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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 71801 to 71850:

  1. Freedom of Information (FOI) requests were ignored
    The Climate Research Unit finally released some of the climate data which had been requested under FOI. They claimed that they could not release the data under the FOI, because the countries supplying the data would not allow it, yet they did release most of the data WITHOUT getting that permission, except for the data from Poland? http://blogs.nature.com/news/2011/07/at_long_last_cru_releases_clim.html Found the comments interesting Chris Shaker
  2. Ice age predicted in the 70s
    Found a much more recent paper, which is talking about a return to ice age conditions in the near future From the summary, published in 2000: "The solar-output model allows speculation on global climatic variations in the next 10,000 years. Extrapolation of the solar-output model shows a return to little-ice-age conditions by A.D. 2400–2900 followed by a rapid return to altithermal conditions during the middle of the third millennium A.D. This altithermal period may be similar to the Holocene Maximum that began nearly 3,800 years ago. The solar output model suggests that, approximately 20,000 years after it began, the current interglacial period may come to an end and another glacial period may begin." http://www.pnas.org/content/97/23/12433.full Chris Shaker
  3. Climate sensitivity is low
    cjshaker I'm a bit surprised to see this old and debunked Shaviv paper pop up again. Honestly, I do not find it that much interesting.
  4. The sun is getting hotter
    A believer in CO2 was telling me that the sun's output is now 30% higher than it was when life evolved on the earth. Is that true? Thank you, Chris Shaker
  5. Should The Earth Be Cooling?
    cjshaker there are still a lot of things to work out before the so called early human impact can be reliably assessed. It is still at the stage of hypothesis, will see. As for Columbus, let me be pedantic. In the link you provide they say "may have helped augment Europe’s so-called Little Ice Age" and not "was responsible for the cooling" as you say.
  6. Corals are resilient to bleaching
    J.E.N. Veron, formerly at the Australian Institute of Marine Science, says that the world's reefs face possible catastrophic losses again, due to acidification. He claims that some of the previous coral extinction events were most likely caused by ocean acidification. He also says "Corals have an intimate symbiotic relationship with single-celled algae, zooxanthellae, which live in their cells and provide the photosynthetic fuel for them to grow and reefs to form. The research showed that this Ecosystems can recover from all sorts of abuse, and coral reefs are no exception. relationship can be surprisingly fragile if corals are exposed to high light conditions at the same time as above-normal water temperatures, because the algae produce toxic levels of oxygen, and excessive levels of oxygen are toxic to most animal life. Under these conditions, corals must expel the zooxanthellae, bleach, and probably die or succumb to the toxin and definitely die. A tough choice, one they have not had to make at any time in their long genetic history." I'm not sure I should believe the last sentence, given that the climate reached a few (several?) degrees C warmer than today during the previous interglacial... Chris Shaker
  7. Corals are resilient to bleaching
    It appears that J.E.N. Veron's former colleagues at the Australian Institute of Marine Science are saying that the Great Barrier Reef is not doing so badly "Crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci) outbreaks and storm damage were responsible for more coral loss during this period than either bleaching or disease despite two mass bleaching events and an increase in the incidence of coral disease. While the limited data for the GBR prior to the 1980's suggests that coral cover was higher than in our survey, we found no evidence of consistent, system-wide decline in coral cover since 1995. Instead, fluctuations in coral cover at subregional scales (10–100 km), driven mostly by changes in fast-growing Acroporidae, occurred as a result of localized disturbance events and subsequent recovery." http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0017516 Chris Shaker
  8. Should The Earth Be Cooling?
    According to Professors Reddiman and Kaplan, our climate should be cooling, if not for mankind's CO2 emissions. They say that our CO2 has been modifying the climate since the beginning of agriculture, well before industrialization http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110325/full/news.2011.184.html They also believe that Columbus was responsible for the cooling during the Little Ice Age http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/335168/title/Columbus_blamed_for_Little_Ice_Age Chris Shaker
  9. Climate sensitivity is low
    You may be interested in Professor Shaviv's writings about climate sensitivity. He explains why he comes up with a lower number http://sciencebits.com/OnClimateSensitivity From: http://sciencebits.com/about "Prof. Nir J. Shaviv, who is a member of the Racah Institute of Physics in the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. According to PhysicaPlus: "...his research interests cover a wide range of topics in astrophysics, most are related to the application of fluid dynamics, radiation transfer or high energy physics to a wide range of objects - from stars and compact objects to galaxies and the early universe. His studies on the possible relationships between cosmic rays intensity and the Earth's climate, and the Milky Way's Spiral Arms and Ice Age Epochs on Earth were widely echoed in the scientific literature, as well as in the general press." Chris Shaker
  10. The BEST Kind of Skepticism
    I didn't realise that Judith Curry was a co-author. She writes pretty sensibly about the experience, publication and the results in her blog, concluding: "Although the results of the analysis aren’t particularly surprising relative to previous analyses, I think the BEST project is very important given the importance of the surface temperature data set and the problems that have been associated with the CRU and NASA data sets, not to mention their disagreement. The BEST group is comprised of some extremely distinguished scientists (including Nobel Prize awardee Saul Perlmutter), and this topic has benefitted greatly from the examination of this problem by physicists and statisticians who were prepared to take a fresh look at this problem. I am honored to have been invited to participate in this study, which I think was conducted very well". Berkeley Surface Temperatures: Released
  11. Test your climate knowledge in free online course
    SLR is a long term process lasting several centuries up to a millenium until equilibrium is reached with respect to melting of Greenland & Antarctica, as we discussed here. What rise we see now in XXI century may actually be just 30cm, so they may be correct. However, from the paleo history (e.g. PETM) we can find out that for a given amount of CO2, equilibrium SLR rise should be higher. We just don't know how much we've committed already and where the tipping point is. Even if wee're past TP, I am still optimistic: 100y is a lot of time and poeple may learn how to "cool-down" the globe before the land ice starts collapsing in XXII century or so.
  12. Clouds provide negative feedback
    lancelot, So while RW1 has not proposed a mechanism," The mechanism is the whole of the atmospheric water cycle (ground state water -> evaporation -> water vapor -> clouds -> precipitation -> ground state water), which is the primary way the planet's energy balance and ultimately the globally averaged surface temperature is maintained despite such a large degree of local, regional, seasonal hemispheric and even sometimes globally averaged variability. In general, mechanistically, when clouds are increasing the climate is too warm and trying to cool (more or denser clouds are exposed to space, reflecting more of the Sun's energy) and when clouds are decreasing the climate is too cool and trying to warm (fewer clouds lets in more of the Sun's energy). If water vapor is the primary amplifier of warming, as claimed, what then is the controller? If not clouds via there ability to reflect incoming solar energy and precipitate out the water from the atmosphere, then what? Does anyone think it's just a coincidence that energy from the Sun drives evaporation of water? Is it just coincidence that evaporated water removes heat from the surface, condenses to form clouds and the clouds reflect the sun’s energy? Is it just a coincidence that the water precipitated out of the atmosphere emanates from clouds?
  13. Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    Sphaerica#212: "If you have some sort of sink that takes most of the anthro CO2" Problem solved. A new natural sink is emerging before our very eyes. A place where the low salinity surface waters ... are undersaturated with respect to CO2 in the atmosphere and the region has the potential to take up atmospheric CO2, although presently suppressed. This marvelous new sink for CO2 has tripled over the last 3 decades. Just what the doctor ordered!
  14. Test your climate knowledge in free online course
    Overall it’s a nice Climate 101 introduction. Regular SkS readers should easily ace all the end-of-section quizzes. One imbedded question about further sea level rise by 2100 tripped me up. Their right answers seem too low to me, either 30 or 50 cm. Based on my Sks and other readings I predicted much higher - 100 cm. They admit their right answers to this question are somewhat uncertain though.
  15. Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    211, Bob, I'm not sure I understand. If you have some sort of sink that takes most of the anthro CO2, then it also has to take most of the natural CO2 as well. But if the rise in CO2 is primarily from this unknown natural source, then for that natural sink to be taking most of the anthro CO2, it has to also take proportionally more (i.e. most of) the natural CO2. That means that in order to have raised atmospheric CO2 levels by 100 ppm while overwhelming this mysterious natural sink that has sucked "most" of the anthro CO2 out of the air, then that mysterious natural CO2 source must be absolutely huge! A whole order of magnitude greater than the hundreds of gigatons of CO2 we've generated by burning fossil fuels. What the heck is that source? [My own conjecture is that an alien race is burning their own fossil fuels, but using special teleportation technology to deposit their CO2 in our atmosphere.]
  16. Test your climate knowledge in free online course
    Aced the first quiz and I didn't even view the lesson! I did think the questions were fair and didn't try to trip you up, as so many of these online quizzes do. They were well phrased and clear about the information they were looking for. But hey, I was watching (American) Football on TV at the same time and I do have priorities (go MSU Bobcats!)
  17. Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    re: Sphaerica @208 You've left the loophole that the unknown sink that surely must exist (by denier argument) is only taking most of the anthropogenic CO2, not all of it. Thus, the unknown natural source is also affected by this same sink, so point 3) is avoided. To close this loophole we can look at quantities. Current thought is that half the anthropogenic CO2 is removed from the atmosphere. Let's assume that the proportion is larger: - if 3/4 is removed, then 3/4 of the unknown natural source is also removed, and this means that the unknown natural source is of the same size as the anthropogenic source. Corollary: half the rise is anthropogenic. - if 80% is removed, then 80% of the unknown natural source is also removed, and this means that the unknown natural source has to be 1.5X larger than the anthropogenic source. Corollary: 40% of the rise is anthropogenic. - if 90% is removed, then 90% of the unknown natural source is also removed, and this means that the unknown natural source has to be 4X larger than the anthropogenic source. Corollary: 20% of the rise is anthropogenic. - if 95% is removed, then 95% of the unknown natural source is also removed, and this means that the unknown natural source has to be 9X larger than the anthropogenic source. Corollary: 10% of the rise is anthropogenic. - if 99% is removed, then 99% of the unknown natural source is also removed, and this means that the unknown natural source has to be 49X larger than the anthropogenic source. Corollary: 2% of the rise is anthropogenic. To get to a point where most of the rise is not anthropogenic in origin, and (to keep consistency) there is an unknown natural source that plays by the same rules as the anthropogenic one, you have to posit a huge, undiscovered natural source that nobody has noticed. As they say, that dog won't hunt.
  18. Dikran Marsupial at 07:26 AM on 23 October 2011
    Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    bugai wrote: "And yes, I claim it is the problems with a too weak sink of CO2, not with extra emission." However, the data show that the natural sinks are stronger than the natural sources and have been steadily strengthening relative to sources for at least the last fifty years. SO the idea that the sinks are too weak doesn't survive first contact with the data, they are only weak in the sense that they can only cope with half our emissions on top of all natural emissions. Which suggests that CO2 levels have only been rising because of anthropogenic emissions. Bugai is making an error that many have made before (confusing residence time with relaxation time). Making a mistake that others have made before is nothing to be embarassed about - we all make mistakes. Not being able to accept you have made a mistake on the other hand is another matter. For that reason it is always a good idea to assume you are wrong and take counter-arguments seriously.
  19. Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    scaddenp - Well, we're currently emitting enough CO2 to raise atmospheric concentrations at >4ppm/year. It's actually rising at ~2ppm/year, hence natural sinks are (currently) absorbing ~2ppm. So, if we were to suddenly stop emitting CO2, the natural sinks would initially absorb 2ppm/year, with an expected decrease over time (multiple decaying exponentials due to the various pathways), as the imbalance decreases. See my post and the IPCC links here, and also here for the curves. It's definitely rate(s) dependent on the pCO2 imbalance.
  20. Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    Bugai, You position is untenable, because you must solve three intractable problems to support it. First, humans have burned hundreds of gigatons of carbon that have been sequestered underground for hundreds of millions of years. 1) If this carbon has not gone into the atmosphere and oceans, then where has it all gone? Second, there must be a source of carbon which has both raised atmospheric levels by 100 ppm, and introduced an equivalent amount of CO2 into the oceans (and very noticeably lowering pH there). 2) What is the source of the hundreds of gigatons of carbon that have gone into the atmosphere and the oceans? At the same time, if you do propose another source of carbon, and another destination for anthropogenic carbon, there must be some mechanism which somehow preferentially puts anthropogenic carbon in one place (if you can find it) while adding only your other source of carbon (if you can find one) to the atmosphere and ocean, in a fashion which makes the existence and quantity of anthropogenic carbon meaningless in affecting the balance. 3) What mechanism can possibly exist that "knows" how to intelligently separate anthropogenic from natural carbon, adding the former only to some undefined (and presumably bottomless) sink, while putting the latter into the atmosphere and oceans. No matter what other things you want to argue, the bottom line is that there is a pool of carbon in the system, an additional pool of carbon (fossil fuels) that had been separated from the system but have now reintroduced in a very short time frame, and there are only limited and measurable places for that carbon to go in similarly short time frames (those places being the atmosphere, the oceans, and biomass). No matter what you come up with, anthropogenic carbon must go somewhere, and in so doing, it must be affecting the balance. No matter what you come up with, anthropogenic carbon must be contributing substantially (actually, solely) to the CO2 levels in the atmosphere and oceans. There is no way out of this inconvenient truth.
  21. Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    "So without our contribution to atmospheric CO2, CO2 levels would be declining by >2ppm/year right now". This cannot be right. The amount of update of CO2 by natural sinks must have some dependence on pCO2. If natural sinks reduce CO2 by 2ppm/ year we would have been ice age long ago.
  22. Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    Bugai #201, Also in the Joos et al. paper you cited, they've set the air-sea exchange to zero for figure 3 (see appendix A1). The curves in their figure shows how quickly tracers move from the surface to deep ocean, and that is certainly not the relaxation time we're discussing.
  23. Clouds provide negative feedback
    174, lancelot,
    So while RW1 has not proposed a mechanism, others appear to have.
    I'm afraid I don't see that. Can you be more specific? The question at hand is: "Given warming that results from anthropogenic CO2, what will be the resulting cloud feedback?" While the work you discuss is interesting, it does not in any way affect the topic at hand -- which is the direction and degree of feedback from clouds in response to warming. That cloud formation is impacted by many factors is obvious. That temperatures are impacted by unexpected but measurable factors such as cosmic rays, through cloud formation, is what is under debate in current science (and on other threads here at SkS) but at the current time is not in any way supported by the evidence available. But in any event, it is not relevant to this thread, which discusses cloud feedbacks, not clouds as a primary forcing.
  24. Sea levels will continue to rise for 500 years
    @Agnostic #57: The issue you have raised is directly addressed in "The Next 500 Years of Sea Level Rise" by Michael Lemonick posted on Climate Central on Oct 19. Lemonick had posed that very same question to Aslak Grinsted.
  25. Clouds provide negative feedback
    lancelot#174: "Svensmark, Shaviv, J Kirkby et al all suggest a mechanism" Those gentlemen are all part of the 'it's cosmic rays' camp. There are a number of threads addressing their data here at SkS (search: cosmic rays), as well as this excellent RealClimate piece exploding their suggested mechanism.
  26. The human fingerprint in the daily cycle
    An uncharacteristically perceptive comment by one of JCurry's 'denizens' in the midst of their agonized debate on the BEST temperature work: it is alleged that due to increased green house gases in the atmosphere, heat is trapped that cannot escape from earth. So if an increase in green house gases is to blame for the warming, it should be minimum temperatures (that occur during the night) that must show the increase (of modern warming). In that case, the observed trend should be that minimum temperatures should be rising faster than maxima and mean temperatures. That is what would prove a causal link. -- emphasis added This fellow goes on to admit a cherrypick ("my carefully chosen sample of 15 weather stations") of some recent data to demonstrate that in a few locales, DTR is not decreasing. But as we've seen here and here, there is ample evidence of DTR decrease. Other references for DTR decrease include Zhou et al 2005: Such spatial dependence of Tmin and DTR trends on the climatological precipitation possibly reflects large-scale effects of increased global greenhouse gases and aerosols (and associated changes in cloudiness, soil moisture, and water vapor) during the later half of the twentieth century. Zheng et al 2010: ... for the later period of 1951–90, the trend in maximum temperature reduces to an insignificant value, while the trend in minimum temperature remains high, resulting in a significant downward trend in diurnal range of 0.10°C/decade. From Martinez et al 2009, despite variations due to seasonal effects, an average annual decreasing trend of DTR is found, particularly relevant in autumn (−0.9 °C/decade).
  27. Clouds provide negative feedback
    Interesting thread. Is it still active? On mechanisms: Svensmark, Shaviv, J Kirkby et al all suggest a mechanism for cloud nucleation (and thus possibly formation) independent of temperature. I was surprised not to see this mentioned. Other possible mechanisms have been proposed, such as micro organisms prompting nucleation. http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/05/microbes-make-rain/ So while RW1 has not proposed a mechanism, others appear to have. No hard evidence for those mechanisms, but they should perhaps be considered when assessing the evidence for other mechanisms such as co2 forcing.
    Response:

    [DB] "Interesting thread. Is it still active?"

    All threads here at SkS (all 4,000+) are active.  Many are temporarily dormant but any are free to be reawakened at any time.  Regular participants here follow the Recent Comments thread, so they will see any new comment made regardless of the thread it is posted on.

  28. Abraham reply to Monckton
    Scoop! "Lord Monckton" actually always has been Sasha Baron Cohen in unbelievably convincing character!
  29. Continued Lower Atmosphere Warming
    The tail end of new the BEST temperature reconstruction: is not very friendly to the 'warming stopped in ____' crowd, nor is it supportive of Dr. Pielke's '2002 change in trend is significant' interpretation. Put in the perspective and detail of the BEST graphic, short term downtrends are a regular feature of the temperature record, as there are too many of these 'blips' to count. Despite the jagged appearance, the overall trend is up: since ~1970, ~1 degree in 40 years.
  30. Sea levels will continue to rise for 500 years
    Hyperactive Hydrologist shares my concerns about the WAIS being more of a threat to SLR than does the GIS. Once the restraining influence of the PIG & Thwaites linchpin are removed the risk of ice sheet dynamic decomposition of the WAIS escalate. Melt rates are a non-issue compared to that. I've been planning on writing a post on this for some time; perhaps the time has come to put aside malaise and laziness and actually do it.
  31. The BEST Kind of Skepticism
    Bern @29, Oil & coal will run out in ~300y at current rat, so your will is actually pessimistic. Had that happen (300y of BAU) we would certainly head for PETM scenario (56mya) when arctic ocean temp was 74F... Hopefully it won't come to that. Back to our times: denialist are disturbed and hopefully their influence dies much sooner than the fosils are burned. If it happens in decade or two, it won't be bad, perhaps not too late.
  32. Sea levels will continue to rise for 500 years
    Hyperactive Hydrologist - yup, that seems to be the conclusion of a couple of recent papers - the West Antarctic Ice Sheet may have been the main contributor to sea level rise in recent (ish) warm periods. See SkS post: Rising Oceans - Too Late to Turn the Tide? and The Role of Ocean Thermal Expansion in Last Interglacial Sea Level Rise - McKay (2011) the study referenced.
  33. Hyperactive Hydrologist at 20:02 PM on 22 October 2011
    Sea levels will continue to rise for 500 years
    Glenn, I'm not disputing rapid ice loss and subsequent rise in sea level. I'm saying perhaps Greenland is more stable and resilient to complete collapse compared with the Western Antarctica (WAIS) based on topography. In-situ melting of a large ice sheet will be much slower than an ice sheet losing mass from glacial carving and in-situ melting. WAIS has the potential to suffer from a mechanism of sea water intrusion and consequently an increase in basal lubrication. For me the real danger of rapid or even catastrophic sea level rise comes from the WAIS. The key is how much of an impact will 2-4oC of warming have on Antarctica.
  34. OA not OK part 20: SUMMARY 2/2
    Don't look at me. I have no intention of rolling in the muck with the crowd at Watts. I leave it to those of a pachycephalsauriaic disposition to deal with. Bernard: Perhaps your pedantry is up to the task? I still don't follow your concern. A definition of 'neutral' is not relevant to a definition of acidification. We thought we were careful in the first post to remind readers that acidification is an absolute increase in [H3O+] and not a relative change with respect to some 'neutral' point. (Yes, yes, actually activity not concentration but we also explained that we would avoid activities to not totally confuse readers).
  35. Sea levels will continue to rise for 500 years
    Hyperactive Hydrologist. Catastrophic collapse is unlikely. On what time scale? If a couple of 1000 years of temps maybe 0.5 C warmer than now removed 1/2 or more of the GIS, what will the rate of loss be with temps 2-4 C warmer than now? How much of decline is movement towards the coast, how much is melting in-situ? Today? What will this balance be in 50 years?, 100? 200?
  36. Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature Study: “The effect of urban heating on the global trends is nearly negligible”
    @John Russell I'd say you're right on that. And when we have all forgotten all the previous debunkings they will return once again to the old chestnuts. I heard two the other day "peer reviewed by who?" and "but the Earth is only 6000 years old, there can't be a carbon cycle." Fortunately the later doesn't come up too often.
  37. Ocean Heat Poised To Come Back And Haunt Us?
    David Lewis -"I wonder why you report on the science as if one of the organizations did not exist" I wonder why you would write such a thing when you commented on another recent(ish) post which attributed the slowdown to pollution aerosols from Asia? We'll just have to wait and see how this plays out. As I mentioned in the other post, some papers on the effect of Asian pollution on global dimming are awaiting publication. In the meantime, I see little point in you repeating the same things over and over again.
  38. The BEST Kind of Skepticism
    Bert: those who are actually sceptical as to whether the Earth is warming will probably be convinced by the BEST study. Those in denial will not be. But many of those who were sceptical about the warming will shift their scepticism to the causes of warming. Maybe the BEST team can tackle that next? ;-) Hey, maybe in a decade of two, when they've reproduced & confirmed the last few decades of climate science as a whole, we might start to see some real public acceptance? Naaaaaaah! That'll only happen when the oil & coal actually runs out, and the denialist organisations run out of funding.
  39. Climate sensitivity is low
    Thanks Sphaerica, your response was just what the doctor ordered! xox
  40. The BEST Kind of Skepticism
    Mal Adapted, I'm tempted to drive up to Santa Fe to catch the proceedings. The Tuesday morning Observations session could be interesting: Muller gives his presentation from 10:55-11:15 followed by Rohde from 11:15-11:35, followed by a certain F. Singer presenting "Is the reported global surface warming of 1979 to 1997 real?" I'm not sure how these conferences are, but the ones I've been to something like that would spark some interesting, uh, discussions.
  41. Philippe Chantreau at 14:09 PM on 22 October 2011
    The BEST Kind of Skepticism
    Bert, as their actions indicate, the term scientist would not apply by any stretch to Easterbrook, Monckton or Goddard.
  42. Bert from Eltham at 12:58 PM on 22 October 2011
    The BEST Kind of Skepticism
    Apart from carefully collected and drafted evidence and solid conclusions, what else can you do to convince sceptics? I am totally at a loss as to the blindness of seemingly rational scientists. Bert
  43. Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature Study: “The effect of urban heating on the global trends is nearly negligible”
    Improved energy use? Removal of power generators from the cities?
  44. Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    bugai#195: "we destroy the CO2 sink by pollution of the oceans" We pollute the oceans, sufficient to 'destroy' the CO2 sink, yet we do not produce the CO2 that goes into the atmosphere? BTW, we also influence atmospheric ozone and produce CO, N2O, NO, among other gases, but not CO2? Seems like an inconsistent position to me.
  45. How Increasing Carbon Dioxide Heats The Ocean
    Rob - I was imprecise in my language. The warming of the skin layer increases the gradient between the cooler air and the top of the warmer skin layer - increasing the heat transfer from the water to the air.
  46. Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    Bugai, Your own model suggests that T cannot possibly be 5-10 years. Say we linearize about the pre-industrial level and assume that's the equilibrium. The resulting DE will be dC/dt=E_a-C/T Notice that E_n disappears due to linearization. C here is the CO2 above the preindustrial level of 280ppm. Currently we have dC/dt=14 Gt/yr, E_a=29 Gt/yr gives C/T=15 Gt/yr Now the CO2 level has increased by about 100ppm, with is about 770Gt. This yields T of 51 years.
  47. The BEST Kind of Skepticism
    Hopefully there will be a Skeptical Science special on the Easterbrook debacle textbook soon!
  48. The BEST Kind of Skepticism
    Muller and Rohde will present their results on November 1, at the Third Santa Fe Conference on Global and Regional Climate Change. Also on the conference program are R. Lindzen, D. Easterbrook, C. Monckton, F. Singer, J. Curry, and other well-known denierskeptics. I wonder how the BEST results will be received?
  49. Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    bugai, your position appears to be self contradictory. Let's assume for the moment that your arguments of '5 year relaxation time' and 'CO2 accumulation due to pollution decreasing natural sinks' are correct... I don't see how that changes the conclusion that the increase in atmospheric CO2 levels is entirely due to human emissions. You concede that natural emissions are less than natural sinks... ergo natural emissions CANNOT be causing the rise in atmospheric CO2 levels. You also agree that humans are emitting enough to increase atmospheric levels by about 4ppm per year, but the actual rate of increase is only about 2ppm. You argue that this accumulation is due to reduced natural sinks... but even if that were true, it changes nothing. Nature is taking out less than it would if not for pollution. Ok... but the accumulating excess is STILL entirely derived from human emissions since even these 'reduced' natural sinks are greater than the natural emissions.
  50. Dikran Marsupial at 09:25 AM on 22 October 2011
    Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
    KR, IIRC the 74 year figure is the e-folding time, i.e. the time taken for the concentration to fall to 1/e of its initial value.

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