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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 84851 to 84900:

  1. Monthly Climate Summary: April 2011
    Also, I rather feel that there is a tendency to rush in and attribute these events to global warming because these are attention-grabbing, especially compared to the real effects where are slow and insidious, because there is a hope that maybe this will jolt people out of complacency and into action. However, there is also a large risk of losing credibility when going in ahead of the real science. Leave the exaggerations to the anti-science bunch. Activists of all persuasions somehow cant resist hyperbole and in doing so lose their credibility.
  2. Monthly Climate Summary: April 2011
    I would cautious about attributing any of this to global warming yet. Certain types of extreme weather are predicted by global warming but I thought the jury was still well and truly out on tornados and even tropical storms. What I dont see on that chart is much of a trend and its trends that would make me think that global warming is a factor.
  3. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    ROBH @ 8 I don't even know where to start with your post. You "heard on Australian Public radio" about the status of the poor in America and now you are an expert!?!? Public education is funded on the state level, not by local authorities. Deficiencies in education typically result from rural areas where a majority of families do not place a value on education. And, are you implying that religion a bad thing? America's education system is not poor. My wife teaches in a rural community and I can assure you that everyone has heard of global warming and certainly know what CO2 is. Now if you want an essay on how many CARE about global warming, then you might have a story.
  4. Rob Painting at 12:35 PM on 25 May 2011
    Monthly Climate Summary: April 2011
    Now I know that the tornado outbreaks are the consequence of natural influences and global warming, but they sure are off the charts!. Be interesting to see how they measure up in the May 2011 round-up, given they are still hammering the US as I write.
  5. Monthly Climate Summary: April 2011
    And the PNW and the Upper Central Great Plains continue to be colddddddddddddddd. When that cold air hits warmer air.....watch out! WE need to get that pesky Greenland high to move. The AMO is making a switch it seems....and holding that high shoveling cold air south.
    Response:

    [DB]  "The AMO is making a switch it seems"

    Perhaps you mean the AO?  The AMO is a 20-40 year oscillation; we have been in a warm phase since the mid-90s:

    AMO

    [Source]

     

    The AO has been positive for several months now:

    AO

    [Source]

    It would reflect better on you to cite a source when venturing opinions on a science blog.

  6. David Horton at 10:41 AM on 25 May 2011
    Monthly Climate Summary: April 2011
    I have had a go at how we talk about extreme weather here http://davidhortonsblog.com/2011/05/25/dont-mention-the-weather/. The statistics in the report above are staggering - "The 30-year-average for April tornadoes nationwide is 135. The monthly record was 542. The preliminary number of tornadoes reported in April 2011 is 875."
    Response:

    [DB] Hot-linked URL.

  7. UQ Physics Colloquium this Friday: Communicating Climate Science and Countering Disinformation
    John, Can I come to rebut what you say? :)
    Response: [JC] Yes, but you have to wait patiently till the question part of the talk (and if I see you in the audience with a notebook of tricky questions, I'll make sure my talk goes overtime :-)
  8. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    Mike Palin may have a point, not because Journalists no longer have a valuable role to play, but because they are no longer willing to play their role. So long as the primary role of a journalist is seen as selling copy, rather than informing, they are an impediment to public understanding of any issue, not just global warming.
  9. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    How the new online media landscape is changing the way the public gets its news is also another dimension about how climate science is communicated. This issue is thoroughly explored in the in-depth article, "Online media is replacing newspapers and TV. Is that a bad thing?" posted (May 13) on the Christian Science Monitor website. http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Society/2011/0513/Online-media-is-replacing-newspapers-and-TV.-Is-that-a-bad-thing
    Response:

    [DB] Hot-linked URL.

  10. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    Chris G @ 17- Perhaps, but is a science journalist going to solve this problem? Among other things, my colleagues and I teach geology to first year university students. Earth science is not taught in high schools, yet we do just fine. pbjamm @ 19- I have studied & worked at 8 colleges and universities and can assure you that they are home to many excellent communicators (as well as many not so gifted). I have also been interviewed by journalists - none have impressed me with their communication skills either during the interview or in the final product. I am confident there are many more excellent communicator scientists than there are science journalists. My basic point is that journalism in the traditional sense is dying as access to and distribution of information is changing. The time is right for scientists (and their professional associations) to take the opportunities this affords. Not all their efforts will succeed, but the best will make the old ways look lame.
  11. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    Mike Palin@16 Having worked at a university I can assure you that good communication skills are not a requirement for faculty positions. Someone with a good grasp of the science and the skill to make complex topics understandable and engaging is an invaluable asset. The world needs more Don Herberts. Prof Farnsworth: "Please, Fry! I don't know how to teach. I'm a professor!"
  12. Carter Confusion #1: Anthropogenic Warming
    jonicol - if you wish us to accept that you have a better answer than the textbooks, with experimental evidence to back it, then I think it is time to show us your workings and your data. Such a landmark result, if true, should surely be published.
  13. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    Mike, In a world where everyone understood basic physics, chemistry, statistics, etc., that would work. But, there is such a huge gulf between what the average person can understand and what seems trivial to someone who has spent a life as a researcher, that your suggestion simply won't work. Take the "AGW violates the 2nd law of thermodynamics" meme; the average person has no idea what the 2nd law is, and some that do know what it is misunderstand it in a way that is almost beyond comprehension for someone at the researcher level of understanding. You can't expect researchers to cover the material from Stefan-Boltzmann to PV=nRT, etc., in every article they write. The information is out there and available, but you can only lead a horse to water, and sometimes they are unwilling to go that far.
  14. Carter Confusion #2: Green Jobs
    Actually, I have to disagree with the "Wind is more expensive than coal" argument. Looking at figures from 2007, generation costs of On-shore wind were 5-8 cents/kw-h, whereas coal is around 6c/kw-h. Doesn't seem like a *huge* difference to me-at least not big enough to show up clearly on someone's electricity bill.
  15. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    Who needs journalists anyway? They are redundant - remnants of a former age when the sources of information were scarce and the distribution networks centralised. If "science" journalism ever existed, which I doubt, it is rapidly dying. This provides the opportunity for scientists to clearly present the essence of their work directly to the public via the new decentralised distribution networks. Academic scientists are well suited for this because they deal with students on a day to day basis.
  16. Carter Confusion #2: Green Jobs
    Yeah Dana, but that was the point I was making in previous comments, the jobs issue is a political one that satisfies the established political ideologies (right and left). The fact is, politicians are afraid of discussing anything outside the political ideologies that have established themselves during the industrial (fossil fueled) revolution. Bizarrely there is a crazy notion that without these ideologies, we will go backwards in thinking rather than develop something new. Yet before the industrial revolution, modern capitalism and communism didn't exist, you had other modes of governance and living. What the die hards need to understand (both left and right) is that a green revolution, will invoke political changes as well. The technology and the needs of communities will mould new ideologies or transform existing ones. That is already happening, it is inevitable IMO as climate change and environmental destruction continue.
  17. Monthly Climate Summary: April 2011
    I am glad this issue points out the danger of 'fracking'. It has, after all, been far too easy for the industry to sweep the problems under the rug, taking advantage of the political climate to make a quick buck -- at great expense to our descendants. The fallacy they use to promote this folly is familiar, too. Of course, the industry response fits the pattern of dishonesty some of us have learned to expect from them, the dishonesty Darrell Huff described so brilliantly in "How to Lie with Statistics". What pattern is that? Why, exactly what industry spokesman Ingraffea did, casting doubt on the conclusion NOT because there is real room for doubt, but because it is inconvenient/embarrassing for the industry. And yes, this is the pattern: emphasize/repeat doubt when the conclusion is not favorable to you, explain it away, distract from the doubt when the conclusion IS favorablle to you. Duff provided a memorable example, the cashier who always claims an innocent mistake, but always makes the mistakes in his own favor.
  18. Can we trust climate models?
    BTW Mr Cadbury@6, the article is about climate models, so I suggest that before the moderator starts deleting comments, you get back on subject.
    Response:

    [DB] Agreed.  Jay is making an extrapolatory leap from 2+2=4 to calculus.  Do not pass go, doesn't parse, that dog doesn't hunt, etc.

  19. Can we trust climate models?
    Mr Cadbury@6 Is conducting a massive global experiment to alter climate on top of an existing global climate experiment (AGW) wise? Considering that humanity usually gets things badly wrong with any experiment with nature, I don't think adding another one is appropriate.
  20. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    Thanks, all. Sadly, it would seem that there is little money to be made in saving the planet. (Reading that bit about fossil fuel interests cowing CNN was disheartening. DSL, yeah, I guess Mel sells more copy than a town in the US Midwest, which happens to be near me. Who really cares about Mel's, or Tiger's escapades or how many kids Kate has. CNN let go all of it's science staff some time ago; I've lost interest in watching it since then.) Scientists get paid to do research, and reporters get paid to sell stories. IMHO, the reporters and the scientists are not at fault any more than industrial society at large. Poor education is a problem, but it always has been. That doesn't really matter; in the end, humans are not thinking creatures that feel, we are feeling creatures that think. Denial is a powerful psychological tool for dealing with difficult situations; it enables a soldier to charge into battle and in general, enables us to carry on with life when bad things happen around us. Collectively though, it is preventing action when action is needed. There is a minority of people with vision that can see the climate change catastrophe coming and do something about it, but my guess is that the majority just want to carry on with their lives. They won't buy news stories telling them things they don't want to hear until something bad happens to them personally. Unfortunately, by then, we will all be committed to worse. I don't know what can be done except to continue to talk to those that will listen, and try to relate the change to something that they care about. Honestly, I don't know that most people in industrialised nations care about polar bears or the millions in Bangladesh. Food supply and national security issues sometimes strike a cord. Something in our ancestry must predispose us to worry about food and security. :-/
  21. Carter Confusion #2: Green Jobs
    I disagree about jobs being a non-issue, because you have to get public support to make renewable energy investments happen on large scales. If the public thinks investments in these projects kills jobs, they will get much less support. If people realize it will modestly increase employment, they'll be much more likely to support it. If it were a non-issue, then guys like Carter wouldn't make this (wrong) argument to begin with.
  22. Eric the Red at 04:39 AM on 25 May 2011
    Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    Badgersouth, I do not think the environmental movement has dropped anything with regards to global warming issues. Personally, I think the past two cold, snowy winters have made an impression. People are fickle, have short memories, and react instinctively. During the next major heat wave the issue will be front and center.
  23. Dr. Jay Cadbury, phd. at 03:57 AM on 25 May 2011
    Can we trust climate models?
    This business about the aerosols, if what Hansen is saying is true and the cooling effect of aerosols is being underestimated, doesn't this prove that we can simply geo engineer our way out of the problem?
    Response:

    [DB] "...doesn't this prove that we can simply geo engineer our way out of the problem?"

    Umm, nottasomucha.  There is a logical disconnect in your thinking.  Discussing hypotheticals and theoreticals based on not-yet-published works is pretty off topic for this thread "Can We Trust Climate Models?"

  24. Can we trust climate models?
    "A Climate Modelling Primer" by McGuffie and Henderson-Sellers is quite a good book on the subject. Goes through the historical development of climate models and covers some detail. Having said that, it is a bit over the top if you only want a basic understanding.
  25. Eric the Red at 03:36 AM on 25 May 2011
    Carter Confusion #2: Green Jobs
    I agree with Paul. Employment may rise as construction commences (per CB above), but is really a non-issue in the green scheme of things.
  26. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    There's another dimension to the issue -- the role of envornmental organizations in communicating the "urgency of now." This dimension is addressed head-on in "Americans Tuning Out Climate Change", a well-written and informative article by D.R. Tucker posted on FrumForum (May 22). "According to a recent Gallup poll, Americans are less concerned about climate change than in the past. Has the environmental movement dropped the ball on keeping the issue in the public eye?" http://www.frumforum.com/americans-tuning-out-climate-change
  27. Carter Confusion #2: Green Jobs
    Creating jobs is always going to be a short term vote winning issue and I don't know of any period in history where there has been stability in jobs for longer than a decade or a few decades. That is really short termism in the grand scale of things but is a plus point in votes if you can claim jobs are going to go up for a few years. Really jobs shouldn't be an issue, we all have to work and do our thing for the community in order to deserve a roof, heat and food. Whether renewables or fossil fuels are involved isn't important regarding basic duties and work. People are generally resourceful over long time scales, so despite short term losses in employment, always find other work to occupy themselves given the right positive attitude and more importantly education. Hence the real issue is climate and the environment, what impact renewables or fossil fuels have on that. Clearly renewables are designed to environmentally sustainable as much as is possible and are being improved continuously.
  28. Can we trust climate models?
    That model evolution figure is very cool. I hadn't seen that before.
  29. michael sweet at 01:58 AM on 25 May 2011
    Can we trust climate models?
    It is also important to remember that models can underestimate problems as well as overstate the case. In the reverence you cited they state in the abstract that sea level rise has been faster than estimated in 2000. The sea ice in the Arctic is also melting much faster than expected. Does anyone have similar examples where change is happening slower than expected?
  30. Carter Confusion #1: Anthropogenic Warming
    jonicol @42, I am not going to wander of topic so far as to debunk kinninmonth's various presentations, nor your argument here. I will, however, suggest that you present your argument on the thread about the saturation of the Green house effect where it is probably on topic. Take care to read the advanced version of the article and relate your discussion to that article. I suspect that if you just post a screed again without relating it to the appropriate article it will once again (and rightly) be considered off topic. When you relate your argument to the article, please take care to explain why your result is so different from that obtained by Line by Line models using exactly the same physical laws that you appeal to. Also explain why we should accept your approximate calculation based on energy transfers at just two levels of the atmosphere over detailed calculations over multiple levels of the atmosphere that ensure conservation of energy between each level, and account for all energy transfers between levels. I find your claims about Australian climatologists frankly incredible (ie, unable to be believed). I believe you have either misunderstood their communication with you, misrepresented it, or have simply been fobbed of.
  31. Berényi Péter at 01:37 AM on 25 May 2011
    Lindzen Illusion #5: Internal Variability
    #131 Ken Lambert at 23:41 PM on 24 May, 2011 Squirting heat from vents driectly into bottom water and conduction from a warm immersed bottom would be much more efficent heat transfer mechanisms than radiant heating of the surface. Yes, its role is discribed by the following paper in some detail. Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans, 2001, 106, (C12), 31141-31154. doi:10.1029/2000JC000532 Geothermal Heating and its Influence on the Meridional Overturning Circulation Jeffery R. Scott, Jochem Marotzke & Alistair Adcroft Anyway, the upshot is that in order to keep MOC moving, heat has to get into the abyss by whatever means, including geothermal flux at the bottom and deep turbulent mixing at boundaries driven either by wind stress or tidal forces. However, the net heat storage resulting from this flow is very small, because there is a feedback loop that readily removes (or resupplies) most of this heat again by feeding in just the necessary amount of very cold polar water. Journal of Climate, 2011 ISSN 0894-8755. On the linkage between Antarctic surface-water stratification and global deepwater temperature Ralph F. Keeling & Martin Visbeck This loop is not controlled by average surface temperature, but by the coldest surface water temperatures available, which in turn are fully determined by physical properties of water/ice (at least as long as there is sea ice anywhere on the globe). The bulk of oceans is a polar thing, even in the tropics, warmth is only a thin top layer. Average temperature of seawater is close to 3°C while about 57% of it is below 2°C. This is how we know we are still in an ice age. In the good old days when there was no sea ice, deep water temperatures exceeded 20°C (as it is the case with present day Red Sea).
  32. Eric the Red at 01:31 AM on 25 May 2011
    Can we trust climate models?
    Kevin, Much has been written in the blogosphere recenty about aerosols, probably a result of Hansen's recent paper. http://www.columbia.edu/~jeh1/mailings/2011/20110415_EnergyImbalancePaper.pdf Hansen surmised that we have been underestimated the cooling effect of aerosols, and thereby overestimating the rate of heat uptake by the oceans, suggesting that the models need to be adjusted. His latest aerosol forcing is about half the GHG forcing, but with a rather large uncertainty. In fact, he states that many climate models only use the direct aerosol forcing, and ignore the indirect forcing which may be twice as much.
  33. Temp record is unreliable
    giniajim @177, yes! Go to each separate national meteorological agency that supplied the data to either the Hadley Center/CRU or NOAA and purchase the data of each such agency, or arrange access to the data on a research basis. That is what has been done by each of the major global temperature indices, and each is bound by contract to not release the individual data, which remains the commercial property of the particular national meteorological agency that supplied it. You may want to note, however, that every independent attempt to determine the mean global temperature, whether based on thermometer or satellite data, has come up with effectively the same trend, including Muller's BEST project, and most recently (for US data only) Anthony Watt's team. The chance of finding significant error, therefore, seems remote.
  34. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    RobH: Ugh. Bad logic. All humanities graduates are not journalists. Indeed, few are. I work in the humanities, and I've encountered probably five students in the last five years who aren't concerned about/don't believe the warming planet. Many of the students who are concerned couldn't explain the physics of radiative transfer (they'd think that GHGs "trap" "heat" rather than lengthening the path of OLR), but then 95% of the students in general at my university couldn't explain the physics, and this is a highly-selective university. "You wouldn't believe the naive bloopers that come out on public and commercial radio from the mouths of out arts graduated journalists - the newspapers are just as bad." I would believe, but you wouldn't believe how many smart journalism graduates I know who don't have jobs in journalism. Question: does Fox News hire the best journalists? Does CNN? Do the major media outlets publish the best in investigative journalism? Was CNN focused on Mel Bloody Gibson the other night while a massive tornado mowed down Joplin, MO (USA)? Media owners, their editors, and their managers are much more to blame than even their selected journalists for what gets published and what gets hyped. "Sadly, 90% of Australians, probably better educated than the US lot, aren't that interested in science to tune in." Everyone in the U.S. is interested in science, but many are only to the extent that either A) the results coincide with their existing beliefs, B) the results are sensational but not threatening (robots connected to Facebook but not robots that take your job), or C) the results can be used to generate profit. No one wants to hear that their way of life is responsible for the destruction of their way of life. For most people, science is an explanation for things that already are or have been. Science cannot explain to people what those people have not yet experienced. These people will have to experience global warming. After all, how much energy and time does it take to convince people that a particular God exists? Even after 15-20 years of daily teaching during the most impressionable time, there is still doubt--and often rejection. Why? No direct evidence/experience for the theory, and plenty of evidence/experience against. My lower middle-class, hard-working mother-in-law, when confronted with the idea of a warmer future, will say "it doesn't feel warmer to me." No evidence. We can teach students to think critically about the information they encounter--teach them to understand the experience and evidence of others--, but we can't teach them to have the time to process the information to the degree that it needs to be processed over the course of their lives (and certainly my mother-in-law does not have the time to explore the evidential basis of AGW). For the past fifty years and for the foreseeable future, people have had to--and will have to--choose how to spend their time thinking about the world. The complexity of the modern world descends upon us like a giant blanket, threatening to suffocate, and we flop about trying to find an edge--some place to catch a breath and make sense out of things. If we had enough leisure time to engage in lifelong education, we would, but we don't. Most of the people in this world at this time are trying to keep jobs within an economic mode that only demands more and more of their time and energy. Are they stupid? When time becomes available, basic de-stressing is needed (not heaping more stress by trying to find out where the world is headed). The people who do regularly have the time (including students, business owners, well-paid managers, and professional educators (excepting K-12)) are mostly dependent in a variety of ways on the people who don't have the time, and so they, the former, are interested in keeping the latter in their current positions. Solution: fundamental change. Probability that solution will be self-authorized: .01%. Probability that solution will be forced: 99.99%. Percentage of people who will kick and scream in resistance to the change: 25%. Percentage of current world wealth these people control: 95%. By the way, I'd love to see an analysis of the economic positions of the people who post to the major climate blogs. Ugh. Huge post.
  35. Eric the Red at 01:11 AM on 25 May 2011
    UQ Physics Colloquium this Friday: Communicating Climate Science and Countering Disinformation
    Well, I guess we just have to disagree on the validity of the survey, and yes the actual spelling is Yooper, sometimes abbreviated as UPer. It was not meant to be taken seriously anyway.
    Response: [JC] Let's not forget there are two separate surveys using completely different methodologies, both finding a 97% consensus. The Doran et al 2009 interview directly asks Earth scientists "are humans significantly changing global temperature?" The Anderegg et al 2010 survey examines publicly signed declarations by climate scientists to see whether then agree with the tenets of AGW. Two independent approaches arriving at the same conclusion.
  36. Temp record is unreliable
    Does anyone understand how to get to the raw data (i.e. the actual individual temperature measurements)? All I can find on line is various averages.
  37. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    Eric, the big problem for relating climate events in Australia to climate change lies with the concept expressed so neatly in a famous poem, the land of "droughts and flooding rains". The simple fact is that we've had much, much more of both than historical averages. Lake Eyre has filled 3 years in a row, that's unheard of. The first time it filled there were huge contingents of people who went to see the water and the wildlife because they never expected to see it again in their lifetimes. Now it's almost expected as an annual event. As for smarts. Just try getting people to explain why we have seasons. There's a very good reason why old-fashioned classrooms had a globe on the shelf. It's not just for the geography of the continents. It's a constant image of axial tilt. Add atmosphere and hey, presto! we have a liveable climate with identifiable growing seasons in the temperate zones and a couple of nice neat icecaps at the poles to provide much needed albedo.
  38. Can we trust climate models?
    Is it worth reiterating at this point that you don't need a climate model if you just want to compute future temperature trends? All you need is an energy balance calculation or some kind of empirical model of it. Hansen point this out here, and numerous bloggers (including Tamino, Arthur Smith and Lucia) have reproduced the empirical calculation. The 20th century climate is enough to determine the parameters of the system (although not the climate sensitivity, which requires longer timescales but for that reason is irrelevant over the next few decades), allowing forecasts for the next few decades at least. The principal uncertainly according to Hansen is the values of the aerosol forcing. But even if this is wrong, the response function mops up the error to a large extent when tuning against the 20th century climate.
  39. Coral atolls and rising sea levels: That sinking feeling
    Arkadiusz Semczyszak, why don't you wait until the papers are actually peer-reviewed and published, rather than pre-reviewed, when you can cite them directly ?
  40. Rob Painting at 00:22 AM on 25 May 2011
    Coral atolls and rising sea levels: That sinking feeling
    Arkadiusz Semczyszak- coral bleaching is a natural phenomenon, often found in colonies of corals - and often quickly reversible No. See comment at @ 32 and note the peer-reviewed studies provided. Coral bleaching that killed ancient atolls was natural. Earth was in a "greenhouse" phase then, and the equatorial regions not conducive to coral survival. No humans around back then. As discussed here- mass coral bleaching, a thread you have previously commented on, mass coral bleaching has only recently emerged, coincident with human-caused global warming. And note the lack of recovery of bleached coral reefs in the eastern tropical Pacific, especially the Galapagos Islands. As for Suggett & Smith (2010). So they're upset about media reports confusing all coral bleaching events with mortality. So what?
  41. Arkadiusz Semczyszak at 23:55 PM on 24 May 2011
    Coral atolls and rising sea levels: That sinking feeling
    @JMurphy The first link is a figure cited by a number of websites - it’s from the pre-review paper. The next two figures originate (unchanged) also pre-reviewed the papers. I did not quote “a word” of comment to them - nor Idso or WUWT. My information comes only from work Suggett & Smith1, 2010.. They are workers: Coral Reef Research Unit, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Essex, UK. Instead of looking for "conspiracy theories", we respond to their proposal: that even strongly coral bleaching is a natural phenomenon, often found in colonies of corals - and often quickly reversible. It is worth to discuss their work in detail but we can not ignore.
  42. Lindzen Illusion #5: Internal Variability
    BP #130 I have often thought that the geothermal heating from the ocean floor (reputedly 0.1W/sq.m) globally must have a confusing effect on OHC measurement. Squirting heat from vents driectly into bottom water and conduction from a warm immersed bottom would be much more efficent heat transfer mechanisms than radiant heating of the surface. With a 0.1W/sq.m flux constantly rising from the bottom through the column toward the surface - some effect on mixing and other transport mechanisms would be expected.
  43. Hooks, Roles, and the Climate Change Blame Game
    @9 Alexandre It will look exactly like the attacks on Jewish Physics in the 1920s and 30s. Albert Einstein said it best: This world is a strange madhouse. Currently, every coachman and every waiter is debating whether relativity theory is correct. Belief in this matter depends on political party affiliation. Albert Einstein, 1920
  44. Roy Spencer’s Latest Silver Bullet
    Or to put it more simply: Let's define a new plot, which is the step-function response curve scaled by the sensitivity. Paleoclimate gives us the height of the plateau at the end of this plot (the fast feedback sensitivity). Recent climate gives us the slope at the beginning. The curve in the middle is ambiguous. A wrong estimate of aerosol forcing means that we have the gradient at the beginning wrong, and thus the time to reach the plateau is out too.
  45. Carter Confusion #2: Green Jobs
    #2: I don't see that the 'jobs created' figure should always be directly proportional to cost. Market coal prices are generally cheaper than, say, wind (especially once you include backup or storage). So going wind likely adds to the cost of energy (and also labour use I suspect) Higher energy costs can impact other sectors and it's not necessarily linear. Maybe the higher cost of doing industry means other companies shut down. But on the other hand, coal power plants cause damage to people's health and the environment. In some studies a very large amount and this could translate to a significant employment effect (thousands of people unable to work properly because of health problems, say) So I suspect it's not just as simple as cost = some constant x labour use and then relating direct labour changes to cost.
  46. The Skeptical Chymist at 23:24 PM on 24 May 2011
    Carter Confusion #2: Green Jobs
    Macoles @ 11 I see what you are saying there but I disagree with part of your conclusion. The Álvarez "study" is trying to argue that investment in renewables causes net job losses, but as you point out the investment in the Navarre region helped lead to lower unemployment. So this does help rebut Álvarez claims.
  47. Shapiro et al. – a New Solar Reconstruction
    Sphaerica, Riccardo Thank you Sphaerica for your generous defence. I am simply saying that the Earth has a natural cycle of warming and cooling and it is never at equilibrium, but cycles around some mid point. Excluding CBD's orbital forcing over 100Ky time scales, Solar irradiance variation prior to AD1750 is the driver. Increase the TSI and the Earth receives more incoming energy, warms up until temperature rise increased S-B outgoing energy and the warming is arrested and temperature stabilizes at a higher level. Drop TSI at this higher temperature level and the S-B outgoing exceeds the incoming and the Earth temperature cools. It seems to me that this underlying cycle has an amplitude of natural temperature range and that will follow the natural TSI variation over centuries (excluding the 11 year sun spot ripple). To tell how much Solar irradiance is warming or cooling the Earth we need to know the point we are at in this natural cycle - and that supposes an 'equilibrium' TSI or an average TSI over the cycle.
  48. Roy Spencer’s Latest Silver Bullet
    That Hansen article is very interesting though - I'm glad it's been highlighted. I'm struggling with some of the terminology. But if I understand correctly, his argument is as follows:
    • The fast feedback sensitivity sff is the equilibrium sensitivity excluding some very slow terms like changes in ice sheets.
    • Hansen claims that sff is well determined by paleoclimatology. Here's a counterintuitive point. How come the ice ages tell us about the fast feedback sensitivity, rather than the slow sensitivity? I think the answer is that Hansen is feeding in the additional feedbacks (e.g. ice sheets) as forcings on the basis of known data, rather than allowing them to be included in the sensitivity.
    • The transient response is constrained by recent climate. Thus any model (e.g. GCM, two box, or Arthur's non-physical deconvolution) complex enough to represent at least 2 transient timescales will produce a similar hindcast for the last century, and as a result will also produce a similar forecast for the next century.
    • However, this doesn't nail down the fast feedback sensitivity. What is nails down is the product of sff and the response function over the first few decades. Turning this into a sensitivity does indeed involve the length of the long tail of the response function, and thus is poorly determined from the instrumental record alone.
    • Thus if we are interested in the next few decades, the sensitivity is actually irrelevant. It is the product of the sensitivity and response function which matters. The sensitivity will only come into play over much longer timescales.
    • Hansen claims that how much longer is confused by the GCM response being too slow. The main focus of the paper is to justify this claim.
    • Changes in response when varying the aerosol feedback is hard to distinguish from changes when varying ocean mixing, which causes the slowness of current models. Increasing the aerosol feedback requires faster response.
    • Hansen suggests that the planetary energy imbalance be used to resolve this ambiguity. A higher (more negative) aerosol feedback, coupled with slower ocean mixing (thus faster response), makes the apparent energy imbalance go away. In doing so, he resolves 'Trenberth's travesty'.
    • Having done so, he concludes that the human forcing is lower than previously estimated, but that the response is faster: 75% in 100 years. Thus his claim is that the current GCM response (figure 8a posted above) is actually wrong.
    • Another implication of the change is to explain why the IPCC underestimates sea level rise.
    So, in short, he's arguing for the sensitivity to be correct, the forcing to be lower, but the response to be faster. Doing so solves the energy budget problem and the underestimated sea level rise. Presumably, if this is correct, Charlie's '5 year sensitivity' metric would also increase by some amount (~25%?) to allow the reduced forcing to still produce accurate hindcasts. That's a lot of material. I presume I've got at least some of it wrong.
  49. French translation of the Scientific Guide to 'Skeptics Handbook'
    Here is an additional website called "Climobs.fr", a great new french resource for climate change data and graphics. Blogs coming soon...
  50. How Jo Nova doesn't get the tropospheric hot spot
    Mike Williams @38: In the words of John Cook:
    "To claim that humidity is decreasing requires you ignore a multitude of independent reanalyses that all show increasing humidity. It requires you accept a flawed reanalysis that even its own authors express caution about. It fails to explain how we can have short-term positive feedback and long-term negative feedback. In short, to insist that humidity is decreasing is to neglect the full body of evidence."

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