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Comments 37451 to 37500:

  1. The Editor-in-Chief of Science Magazine is wrong to endorse Keystone XL

    There's a good piece in the Vancouver Observer today that skewers the logic of the people who claim that, since we can't stop the expansion of the oil sands, we may as well appear reasonable by approving the construction of massive new bitumen transportation infrastructure.

    As the author, Barry Saxifrage, points out, the argument only makes sense once you concede that all of the Copenhagen targets will be missed and that we stay on a business-as usual emissions trajectory. This is self-fulfilling defeatism. Since "future generations will be roasted, toasted, fried and grilled." (that's the IMF speaking, not some crazed environmentalist), a single pipeline won't make much difference, surely? 

     

  2. CO2 lags temperature

    Ceddars @435, supplemental to Scaddenp @438, IF global temperatures had risen by 1 C without any anthropogenic of volcanic increase in CO2, ocean outgassing would have raised CO2 levels by about 10-20 ppmv.  The increase in atmospheric concentration from anthropogenic emissions is far greater than that, so CO2 has entered the ocean rather than left it.  However, it would have entered it more readilly without the temperature rise, so that if anthropogenic emissions had been the same, but temperature not risen, there would have been about 10-20 ppmv less CO2 in the atmosphere, and correspondingly more CO2 in the ocean.

    The consequence is that the reduced capacity of the oceans to absorb CO2 as they warm is not included directly in transient or equilibrium climate response estimates, they are included indirectly for that effect is included in historical rises in CO2 concentration, and partially and in estimates of future rises.  There is a slight kicker for simple models that use a linear retained fraction of atmospheric CO2, in that the ability to absorb CO2 will fall with further rises in temperature, but the effect will remain small relative to anthropogenic emissions.  It will only result in increases of about 10-30% in CO2 concentration.  That works out at about 1 W/m^2 of forcing, or the equivalent of about 0.75 C increase in eqilibrium temperature.  So simple models will likely underestimate temperature rises by a small amount.  I do not know to what extent GCMs already include the effect.

  3. CO2 lags temperature

    Cedders @437, when looking for other proxies, Dana Royer's publication page is a wise place to start.  In particular, his 2004 paper with others, uses a dO18 proxy to reconstruct temperatures over the last 500 million years, which is presented below along with the known forcings over that period:

    (The image is from a slide for a talk, and presented in a non-peer reviewed article in 2009, but the reconstruction is from the peer reviewed Royer et al (2004).)

    That reconstruction has better time resolution than scotese's graph, but the time resolution is still restricted.  Consequently Royer (2006), which looks at CO2 concentrations with reference to glacial states at a much higher time resolution is also of interest. 

  4. RemootSensing at 06:37 AM on 13 March 2014
    Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    Sorry, I see a point that should be corrected in the article. At one point it is mentioned that "In a La Niña phase, warm water sinks, bringing cold water to the surface." That is not accurate.

    During a La Niña, easterly trade winds at the equator increase causing increased upwelliing along the coast of South America and eventually spreading to the west. Due to the change in the easterly trade winds, warm water "piles up" in the western Pacific. So warm water sinking does not bring cold water to the surface. From a first prinicples perspective, we have the opposite occuring.

    However, the combination of a negative phase IPO and more neutral/La Niña events since 2000, it is not suprising to see the results in figures 1 and 4. More energy is required to warm the cooler waters, so the rate of atmospheric warming will be reduced. Still warming, but at a lower rate. Much as we talk about the energy balance at the top of the atmosphere, this is an energy imbalance at the ocean/atmosphere boundary. So the result in figure 4 has a good physical explanation.

    In addition, the cooler water in the Pacific is being warmed, and the warm water "piled up" in the west must go somewhere. Yes, some energy will go to the atmosphere, but I believe this is part of the mechanism for increased ocean heat content observed more recently. Not sure of the exact mechanism (some combination of conduction and convection with regards to heat transfer) but seems to fit the data correctly. So, the impact is increased ocean heat content, at a higher rate than before, as seen in figure 1.

    Moderator Response:

    I've tried to concisely amend my original post; hopefully it's now more accurate. As an amateur I sometimes get confused about these circulation patterns, but the important point is that heat is cycling through the atmosphere and ocean. - James

  5. CO2 lags temperature

    Cedders - the feedbacks that work with the Milankovich cycle are slow. With around 1000 year cycle time, the ocean's wont be outgassing anytime soon. At the moment, oceans are mopping up much of our emissions (See the OA is not okay series for detail). CMIP3 models did not include carbon cycle feedbacks. I believe that some of the CMIP5 model are "earth system" models with these feedbacks included, but they have little impact on what happens in the next 100 years.

    As to measurable - Ocean pH and isotopic composition of CO2 in atmosphere would both constrain estimates of outgassing.

  6. Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    Links should be fixed now.  Apologies for the delay.

  7. Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    article with live links: 

    http://precariousclimate.com/2014/02/11/global-warming-not-slowing-its-speeding-up/


  8. Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    Nice post

    I have argued for years that the IPCC are too cautious and the reality is likely to be a lot worse. Good to see Kevin C's paper getting such a prominent mention. Most scientists are not that media savvy, unlike the right wing press who know how to brainwash the gullible. I have no clue here but many like to live in a comfortable alternative reality

  9. keithpickering at 04:00 AM on 13 March 2014
    Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    One more point about Arctic sea ice this year: according to the interactive chart on Cryosphere Today, ice area peaked on Day 53 at 13.08 million km². Not only is this the earliest peak on record (I believe), but last year area didn't drop that low until Day 104, a whopping 51 days later. So in effect we've gained an additional 7 weeks of melt season this year compared to last year.

  10. keithpickering at 03:39 AM on 13 March 2014
    Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    Nice post, Jim, but from here it appears that all the "(Source)" links just point back to SkS main page. Fixable, I hope.

  11. Rob Honeycutt at 03:16 AM on 13 March 2014
    GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    But Dana, facts can be a very mean thing when they don't conform to one's predetermined outcome. They rattle the bars of the cognitive dissonance cage.

  12. Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    After September's "recovery," Arctic sea ice area is now at a record low for the date and has possibly hit winter max.  If so, it would be a record low winter max for area.

  13. Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    The guys are onto it....

  14. GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    Re Tom @44, what bothered me the most about our exchange with Pielke Sr. was that the comments were perfectly polite but challenged him on the science, and he would then run back to his blog and write a post about how mean we were being to him.  Similarly, contrarian commenters will often blatantly violate commenting guidelines, then cry censorship when those comments are deleted.  Classic victim complex.

    But now I'm getting off topic and verging on violating the commenting guidelines myself!  So I'll bring it back on topic by noting that ATTP has a good post on Shindell and Lewis.

  15. Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    Want to echo KeenOn350's comment: lots and lots of broken/dead links in the OP.

  16. Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    Yes, the "beyond our capacity to adapt" link doesn't work for me, and I'd be interested to look. Does it link to an article on wet bulb temperatures, or to something else?

  17. Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    Most excellent article. The deniers carefully ignore the oceans, but just wait till the next Nino and a likely new surface record. Then the ''skeptics'' will be all over the ''missing rapid increase'' in ocean heat content in that Nino year.

    However, it will be hard for them to spin away a new surface record and likely record low Arctic sea ice in the same year. They will try, though, be sure of that.

  18. Global warming not slowing - it's speeding up

    excellent post - 

    seem to be some broken links, where href comes out as 

    http://www.skepticalscience.com/%5C

    Moderator Response:

    The links problem was my fault. Sorry about that, but it's fixed now. - James

  19. Cartoon: the climate contrarian guide to managing risk

    Tom Curtis,

    My apologies to both you and the moderators for my earlier inappropriate comment. Please know that it was in no way intended to be either insulting or inflammatory.

    I was going to walk away from this particular debate because I feel that the discussion has dug too deep into the weeds to be relevant to the purpose of the thread, and was no longer worth the time and effort.  Instead, I will continue.

    "...the actual facts with regard to Ontario show that the opportunity cost of switching to carbon reduced (not quite carbon free as there will still be some gas generation) is low, possibly even negative (ie, a positive benefit); and that they were initially overstated in the formal document presenting the plan.  My question is, are you prepared to acknowledge that fact...."

    No, but only because I don't believe that you've presented a convincing case.... yet.  Perhaps you will, and I'm open to that possibility.  If the numbers do support your argument, then I will gladly accept it, and adopt it going forward.

    So before we continue, let's recap, with direct quotations to avoid ambiguity:

    • I argued that the insurance analogy in the cartoon was inappropriate for a few reasons, but the one we're focused on is that "they don't tell you the cost of your premiums in advance".
    • When challenged on this, I offered to provide if requested, "evidence of the public having been misled about the costs of mitigating global warming, only to discover the true costs once the policy was enacted."
    • As requested, I presented Ontario's Green Energy Act as an example showing evidence of what was promised to the public before the law was passed: ("One percent per year, incremental on the cost of a person’s electricity bill, with corresponding capability through investments in conservation for people to lessen their use of electricity").
    • I also presented evidence that after the law was passed the government announced electricity price increases that were materially higher than what was promised: ("The consumer rate will increase by about 3.5% annually over the length of the long-term plan. Over the next five years, however, residential electricity prices are expected to rise by about 7.9% annually (or 46% over five years)."
    • Lastly, I linked to an additional study that argued that estimates underlying the government's announcement omitted a number of costs, which "would raise power bills by 40% above the government’s forecast.".

    Would you agree that the above points accurately summarize my argument prior to your challenge @47?

  20. Climate change and sensitivity: not all Watts are equal

    Just a quick addition to John's summary; Shindell's paper also noted an interesting thing, which is that any reductions in aerosols in the future would also have a warming effect, but while the RCPs do model aerosol trajectories, most of the attempts to minimise potential TCR or ECP do not (another function of the cherry picking involved, I guess).

  21. CO2 lags temperature

    Thanks, Tom.  I'll think of that temperature plateau as an artefact, and look for other proxies.

    My other question remains.  Does it make sense?  Is effect of degassed CO₂ released from warming oceans (a) measurable; (b) a substantial feedback; (c) already included in models?

  22. IPCC overestimate temperature rise

    BTW a later article by Monckton (2012) does another odd thing with IPCC projections, based purely on arithmetic.  The final comment there is mine and intended to be read side-by-side with the article.  It took some time to work out what Monckton was doing, which was back-projecting the same figures from the projections to obtain estimates for warming in 1960-2008, first assuming the CO₂-temp relationship was logarithmic, secondly that it was linear.  Unsurprisingly he finds a discrepancy between those two results, but he assumes that is a flaw in the models (!).

    I didn't start from an ad hominem premise, but can't help trying to understand what was driving Monckton in that article.  In the Meet the Sceptics (2011) documentary, he claims to have cured himself of Graves' disease.  As I understand it, mental confusion is an occasional symptom of hyperthyroidism.  I don't mean that gives additional reason to dismiss his varied claims, but it might invite a more sympathetic response.

  23. CO2 lags temperature

    Ceddars @435, in answer to your second question, the graph by Scotese that you link to (which is much loved by deniers) is not generated by any proxies.  Rather, scotese mapped different rocks known to be formed in particular climate conditions onto maps of the continents in their arrangement at the given time.  This provides an approximate measure of the width of various climate zones, which are then equated to a temperature.  Thus, Late Carboniferous is shown as having very extensive cold regions at the poles, and is therefore plotted as being cooler than today.  In contrast, the Early Carboniferous has no cold zones at the poles, but rather cool temperate zones.  Consequently it is mapped as warmer than today, but not very much warmer than today.  The Middle Triassic has warm temperate zones at the poles, and is therefore plotted as being much warmer than today, ie, warmer than the Early Carboniferous.

    This is a crude measure of temperature, and consequently only resolves (effectively) four climate states - Colder than today, about the same as today, warmer than today, and very much warmer than today.  That does not mean temperatures were at precisely 25 C, or 20 C, etc.  It only means this method cannot resolve differences in global temperature finer than about 5 C.

    What is more, because this method requires mapping "thousands of rock types", it is not even capable of the normal million year plus minimum resolution found in geology.  Rather, it resolves in terms of fractions of epochs, ie, 10 to 50 million year intervals.  As such it is far inferior to the various proxie based temperature records produced by Dana Royer, both in resolution of temperature, and temporal resolution.

  24. CO2 lags temperature

    Another naive question, please.  When I come across contrarian arguments in a policy discussion, I try to check the relevant science; about half the time I come away thinking the situation is even worse than I had before investigating.  Here, I knew gas solubility goes down with temperature and Milankovitch cycles are completely different "drivers" from digging up coal from the Carboniferous.  So the "lag" argument just reminds me of the worrying feedbacks from more CO2 leaving the oceans (and from changes in polar albedo).  I presume the oceanic CO2 feedback is not included in Transient Climate Response figures - but is it generally included in ranges of Equilibrium Climate Sensitivity we find in AR5?  (I know I could read AR5 more thoroughly myself, but thought it might be a question in other people's minds.)

    And possibly related to that: some graphs showing temperature before the Cenozoic (the last 65 million years when temps and CO2 have gradually been falling), suggest global temps are "bistable", with a 25 °C hothouse plateau.  Do you know a reason for that or is it an artefact?  (Price et al (2013) does not show the plateau.)  (And sepculation: If it is a real effect, are we possibly going to tip the world into a situation uninhabiltable by humans but where at least most classes of animals survive?)


    Thanks in advance.

  25. Climate change and sensitivity: not all Watts are equal

    Kevin C @7

    many thanks. That makes total sense.

  26. 2014 SkS Weekly News Roundup #10B

    chriskoz @17, it is not as bad as the raw date suggests.  Upgrading the inverter, installing extra capacity if your inverter was less than 5 kW, closing your account, changing tennants, or moving house will all result in loss of eligibility for the 44c rate.  Consequently the number of people on the 44c rate will decline over time, with only a minority (probably a small minority) retaining eligebility for the full remaining 14 years.  I think the below wholesale feed in tariffs are a far larger impediment, as they essentially require installers of domestic solar power to subisdize other consumers electricity.

  27. 2014 SkS Weekly News Roundup #10B

    Tom@16,

    Very useful links, thanks.

    I note the following from your QLD link:

    When will the 44 cent [FiT] rate expire?

    Under the Electricity Act 1994, the 44 cent rate is due to expire on 1 July 2028, for those who maintain their eligibility.

    That's far worse than NSW's until end of 2016. I wonder how many eligibles for such essentially free lifetime gift of monies are there. As I said before, govs would do far better by terminating those contracts and settling with some lump sum of money, rather than killing the growth of PV industry, as you describe. That's really sad news: the worst imaginable from the GHG emission perspective. I just cannot believe that it happens in such state as QLD, Australia where solar energy potential is the largest in the developed world :(( The only hope is that the storage alternatives become cheaper  and the competition from the comunity cooperatives will force the silly govs to quickly change their minds.

    The wholesale price report is quite old (2008) although still interesting to look at, esp. the spikes in prices over $4000MWh in summer. I'd like to get my hand on a newer report, from 2013, when every fifth household in OZ got their PV installed, and at the same time we hit the record hot summer nationwide. I know for example that grid penetration of renewables in SA (mainly wind) became very signifficant (perhaps some 30%+?), and the overall demand figures has fallen, condradicting the fossil-fueled "expert predictions", so the production picture looks very different now.

  28. renewable guy at 12:11 PM on 12 March 2014
    The Last Interglacial Part Five - A Crystal Ball?

    Rob and Tom,

     

    Thanks.  :)

  29. Climate change and sensitivity: not all Watts are equal

    Realclimate was down for me last night. It's back online today.

  30. GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    Adding to Dana's @43, on at least one occassion when a noted "skeptical" climate scientist did comment at SkS, it became very clear that he was only interested in airing his talking points rather than engaging in genuine discussion.  I was not alone in being very frustrated by that.  It was frustrating because it meant he did not even respond to questions designed to elucidate his actual views, let alone engage in lines of enquiry that might challenge those views.  

  31. GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    Russ R @42, I have responded in a more appropriate location.

  32. Cartoon: the climate contrarian guide to managing risk

    Russ R elsewhere, and with apologies to the moderator, you wrote:

    "You're arguing against my response to your argument against my response to CBDunkerson's rebuttal to my lampooning of a cartoon that itself lampoons a contextually questionable quotation of a climate scientist from a radio program six months ago.


    Is it really worth the effort?"


    No! That is the context which sparked the discussion. It is not the basis or the purpose of the discussion.

    The purpose of the discussion, from my POV is that you claim that the costs to switch to carbon free energy sources is large, and invariably understated. You have introduced Ontario as an example of that, but the actual facts with regard to Ontario show that the opportunity cost of switching to carbon reduced (not quite carbon free as there will still be some gas generation) is low, possibly even negative (ie, a positive benefit); and that they were initially overstated in the formal document presenting the plan.

    My question is, are you prepared to acknowledge that fact. Or will you keep evading the fact, thus showing that debating with you is indeed well represented by the cartoon you showed?

    With regard to the moderation, when I have issues with it I take it up with the moderators or John Cook in private.  Regardless of whether or not I was personally offended, however, the moderators need to take a consistent line that avoids behaviour likely to give offense in all contexts, regardless of whether or not it seems innocuos in a particular context.  So, without stating any view as to whether or not I was personally offended, I fully endorse the moderators actions.

    Moderator Response:

    [JH] Rus R's most recent comment constituted a moderation complaint and was therefore deleted.

  33. GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    I think it's fair to say that commenters on SkS can sometimes be a little hostile to commenters of the 'skeptical' persuasion.  But to be fair, there are a lot of 'skeptical' commenters who are flat-out trolls (look at the comments on my Guardian posts and how many the moderators are forced to delete for violating the guidelines, for example).  As a result, we're conditioned to assume that 'skeptical' commenters are probably trolls, because frankly they usually are (not directed at anyone here, just a general observation).

    In any case, Lewis' Climate Audit post was unconvincing.  His main argument was that the aerosol forcing is too uncertain to allow the Shindell method to tightly constrain climate sensitivity.  Sorry, but that aerosol forcing uncertainty is the same in the Lewis, Otto, etc. studies.  So why doesn't Lewis apply that critique to his own papers?  This is consistent with my point that Lewis is unwilling to consider the many, significant shortcomings in his own methods, because they yield the result he wants.  That's neither skepticism nor good science.

    In fact Andrew Dessler and other climate scientists have made this point, that the 'instrumental' method uncertainties are too large to tightly constrain climate sensitivity, because of the uncertain aerosol forcing, among othe reasons.  So we're still back to the body of reliable research being consistent with 2 to 4.5°C equilibrium climate sensitivity.

  34. We're coming out of the Little Ice Age

    greg84 @65:

    "I was curious when was human industry significant enough to impact climate (roughly)?"

    It depends on what you mean by impact.

    William Ruddiman believes (and I believe that he has shown) that absent anthropgenic emissions from land clearing and agriculture, CO2 concentrations would have fallen from a high aroun 8,000 years ago to at least 240 ppmv, or lower.  That fall may well have been enough to kick us into a new iceage by now, and would certainly have resulted in LIA conditions being the norm rather than the exception.  (Note, the linked paper is the earliest presentation of his hypothesis, which is supported by a number of more recent papers, and by more than just Ruddiman.  His theory is, however, not universally accepted among climate scientists.)

    From about 1650, coal burning in London was sufficient that there was a selective advantage for dark forms of the Peppered Moth due to soot coating trees.  So from then there was an appreciable anthropogenic forcing from black carbon.

    More directly related to your question, in 1940, the forcing from CO2 relative to 1832 was 0.47 W/m^2, or 29.4% of the 1.6 W/m^2 in forcing 2008.  (The exact figure and percentage will change, depending on your base year.  I have used 1832 for convenience as I have a spreadsheet with CO2 concentrations back to 1832.)  That is clearly significant, but also not enough to account for the majority of the warming trend from 1900-1940.  Deniers like David Evans, however, tend to talk as though it was completely irrelevant.  In fact, that forcing is larger than the probable chang in solar forcing over that period.  It is, however, likely smaller than the volcanic forcing over that period.  The near complete absence of volcanoes from 1910 to 1940 is the probable primary cause of the warming in that period; supplemented by (in order of magnitude) anthropogenic forcing, and solar forcing; with those two combined being approximately of the same magnitude as the volcanic forcing.

    The interesting thing is that since 1940, there has not been a pause in volcanism, so that the volcanic forcing has been negative.  Likewise, the solar forcing, after peaking in 1950, has declined so that in 2008 it was almost as low as the 1910 minimum.  Consequently, while anthropogenic forcings account for only about 25% of the early twentieth century warming (give or take), they account for nearly 100% of the warming from 1900 to 2013.  

    In a recent poll of climate scientists, 86.76% thought that 50% or more of the warming since 1850 was anthropogenic.  Given a distinct, and clearly natural cooling trend from 1850 to 1900, that figure would rise significantly if the start year had been 1900, and to near unanimity for a start year of 1950.  The modal (most preferred) value was 80%, with twice as many thinking it was above 80% as thought it was below 50%.  Science is not settled by consensus, of course.  But scientists hold their opinions for good reasons.  Anybody challenging so strong a concensus must show very good reasons to do so.  Unfortunately no such good reasons have been presented.  

  35. Climate change and sensitivity: not all Watts are equal

    StBarnabas: In this context, uniform heating means uniform between the northern and southern hemisphere, and says nothing about time variation of the heating. Non-uniform heating involves the same total global heating, but more of it occuring in the southern hemisphere where it has less impact on temperatures.

  36. We're coming out of the Little Ice Age

    "The IPCC blames human emissions of carbon dioxide for the last warming. But by general consensus human emissions of carbon dioxide have only been large enough to be significant since 1940—yet the warming trend was in place for well over a century before that." (David Evans)"


    Hello,

    Is this 1940's thing in dispute? I read through the LIA stuff here, but it only talks about the LIA itself. It is in the "myth" section, but unless I'm missed something, I didn't see anything saying anything otherwise. I was curious when was human industry significant enough to impact climate (roughly)?

    Moderator Response:

    [PS] Please see "It cooled mid-century" section. Climate change is a response to net forcings not just one -  aerosols are important as well.

  37. Climate change and sensitivity: not all Watts are equal

    They've been down all day and it's been noted on Tamino's site as well....aurgh...

  38. Climate change and sensitivity: not all Watts are equal

    I came here to ask the same question. Bummer - hope they're OK.

  39. Climate change and sensitivity: not all Watts are equal

    Re. RealClimate: not sure what's going on but when I try to go to realclimate.org I immediately get a "Forbidden - You don't have permission to access / on this server."

  40. The Editor-in-Chief of Science Magazine is wrong to endorse Keystone XL

    Brooks, Tom:

    Although it is now a post that is two years old, To Infinity and Beyond (over at Desmogblog.com) links to an interested video produced by Media Matters, indicating how job numbers for Keystone XL have been inflated in the media.

  41. GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    Russ R.:

    If guests don't feel welcome, SkS won't find many guests coming to visit, and it will run the risk of devolving into an echo-chamber of groupthinkers nodding vigorously in agreement with one another while actual debate takes place elsewhere.

    For me, SkS is a resource for language and links I can use to counter pseudo-skeptic drivel elsewhere.  SkS authors can argue authoritatively, but as with other scientific disciplines, "actual debate" on climate-science issues does take place elsewhere: in the laboratories of working climate scientists, and the journals, conferences, and other professional venues where they expose their work to peer-review.  For the most part, scientific controversies are not resolved on blogs open to indistinguished nobodies like me and you.

    If you like to debate, Russ, you should consider presenting a paper at, say, the annual AGU meeting. Of course you'll need to be prepared for rigorous peer-review, your peers being the scientists best able to spot the flaws in your work because they know as much or more about your topic than you do.  Science at that level isn't for the faint-hearted, though. Scientists can seem "inhospitable" (even "vituperative") when critiquing arguments that aren't well thought out or well supported by evidence.  That's a good thing, because if your work can't survive the peer-review snakepit you're most likely fooling yourself.  Your feelings may be hurt, but your incorrect ideas won't make it in to the accumulating body of scientific knowledge, which is what really matters:

    Science doesn’t work despite scientists being asses. Science works, to at least some extent, because scientists are asses. Bickering and backstabbing are essential elements of the process.

     

     

  42. Climate change and sensitivity: not all Watts are equal

    @wili

    have not been on RealClimate for a week or two. I have tried now without success; the site appears to be down. I'm sure they will be a prime target so hopefull it is just maintanence

  43. Climate change and sensitivity: not all Watts are equal

    What uniform heating? i am struggling with the units here. The y axis is fine. Uniform heating to me is a constant input of Watts (dQ/dt =k (J/S)) which into an adiabatic system would prosuce a linear rise. Is this uniform heating d2Q/dt2 =k? A few  ODEs might help me understand this a bit better - obviously the models are very complex but a simple state spaace model or equivalent simple ARMA proccess would help my small brain.

  44. Climate change and sensitivity: not all Watts are equal

    This seems to be the crucial part (from "below the fold"):

     

    " Multiple lines of evidence are now consistent showing that the climate sensitivity is very unlikely to be at the low end of the range. The consequences of climate change are thus likely to be towards the more damaging end of the estimates, unless we take action to quickly reduce our emissions."

    OT question: Has anyone else had trouble getting onto RealClimate recently? Are they shut down for maintanance, or under cyber attack?

  45. GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    All: Russ R's most recent comment directed at Tom Curtis was deleted because it was inflamatory and insulting. Russ R may soon be recusing himself from posting on SkS.

  46. GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    Another near-term feedback is the reduction ocean-spray DMS aerosols that will contribute .2-.4C additional warming and the recent model results of decreased low-altitude cloud cover under warming scenarios (additional .2-.5)

    It is clear that we have already passed the 2C pre-industrial threshold, even if we halted all emissions today.


  47. GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    Russ R. - If you want examples of groupthink and echo chambers, take a look at WUWT, at Climate Audit, at JoNova, Bishop Hill, etc. Where the presentation of facts, of peer-reviewed papers, of statistical significance are all met with jeers, insults, ad hominems, etc. Persisting with facts on those venues tends to result in moderation. 

    On SkS, by contrast, jeers, insults, ad hominems, and sloganeering are met with facts, peer-reviewed research, and discussion of statistical significance. And commenters persisting in posting nonsense are moderated. Compare and contrast, note the distinction in content. Personally, I prefer fact-based discussions such as the ones here. 

    Your personal experience seems unhappy - I would point out (IMO) that you reap what you sow. 

  48. GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    If we halted all CO2 emissions today, according to the AR5 Frequently Asked Questions 12.3, temperture would continue to rise for "several tenths of a degree" due to sulfate emission reductions.

    Then it would take several decades for methane emissions to return to pre-industrial levels.

    But we know that the loss of arctic sea ice between 1979 and 2012 has contributed a total of 25% of the total anthropogenic forcing.  We also know that this trend will continue through the next several decades.

    In addition to the aerosol and albedo feedbacks that will occur during these next few decades,  the additional warming will produce carbon cycle feedbacks.  These feedbacks are,

    1.  The collapse of the Amazon rainforest
    2.  The rapid thaw of arctic permafrost, and
    3.  An additional slowdown of the Meridional Overturing Circulation

    All of these factors are not modelled in the AR5 scenario and will produce significant warming over the next several decades.

  49. A Hack By Any Other Name — Part 4

    Fascinating story. I had no idea how much work has been put into the site. I look forward to the next episodes. A book that might be of interest is The Cuckoo's Egg: Tracking a Spy Through the Maze of Computer Espionage by Cliff Stoll

  50. Rob Honeycutt at 01:36 AM on 12 March 2014
    GWPF optimism on climate sensitivity is ill-founded

    Russ...  You may not have been around long enough to have noticed that we've had quite a few more prominent scientists posting here. In particularly contentious cases we assign a single SkS commenter to the discussion as to not overwhelm the guest. 

    What SkS does not have patience for are those who break the rules that are laid out in the commenting policy. Those get snipped or deleted or banded depending on the severity of the infractions.

    And, if you think it's bad here, you might take a day and pose as an advocate for action on climate change on sites like WUWT, JoNova, Curry, or any of the many other lightly or unmoderated "skeptic" sites. 

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