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Comments 36751 to 36800:

  1. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren, you state:

    we know "about 0.75c per century" is not [alarming].

    To paraphrase Dikran, whether some phenomenon is alarming or not is a question of the observer's attitude towards the phenomenon. After all, melting ice, changing weather patterns, and rapid ocean acidification don't have emotions.

    You can be as alarmed or not, as you wish. What you can't do, if you want to be taken seriously (at least around here), is argue your case on the basis of misleading evidence (e.g. the material from Joanne Nova and Craig Idso), cherry picking (e.g. "ice-free Arctic in 2013" when the correct estimate is 2016 ± 3 years), and outright false claims (e.g. your comments about the "Hockey Stick", which others have noted has been substantiated over and over in the literature). If you persist in doing so you aren't likely to get any more polite reception than you are now.

    Personally speaking, if you don't find an unprecedented temperature change, in geological terms, alarming (or at least potentially alarming), that's your lookout. Frankly it seems that you don't have the slightest grasp just how rapid and significant a 0.7-0.8°C change in global mean temperature over a single century is.

    Regarding your (again, apparently reflexive) dismissal of 9+ metre sea level rise: the simple fact of the matter is that 9+ metre sea level rise would become inevitable, given sufficient unabated warming. It would take a few centuries to happen (even worst case scenarios for 2100 call for no more than 2 metres of sea level rise IIRC), but it would be inevitable (because, surprise surprise, ice tends to melt as temperatures rise, and there is a lot of ice locked up in the Greenland & Antarctic land ice sheets).

  2. Dikran Marsupial at 22:42 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren wrote "No more sacrosanct predictions of the future"

    again you are trolling, nobody is claiming that the IPCC projections are in any way sacrosanct.  Please give the hyperbole and rhetoric a break, it really is not helping you in any way.  The model projections tell us the consequences of our actions under our best understanding of the laws of physics.  To ignore them is to ignore what we know about the physics of the climate, which is an unreasonable and irrational position.

  3. Dikran Marsupial at 22:41 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    "Is your avoidance of the word alarming a cop out?"

    no, as I said earlier that future climate change is likely to be problematic and adaption expensive is sufficient to warrant efforts at mitigation.  By nature I am generally rather calm, rational person, so I may well not be alarmed by something that someone else would find alarming.  So I find it better to stick to the science than itroduce emotive terms such as alarming or CAGW etc.

    The warming that we have observed is not all we have to go on though, we also have the laws of physics, which you appear to ignore.  I consider that a fairly unreasonable attitude.

    BTW the meaning of "we know about the future" and "that does not mean we know nothing about the future" are not equivalent.  The former implies a much greater degree of certainty than the latter, and hence substantially misrepresented what I actually wrote.

  4. Warren Hindmarsh at 22:33 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    (snip)

    Moderator Response:

    [PW] Warren, this is your last warning: any further *trolling* and all your rants will be deleted, and you will be recused from any further commentary on SkS.

  5. Dikran Marsupial at 21:51 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    O.K., to show that Warren *is* just trolling, he complains 'Dikran sorry but to call me a troll and then you say you "know about the future" '

    what I actually wrote was

    "you are playing with words now. We can have no "evidence" of the future, but that does not mean we know nothing about it."

    I clearly did not say that I know the future, and to suggest that we are not completely ignorant of what will happen in the future is not an unreasonable statement.

    "once again your proof of alarming warming and we know "about 0.75c per century" is not that."

    Also I didn't say that I had proof of alarming warming.  I made it very clear that "alarming" is a subjective term and didn't use it myself, I also didn't say proof, you can't have proof of something that happens in the future. 

    It is sad that Warren should play such silly word games and misquote, rather than actually engage in a rational discussion of what the science actually does tell us.

  6. CBDunkerson at 21:47 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren wrote: "...the increasingly absolute belief systems of the AGW lobby (Mann's flawed hockey stick graph, climate gate, It won't snow in London again, the Arctic will be ice free by 2013, etc.etc.) caused me to adopt a contrarian and skeptical view."

    So you have based your position on lies and nonsense... and continue to hold that position even when shown that these things are lies and nonsense.

    Sorry, that doesn't make you a 'skeptic'.

  7. Warren Hindmarsh at 21:35 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Dikran sorry but to call me a troll and then you say you "know about the future" if that's the best you have sorry I'm too much of a contrarian skeptic to cop that now, once again your proof of alarming warming and we know "about 0.75c per century" is not that.

  8. Glenn Tamblyn at 21:23 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Tom

    I am aware the usual convention for any paleodata is 'present' is 1950. The GISP data I linked to specifically says from the present and is from a 2000 study. Possibly Alley means the usual convention, just the description of the data doesn't say that specifically.

    Warren's problem is relying on poor quality source for his arguents.

  9. Dikran Marsupial at 20:46 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren, the tone of your response to Tom is again snarky and gives the impression of trolling, rather than rational scientific discussion.  The answer is pretty obvious, the part that is not an extrapolation is not necesarily model based and hence the forcing data Tom gave is not "only a model".  Please exercise some self skepticism and try and see the value in the posts made by others, rather than just assuming they are wrong without checking.

  10. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren Hindmarsh @29,

    1)  Could you please provide your evidence for your false claim that the forcing data I showed "is only a model"?

    2)  I note that your comment that even considering the possibility of mass extinctions in similar conditions to the worst mass extinction in the paleo record is "alarmist".  Very clearly you are operating on an a priori assumption that the impacts of global warming cannot be bad.

    You are making it more and more transparent that you are just yet another ideologically driven, evidence free troll.

  11. Dikran Marsupial at 19:30 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    By the way, the problems with Warrens behaviour here have been pointed out to him before, for instance here, where he wrote the obviously content-free trolling comment:

    Hi dikran

    where is the global warming :)

    To which I later replied:

    "Warren, firstly your posts on SkS have demonstrated an argumentative rhetorical tone. This is not conducive to discussion of science and is likely to irritate the other participants in the discussion, which reflects more badly on you than on anyone else. Please give it a rest."

    before going on to answer his question.  Note also the moderator comment that shows the other moderators had also tired of his snarky behaviour.

    I've had a look through Warren's posting history here, and this sort of behaviour seems pretty much standard operating procedure, so if he resents being labelled as a troll, then perhaps he needs to reconsider his posting strategy.

  12. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Glenn Tamblyn @32, Before Present refers to before 1950 in geological analysis, unless otherwise specified.  Therefore the final date in the Alley et al data is 1855, not 1905.  A comparison between 1855 temperatures and modern temperatures at site of the GISP2 core can be found here.

    It is interesting to note that of the three regional temperature series, not one shows a temperature record through to modern times.  The GISP2 record shows temperatures only through to 1855 as already noted.  It even marks the temperature increase from 1790-1855 in red to deceptively indicate it is the modern warming.  

    The soil temperature record in the great plains (your second image in your post @37) terminates around 1500 AD, ie, effectively with the onset of the LIA.  The line across (as you note) represents modern values, but in fact represents modern (1990s) soil composition.  Soil is formed from biological decay products being worked into the sand and/or clay substrate by bioturbation.  Thus modern soil composition is only a measure of modern temperatures at very low resolution of at least decades and possibly longer.  This is shown, in part by the fact that 1940s measurements match 1990s measurements.  Therefore the modern values shown, used as a temperature proxy, equate to a multidecade average temperature terminating in the 1990s, and do not represent modern (early 21st century) values at all.    

    The final image (and your final image @37) shows no temperature post 1980.  The line across purportedly represents modern temperatures, but as you not is not the modern temperatures shown in the original source, and indeed shows a lower temperature than that shown in that source.

    Thus, in his attempt to show mid to late holocene temperatures greater than modern temperatures, Hindmarsh has singularly failed to show any modern temperatures.  So much for his claim to be guided by evidence.

  13. Dikran Marsupial at 18:58 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren wrote "Dikran I asked for evidence of alarming global warming"

    as I said, what is considered "alarming" is a matter of opinion, and like your use of CAGW is usually hyperbole or rhetorical overstatement in order to create a straw man.  If you want to give the impression of trolling, this is a pretty good approach.

    "you provided a link to a IPCC report. In that report it stated that the earth had warmed by "about 0.74C" over the last 100 yearrs""

    so?  did you read the projections of future warming?  That is what justifies efforts at mitigation, not the relatively small warming we have seen over the last 100 years.

    The IPCC reports also contain discussion of historical sea ice extent and the medieval warm period etc, but you seem to have ignored that and prefer Jo Nova's blog instead.

    "Yes there are models that predict much worse in the future but models, by their very definition, can not be evidence."

    you are playing with words now.  We can have no "evidence" of the future, but that does not mean we know nothing about it.

    "Dikan I resent the troll accusation"

    too bad, stop using the phrase CAGW, stop playing with words and start taking a balanced *skeptical* view of the evidence rather than just cherry picking images from blogs (without considering whether they are an accurate representation of the evidence or whether they tell the story they are purported to tell - see posts by Glenn).

  14. Glenn Tamblyn at 18:34 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren. Your first link (GISP) tells us about Greenland. The MWP (if there was such a thing) doesn't appear to have been global in nature. Certainly not if it was 500 years apart in different parts of the planet. Whereas warming today is global. And by not showing the instrumental record for Greenland in conjunction with the ice core data that removes the context wrt current temperature changes.Picture what that graph looks like if, at the far right the line climbs to current temps in Greenland. That would put it up at around the 'minoan' level, a much larger change than any of the other spikes given that we should be in a long term downward trend as the curved trend line on the graph suggests. Incomplete information can be very misleading Warren.

    Your second link was about evidence for differing proportions of different plant types in the Great Plains in the transition out of the last Glacial involving lots of factors. And if you read Nordt et al they show graphs from studies by others that differ significantlyfrom their work. So what was the point of the second link.

    And what excatly is Craig Idso's manipulation of the graph from Otto et al telling you about the reliability of your sources?

    And your links were all to the same source - Jo Nova. And she sourced 2 of them from Craig Idso.  And Idso manipulated both the images he supplied.

    You need to find better sources of information Warren.

     

     

  15. Glenn Tamblyn at 18:08 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren, regarding no Arctic sea ice by 2013, that was a projection by one modelling group and actually was 2016 +/- 3years.

    This is a graph of Arctic sea ice volume from PIOMAS since 1979. Each line is one month with the green bottom line being September. The bottom axis is zero volume.

    After last years mild season ice volume ticked back up so now the trend projection is saying 2016/17 for zero. Prior to last year the projection was saying 2015/16. Ice volume up there has returned to what it was a year ago - the 'recovery' has evaporated away. Will ice reach zero by 2016? Its not certain, but it is also quite plausible that it could.

    So '... but you still have to give me "Ice free Arctic"...'. What do you think the data is suggesting

     

  16. Warren Hindmarsh at 17:57 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Glenn Tamblyn Please read my comment again.

    I did provide links to 3 different locations..

    Yes they vary but they all have the same effect i.e, to hopefully allay composor99@26's concerns that recent warming was unprecedented in the "history of the earth" and yes your Vostok example should help composor99 as well.

  17. Glenn Tamblyn at 17:54 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren

     

    Regarding your 2nd link, this is a small excerpt from a paper Nordt et al here. Quite a technical paper about variations in the proportion of C3 & C4 plant in the US Great Plains over the last 12 kyr+

     

    Here is the conclusion from the paper:

    "Conclusions

    The delta 13C and delta %C4 from organic carbon of buried soils within the mixed and shortgrass prairie of the North American Great Plains permits a regional analysis of C4 grassland dynamics for the past 12ka. The delta 13C data compiled from a literature review of buried soils reveal that C4warm season grasses were present throughout the Great Plains study area during the past 12ka, but that there were appreciable fluctuations with 0.6 and 1.8ka periodicities. The crossover latitude of equal relative production of C4 and C3 plants appears to have been several degrees to the south of the modern location of 46 deg N prior to 6.7ka, with a shift to near the modern position after 6.7ka.

    Relative C4 production did not increase monotonically in response to orbitally forced insolation between 12 ad 6.7ka, apparently because of a negative feedback from the presence of the LIS, glacial lakes in the northern plains, and cool glacial meltwater pulses into the Gulf of Mexico and North Atlantic. Thereafter, fluctuations in solar irradiance provided a more direct influence on delta %C4 as outflow of warm subtropical air from the Gulf of Mexico became established, interrupted periodically by warm, dry westerly flow contributing to episodes of drought. Here, increased delta %C4 occurred during intervals of elevated solar irradiance and with shifts in the ITCZ into the northwest Gulf of Mexico in the absence of ice-rafting events in the North Atlantic.

    The coherency in our buried soil record with pollen spectra, marine cores, and ice cores, demonstrate the reliability of C4 plant dynamics not only as a proxy for grassland evolution but for climate as well. More work is needed to better understand grass dynamics in the early Holocene in response to conflicting reports of whether conditions were warmer or cooler than present. The paradox in the middle and late Holocene is that positive delta %C4 anomalies correspond with periods of dune activation. More work is needed to understand why during drought conditions C4 plants flourished. No doubt, C4 plants were responding positively to elevated temperatures as they should, but either these grasses thrive during drought or were growing between drought events during periods of landscape stability.

    Hopefully our work will spawn further investigations into grassland dynamics of the past, provide additional parameters for climate and biome modeling, and create a better understand C and N dynamics in a region that is poorly understood"

    So what exactly is the relevance and more importantly significance of your 2nd link?

    Then there is this graph from Nordt et al. Seemingly one of the graphs that your graph was based on.


    Whereas your looks like this:

    Sort of a bit different isn't it when you leave half the data off. Because the Nordt paper was looking at some quite complex local climatic issues as the Laurentide Ice sheet melted and so on. Again not exactly global.

    So who produced this truncated graph that could o easily mislead people? Well lets quote Jo Nova "Thanks to the Craig Idso at CO2Science for compiling so many of these on his site.". Interesting concept don't you think. Truncating graphs and cherry-picking is 'compiling'?

    As to your third graph and some more from Craig Idso, try reading this.  Note particularly the section labelled CO2 Non-Science on how CO2Science misrepresents Oppo el al (2009).

    Here is your graph as shown in Otto et al (b)

    Notice the '1997-2007 mean annual SST' line that Craig Idso at CO2Science 'compiled' away in your version and replaced with another line that is not on the original, is not identified, and might suggest well sumfink or uver.

     

    Finally Warren. If you wish to discuss science here with people that's great. But please make them your opinions or the published science itself. Not a blogger said that another blogger said that ... well you get the picture.

    Just doing a copy and paste from an old Jo Nova blog doesn't really count as making your own argument does it? Its sort of insulting to everyone here.

  18. Dikran Marsupial at 17:43 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren, the claim that the Arctic may be ice free by 2013 was made by one (1) scientist, the IPCC reports (and the majority of Arctic sea ice scientists) did not agree with that projection.  So what you are doing is cherry picking headlines and not bothering to check whether they were actually in accordance with the mainstream scientific position. 

    Here is a hint, if you think some climate change claim is alarmist, try looking to see what the IPCC reports say about it.

  19. Sapient Fridge at 17:38 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren might be interested to know that this is the first year I can remember that it didn't snow at all over winter in my part of England (Cambridge, just North of London).   We had about 5 frosty mornings, but no snow.


    Not proof of anything of course, but still an interesting data point.

  20. Dikran Marsupial at 17:36 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren Hindmarsh wrote "Dikran and Composer99 You seem to be concerned that "about 0.75C" global temperature rise in 100 years is "something to be concerned about" and "quite possibly unique" evidence like this or this or this may help."

    So I point you to the IPCC reports (which describe the work of many thousands of scientists) and your only comment on it is to post links to three rather questionable (see Glen's post above) pictures from Jo Nova's website? 

    It seems to me that you have paid no attention whatsoever to the answer I gave to your question, which makes me wonder what you had in mind when you asked it.  I suspect the answer is that you are just trolling.

  21. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren, I'd like to have said I was astonished by your reply, but I found it sadly predictable.

    I still believe these are great outcomes but the increasingly outlandish claims of 9m sealevel rise and 6c temp rise by the end of the century and the increasingly absolute belief systems of the AGW lobby (Mann's flawed hockey stick graph, climate gate, It won't snow in London again, the Arctic will be ice free by 2013, etc.etc.) caused me to adopt a contrarian and skeptical view.

     

    As others have noted, the moment you added the "C" to AGW you betrayed a propagandistic stance towards matters.  Adding the 'catastrophic' to AGW was simply a branding tactic by a political opposition that had no basis in published work.  Your use suggests either you don't know manipulation and propaganda when you see it, or that you are willfully interested in propogating a false meme.  Which is it?

    Moving on to the hockey stick, I'm not sure what your apparent concession to TonyW means, but in any case you've not made it clear what you think the importance of the hockey stick is.   Again, this is a dismissive stance, that isn't about understanding but about something else entirely.  To be blunt: do you recognize that Mann's original 1998 work has been replicated and extended by other groups using other proxies and statistical methods?  If not, in terms of this debate you're talking about, I and many others here are far more technically competent than you to evaluate the claims and methods:  what hope do you have of persuading us?  Referring to JoNova?  Part of the issue Warren, is that you have to have the technical chops to know when a McIntyre or Nova is simply wrong.  If you don't have those skills, like I do, then you can't be a skeptic... you're simply a bystander to something you don't understand.

    Moving on then to the disappearance of Artic sea ice in summer, you surely know that one group reported results of 2013-2019.  It's one group, reporting a preliminary result, not a consensus opinion and you distort it when you aren't sayig 2016+/- 3 years.  It is a perfectly normal and expected part of science for someone to publish a finding of this sort "hey, we tried a new approach and it gave these interesting results".  The whole point of this is so that other people can look at the approach, see if they think it is correct.  You don't seem to register this part of normal science and instead seem to be taking a legalistic approach of constructing an advocacy case- an approach with no obligation to consider the findings as a whole.  So if this is the sort of debate you think is productive, you've probably signed your death warrant as far as being seen as someone who a scientist can have a productive discussion with.

    I think the same applies to the "no snow in London" business.  AFAIK that was one remark, not published paper, and the modeling results for the UK tend to show the kind of winter England just had.  And again it seems that you have a barrister's approach to things- finding one little thing and stripping it of context.

    This is what the UK Met office shows these days.  Why is it not the story rather than whatever the no snow in London story?

    So when you say "increasingly outlandish claims" say for sea level, you ignore the mainstream projections, and take some sort of odd umbrage that outliers in the scientific work exist.

    Beyond that you give the appearance of advocating some sort of censorship of worst case assessments.  Kerry Emmanual, of MIT (where I got my doctorate) makes a strong case for the importance of including the long tail risks, because leaving them out would be misleading.  On my own authority and training (industrial process safety and hazards analysis) I think he's quite right.  In my reports to management I certainly included the long tail risks and mitigation strategies.

    In toto, I don't think you've provided an example of facts changing your mind, rather you've provided examples of how you get lost in the whole business and can't see the forest from the trees.  It certainly doesn't give me any warm feelings on the possibility of rational interchange with the WUWT and JoNova factories, and even further ignores whether these folks or you really matter anyhow. 

    Moderator Response:

    [PW] Unnecessary white space removed.

  22. Glenn Tamblyn at 16:53 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren

    Regarding your links - all generated by CO2Science or JoNoova by the way, not links to the actual data sources or papers - you might find these things interesting

    Your first link is for ice core data from Greenland. Not the globe. We can't assess the globe from data from just one location.

    Here is your image, taken from JoNova. Here is the paper by Richard Alley that the graph is based on. Firstly this graph does not appear in Alley's paper. You can get the actual data here. Notably the data ends in 1905. So most of the warming we are disscussing here isn't included on the graph. And this is Greenland so we can't just add what the global temperature change has been since warming is greater in the Arctic. Here is the record for one station in Greenland that is continuous since the start of the 20th century. Around 2.5 Deg C of warming. So that would possibly put temperatures at Greenland today back to the levels labelled Minoan Warming

     

    \Next look at this graph - I even obtained it from a skeptic website. Vostoc Ice Core data from Antarctica for a similar period. And there are spikes labelled with the same 'warm period' names.

    N

    Notice the difference between the two graphs. Your graph shows Medieval Warming as a spike around 1050 while the Antarctic data shows a narrow spike around 1550. 1050 was actually quite cool in the Antarctic. The Roman warming was a narrow spike around 100 BC in Greenland but a narrow spike around 350 BC in Antarctica. The Minoan period was around 1300 C in Greenland but around 1700 BC in Antarctica. Is there seems to be a bit of a problem with dates here Warren? No, just with the assumption that we can use one location to tell us what was happening over the entire planet.

  23. Warren Hindmarsh at 16:33 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    TonyW I will give you the "Hockey Stick" but you still have to give me "Ice free Arctic" "it won't snow in London" and we will just wait on the upcoming court case on the "Hockey Stick" 

  24. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously
    I think we can determine Warren's line of "reasoning" when he bring up long debunked ideas like the supposed flawed hockey stick, which has been confirmed in numerous other studies.
  25. Warren Hindmarsh at 15:56 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Tom Curtis thank you for the comment your "evidence" is a model using only CO2 and sunlight and a host of assumptions concluding with the possibility of the extermination of just about all life on the planet. The alarmism is about as absolute as you can get but to rest your concern most of the models have been wrong, I admit the jury is still out, the warming will come back, CO2 is a green house gas but at alarmist rates? lets follow the evidence.

  26. Warren Hindmarsh at 15:14 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Dave123 You asked where I have changed  my mind and I have to be careful here because the last few comments have been way off topic of this post which is about the link of set beliefs and AGW denial.

    Any way, yes I did follow the warming debate and you could probably say I was a strong supporter of alarming warming during the 90's. I considered it had a lot of credibility after all, no matter what the case, to cut CO2 emissions pollution and promote renewable energy are all great outcomes. 

    I still believe these are great outcomes but the increasingly outlandish claims of 9m sealevel rise and 6c temp rise by the end of the century and the increasingly absolute belief systems of the AGW lobby (Mann's flawed hockey stick graph, climate gate, It won't snow in London again, the Arctic will be ice free by 2013, etc.etc.) caused me to adopt a contrarian and skeptical view.

    In other words with each global warming claim now I go and check the fact, it's not that difficult these days.

    Contrary to the above post I consider a skeptical inquiring mind as a strength.  I recommend it.

  27. Warren Hindmarsh at 14:46 PM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Dikran and Composer99 You seem to be concerned that "about 0.75C" global temperature rise in 100 years is "something to be concerned about" and "quite possibly unique" evidence like this or this or this may help.

  28. Most of the last 10,000 years were warmer

    peter @50:

    10,000 years is not exactly "short term".

    Further, the behaviour of stocks and commodities and the behaviour of ice cores as a proxy for local temperatures are rather different, for what I hope are rather obvious reasons. If you are trying to make a claim about ice cores based on stock or commodity charts, you are doing it wrong.

    So, you're going to need to provide citations - to papers regarding the Greenland ice cores, not to papers discussing equity markets - to support your assertions.

  29. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Warren @21:

    A 5-6°C drop in temperature would mean very little in our day-to-day experience. Maybe the difference between t-shirt and long-sleeve shirt weather on a sunny day.

    But a similar drop in global mean temperature means mile-high ice sheets covering large chunks of the Northern Hemisphere, as was observed during previous glacial periods.

    Cooling or warming, small numbers at the global scale lead to big changes.

    So, yes, a 0.74°C rise in global mean temperature over the 20th century is something to be concerned about. In fact, a 0.74°C change in global mean temperature over 100 years is quite possibly unique in the geological history of the Earth over the Phanerozoic, save for the most violent of geological upheavals.

  30. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    A typo in my post@24. The "vaccination effects is always inferred" should read as "vaccination effects is often inferred".

  31. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    From the article:

    Climate change is not as well understood as vaccination or evolution, and I would not put deniers of climate science in the same camp as anti-vaccination and anti-evolution movements, but there is an increasing trend among them all to adopt similar methods.

    (my emphasis)

    I would question the emphsised part. Knowledge of vaccination effects is always inferred from the statistics and lots of evidence in evolution is based from paleo observations, that silimar to paleo-climate have their uncertainties. The climate science however, is not based on statistics, but mainly on well understood physical processes. Also because of these physics foundations, climate science would stand on its own, even if paleo-climate did not exist. Therefore, I find climate science better understood than both vaccination and evolution, contrary to the assertion above.

  32. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Ah.... Warren, this is where you got to.

    I'm still hoping you'll provide some instance related to global warming where your mnd was changed by the evidence.

    I also continue to hope why you think that the people posting at WUWT can be convinced by evidence, given their disparate and fatally inadequate backgrounds and the overwhelming malice they display

    and of course, what difference it would make if they could be convinced.  As in if Tony Watts threw in the towel and declared that he wanted to have Mike Mann's babies, would James Inhofe turn?

    I'm not too miffed that you moved onto another thread however, I don't think I'm willing to let you off the hook either.

  33. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    The following image shows the radiative forcing from CO2 plus changes in solar brightness over time:

    The interesting comparison is between RCP 8.5, ie, the BAU scenario in the last panel, with the rise in forcing at about 250 million years before the present in the first panel (ie, the end Permian extinction).  The later shows a rise of about 10 W/m^2, slightly less than the circa 12 W/m^2 associated with RCP 8.5.  The absolute level of forcing associated with RCP 8.5 has never been matched in the planets history.

    The 12 W/m^2 forcing associated with the RCP 8.5 scenario shows clearly that not all forcings are considered.  When all known forcings are considered, the RCP forcing will drop towards 8.5 W/m^2.  Similarly, with all forcings considered the change in forcing associated with the end Permian mass extinction may be slightly greater, or less than that shown.  Therefore we cannot conclude that the change in forcing associated with RCP 8.5 is greater than that associated with the Permian mass extinction.  We can conclude, however, that the BAU (RCP 8.5) scenario will result in a forcing change of similar magnitude to that in the Permian mass extinction; that it will certainly occur over a much shorter time; and that it is more likely than not to result absolute levels of forcing never before encountered on this planet.  

    For those not familiar with the Permian mass extinction, it resulted in the extinction of around 90% of marine invertebrates, around two thirds of terrestial vertebrate species, and possibly as much as 50% of terrestial plant species.  There is little reason to think an equivalent change in forcing would not result in similar exinction levels today.  Indeed, given that the impacts on the extinction rates would be addition to those already driven by over fishing, deforestation, and colonizing species due to international travel, overall extinction rates with RCP 8.5 have a good chance of being higher than those in the end Permian extinction.

    It should be noted that the change in forcing is not the only potential explanation of the end Permian mass extinction, but its major rival, ocean acidification, gives us an equally pessimistic prospect.  RCP 8.5 will result in ocean acidification levels comparable with or higher than during the end Permian mass extinction.  This is because, despite the lower CO2 levels, the rapid accidification removes pH buffers from the ocean that would have retained a lower pH during the Permean mass extinction.

    Given these facts, it is foolhardy to think human civilization will proceed untroubled by such potential ecological catastrophes.  These facts by themselves establish there is a considerable risk that a BAU policy will create sufficient strains on human society as to result in massive, potentially devestating reductions in human well being and population.  That is not certain, but the odds are sufficiently high to make the risk entirely unacceptable.

    Warren Hindmarsh asks, "what is the evidence that you use to convince a contrarian of alarming warming?"


    If the evidence summarized in that image, and its implications is not evidence enough to convince him, then nothing will be.  

  34. The Quantum Theory of Climate Denial

    Mods, why has my previous post in this thread been deleted?

    Moderator Response:

    [JH] All moderation complaints are summarily deleted. Please read the SkS Comments Policy and adhere to it. You are on the cusp of relinquishing your privilege of posting comments on this website.

    Mea culpa! Mea culpa! Mea culpa!

    I mistakenly thought that I was responding to someone else. 

    Another member of the SkS Moderation team deleted your comment because he found it to be "off-topic & tone trolling."

     

  35. Warren Hindmarsh at 10:30 AM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    DIkran it is warming, that is beyond doubt. It is the alarming amounts that we need to worry about so the "Expressed as a global average, surface temperatures have increased by about 0.74°C over the past hundred years (between 1906 and 2005" is the warming that you worry about?

  36. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    The Brandis statement, that climate change skeptics are being silenced by the authoritarian advocates of climate change and should be given equal opportunity to make their argument, doesn't actually agree with the reality of the Australian media. In fact the reverse is true. When you consider that newspapers like the Daily Telegraph or the Herald Sun command around 70% of the Australian market and that these papers reach about 83% of Australia's reading public, and that their 3 most popular writers, Miranda Devine, Andrew Bolt and Piers Ackerman, are all climate change/global warming skeptics/deniers tirelessly repeating the same old "it's not happening"/"it's all natural" arguments and referencing scientists like Curry, Monkton, Spenser, Lindzen, Carter and Pilmer et. al. to justify their views, hardly indicates that the deniers are being silenced. On top of this you also have the shock jocks on radio like Alan Jones, Ray Hadley and others who also command a significant percentage of the radio market also promoting climate change/global warming denial, and with climate scientists and advocates like David Karoly and Tim Flannery being brow beaten into silence, it seems that Brandis's statement is nothing but hubris.

    Now if Brandis is complaining that denier skeptics are not getting equal time in reputable science journals like American Scientist, Scientific America and Nature and other reputable magazines like New Scientist and National Geographic, and science shows like Catalyst, then it indicates he doesn't truly understand the difference between a political argument where anything goes versus a scientific argument where verifiable evidence and scientific reasoning are required.
    I would have thought a venue like Skeptical Science does give deniers and skeptics a chance to air their views in the Brandis meaning of equal time, due its tendency to have direct links to the denier argument references. However, Skeptical Science and sites like it also provide direct links to the counter argument references as well. Unfortunately, the denier/skeptic arguments don't stand up to the intense scrutiny required of a scientific debate, even when a few of the arguments occasionally do merit further research. This is why, generally, the denier/skeptics resort to political tactics rather than make proper scientific arguments to get what they think is equal time. The trouble with all this is that the public remains confused, which I guess is the whole point anyway, to stop positive action on climate change being taken.

  37. Warren Hindmarsh at 10:07 AM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    moderator: sorry neve never

  38. Warren Hindmarsh at 10:03 AM on 7 May 2014
    Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Dikran my aplogies in misspelling your name.

     

    Moderator: I would neve misspell someones name deliberately.

  39. Most of the last 10,000 years were warmer

    the last 10,000 years of GISP2 data

    If you have done any form of stock chart or commodity chart analysis you will se that the past 10,000 years shows no up or down trend in global temperatures.(or temperatures of the Greenland Ice Core)

    What it does show is Temperature Range of approx 5 degrees - or a sideways trend. That is the Long Term Trend.

    Its completely irrelvant as to whether or not Eastwards "present" is 1855.

    Focusing on short term trends are extemly misleading and in the case of stocks or commodities can be very expensive.

     

  40. IPCC issue official rebuttal to more David Rose/Daily Mail nonsense

    peter:

    With regard to your first paragraph, people in the UK were working on analyzing temperature data long before 1990. For instance:

    Northern Hemisphere Surface Air Temperature Variations: 1851–1984
    P. D. Jones, , S. C. B. Raper, , R. S. Bradley, , H. F. Diaz, , P. M. Kellyo, and , and T. M. L. Wigley

    As you start with the wrong facts, you end with the wrong conclusion. But don't let the facts get in the way of your story.

    Moderator Response:

    [JH] Peter's post was pure unadulterated sloganeering and was therefore deleted. 

  41. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Here is a further comparison between evolution deniers and AGW deniers, linking to specific examples.  The list of 10 characteristics may need to be reduced to a list of 9, as a creationist example of the explicit offering of money based on opinion was not offered in the OP.  The Phillip E. Johnson Award for Liberty and Truth was suggested as a creationist counterpart, and does indeed include a monetary component; but it is not clear it is entirely analogous.

    I also want to note the way that the "evidence based" Warren Hindmarsh, when presented with clear and cogent comparisons that he had asked for immediately started talking about something else.  That is probably more characteristic of trolls than of evolution deniers per se, but it is inconsistent with his claim of evidence based belief.

  42. Answers to the top ten global warming 'skeptic' arguments

    Coming from an active climate scientist, arguments like "Is CO2 bad?" are disappointing.

    He even accuses fellow scientists of liars that use fudge factors - which in itself is below the behavior expected from a serious scientist. But if he himself resorts to the things he tries to impute to others, then it's downright sarcasm.

  43. Answers to the top ten global warming 'skeptic' arguments

    I find it a fascinating comparison to look at Spencers 10 worst 'skeptic' arguments and 10 best 'skeptic' arguments. And yes, I'm using quotes because they are really pseudoskeptical, grasping at any straw to support their views rather than following the evidence. 

    • The 10 worst arguments are wrong because the science says they are according to Spencer (and the rest of physics and climate science).
    • The 10 best arguments are best because of, well, some pretty poor rhetoric. Not science, certainly none presented by Spencer. 

    Quite a difference there. And emblematic of climate denail in general. 

  44. Brandis confuses right to be heard with right to be taken seriously

    Composer99 @13

    On "impossible expectations", I believe that the creationists who demand transitional forms are secretly pleased when one is actually found, since then they can point to the absence of not one, but two transitional fossils, younger and older than the newly found one. 

    It's bit like it is for our contrarian friends when temperature or sea ice hit new records; it just provides a new starting point for a trend reversal. 

  45. Answers to the top ten global warming 'skeptic' arguments

    I am always looking into Spencer's site this time of the monh, because UAH are the first to publish a temperature anomaly.

    Thanks for this response to his post.

    Today, he is pouring scorn on the White House Climate Report announced earlier. But for the first time, I thought his attempts at humourous dissent were so forced that he sounded ... pathetic, even pitiful. Like a Flat Earther who cannot figure how why no one is convinced by his invincible logic.

    Tomorrow I might go back to feeling irritated again.

     

  46. Answers to the top ten global warming 'skeptic' arguments

    Dr Spencer's list is pretty much the reason why I maintain that self-styled climate science "skeptics" are anything but.

    If those are the top ten, climate skepticism is a complete and total bust.

  47. Answers to the top ten global warming 'skeptic' arguments

    How is this man still employed at the university level?

  48. Rob Honeycutt at 02:07 AM on 7 May 2014
    Answers to the top ten global warming 'skeptic' arguments

    I would agree with Dr. Spencer on this. These are clearly the best arguments the denialist community has, and they are profoundly weak.

    I was even more amused by his list of 10 bad skeptical arguments, in part because I still read all of them being used all over the internet.

  49. 2014 SkS Weekly Digest #18

    Climate change: what are the worst impacts facing America?

    A government report has found the US is already experiencing the effects of climate change. Karl Mathiesen, with your help, investigates where it will cut deepest.

    Join the debate. Post your views in the comments below, email karl.mathiesen.freelance@guardian.co.uk or tweet @karlmathiesen

    This EcoAudit post is now live.

  50. Doug Bostrom at 01:22 AM on 7 May 2014
    Answers to the top ten global warming 'skeptic' arguments

    These people labor in such a shabby edifice, like a casino; a structure of misdirection engineered to inspire misplaced confidence and entice gullible commitment  but so obviously grubby, shopworn and fraudulent when the lights are turned up.

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