyway. For the next part, you need to know what standard deviation is and have some basic knowledge of stats. If you don't, acquire it before you try to reproduce the results, as you would have no business doing so without the knowledge base. Once you know how to do it, then you can calculate your own standard deviation, a much fruitful endeavior than reusing someone else's equations, which would not constitute reproduction of results and would not validate anything. All the following graphs are based on deviations as compared to the standard deviation. Once you have the necessary numbers, just plot them on a graph. All this can be done with the info that is in the paper and the GISTEMP data. Have at it. Furthermore, this paper is not yet formalized for publication, this caveat is clearly stated on top of the thread. Your insinuations that it will pass peer-review out of sympathy in its current form are unwarranted.
  23. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    This reads like a religious paper not a scientific paper. Let me explain: First of all there is no equations or real description of how to reproduce his numeric model. We are expected to have faith that his numeric methods are valid. Then half way through we get an attack on his "opponents". Forget what the attack is: What does this paragraph have to do with the Science discussed?!? The writer has such a political agenda he can't even get through a 4 page paper without a purely political criticism from someone completely unrelated to the subject at hand... I predict it will travel the path of most faith based documents. It will pass the peer review process by someone sympathetic. Be flogged at press releases and then be ripped apart within 18 months as what it is. Unscientific. It doesn't mean anything about Global Warming if this gets ripped apart. It should be labelled for what it is: Political commentary or Religion. Take your pick.
    Response:

    [DB]  Your comment contains several inflammatory bits of ideological rhetoric, as well as insinuations of academic fraud and/or dishonesty.  All of which are violations of the Comments Policy.  Please better conform to said policy, as future, similar, comments will be simply deleted.

  24. Myth of the Mini Ice Age
    @Rob Honeycutt: Suggest that you embed a link to Sinclair's blog in the first sentence
    Response: [JC} Added, thanks for the suggestion.
  25. It hasn't warmed since 1998
    mace#143: "why the global mean temperature increase appears to have stalled." It hasn't stalled. See the Foster and Rahmstorf thread. "The resultant adjusted data show clearly, both visually and when subjected to statistical analysis, that the rate of global warming due to other factors (most likely these are exclusively anthropogenic) has been remarkably steady during the 32 years from 1979 through 2010. There is no indication of any slowdown or acceleration of global warming, beyond the variability induced by these known natural factors." It would be helpful if, as scaddenp suggests, you provided the source of these assertions: '___ says temperature increase appears to have stalled.'
  26. Temporarily Frozen Planet, Permanently Frozen Objectivity
    Attenborough hits back at claims made by former Chancellor Nigel Lawson that the BBC’s natural history series, Frozen Planet, lacked objectivity. Source: “David Attenborough: Frozen Planet was not alarmist about climate change”, The Guardian (UK), Jan 3, 2012 To access this informative article, click here.
  27. It hasn't warmed since 1998
    In one breath, we have "why the global mean temperature increase appears to have stalled" - well Foster & Rahmstorf 2011 deal to that. Next breath we have a UK only data used to support the assertion? Classic cherry picking. This sounds like repeating a meme from a denialist site. Care to tell us which one?
  28. Tree-rings diverge from temperature after 1960
    Also note that public science is interested in finding out what we don't already know. You can't get funding "to prove AGW" - you can only get funding to further understand the climate system. Science follows whereever the data leads you. Not so for "industry science". FF companies have the resources to run climate models (I work in the industry) but what would be the point? Disinformation is much cheaper. Do you think Fred Singer is going to publish data in support of AGW if that is where his "research" took him?
  29. SkS Weekly Digest #31
    Time to nominate for the Bloggies 2012 http://2012.bloggi.es/
  30. Myth of the Mini Ice Age
    Myths of Mini Age even if they persist for now, will completely disappear within a few years. So, report facts, ignore myths!! Thanks once again to Peter.
  31. Tree-rings diverge from temperature after 1960
    The "billions" almost all go into satellites. Climate science remuneration (or for that matter any public funded scientist) is not closely tied to their level of funding. You can't spend research funds on fancy living. Not so with misinformation money.
  32. Philippe Chantreau at 06:20 AM on 4 January 2012
    Tree-rings diverge from temperature after 1960
    DSL, No doubt he woud make a great modern Tartuffe...
  33. Hyperactive Hydrologist at 06:04 AM on 4 January 2012
    Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    mreisner, That is significantly more difficult to do due to the complex nature of rainfall and the sparse data coverage of much of the globe. Current statistical technique for analysing trends or change points in the data are, to put it mildly, not very good.
  34. SkS Weekly Digest #31
    Attenborough hits back at claims made by former Chancellor Nigel Lawson that the BBC’s natural history series, Frozen Planet, lacked objectivity. Source: “David Attenborough: Frozen Planet was not alarmist about climate change”, The Guardian (UK), Jan 3, 2012 To access this informative article, click here.
  35. Tree-rings diverge from temperature after 1960
    I kind of had this discussion with a someone on FB just after climetEmailTheft1.0 regarding grants at CRU... I looked at some leaked spreadsheet and was astonished at the low level of funding people where counting as "grand larceny"... especially when you consider that in the UK Universities charge grants <40% overheads, stipends include tax, NI, pensions etc. I've seen better grant capture in many other disciplines - with nothing going into the pockets of academics. Running a unit in a university is both extremely expensive (compared to grant levels available) and highly audited. The only way an academic can end up with some cash is through consultancy (you could easily pay 80% or 100% overheads on that also, before income tax).
  36. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    Anyone aware of a similar global analysis of "extreme precipitation events?"
  37. A thoughtful conservative perspective on climate
    67, Eric, Agreed. I am disappointed with how quiet and complacent the Democrats have been on climate change, although the current economic fears, exacerbated by the way the Republicans trumpet and prey on those fears, are a big reason. I'm not sure the Dems wouldn't have done more if they had more wiggle room, or that they won't do more during the next administration, when (a) climate change is more obvious and (b) either Obama is in office but no longer facing re-election, or a Republican is in office and the Dems can at least make it into an important issue and force a Republican president or House (or Senate?) to actively and publicly halt legislation. But the fact is that the only way this will really get done is if both parties cooperate. Unfortunately, the current Republican congressmen and women appear to be beholden to business and fossil fuel interests, so it will take something of a cosmic earthquake to shake them into taking the issue seriously.
  38. Tree-rings diverge from temperature after 1960
    Dawson, you're also ignoring how the money is used. Scientists use money to do science. Organizations such as The Heartland Institute use money to change public opinion and to do so without supporting evidence. That's all they do. Any science these organizations support directly (through funding or publication opportunities) is not meat-(or tofu)-and-potatoes, everyday science; it is scientific or, rather, statistical work attempting to find a rhetorically exploitable weakness in the prevailing theory. If the opposition to the theory of AGW provided an alternative theory that covers the evidence and physics even half as well as AGW, this would be an interesting conversation. There is no such alternative theory, yet some people continue to insist there must be--there must be. What do you call people who believe in a "how things work" that relies on an absent physical mechanism(s) and ignores a range of evidence? Phillipe: Molière would salivate over the deeply hypocritical figure of Wegman and his ripe-for-satire situation.
  39. North American mammal evolution tracks with climate change
    @James Wilson #4 Funny, isn't it? Impact by asteroid could be considered by some to be 'alarmist' talk propagated by 'chicken littles'. Yet no one denies their existence or decries the amount that NASA spends every year to track them. Indeed if NASA ever announced the necessity to spend a large sum -- oh, I don't know, 20bn dollars? -- to instigate a programme to intercept and divert or destroy one with, say, a 1% risk of a collision with Earth, would anyone shout, "it's a scam to take taxpayer's money!"? More.
  40. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    Regarding the Rick Perry reference, I've seen this perceived as an attack on some website or another, and in that way it was distracting. For my own part, like Muoncounter, I perceived it as merely an observation. Atcook27, we are coming to the same conclusion. Bernard J, I have found lots of hits on Hadley cell expansion from Google Scholar, and the Hadley cells define where the jet stream and prevailing winds occur. The impression I've gotten is that we can expect a 2-4 degree of latitude expansion per degree of warming. So, yes, what you are saying is within the realm of possibility.
  41. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    Given that governor Perry is, tragically, a candidate for the GOP presidential nomination it certainly seems wisest to leave him out of the paper rather than to invite charges of science intruding on the political sphere... though we actually have a constitutional edict that religion not do so which Perry and many others now ignore with impunity. Hansen's findings are extremely powerful and suggest that the trend we have been seeing in new record high temperatures is only the beginning. Based on the 'extremely hot' curves in the graphs above it seems likely that the vast majority of 'highest daily temperature' records for all parts of the globe will be broken within the next 20 years. The increase in 'hot' days has gone largely without notice, but the 'very hot' and 'extremely hot' events have already been attracting attention and if they continue on the slopes shown that is only going to increase.
  42. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    All I can say are two things 1) Oh dear - bad (though not surprising) news. "Extremely Hot (+3σ) occurred over 13%" but "expected only 0.13%". If there was "nothing" going on and it was all "natural variation" what are the chances of such an occurence? Of course if it was just a single year (2010) such an "outlying" event" would be possible (albeit improbable) - but one must also look at the trend since 1980. It's like a heavily loaded dice. Although exactly what you would expect when you see a "normal" distribution of an output/response parameter subjected to a relentless external increase on one of its input driving parameters :( 2) How will the pseudo-skeptics spin this one away?? No doubt they will try and perform their usual feats of logical contortion.
  43. Dikran Marsupial at 21:51 PM on 3 January 2012
    It hasn't warmed since 1998
    mace It is pointless to look at the temperatures in one tiny country for one season for evidence ablut global temperature changes. The UK is pretty much the worst place you could choose to look as U.K. temperatures are buffered by the atlantic ocean (as most of our weather comes from the west). If you look at the IPCCs projections for regional temperature change, you will find that the UK is a place where climate change is expected to be rather modest. 30 years is about enough time to blot out most of the natural variability in global temperatures. Longer will be needed for regional and subregional temperatures as the signal to noise ratio is smaller the smaller the region you consider (because the spatial averaging reduces variability just as temporal averaging does). You will always be able to cherry pick some data that seems to suggest a lack of warming, but it is just that, a cherry pick. If you really want to understand the climate of the British Isles, I suggest you read this book on the topic.
  44. Eric (skeptic) at 21:30 PM on 3 January 2012
    A thoughtful conservative perspective on climate
    "Joining Lincoln in pushing for putting off climate legislation until next year are Senators Ben Nelson, D-Neb, Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and Kent Conrad, D-N.D."
    (http://farmfutures.com/story.aspx/pushing-climate-change-to-next-year-proposed-by-senators-0-30761) It's true that Republicans have pulled ahead of Democrats in science denial and also true that the mechanics of the Senate allow anyone from any party to stop legislation, but I would please ask people not to believe that one party rule will result in effective legislation because it didn't and IMO, it won't. A bipartisan approach is likely to be more effective because it can potentially create a consensus on energy security, industrial policy (stop offshoring CO2 emissions), and similar considerations.
  45. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    I got an extremely prompt reply from Prof. Hansen. He is working on a revised version without the political commentary.
  46. It hasn't warmed since 1998
    Mace - You are probably correct in that a better explanation exists. It is however somewhat counter-intuitive for most. The oceans are by far the largest reservoir of heat on the planet. They cover over 70% of the Earth's surface and over 90% of global warming is going into the oceans. If we consider the ocean depths down to 2000 metres, then global warming has not slowed down at all, just global surface temperatures. It's just that all that heat is building up below the surface layers of the ocean. Basically what the recent Foster & Rahmstorf paper found is that when you eliminate the natural variability, the man-made global warming signal emerges. We have some posts coming up that put this all into perspective.
  47. It hasn't warmed since 1998
    I do feel there needs to be a better explanation of why the global mean temperature increase appears to have stalled. If I look at the UK metoffice statistics going back over 100 years now, the graph shows that the winter mean temperature has barely changed over this entire period in the UK. Granted, The other 3 seasons of the year show a marked increase since 1978, but if CO2 is responsible for global warming and climate noise disappears after 30 years, why are UK winters immune to the greenhouse effect?
  48. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    Paul Magnus @ 15 - The Western Australian heat record was very nearly broken in December with 49°C (120F). Don't think I could handle that kind of searing heat. Glad I live in a tiny country at high(ish) latitude surrounded by a vast ocean (NZ).
  49. Quantifying Extreme Heat Events
    Is there any quantification of sigma value in Hansen's paper? I understand, Hansen calculated sigmas locally for each station, as local whether patterns differ at each location. But some average or weighed average value would be interesting to have. For example, how about comparing those Gaussian shifts on figure 3 to the average AGW signal measured by Foster and Rahmstorf and reported here... Hansen average mean shift and Foster and Rahmstorf AGW signal should be pretty much the same if both papers started from the same/similar data and strengthen both conclusions.
  50. Philippe Chantreau at 17:24 PM on 3 January 2012
    Tree-rings diverge from temperature after 1960
    Dawsonjg, your challenge to me is misplaced. You're the one who claimed "billions." Show me the references. Sources, serious ones. Break it down to how much that represents per researcher, per paper, then we can talk. The links I provided contains itself numerous links. Considering that M&M have managed to cough up a couple of papers of little interest over several years, whatever money they got, from whatever source can already be labeled as a waste anyway. McIntyre does not deserve anything remotely comparable to the attention he gets. I'm also waiting for your comment on the computer code from M&M that sorts out upward hockey sticks on top of the pile and saves them as representative samples. How about Wegman copy and paste method? What shall we call that?

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