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Comments 1301 to 1350:
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michael sweet at 00:06 AM on 18 September 2023Patrick Brown's recycled hallucination of climate science
Cork:
It is impossible to convert existing uranium plants to thorium. Thorium plants have to be specifically designed to be breeder plants. No comercial plants are breeder plants. Breeder plants are much more expensive and difficult to design and run than once through plants. A thorium supporter here at SkS referred me to a design that used 5000 Kg of bomb grade uranium to start up. What could possibly go wrong with that???
There is not as much economically recoverable thorium in the Earth as you think.
Nuclear supporters with fantasies of replacing uranium straight up with throium are completely uninformed about how nuclear plants work. Why do you believe the propaganda you hear from individuals who are completely uninformed?
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CORK at 23:49 PM on 17 September 2023Patrick Brown's recycled hallucination of climate science
Converting Uranium only plants to thorium /uranium plants would reduce many of the issues. Thorium is widespread in vast volumes all over the planet and it cannot be used to make nuclear weapons.
Anyhow, thanks for your comprehensive answer.
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BaerbelW at 18:52 PM on 17 September 2023Human CO2 is a tiny % of CO2 emissions
Please note: the basic version of this rebuttal has been updated on September 17, 2023 and now includes an "at a glance“ section at the top. To learn more about these updates and how you can help with evaluating their effectiveness, please check out the accompanying blog post @ https://sks.to/at-a-glance
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nigelj at 06:42 AM on 17 September 2023Patrick Brown's recycled hallucination of climate science
Cork@7.
"Nevertheless, I opened the link to the Breakthrough Institute and all I found were articles promoting the reduction of greenhouses gasses emissions by expanding the use of Throrium/Uranium in pre-existing nuclear plants and other plants to be built in the emergent countries where no other option may be available."
When I opened the link I found articles on multiple different power sources, food and agriculture, and more issues. Listed right on the opening pages and menu bar.
The articles promoted nuclear power and mostly cricised wind and solar power judging by the titles. The articles leaned strongly towards free market solutions rather than governmnet lead solutions so there is a clear ideological leaning.
Out of curiosity I googled The Breakthrough Institute:
"Tucked away in the heart of liberal Berkeley is one of the most controversial organizations in the environmental movement: the Breakthrough Institute, known for advocating for nuclear energy and a pugilistic approach to disagreement."
"The think tank’s critics, who include prominent advocates and researchers, decry the group as advancing right-wing ideas and say its policy proposals would delay action on climate change. But if the Breakthrough Institute’s leaders are to be believed, they are reformers with a 21st century strategy for solving the planet’s problems......"
"While sometimes functioning as shadow universities, think tanks have been exposed as quasi lobbying organizations, with little funding transparency. Recent research has also pointed out that think tanks suffer from a lack of intellectual rigor. A case in point is the Breakthrough Institute run by Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger, which describes itself as a "progressive think tank."
"The Breakthrough Institute has a clear history as a contrarian outlet for information on climate change and regularly criticizes environmental groups. One writer describes them as a “program for hippie-punching your way to fame and fortune.” So it was not shocking to see their column last Wednesday in the New York Times criticizing a new documentary on climate change that was put together by award-winning journalists. In their article, Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger state that the documentary will raise public skepticism about climate change because it uses scare tactics......"
ethics.harvard.edu/blog/breakthrough-institutes-inconvenient-history-al-gore
"Anyhow when I wrote "All hands on board! Each point of view should be heard. Teaming up will be the only answer." I meant that thorium/uranium are tools in the box and it may not be possible to do without them."
Possibly. I have no objection to the use of nuclear power in principle. I'm somewhat energy agnostic as long as its clean, zero carbon energy (or close to it). Nuclear power is essentially clean zero carbon energy.
That said, nuclear power is not looking like a big part of the climate solution. Its too slow to build, its very expensive to build, its more expensive generation than wind and solar power (refer to an energy analysis like Lazard), and there are problems with waste disposal.
Uranium is a finite resource and one of the less common minerals in the earths crust, and it cant be recycled like materials used in wind power turbines. Nuclear power is not liked by the general public in western countries due to the perceived danger (this may be overblown but perceptions are perceptions.)
Its therefore unlikely generating companies or governmnets in western democracies would choose nuclear power right now. And its totally understandable. Its up to the nuclear industry to solve these problems. Nobody else can solve them.
Personally I think we should push ahead with things like wind and solar power and perhaps nuclear power might eventually become part of the mix. Many countries have traditionally had a mixture of electricity generation. I suspect looking for the one perfect generating source is a delusion.
Moderator Response:[RH] Shortened link
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John Hartz at 05:01 AM on 17 September 2023We're coming out of the Little Ice Age
Recommended supplemental article:
What climate change deniers get totally wrong about the Little Ice Age
What does a regional period of mid-millennial cooling have to do with today's climate disasters? Absolutely nothing
by Matthew Rozsa, Science & Health, Salon, Aug 7, 2023
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John Hartz at 03:44 AM on 17 September 2023Akasofu Proved Global Warming is Just a Recovery from the Little Ice Age
Recommended supplemental article:
What climate change deniers get totally wrong about the Little Ice Age
What does a regional period of mid-millennial cooling have to do with today's climate disasters? Absolutely nothing
by Matthew Rozsa, Science & Health, Salon, Aug 7, 2023
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CORK at 23:40 PM on 16 September 2023Patrick Brown's recycled hallucination of climate science
Nigelj
I do not know Mr Brown at all therefore I won't comment on his papers, opinions etc...
Nevertheless, I opened the link to the Breakthrough Institute and all I found were articles promoting the reduction of greenhouses gasses emissions by expanding the use of Throrium/Uranium in pre-existing nuclear plants and other plants to be built in the emergent countries where no other option may be available.
The articles mentionned at lenght the urgent climate issue and the absolute need to reduce to zero the emissions of GHG.
Are there 2 different Breakthrough Institute? Maybe I can't read english?
Anyhow when I wrote "All hands on board! Each point of view should be heard. Teaming up will be the only answer." I meant that thorium/uranium are tools in the box and it may not be possible to do without them.
Now honest, I did not appreciate to be jumped at aggressively and I hope it is the last time.
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nigelj at 07:03 AM on 16 September 2023Patrick Brown's recycled hallucination of climate science
shoyemore
"Was this a deliberate hoax by Brown or him just being petulant?"
Browns main evidence free allegation appears to be journals like Nature only publish work that fits some warmist narrative. Brown is probably suffereing from petulance due to an over active imagination and paranoia that they are conspiring against sceptics.
We are perhaps all susceptible to this pretulance and paranoia to some extent. For example if one of my comments posted on websites doesn't get published, I get suspicious of their motives. But when I reflect on the issue there is a good technical reason why the comment didn't get published. Brown "spat the dummy" in a big way and very publicly (NZ vernacular for petulance).
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nigelj at 06:26 AM on 16 September 2023Patrick Brown's recycled hallucination of climate science
Good. You are hitting back hard against the denialists and cranks (metaphorically speaking). Best article this website has done in ages.
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nigelj at 06:24 AM on 16 September 2023Patrick Brown's recycled hallucination of climate science
CORK
"All hands on board! Each point of view should be heard. Teaming up will be the only answer."
Not clear what you mean by this, but if you mean warmists should team up with denialists I think you are completely wrong. Any teaming up must be with people who accept the complete basics of climate science and the need for a robust mitigation response, or there is no point. Some things in life can legitamately involve compromise, but not scientitic truths, or the need for a strong mitigation response.
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Rob Honeycutt at 05:08 AM on 16 September 2023Patrick Brown's recycled hallucination of climate science
shoyemore... The whole thing, to me, sounds like a conclusion grasping for a rationalization where there was none.
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Mal Adapted at 04:41 AM on 16 September 2023John F. Clauser: the latest climate science-denying physicist
Sorry, should have included a link to the Media Bias chart. The publisher is selling some versions of it, but the interactive one at the link is free. I have no financial interest in the company.
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Mal Adapted at 04:38 AM on 16 September 2023John F. Clauser: the latest climate science-denying physicist
sailingfree @17, blatant crap is pretty much all Epoch Times has to offer. I somehow got identified as a potential subscriber, so I keep getting free copies in the mail. On Adfontes Media's Media Bias chart, ET shows up far to the right on "Political Bias," and well down the vertical axis on "News Value and Reliability". One wonders just how much overlap there is among readers of ET and SkS.
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krautbernd at 02:19 AM on 16 September 2023Is Nuclear Energy the Answer?
sekwisniewski:
Sovacool et al. have since published a reply to the supposed refutation, pointing to serious flaws in said paper:
Sovacool, B.K., Schmid, P., Stirling, A. et al. Reply to: Nuclear power and renewable energy are both associated with national decarbonization. Nat Energy 7, 30–31 (2022). [Link]
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CORK at 00:14 AM on 16 September 2023Patrick Brown's recycled hallucination of climate science
All hands on board! Each point of view should be heard. Teaming up will be the only answer.
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sailingfree at 22:38 PM on 15 September 2023John F. Clauser: the latest climate science-denying physicist
Good thoughts on the IPCC, but back on topic, Clauser:
The recent article in Epoch Times is at https://www.theepochtimes.com/us/nobel-winner-refutes-climate-change-narrative-points-out-ignored-factor-5486267?cmt=1&cmt_id=bc9ade40-335a-4574-b934-27a8bb64dd4b
It is depressing to me to see the spread of such blatant crap. To get really upset, see the comments there for a view into the minds of deniers.
I hope that readers of skeptical science can add comment and replies to that article to help balance the propaganda and even get some deniers thinking of the real science.
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shoyemore at 20:46 PM on 15 September 2023Patrick Brown's recycled hallucination of climate science
Was this a deliberate hoax by Brown or him just being petulant?
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scaddenp at 11:51 AM on 13 September 2023At a glance - Does cold weather disprove global warming?
Just to address the point, consider another cold country with frozen seas about it - Sweden. According to this -
"In the 1970s, three quarters of Swedish homes were heated with oil boilers. Today, electric-powered heat pumps have all but replaced oil in single-family homes (most multi-family homes rely on district heating). That has driven greenhouse gas emissions from oil heating of buildings down 95 per cent since 1990, according to the Swedish Energy Agency"
The difference is Sweden's willingness to act. A carbon tax in 1990 and revised building codes certainly helping. The very common district heating schemes also use waste heat and wood waste as well as GSHP.
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One Planet Only Forever at 06:21 AM on 13 September 2023Exploring the feasibility of a new feature: Bunk of the Week
I will submit a response using the form. But I want to share my initial 'thoughts open to discussion'.
A good title is important. But a good description of the objective, the reason, for the actions is probably more important.
My first thoughts for a Title and an 'Intro, objective, reason' for the Blog Post series is:
This Week's (or Month's) Climate Science Non-sense: In pursuit of common-sense understanding of climate science matters.
Developing a common sense (a common understanding or consensus understanding) requires an agreed common objective. Without an agreed 'common interest' objective a diversity of conflicting interests will interfere with the development of 'common sense'.
The common sense objective regarding climate science should be pursuing increased awareness and improved understanding to reduce harmful human activities, especially by trying to reduce the harm of misleading marketing efforts.
My suggested focus on 'common sense' is due to harmfully misleading populist political players claiming their group is 'The Common Sense Party' while they make non-sense claims that they hope will be popular. It seems to be driven by the non-sense belief that a belief that is more popular 'must be more reasonable and more justified'. More popular means more correct and therefore, by default, less harmful and well justified doesn't it?
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Bob Loblaw at 05:02 AM on 13 September 2023A Frank Discussion About the Propagation of Measurement Uncertainty
MAR @ 65:
You are trying to ell me that Pat Frank misread and misunderstood something? I'm shocked, I tell you, shocked.
...but you made me go back and read some of Bevington and Robinson again, to try to see what Pat Frank was looking at and why he thinks what he thinks. [I'll forgive you for doing that, this time.]
The odd thing is that the section containing B&R's equation 4.22 is titled "Relative Uncertainties", and follows a section titled "Weighting the data - Nonuniform Uncertainties", and it is all dealing with looking at how to use statistics to determine "the most probably value" and its uncertainty. The everyday mean is "the most probably value" when all points have the same precision, but when they don't, B&R derive equations that account for that.
The B&R section on Relative Uncertainties begins with the statement "It may be that the relative values of σi are known, but the absolute magnitudes are not". And then equation 4.21 is how to estimate a weighted mean, accounting for the ratio between uncertainties. They say (about equation 4.21) that "the result depends only on the relative weights and not on the absolute magnitudes".
And, as you say, B&R then get to equation 4.22 for the "weighted average variance of the data" (not the mean), and equation 4.23 gives the expected 1/sqrt(N) relationship between the σ of the data and the σ of the mean. All this “weighted variance” stuff does not change that 1/sqrt(N) relationship.
But then, as is usual, you try to figure out where the student went wrong and do they deserve part marks, and you realize that all this stuff in this section of B&R is talking about distributions of data where errors are happening randomly. B&R talk about systematic errors as a complication, but the equations presented do not account for that. Pat Frank keeps saying "it's not random, it's systematic". At which point you say "oh, you're looking at equations that don't deal with systematic error".
And then you realize that Pat Frank's equations 4, 5, and 6 are not dealing with relative error - he has specific numbers he has claimed for the uncertainty of maximum and minimum temperature readings, and daily means. In equations 5 and 6 he is claiming that they carry on as constants ad infinitum regardless of averaging period. So you say "you're not looking at equations that should be used when you know the absolute variances".
And then he switches horses and claims that those equations have nothing to do with uncertainty or precision or whatever. He says the 0.382C is not a distribution, etc.
I only see two options:
- He really has not understood the material he has read, and is misusing what he sees, so his results are based on a misunderstanding.
- He knew what he wanted to see at the start, and has only read the references enough to find something that he thinks looks like what he wanted to begin with.
Some time, over a few beers, I'll have to tell you what I really think.
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MA Rodger at 03:02 AM on 13 September 2023A Frank Discussion About the Propagation of Measurement Uncertainty
Bob Loblaw @64,
Having now examined the rabbit hole Frank used to hide the derivation of his equ 5 & 6, I can now say he is flat wrong as he has all along mis-read his reference Bevington & Robinson (2003). (Mind, I'm not sure how he reckons to fit all that Case 3b nonsense into this reference.)
Frank (2020) is saying his reference shows for his Case 3b that varmean = varnoise x (N/(N-1)) with wi=1, indicating the sample uncertainty is a simple average of all the measurement uncertainties vari.
This is a mis-reading of Bevington & Robinson (2003) equ 4.22, the error being that equ 4.22 yields the 'weighted average variance of the data', the varnom from which the individual measurement variances vari are scaled. With wi=1, there is no scaling so the varnom = vari. The actual variance of the mean varmean is given in equ 4.23 where varmean = varnom/N which then yields the division by N1/2 for the standard deviation.
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Rob Honeycutt at 23:32 PM on 12 September 2023At a glance - Does cold weather disprove global warming?
JacobsLadder... Just curious, is there some reason you believe that sustainable energy can't supply heating?
Moderator Response:[DB] The sock puppet in question has recused itself from further participation here.
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Eclectic at 20:54 PM on 12 September 2023At a glance - Does cold weather disprove global warming?
My apologies, Moderator. Figures from ieso.ca for 2022.
Supplied electricity (not capacity) for Ontario Province ~
Nuclear 78.8 TWh ; Hydro 38.0 TWh ; Wind 13.8 TWh
Total equates to about 89% of produced electricity.
Equivalent to 13 GW of continuous electricity yearlong.
( ~13 million small bar radiators of 1000 Watts each, used 24/7/365 )
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Eclectic at 20:10 PM on 12 September 2023At a glance - Does cold weather disprove global warming?
JacobsLadder @1 :
And that ain't half of it ! You didn't mention north of the Great Lakes.
Each winter, nearly a million dead of cold in Ontario, but it's hushed up.
Owing to their electricity coming 89% from nuclear, hydro, and wind.
[ 2022 figures of supplied electricity ]
Moderator Response:[PS] Did you mean to supply a figure for supplied electricity? I don't think your sarcasm encourages useful discussion and his point was about heating not electricity.
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JacobsLadder at 19:09 PM on 12 September 2023At a glance - Does cold weather disprove global warming?
Regardless of what may be happening with the global average temperature, the simple fact is that millions of people, in particular those in the north-eastern and mid-western US have experienced record cold winters for years. Harbors on the Great Lakes have frozen over and there have been numerous deaths from hypothermia. The people in these regions have always relied on coal and natural gas to meet their energy needs. So-called "sustainable energy" is totally inadequate, and it would be dead wrong (pun intended!) to deprived these people of their needs through government actions to curtail fossil fuels. Unfortunately, our current "president" is trying to do just that to the American people, and we are not taking kindly to it!
Moderator Response:[PS] Politics is not permitted by the Comments Policy. Links to show that those regions are indeed experiencing record cold winters would also help discussion.
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Bob Loblaw at 12:14 PM on 12 September 2023A Frank Discussion About the Propagation of Measurement Uncertainty
One more followup to MAR:
You quote Pat Frank as quoting Giever:
...an adjudged average noise variance must be assigned using physical reasoning...
This basically means that you should do what Spock did when calculating the return parameters in Star Trek IV, the Voyage Home.
Kirk: Mr. Spock, have you accounted for the variable mass of whales and water in your time re-entry program?
Spock: Mr. Scott cannot give me exact figures, Admiral, so... I will make a guess.
You can get a more useful discussion n the JCGM 100:2008 mentioned earlier in this thread. In section 4.3, where it discusses "Type B evaluation of standard uncertainty", it says:
4.3.1 For an estimate xi of an input quantity Xi that has not been obtained from repeated observations, the associated estimated variance u2(xi) or the standard uncertainty u(xi) is evaluated by scientific judgement based on all of the available information on the possible variability of Xi . The pool of information may include
- previous measurement data;
- experience with or general knowledge of the behaviour and properties of relevant materials and instruments;
- manufacturer's specifications;
- data provided in calibration and other certificates;
- uncertainties assigned to reference data taken from handbooks.
In other words, at some point you need to be allowed to make some sort of informed professional judgment.
In no way does it provide justification for Pat Frank's equations 5 and 6. The quote you provide from him is basically word salad that he has used to convince himself of his conclusion.
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Bob Loblaw at 11:46 AM on 12 September 2023A Frank Discussion About the Propagation of Measurement Uncertainty
MAR:
If the only error or uncertainty is a single, fixed offset that applies to all readings, and there is never any variation at all from that fixed offset, then when adding two numbers with different offsets, the result should be as follows:
Ameas = Atrue + Aoffset
Bmeas = Btrue + Boffset
C = Ameas + Bmeas = Atrue +Btrue + Aoffset + Boffset
In which case you are just simply adding the offsets to get the error. And if you are then dividing the sum by N, the offsets also get divided by N. But you don't go through the gymnastics of squaring and then square-rooting. That is completely redundant. The offsets are not "combined in quadrature", as Pat Frank keep saying.
And if you are dealing with the situation where you are subtracting numbers, say, by calculating anomalies, then a fixed offset means:
D = Ameas - Bmeas = Atrue - Btrue + Aoffset - Boffset
..and now you need to compute the difference between the two offsets. And if the offset is so fixed that it is the same for both A and B, then you get the true result for D without having to have any idea at all what that offset is.
Just below equation 6, Pat Frank mentions anomalies, and correctly states that you calculate one by subtracting the monthly mean from the 30-year normal...
...but then he still adds the two offsets together instead of subtracting them. And he does it in the obfuscation of "quadrature".
The form of his equations 5 and 6 is an extreme obfuscation, and only is correct if there is nothing else that affects the errors. And Pat Frank keeps calling it an equation that extends equation 4 (daily uncertainty) into monthly and annual mean temperature uncertainties. He can never give an explanation of what makes equation 4 (as corrected) different from equations 5 and 6.
At PubPeer, he keeps going on about "intrinsic resolution" of liquid-in-glass thermometers, and in the paper he says this about the value coming out of equation 4:
This ±0.382C represents the field-conditions lower limit of visually-read resolution-limited 2σ uncertainty to be assigned to any global daily mean land-surface meteorological LiG air temperature.
So, is it fixed offset, or a 2σ uncertainty? Only he knows, it seems, and it depends entirely on what argument he is trying to make. Screaming "intrinsic resolution" at the top of his lungs is not a justification for assuming that LiG thermometers only ever have a constant offset with no variation. And fixed errors do not start with "±". Calling it a "±0.382C ... 2σ uncertainty" is the exact opposite of a fixed, unchanging offset.
The Pat Frank Uncertainty Principle seems to be a parallel universe to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. You can tell what he is saying, or what he means, but not both. Things are one thing until Pat Frank says they are something else completely different.
I can only conclude that he is so confused about the issue that he has compartmentalized many different aspects of it, and he can't see the conflicts in his positions. To paraphrase the words of a long-time commenter over at RC "Pat Frank and I have one thing in common. Neither of us has any idea what he is talking about".
Pat Frank's statistics are like Pa Kettle doing basic math. Internally self consistent (in his mind), but...
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RicardoB at 09:23 AM on 12 September 2023There is no consensus
Bob Loblaw @954 :
I would say Peterson has developed a rather high public profile well beyond Canada's frontiers, namely in the USA and all over Europe.
Also, Peterson is now on a "coverpage" article on Desmog.
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MA Rodger at 07:57 AM on 12 September 2023A Frank Discussion About the Propagation of Measurement Uncertainty
Bob Loblaw @61,
I did say up-thread I wasn't going to burrow down into the rabbit holes of Frank's argument. So I haven't look into the references Frank uses to defend his equ 5 & 6. If he were honest about his methods, it should be him explaining why he is right and everybody else wrong. But I note for equ 5 & 6, he only "stands by them."
The nearest Frank comes to an explanation for his equ 5 & 6, for using the RMS for the uncertainty of the combined average of N uncertainties (rather than dividing by N1/2) is found in the first version of nonsense**, Frank (2010). [**Note this is Frank's temperature record nonsense not him climate model nonsense.]
Frank (2010) sets out four 'Cases' for combined uncertainties: 1, 2 3a and 3b. All but Case 3b are as you would expect with the RMS being divided by N1/2 and thus for large combinations, uncertainty will tend to negligable values. But Frank (2010) designates the combination of SAT data as Case 3b for which it says:-
"When sensor noise variances have not been measured and neither their stationarity nor their magnitudes are known, an adjudged average noise variance must be assigned using physical reasoning [see Gleser (1998), 'Assessing uncertainty in measurement' - for PDF download]".
I've not looked to see if the Gleser reference supports such an assertion but it doesn't sound unreasonable although perhaps for the individual variances rather than for the average of those variance.
But Frank then goes on to tell us:-
"For multiple sensors of unknown noise provenance, or for a time series from a single sensor of unknown and possibly irregular variance, an adjudged estimate of measurement noise variance is implicitly a simple average ... of the nominally unique ... noise variance(s) of the N measurements. The primed sigma [in the shown equation] indicates an adjudged estimate [not a standard varriance] and distinguishes Case 3b noise uncertainty from those of Cases 1-3a.
"In the case of an adjudged average noise uncertainty, each temperature measurement must be appended with the constant uncertainty estimate.
[For Case 3b] the mean of a series of N measurements [of t] is the usual Σ(ti)/N, but the average noise uncertainty in the measurement mean is [the RMS x N/(N-1)] [see Bevington & Robinson (2003) 'Data Reduction and Error Analysis for the Physical Sciences' 3rd edn, McGraw-Hill, Boston, p. 58, wi = 1 PDF], with one degree of freedom lost because the estimated noise variance in each measurement is an implied mean. Thus when calculating a measurement mean of temperatures appended with an adjudged constant average uncertainty, the uncertainty does not diminish as 1/N1/2. Under Case 3b, the lack of knowledge concerning the stationarity and true magnitudes of the measurement noise variances is properly reflected in a greater uncertainty in the measurement mean. The estimated average uncertainty in the measurement mean is not the mean of a normal distribution of variances, because under Case 3b the magnitude distribution of sensor variances is not known to be normal."I have not delved into the reference to see how it would support Frank's assertion. Well, not yet.
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genebrowne at 05:38 AM on 12 September 2023Exploring the feasibility of a new feature: Bunk of the Week
I think a bunk of the week would be good and maybe ease up on the other emails. There has been a few diversion tactics in the media I would like see debunked like Small Modular Rector's SMRs none have ever been completed and I can imagine the price of electricity would be thru the roof. Also have you guys heard the planet has greened 4% so co2 can't be that bad. And also thorium reactors are cheaper and we should all drive cars with nuclear batteries because you only have to replace them every10,000 years.
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Bob Loblaw at 00:52 AM on 12 September 2023A Frank Discussion About the Propagation of Measurement Uncertainty
For what it is worth, this recent paper by Pat Frank has received a fair amount of discussion over at PubPeer. Here is the link to that discussion. Note that I have participated using a PubPeer-assigned anonymous user name (Camponotus mus).
Pat Frank did note at PubPeer that he had discovered the inconsistency in the published equation 4, mentioned in the OP here. He said that the calculation (0.382C) is correct, and that the equation should have been written with the 2 in the denominator outside the square root sign. This is what I said would be correct, in the OP. He stands by equations 5 and 6, though.
Equation 4 is not (as of today) corrected in the online version of the paper, or the downloadable PDF. There is a mention of this correction on the web page, if you look in the right margin and find the button labelled "Comment". There is no formal correction notice on the journal page, as far as I can see.
The rest of the PubPeer discussion exposes huge gaps in Pat Frank's understanding of propagation of error, uncertainty, and general statistics. Some of it repeats what I have presented here, but there is some new stuff, too. Warning: head vice required. If you go there, you assume all risks if Pat Frank's hagfishing is too much for you.
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Bob Loblaw at 00:30 AM on 12 September 2023There is no consensus
Jordan Peterson has developed a rather high public profile (at least, in Canada) on a variety of anti-science stances.
Desmog has a page on him and his climate change positions.
He used to be a professor in psychology at the University of Toronto. The body that licences clinical psychologists in Ontario has been looking at his, and has recommended that he take some training if he doesn't want to lose his licence to practise. Peterson has challenged that order in court, and lost. Details in this CBC news report.
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Leonard Bachman at 21:54 PM on 11 September 2023John F. Clauser: the latest climate science-denying physicist
Per the IPCC reports, dare I mention that review articles are often exceptional examples of research. Organizing, theming, and critiquing the body of current understanding does itself create new understanding and further direction... aka: research.
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Eclectic at 09:37 AM on 11 September 2023There is no consensus
RicardoB @952 :
In return, thanks for your thoughts on Dr Jordan Peterson. My question about Peterson's "choosing" of Dr Curry . . . was a 25% rhetorical question.
I have only seen a small amount of Peterson : too small to make a confident diagnosis of his psyche.
Initial impressions of him : intellectual, sententious, and addicted to the limelight (so much so, that he might well be prepared to sacrifice his probity in order to achieve more limelight & notoriety . . . and thus more clicks & money ).
So I wasn't sure whether his climate science denialism was genuine or merely commercial. There's a ripe field for moneymaking if you pander to the deniosphere ~ whether in climate or far-right-wingism or vaccines or evolution etcetera.
Peterson seems to have quite a cult following in some quarters. Just imagine the good he could do, if on the Side of the Angels !
If you strongly feel I would benefit from seeing more of Peterson, then please direct me (and us generally) to a couple of his essays or videos. Fear not ~ I have a good supply of anti-nausea tablets.
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RicardoB at 23:13 PM on 10 September 2023There is no consensus
Eclectic @951:
Thank you for you comments.
You stated: "Dr Jordan Peterson shows how little he knows about climate matters ~ fair enough ~ but why is he choosing to boost Dr Curry?"
He chooses to boost Curry as he chooses to boost many other prominent "climate narrative contrarians" that he "interviews" in that same channel, like Robert Bryce, Steven Koonin, Richard Lindzen and Alex Epstein.
Dr. Peterson main point of view on the "climate debate" seems to come from his strong belief (?!) that the political measures that are being enforced by governments (to tackle global warming) will lead to mass impoverishment and starvation via the rise of the energy bill. In his words: "People can't care about environmental concerns when they are so desperate they are worried about tonight's shelter and the next meal." He frequently rages about "the consensus" and the "hysteria" that are leading to these political choices.
Hence, he deliberately chooses to debate the topic only with "specialists" from the "contrarian side" - champions for the carbon industry agenda. It suffices to say that these interviews function not as debates or means to get to the truth (by now, Dr. Peterson seems mostly uninterested in the cientific truth), but as opportunities both to let these "specialists" voice their cherry-picked concerns and attack established comprehensive scientific bases, and to not get himself confronted/debunked on his opinions. There's no debating; there's only agreeing.
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John Hartz at 22:55 PM on 10 September 2023Exploring the feasibility of a new feature: Bunk of the Week
Suggested name for new series:
Let's Play Wack-A-Mole!
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Eclectic at 22:33 PM on 10 September 2023It's not urgent
PollutionMonster @47 :
Sorry if I have wasted some of your time. My reference to Mr G. Santos was intended as a humorous flourish, for the amusement of readers who follow U.S. politics. (Santos is a current federal House Representative, from New York, and is of the same political party as the 45th President.) Hard as it may be to believe, but Santos achieves a mendacity that exceeds that of No. 45 . . . and helps demonstrate the extremes to which we have come*** . And AFAIK, Mr Santos was not involved (directly) with the Budget Committee Report you linked to.
The Budget Committee Report you mentioned is largely pure partisan propaganda ~ and with it, I think your opponents are trying to trick you, by using omissions & cherrypicking of history and data. Please regard that Report with your highest level of skepticism, for it cannot be taken as a useful & valid source of information.
My phrase "budget deficit sabotage" was a shorthand to refer to how the "right-wing" party claims to be the party of responsible conservative fiscal management ~ and yet (under No. 45 ) blew an even yuger [huger] hole in the federal budget, by making large tax cuts for the very wealthy and for the big corporations. Leaving even less money for tackling climate issues.
But enough of this rather offtopic partisan politics ~ discussions in SkS threads are intended to be limited to politics in a general sense (not partisan) . . . and limited specifically to how humans' "general politics" is helping or hindering progress towards a healthy Nett Zero Carbon economy.
*** When you have some spare time, look up Cicero's
"O tempora O mores"
. . . which applies to anti-vaxxers, as well !
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PollutionMonster at 20:24 PM on 10 September 2023It's not urgent
Eclectic@45
Hmmm, I don't follow everything you have said. I am not sure where Mr G. Santos enters the picture, I didn't see any mention on the page I linked to. I never heard of this budget deficit sabotage. I've been arguing with a lot of anti-vaxxers and working lots of hours so I've fell behind on some subjects.
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BaerbelW at 19:35 PM on 10 September 2023Volcanoes emit more CO2 than humans
Please note: the basic version of this rebuttal has been updated on September 10, 2023 and now includes an "at a glance“ section at the top. To learn more about these updates and how you can help with evaluating their effectiveness, please check out the accompanying blog post @ https://sks.to/at-a-glance
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Eclectic at 18:27 PM on 10 September 2023There is no consensus
RicardoB @950 :
thank you for the link to Jordan Peterson's YouTube interview with Dr Judith Curry [made February 2023]. Thank you ~ sort of ~ but alas the video is one (1) hour plus 34 minutes long.
Warning. I didn't get much farther than 35 minutes into the video, before my patience ran out. Dr Curry seemed her usual rather vague & waffly self . . . a blend of half-truths & suggestive propaganda. [See my comments at post #949 , above.] If she or Dr Peterson have anything highly worthwhile to say in the remaining hour of the video ~ then please time-stamp it so I can go look at it.
Shortly before I gave up entirely, Curry at 38:40 said**: "at least over the next 3 decades, like the natural variability piece of this is pointing towards cooling ... [which] would tamp down the [CO2-caused warming]".
** My comment is that this is routine lawyer-advocate rhetoric coming from Curry ~ she has almost no evidence to support this "looming cooling" in the next 3 decades . . . but it sounds good to the gullible Denialist listener . . . and if real climate scientists challenged her, she would simply stand back and say (approx) "Oh I didn't say the world would cool, I just said the expected anthropogenic warming would/could/might be somewhat lower than the IPCC expects." [Which seems likely to be 0.5 degreesC hotter than 2023 ~ barring a sustained heavy asteroid bombardment.]
# At the start of his video : some minutes of Petersonian waffle ~ he may have (as a psychologist) some personal insight . . . but it seems to get overridden by his desire for limelight (such is his multi-year track record).
At 19:30 , Dr Jordan Peterson shows how little he knows about climate matters ~ fair enough ~ but why is he choosing to boost Dr Curry?
At 23:30 , Dr Curry makes vague & fluffy reference to cloud effects. And goes on to say: "we don't know how sensitive the climate is to increasing CO2"
At 24:35 , Curry goes on to suggest: "... the oceans and the sun that are the biggest sources of uncertainty in understanding what's going on ..."
RicardoB , you can see why I regard most of what comes out of Dr Curry's mouth as being very often slanted towards insinuations of a vague or semi-deniable type, well-suited as grist for Denialists.
But, if there's anything good in the last one (1) hour of the video . . . then let me know !
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sailrick at 16:51 PM on 10 September 20232023 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #36
Extreme heat is forcing America’s farmers to go nocturnal
"Rising temperatures in key agricultural regions across the United States are leading more farmers to harvest in the middle of the night to safeguard the quality of their crops.
Heat has become a major economic threat to the agriculture industry, and it’s only expected to get worse. By the end of the century, climate change could lead to worldwide crop damage five to 10 times greater than conventional climate models have predicted, according to a 2021 study published in the Journal of the European Economic Association."https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2023/09/09/heat-night-harvesting-farmers/?utm_campaign=wp_post_most&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&wpisrc=nl_most
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RicardoB at 08:06 AM on 10 September 2023There is no consensus
Rkrolph @948, Dr. Curry has recently "debated" the climate issue with Dr. Jordan Peterson in his YouTube channel. You can get a pretty good idea about Dr Curry's position on Global Warming from it:
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nigelj at 08:05 AM on 10 September 2023Exploring the feasibility of a new feature: Bunk of the Week
This website appears to exist to debunk the climate mythys, so it seems a "no brainer" that obviously there should be a (roughly) weekly article debunking significant denialist nonsense contained in media articles, studies, papers or video interviews. Otherwise what is the point of this website?
Just because the latest nonsense might be adequately answered in the list of climate myths is not a reason to not do a specific debunking. You cant expect people to automatically make the connection between a paper and an existing climate myth buried in the list of 100 climate myths.
Sure if theres nothing significant one week skip that week, but I would say there will be something significant most weeks. Sadly to say.
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nigelj at 07:56 AM on 10 September 2023John F. Clauser: the latest climate science-denying physicist
Eclectic @14 some of these physicists come across as very arrogant and over confident, and seem to think that because physics is the most fundamental of the science it makes them experts at everything, without having to study the detals of other issues, like the climate issue. And with the climate issue the details are particularly important. I assume thats sort of what you mean by Happer-Giaever syndrome.
Yes the IPCC reports are a rich lode of information. I can see a great deal of work has gone into these and I get a bit defensive when they get criticised, and especially when the motives of the authors get criticised.
The IPCC scientists are volunteering their time, and yet they get slammed by paid professional deniers with their junk science, and also slammed by a few people at the extreme edges of the warmist group, who think the IPCC should immediately and uncritically embrace the latest and most doomy study. Makes me furious. And I say this as someone who has a doomy disposition or bias, but at least Im aware of the potential for that to sometimes get out of control.
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michael sweet at 03:21 AM on 10 September 20232023 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #36
The Guardian had an article about Powis et al 2023. This paper shows that heat waves hot enough to kill humans will spread to many locations with 2C of warming. They use a lower wet bulb temperature of 31.5C where previous studies of extreme heat used 35C wet bulb . Recent studies have found the 31.5C wet bulb temperature is fatal without fans or AC.
I have not seen a similar article that discusses when agriculturatal animals like cattle and goats will begin to be killed by heat. Obviously it will be impossible to air condition pastures. If the heat cannot be withstood by animals even occasionally, it will be very difficult to keep animals in those areas. Imagine if they could not raise cattle in Texas for the entire summer!! At 2C warming large areas of the world are too hot for humans (and presumably agricultural animals) (sorry, I could not copy the diagrams showing where the heat would be too hot for humans)
Does anyone have a link for the threat of extreme heat to agricultural animals?
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anticorncob6 at 01:51 AM on 10 September 2023Exploring the feasibility of a new feature: Bunk of the Week
(I mentioned this in the google form.)
I think it's good to refute arguments that haven't already been refuted in your "climate myths" permalinks. There are a lot of advanced climate change deniers out there, and it's hard to refute them if you don't have a solid understanding of climate science and research, which is a complex topic. Worse, they are sometimes convincing to people who don't have an agenda to deny AGW.
I saw this recently with a YouTube video arguing that CO2 greenhouse theory is self-contradictory in how the stratosphere cools. I'm considering posting it in the comments of the "greenhouse theory falsified" article but I don't know if I should expect people to watch a 20-minute video. I did suggest this as something to be in "bunk of the week" (or whatever to call it).
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2097 at 21:45 PM on 9 September 2023Exploring the feasibility of a new feature: Bunk of the Week
I don't think a once-per-week-no-matter-what schedule is helpful. We have so much social media noise already. Instead, please consider setting a threshold for how bad the bunk needs to be (in both content & spread) and debunk stuff that is higher than that threshold no matter how seldom or often it happens.
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Eclectic at 08:37 AM on 9 September 2023John F. Clauser: the latest climate science-denying physicist
Nigelj @12 ,
Agreed. Michaux seems determined to assert that "renewables" are an impossibility, or at least a cul-de-sac, on the path to electricity generation of the non-fossil-fuel type. But the adage is :- half a loaf is better than none . . . it would be foolish not to go the path of wind/solar, while we are gradually developing newer technologies.
@13 : Clauser appears to be a climate neophyte, suffering from the Happer-Giaever syndrome. One wonders at his choice of ignoring the rich lode of information available per the IPCC.
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nigelj at 06:46 AM on 9 September 2023John F. Clauser: the latest climate science-denying physicist
The IPCC reports are clearly conservative leaning. However the latest IPCC report does project warming at around 4 - 5 degrees by end of this century at BAU (Business as usual emissions) and SLR (sea level rise) worst case up around 1 - 2M end of this century. And it will go on rising after that if we do nothing.
There are lower SLR projections out there and a small number of higher projections by people like Hansen at around 4M end of century, but his is very speculative. So Im not sure that the IPCC are being excessively conservative on the key numbers.
For me SLR projections of 1 - 2M end of this century look very worrying with the potential to cause massive problems. Even although 2M is worst case and low probbaility the impact is potentially huge so such a scenario should be guiding or mitigation response. If people cant see all this and feel motivated to take serious action, then I'm not sure they would change their attitude if the number was 4M anyway.
So obviously the IPCC should robustly communicate the climate problem, but I think we are at risk of scapegoating the IPCC for the lack of strong mitigation response, when the culprit is really peoples complacency, due presumably to numerous factors from vested interests, resistance to change, psychological barriers, ideological views, the denialist campaign etc,etc.
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nigelj at 06:10 AM on 9 September 2023John F. Clauser: the latest climate science-denying physicist
Eclectic
"In comparison, Simon Michaux [referred to briefly in a different SkS thread, recently] does know what path we should be taking towards a wind-turbine & solar-panel powered economy . . . but says we cannot reach that goal, owing to inevitability of materials supply shortfalls. (We can't get there from here.)"
IMO Michaux is taking a very doomy, pessimistic approach to the materials issue. The crowd who wrote the limits to growth in around the 1970s were the same and proclaimed the world would run out of key metals like lead, zinc etc,etc, by the 1990s and of course that never happened. Lets explore why.
Now firstly obviously materials are a finite resource. Some of the elements are quite rare and so scattered in the crust they cant be extraced economically. Even the concentrated mineral despots of those elements are not common in the earths crust. So we have a problem and are at risk of running out of some things longer term.
But Michaux takes a particularly doomy view of the situation. He looks at known current high grade / medium grade reserves and says red alert we are running out. But he is basing his warnings on known reserves of good grade ore depoits. He makes insufficient allowance for our ingenuity in extracting low grade deposits, making new discoveries, mining the sea bed, extracting minerals from sea water (there are trillions of tons), high levels of recycling. And its highly likely we will get better at doing these things and in energy efficient ways.
Im not talking techno hype where anything is possible and we will conquer all problems. Im just taking the view that its very likely we will find ways of finding more materials.
If we do run into severe shortages of materials we will have to reduce our energy use. Michaux concerns do not seem a good enough reason to give up on renewables completely, and he doesnt provide an alternative if we did do that.