Climate Science Glossary

Term Lookup

Enter a term in the search box to find its definition.

Settings

Use the controls in the far right panel to increase or decrease the number of terms automatically displayed (or to completely turn that feature off).

Term Lookup

Settings


All IPCC definitions taken from Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Working Group I Contribution to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Annex I, Glossary, pp. 941-954. Cambridge University Press.

Home Arguments Software Resources Comments The Consensus Project Translations About Support

Bluesky Facebook LinkedIn Mastodon MeWe

Twitter YouTube RSS Posts RSS Comments Email Subscribe


Climate's changed before
It's the sun
It's not bad
There is no consensus
It's cooling
Models are unreliable
Temp record is unreliable
Animals and plants can adapt
It hasn't warmed since 1998
Antarctica is gaining ice
View All Arguments...



Username
Password
New? Register here
Forgot your password?

Latest Posts

Archives

Recent Comments

Prev  805  806  807  808  809  810  811  812  813  814  815  816  817  818  819  820  Next

Comments 40601 to 40650:

  1. 2013 SkS News Bulletin #17: Cowtan and Way (2013)

    Wow, lots on the C&W paper here. The main thing I would like to know (so I can clearly and accurately convey it to others) is: Exactly how much additional warming does the study suggest we have experienced.

    In the fifth paper cited, the quote: " 0.12 degrees Celsius between 1997 and 2012 (see the bold "Global" line in the graph above) -- two and a half times the UK Met Office's estimate of 0.05°C" suggests that there is an additional .07 degrees of warming we should add to the total. But that seems more like a rounding error than a major adjustment. Had we been at 8.5 Celsius above pre-industrial, or so before this reanalysis? So are we now acutally closer to 8.6? Or is there something more dramatic that I'm missing?

    Moderator Response:

    [JH] The articles contained in this bulletin are only the tip of the iceberg so to speak. Similar articles have been written and published in many languages other than English throughout the world. 

  2. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Terranova @29 you cannot tell how high the storm surge was just from one video.  You have no idea how close the house shown was to the shore, nor how far above the waterline.  Nor, for that matter, do you even know which city it was in; nor the state of the tide at the time it hit.  The numerical information I have been able to find puts the storm surge at Tacloban at 6 meters (19.7 feet) in one instance, 17 feet (5.18 meters) in another, and at 5 meters (16.4 feet) in a third.  That compares to predictions of up to 7 meters (23 feet).  These figures, however, are hardly authoritative.

    Further, your appoach to estimateing the impact of global warming on storm surges is dubious.  Landfalling tropical cyclones make a sparse and noisy data set.  As the increased height of storm surges due to global warming will just be the increase in sea level due to global warming, it is far better to just use estimates of that increase, either observational (for current data) or predicted (for the future).  Predicted sea level rise is going to be around 750 mm (2.5 feet) with no mitigation.  That is the global average, and will be significantly greater in the tropics.  The effect of an additional 2.5 feet on top of the Haiyan storm surge would depend on your exact location.  Where the land has a shallow gradient, it will greatly increase the area effected.  For those near the shore, it may make no difference at all, in that dead is dead.  For those at 4.5 meters above sea level, it may turn a dangerous and damaging flood into a life threatening torrent that destroys all before it.  In no case is it a good thing.

  3. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    wpsokeland - Your claim that tropical storms "...put energy into the oceans rather than take it out" is utterly wrong, and in fact backwards. I would suggest you look at any reference on tropical storms, such as this one, and read about what really happens - heat from the oceans drive the storm, moving energy into cooler air above:

    "...warm, moist air from the ocean surface begins to rise rapidly, where it encounters cooler air that causes the warm water vapor to condense and to form storm clouds and drops of rain. The condensation also releases latent heat, which warms the cool air above, causing it to rise and make way for more warm humid air from the ocean below."

    The rest of your post is equally baseless. I am puzzled as to what you thought to accomplish by posting such nonsense.

  4. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    SCADDENP - Thanks for the info.  I have not been able to find that.  Do you know where CSIRO mines their data from?

    ALBATROSS - Thanks again for another excellent graphic.  As a survivor of Hurricane Hugo in 1989 with its 18 ft storm surge, I will not diminish the impact of any tropical storm.  I do want to see the official data on the storm surge.  The best I can tell is that it is less than 6 feet.  Again, that is preliminary.  Also, has anyone considered the subject of subsidence in the region?  Look up the work of Dr. Lagmay Investigating ground deformation and subsidence in northern Metro Manila in that region of the world.  

    My overall point is literally: how much SLR has occurred (whether a combination of SLR and subsidence, or not), and what was the realistic storm surge?  Once we know those numbers we can input the data and begin to compile data over a period of time to determine any statistical signficance of any of these events.  

    Before we begin any "immediate action", we need to make sure we are doing it for the right reasons. 

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

    steven foster @27 & 28:

    1)  The chart in my post @ 15 does in fact place the end of the GISP2 data in 1874 (based on pixel count), or five pixels prior to 2010.  Placing it six pixels prior to 2010 would have placed it in 1847, a little more accurate but hardly consequential.  I doubt it makes any visual difference.

    2)  I am not sure why you are making this point on the original Alley et al (2000) data when we have the Kobashi et al (2011) data from the same ice core that is:

    • Carried through to a more recent date;
    • At a higher resolution;
    • Includes reconstructed site temperatures from nearby instrumental readings back to 1840
    • Includes on site instrumental readings back to 1985
    • Is correctly alligned.

    Using the Kobashi data we see the warming at the GISP2 site started circa 1750, and was quite slow till the early twentieth century.  It then shows a rapid increase, and decline, followed by another rapid increase of equal size.

    3)  All of this is largely irrelevant because local proxies are not global proxies.  Anybody using the denier talking point you mention must be ignoring that basic fact.  What the Kobashi reconstruction shows us are the temperatures at one site in Greenland.  The do not show us Arctic temperatures in general, and certainly not NH or global temperatures in general.  In fact, we do in fact have NH and global temperature reconstructions over that period, which show the twentieth century warming to be much faster than the prior warming as the Earth exited the LIA.

    Faced with that fact, the question those rejecting AGW need to ask themselves is, why, after the Earth warmed enough to exit the LIA did it keep on warming?  Indeed, why did it not only keep on warming, but warm faster?  If the late twentieth century just represented a "recovery from the LIA", why did it not slow down as it approached the prior equilbrium level, but instead accelerated past it?

  6. Global warming since 1997 more than twice as fast as previously estimated, new study shows

    It is astonishing that people persist in vaunting the accuracy of satellites temperature data relative to surface temperature data.  Satellite temperature data does not suffer from urban heat island effects, for example, but it does suffer from instrument heat island effects.  It needs numerous corrections for change of instruments having gone through multiple satellites over the years.  It also requires a set of very difficult calculations to convert instrument readings of microwave radiation from O2 into temperatures.  There are no a priori reasons to assume that satellite temperature data is more accurate than surface data.  Indeed, as it involves more corrections, and more processing than does the instrument record, the opposite is true.

  7. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    chriskoz @11, the situation with regard to bush fires is complicated.  First, there is no doubt that one (at least) of the recent fires in NSW was lit by an arsonist, and another by the Army in a live fire excercise.  Absent such human activity they would not have occurred.  Of course, most fires in Australia prior to white settlement were lit by humans as part of Aboriginal land management.  Further, there is little doubt that increased habitation in the blue mountains increases the risk to property and lives from bush fires.  Against that, past equivalent fires were not combated by tenders, fire retardant chemicals and helicopters, or large scale back burning.  Overall, not climate anthropogenic factors have probably decreased the risk of fire at any given location, although that is far from clear.

    What is clear is that if you increase rainfall in wet periods, and decrease rainfall and increase tempertures in dry periods, you will get more fuel for fires, which will be in a drier more ignitable state come fire season.  That is what happened this year, and is a prediction for the east coast of Australia - ie, that part of Australia most influence by ENSO.  I don't think the science supports any stronger claim with regard to bushfires in Qld, NSW and Victoria.  It is also probable that bushfires will decline in the top end (NT, norther WA) as stronger monsoons coming further south green the environment; and decrease also in southern WA where overall drier conditions will support less plant life (not many bushfires in a desert).  Bushfires will likely increase in Tasmania as it also dries, but not sufficiently to remove fuel.

    In any event, the bushfire debate was not like the flood debate in that in the Brisbane flood, victims were being blamed despite an overwhelming preponderance of measures taken to mitigate floods.  Indeed, even residents of Toowoomba (on top of the range) were blamed for choosing to live in a flood plain (!?!).  In contrast, some anthropogenic activities beyond climate have increased the risk from bushfires in Australia, and it is reasonable to point that out.  It is not reasonable to insist that the impact of climate (as in the bolded sentence above) is not occurring; or to insist that it is immoral to mention it (the first response when the issue was raised).  In fact the vehemence with which public figures from the PM on down repudiated that obvious fact surprised me.  That they cannot concede something so obvious, and insist on vilifying those who say no more than that bodes ill for Australia.  

  8. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Lets break this down:

    "TC have nothing to do with global warming". This article presents a case, backed by references for way GW impacts on cyclones and there effects. What is the basis for your assertion?

    "The put energy into oceans" - This would be contrary to both physics and measurement overs decades. Please back the extraordinary assertion.

    "High activity has melted sea ice". Actually both are just result of global warming. By what physics do you propose that TCs melt arctic ice? Your evidence?

    "Low TC activity in 2013". I think you mean low Atlantic TC activity. But if you assertion is correct, then shouldnt sea ice increase in every low TC year and not just 2013?

    "Solar storms create TCs". Just got to supporting evidence for this!

    "We are going to have a cold winter". Who is we? With ENSO still neutral, I wouldnt bet of a NH cold winter, but its a fair bet that jet stream behaviour will give some unusually cold and some warmer. On other hand, more arctic sea ice might bring back some normality to the jet streams.

  9. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    William @18, it is more complex than that.  Extreme events of similar magnitude will, above a certain threshold, cause more expensive property damage in industrialized nations than in the third world.  They will, however, cause fewer deaths and injuries, and less disruption of services.  The threshold exists because, in simple terms, a wind that will demolish a corrugated iron shanty shack is likely to leave a brick house undamaged.  Indeed, there will always be less property damage in the industrialized world for equivalent storms, but the property damage that occurs will cause greater financial losses.  Personally, I think the industrialized world wins on that equation.  So do most storm survivors, who are oftern heard saying "You can rebuild houses, you can't rebuild lives." 

  10. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    wpsokeland @22, cyclones take energy out of the ocean, as is proved by how quickly they dissipate over dry land or cold water.  Beyond the first sentence of your post you disappear into pure gobbledigook.  As it all depends on the false first claim, there is no need to respond in detail.

  11. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Agnostic @20, the Barrow Island wind gust occurred during a tropical cyclone, but was an individual gust, not a sustained one minute gust as recorded on the chart.  On the other hand, the gust recorded in Oklahoma was from a tornado.

  12. Philippe Chantreau at 10:39 AM on 22 November 2013
    Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    wpsokeland, you may not have read the comment policy or perhaps you're not familiar with this site. Assertions must be backed up, peer-reviewed science articles are best for that. A statement of fact like "High activity since 1974 has created the warming trend an melted the Arctic sea ice" has no value unless it is backed up by science. Same applies to bascially every sentence of your post. You also need to make an argument that is internally consistent: the first sentence of your post is in contradiction with the third one.

  13. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Tropical cyclones, TC, have nothing to do with global warming.  They put energy into the oceans rather than take it out.  High activity since 1974 has created the warming trend an melted the Arctic sea ice.  This year, 2013, we had low TC activity and the Arctic sea ice increased fast enough to trap some pleasure vessels.  Solar storms create TCs.  They come from the sun.  We are probably going to have a cold winter.  If the sunspots dissapear on the sun, we will have less TCs and overall colder weather.

  14. Philippe Chantreau at 10:24 AM on 22 November 2013
    Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Agnostic, these numbers seem very unlikely to be corresponding to any kind of tropical low pressure system. Small scale phenomena can muster violent winds but the total energy contained in a system thatnears 1000km in diameter is what is at issue here.

  15. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    The list of the 13 strongest tropical cyclones at landfall appears to be incomplete, since it does not include either of the following, which incidentally are the highest wind velocities ever recorded:

    407 kph recorded at Barrow Island, Australia, Apr. 1996

    484 kph recorded in Oklahoma, USA, May 1999.

  16. Global warming since 1997 more than twice as fast as previously estimated, new study shows

    SASM, since Manabe models in 1992 were predicting cooling, then isnt that a hint that there is more going on in climate than just CO2? As Dikran said, that's why we build models.  I frankly dont expect a plateau at 2000m to respond the same way as seaice at sealevel,  but other factors in Antarctica is the circumpolar circulation which isolates the continent (whereas arctic amplification is in part due to circulation); and ozone depletion.

  17. StealthAircraftSoftwareModeler at 07:52 AM on 22 November 2013
    Global warming since 1997 more than twice as fast as previously estimated, new study shows

    Dikran @54: What are the “other issues” with UAH and RSS? I’ve researched the difference between UAH, RSS, GIS, HADCRUT, and for the most part the plots are all very similar. While satellites have a wider swing up and down, they all tend to match fairly close. I would not expect a perfect match because each measurement system is measuring different things and locations and at different times.

    You mention surface temperatures versus lower troposphere air temps, but what about ocean temperatures (surface and deep) -- which one is most important or the most meaning with respect to AGW?

    Since air has such low heat content, I wouldn’t think air temps would be all that important and shouldn’t be the driver of much of anything. Just look at air temperatures in California – on the coast the cool Pacific ocean brings cool air across the land in the sea breeze, but the air doesn’t have to go very far before it gets very hot. The solar energy hitting the ocean and the land is the same. The ocean doesn’t warm quickly, so the cool water from Alaska remains cool for a long time, and cools the air. But the land warms quickly, and hence warms the air in just a few miles. The air temps in Los Angeles on the coast are 60 degrees F and 20 miles inland the air rapidly warms to 100 degrees F. Clearly, in this case, the ocean or land surface temperatures completely control the air temperatures. Since air temperatures can change a lot and quickly based on surface temperatures, I would think measuring lower troposphere with satellites would be the most accurate since it measures more points more frequently.

    scaddenp @55:” What is the basis of your claim of cooling?” All the blue and darker green area in Cowtan and Way’s map posted in this article. I just eye-balled the data -- I didn’t integrate it and I understand that there are some odd map projections issues; this is just a vague observation on my part. But clearly, the Artic has warmed way more than the Antarctica region. I just find that very curious. I wouldn’t expect CO2 to cause such asymmetrical warming, so it seems to me that something natural phenomenon is occurring. Perhaps this is support for Judith Curry’s Stadium Wave theory?

  18. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Franklefkin:

    The steroids in baseball example shows how it is difficult statistically prove the effect of change.  A baseball player hits 20 home runs one year without steroids.  The next year he takes steroids and hits 30 home runs.  You cannot state with confidence that any single home run was hit because of the steroids, but normal people realize that the steroids have influenced the result.  

    Here is a list of New York Hurricanes going back before 1800.  When I read it I see no landfalling storms that were hurricane strength in October.  Hurricane Sandy is described as:

    "The largest hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic Basin [just before landfall], wind gusts topped 100 mph in some parts of the New York Metropolitan area."

    Please provide a description of a comparable storm in October within 500 miles of New York.  This list of New England hurricanes convienently lists the strength of the storms at landfall and lists no hurricanes in October.   Hurricane season lasts from June to November in the Carribean sea, where it is warmer.  Your assertion that hurricane season lasts until November in New York is "simply not true".  It used to be too cold to support hurricanes in New York at the end of October.

    James Hansen has shown that most (over 95%) of hot summers are caused by AGW.  There is still debate over individual hot events.  That does not mean that the individual hot events were not caused by AGW, just that it is difficult to prove.  It is very difficult to prove individual events.

    The recent tornadoes in Illonois are extremely rare.  Jeff Masters states:

    Sunday's outbreak will probably rank as the second to fourth most prolific November tornado outbreak since 1950. But what was really remarkable about the outbreak was how far north it extended. With three confirmed tornadoes on Sunday, Michigan has increased its total number November tornadoes observed since 1950 by 50%, from six to nine. Prior to Sunday, Indiana had recorded 57 November tornadoes. That total increased by 26 on Sunday,"

    Although he adds that the record is too short to statistically prove anything.  How many of those home runs were hit after the steroids?

    I claim that extreme events have become so common that normal people now recognize them. Ten years ago only perceptive people who measured carefully (like James Hansen) noticed them.  Now, they are obvious but difficult to prove statistically. Your claim that most people do not recognize these as unusual events is simply incorrect.

  19. Clouds provide negative feedback

    Licorj - See Does positive feedback necessarily mean runaway warming. That would only be true with a feedback gain >1, which means that any increase would have an infinite effect. In reality, the law of diminshing returns means that feedbacks of a physical scale are of gain <1, with the total change in temperature being:

    Total T = ΔT / (1-g)

    and with the positive feedbacks providing a limited scale of amplification for any temperature change. For the current sensitivity estimate of ~3C per doubling of CO2, with an initial ΔT of ~1.1C, the gain 'g' is about 0.63. 

    Now as to clouds, if you have actually read the opening post (I suspect you have not), clouds are estimated to have a small positive (amplifying) contribution to the total sensitivity. 

  20. Help make our coverage bias paper free and open-access

    OK, it looks as though my card has been charged (on the second attempt), so hopefully we're getting there.

  21. Clouds provide negative feedback

    If clouds feedback were positive, we would expect:

    Infinite warming, until oceans become dry.

    It never has occurred in the past, even with a warmer earth.

    IPCC's Climatologists should say:

    We don't know everything about clouds. We need study a lot to understand the entire process. When we are sure, we are explaining step by step, showing with controlled laboratorial experiments, and calculation memory. When we can explain in details how to trigger an ice age, and an interglaciation era, we are ready to define positive or negative feedback for clouds. By now, we are closing our mouth about global warming or cooling.

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

    Sorry I meant GISP2 not GRIP2. 

    Also, I realized the 1.44 is not the full extent of the rise. That's only 1855 to now. If we go back to the beginning of the bend it's closer to 2 whole degrees C.

    I understand polar temp rise will be higher than global. But I think the 0.8 degree C figure that we always hear for global warming period is low if we include the entire rise, if taken back to 1780 like this. I have many documents, written in the early 1800's, that describe a warming climate, melting glaciers, rising sea levels, etc. in the early 19th century.

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

    This is quite a thread, I just spent 45 minutes reading and studying through it.

    Post 15 brings the GRIP2 chart to modern times using information from the GRIP site, by adding 1.44 C to 1855, but doesn't move the chart over to the left 50 years. I did that myself just now, lining up the chart so the end of the GISP2 data correctly lines up over 1855 rather than 1905.

    What I find by doing that is, the modern warming period must have started quite a bit earlier than we normally understand, at least in Greenland. I've been under the assumtion that modern warming started around 1830 to 1840 or so, as many believe. But the data presented on this thread shows 1780 or 1790. The beginning of the modern hockey stick on the revised Easterbrook (editied for 1855-2013 by Tom Curtis here and moved over 50 years by myself (sorry I don't know how to post that here) the temperature appears to bend upwards in the late 1700's, perhaps 1780.

    So, we have a long hockey stick with a 1.44 degree C rise from 1780 to now, with roughly the same slope throughout the whole 230 year period. 1780 is long before humans started making much CO2. This thread debunks the 10,000 claim of Monckton, Esterbrook, etc., but adds a new talking point for the deniers to use.....why did modern warming start in 1780?

  24. Global warming since 1997 more than twice as fast as previously estimated, new study shows

    "Antarctica has actually cooled". Well that is what models predicted in 1992 (Manabe) but I am not so sure how well that prediction is holding out.

    Here is Antarctica temperature chance 1981 to 2007. What is the basis of your claim of cooling?

  25. Dikran Marsupial at 04:51 AM on 22 November 2013
    Global warming since 1997 more than twice as fast as previously estimated, new study shows

    SASM (1) The satellites don't measure surface temperature, but temperature in vertical sections of the atmosphere, so if you want to know surface temperatures, the satellite data cannot help you.  While they don't have UHI problems, they do have other issues, hence the many adjustments to the dataset that have been made over the years.  Note also that the trophospheric temperatures are considerably more sensitive to ENSO than surface temperatures (hence bigger spike in 1998).

    (2) The assymetry might be caused by the fact that Antarctica is land and the Arctic is ocean.  I suspect the oceans buffer Arctic temperatures which prevents them from getting as cold as the Antarctic.  Also the circumpolar currents in the southern ocean isolates the Antarctic a fair bit.

    CO2 is not the only thing that causes temperatures to change.  If it were, we wouldn't need climate models.

  26. Global Warming Paws Fails to Materialise: Earth Still Warming and Global Sea Level Rising Like Gangbusters

    skymccain - prior warm periods, such as the Mid Pliocene Warm Period a few million years ago would argue against such a scenario. The reduced equator-to-pole and surface-to-deep-ocean temperature gradients back then imply that the thermohaline circulation remained vigorous (but not necessarily constant) throughout the warming. It is something I intend to write about in the future.

  27. StealthAircraftSoftwareModeler at 04:43 AM on 22 November 2013
    Global warming since 1997 more than twice as fast as previously estimated, new study shows

    I have two questions, and I am surprised no one else has asked them.

    1) Why not just use UAH or RSS satellite data in the first place? My perception is that the satellites are pretty accurate (once they are calibrated) and they have almost worldwide coverage. They also do not have any issues with alleged poor siting and/or urban heat island affects. Why supplement the relatively sporadic land/sea based measurements of HADCRUT4 with UAH data? UAH data shows the warmest year as 1998 and the temps have been flat since then.

    2) Has anyone noticed that all of the heat has accumulated in the Artic? Antarctica has actually cooled over this time period. This seems very curious to me and I cannot think of a way this highly asymmetrical heating could be caused by a well-mixed gas like CO2.

  28. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    In a sense, a so called developed country is more at risk from extreme hurricanes than an undeveloped country.  The higher you are the further you have to fall.  If you can build your house yourself from local materials, thatching the roof with palm leaves, you may recover relatively quickly.  If you flood the subway with salt water,  flood western houses and destroy your electrical grid, the costs build up pretty quickly.  The Hurricane zone is, arguably, going to expand into temperate climes as climate zones shift north and we probably need a Philippine type hurricane to hit an American city before we will be shaken out of our comfortable paradigm.  No, it won't be possible to attribute any given storm to climate change but that won't interfere with the perception amongst the public that it is so.  The sooner we have such storms, the sooner we may get off our duff and start to seriously do something.

  29. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Tom Curtis @10, to add to your excellent response to Yubedude @9, emotions are necessary to change most minds. Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., had to write that letter from a Birmingham jail cell to get wider support for the civil rights movement. If anything, the scientific community has not been emotional enough in conveying the gist of the message, viz., complex life on earth is in jeopardy if we continue twiddling our thumbs.

  30. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    michael sweet @ 14

    It is obvious that many extreme storms are caused by AGW, even though there is not statistical confidence in the data.

    How is it obvious if there is no confidence in the data.  That is counter-intuitive.

    The nature of expreme events is such that scientific confidence will trail the real world experience.

    How can that be?  Unless you are talking about the very first occurance of something.  If there had never been a hurricane in Florida, and now there was, your statement could be true, but what you had been discussing does not lead to this conclusion.

    Most people in the US now realize that tornadoes in Illonois in November and Hurricanes in New York in October are not normal.

    This is simply not true.  Where did you get this info from?  Did you make it up?  Tornados have happened in Ill previously, even in November.  While not a common occurrance, it is by no means not normal.  The hurricane season, as most described, is from June through November.  This obviously includes October.

  31. Klaus Flemløse at 21:19 PM on 21 November 2013
    Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    post nr 1 and nr 13:

    Thanks to Tom Curtis. Now it is working

  32. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    An additional reason that the third world has had bigger hits from extreme weather is that it occupies more of the globe.  A gigantic hurricane like Hayian is much more likely to strike a third world country because there are few developed countries in the hurricane zone.  A few years ago a denier in my Florida chemistry class told me that concerns about increases in hurricanes were misplaced because Florida had not been hit recently.  Two category 5 hurricanes had hit central America that year. He said that if his house was not affected it did not matter!  Sandy showed what happens to a developed country when an extreme storm hits.  If Miami or Tampa (where I live) got hit with the storm surge that Haiyan had there would be many deaths.  Do you feel lucky today?

    It is obvious that many extreme storms are caused by AGW, even though there is not statistical confidence in the data.  The nature of expreme events is such that scientific confidence will trail the real world experience.  Most people in the US now realize that tornadoes in Illonois in November and Hurricanes in New York in October are not normal.  Hopefully people will vote for action sooner than later.  Five years ago there were many skeptics in my class.  Today few students are openly skeptical of AGW.

  33. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Klaus Flemlose @12, the Skeptical Science comments panel is now WYSIWG (What You See Is What You Get).  When editing, stay in the basic tab and just type what you want.  You can bold, italic, underline, strike through, subscript, and supercript from that tab by highlighting the relevant text and pressing the relevant button.  You can also make ordered and unordered lists, and indents.

    If you need to insert links, tables or figures go to the second tab, and use the appropriate buttons.  When inserting a picture, ensure you go to the appearance tab and set the width to 500 pixels or less.

    Finally, if all else fails, you can use the source tab to edit using html code.

    Entering html code anywhere other than in the source tab will simply result in it being displayed as characters on the screen.  If the html code is not broken, however, if a moderator clicks edit on your post and then updates, the html code will normally run.

  34. Klaus Flemløse at 20:31 PM on 21 November 2013
    Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    In post nr 1, I have tried to include pictures and links using the syntax prescribed. Nothing works.

    I could earlier use the html  bottom, but i does not work any more.

    Please help me.

  35. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Tom@10,

    Thank you for your analysis and your links to brisbanewaters blog where you provide comprehensive numbers to refute the game of blaming the victim. I just realised that similar game has been playing by one of my fiends (denier of AGW) in relation to the unprecedented NSW fires in October. To my argument that BOM & CSIRO assert  the increasing Australian weather extremes will be responsible for more frequent bushfires, and this bushfire, occuring so unusually early in the season, is the evidence supporting their assertion, he replied:

    There were always bushfires in Australia. And CAGW has nothing to do with it. If this fire was unusual, or if we've seen more fires recently, that's because there are more people living in Blue Mountains now, and more people means more arsenists. More fires are the acts of arson, the latest one included.

    I didn't know what to answer to such argumentation because I didn't have detailed arson statistics at hand and didn't consider the ethical aspect of that talk. Now I see how corrupt such argumentation is. And it's astonishing that it can be applied not only to an exotic country like Philipines, but also to your own country, even your own neighbours (!) And it's often not easy to refute on empirical basis only, like you did in case of Brisbane floods.

    I don't see the "Blame the victim" in the list of Climate Myths under the thermometer on the left margin. I think the issue is impotant enough to get our attention: that myth is particularly nasty to warrant a comprehensive rebuttal.

  36. Global Warming Paws Fails to Materialise: Earth Still Warming and Global Sea Level Rising Like Gangbusters

    "but isn't there a price to pay for all that energy being absorbed into deeper and cooler parts of the ocean, particularly in polar regions?"  Agnostic at 10:41 AM on 20 November, 2013

    I suggest that it threatens the thermohaline circulation.  Would someone speak about the probable effects of a shutdown?

  37. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    YubeDude @9 indeed, any "half intelligent denialist" will always wander aggressively off topic.  Wether the disaster is a heat wave in Russia, floods in Pakistan or typhoons in the Phillipines, they will play the age old game of blaming the victims.  The interesting thing here is that the game of blaming the victims is even played when the disaster strikes a wealthy western nation with little corruption, such as the Brisbane floods of 2011.  Never mind that they need to get their facts almost completely wrong to do so.  Blaming the victim exonerates the person laying blame, and allows them to feel superior.

    In your case, the fact that the game is played even against an Australian capital city, should it be so unfortunate as to suffer a disaster shows that there is no ideal country whose disasters can be held up as an example that, yes, more extreme weather results in more victims of natural disaster.  (The possible exception is disasters in the US, which seem never to be the fault of the victim.)  Pointing to the poverty, and the corruption in the Phillipines is just a smoke screen.  The victim blaming would have occurred anyway.

    What is more, they are mere whisps of a smoke screen.  The Phillipines is not unusually corrupt (ranking similarly to the BRIC group of nations, the power houses of economic growth in the third world).  So while corruption in the Phillipines may contribute to poverty, it is not the major factor.  By far the largest factors are a lack of significant resources in high demand (such as oil), combined with a super-abundance of low wage workers in other nations such that they are a poor choice for sweated factory labour.  Even without corruption, even with a strong spirit of enterprise (which by all accounts the Phillipinos have), their nation would still be poor.   And because poor unable to build to cyclone resistant standards for the majority of their accomadation.  "Corruption" serves in this context only to provide an excuse for not thinking about the real implications.

    Those implications are simply that adaption does not work.  At least, we are currently unable to adapt to even normal levels of storms except in the most wealthy of nations (and not even always then), so the notion that we can face a world made far worse by global warming and simply adapt to it is laughable.  It relies on the fact that death is also a form of adaption, and that deaths in the third world do not weigh significantly on the scales in western policy.  (In fact, in Bjorn Lomberg's favourite economic model, it is a "feature" that third world deaths and injury are considered a lower cost than first world deaths and injury.)

    So, the response of your putative "half intelligent denialist" amounts to simple moral bankruptcy.  It simply treats the suffering of the very poor in the face of disasters as of little moral consequence - and hides the calousness of that fact behind ideological blinders. 

  38. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    I don't wish to offend or come across as callous to the suffering that has occurred...now having said that...

    Using this video as some kind of humanistic plea for change does nothing to address the issue at hand and actually creates an opening for denialist to take advantage of. The Philippines is not the place to try and link human tragedy and AGW impacts as a way of addressing the need for change. Any half intelligent denialist is going to aggressively wonder off topic and easy show that the amount of the death and destruction was the result of conditions that exist in the Philippines as opposed to the absolute force of the storm. A comparable death count between the next largest storm, Hurricane Camille, and this most recent storm illustrates that death counts and overall destruction have to factor the inherent conditions that exist.
    You can bet the cost will be lower in the Philippines but the death count much higher. Addressing the measured storm surge and speaking of the loss of life does not factor in that a very large population of people have to live in the surge zone due to poverty and are unlikely to have received timely information suggesting evacuation or refuse to evacuate because where exactly would they go?
    Any natural disaster is tragic where there is a loss of life or suffering. But adding that human element in an attempt to pull at the heart strings is disingenuous when the speaker/negotiator knows that his government and the culture of corruption are standing in the way of real change or doing anything significant to lessen the impact felt by these kinds of natural disasters.

    I say stick to the science and leave the tears for the TV dramas and bakla emotional meltdowns.

  39. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Just to bring a bit of visual and audible to the discussion:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hcfdFggVnPE&list=UUVLkqTvsRpm46RDmM4SYf6Q

    Moderator Response:

    [RH] in the future please include a more descriptive comment with your links.

  40. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Extending Terranova's thoughts, there's a world of difference between a house with no water on the floor and another with only 1cm underfoot. 

    Some of us have experienced the difference up close and personally. Rest assured, there's only a fraction of a meter of water between a house being useful and useless.

    Anywhere there's a storm surge,  SLR is playing a role. If it's outdoors, no big deal. Indoors, the story is entirely otherwise.

  41. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Terranova @3,

    In addition to the excellwent figure provided by scaddemp @5, see also the following image from the IPCC's fifth assessment report.  Note that the tide gauge at Manilla has recorded an increase in sea level of about 0.75 metres since the 1960s (H/T to Eli Rabett)!  Note, not all of that is related to global warming, some of the increase in sea-level in the western Pacific is related to decadal-scale variability.  Regardless, now add that to a 3-4 m storm surge (as far as I know, no official number has been released yet, but given the intensity of the storm, the observed damage and what storm surge models were predicting, the 3-4 m value is entirely plausible; see video to witness the devastating force of the storm surge) and you have a really big problem made even worse.

  42. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Philippines sealevel rise is much higher than world average at around 12mm/yr.

    Are you suggesting that it is physically possible for SLR not to add to storm surge height? That would seem to violate a no. of physical laws.

    Moderator Response:

    [RH] Fixed image width.

  43. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    When people talk about Camille in 1969 I point out that Haiyan was massive. It was likely about 3X the size of Camille. 

    Wind speed records are somewhat misleading and don't account for the amount of energy contained in cyclones.

  44. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Dana, 

    One topic at a time.   What is the recorded SLR in that region of the world? And,  more importantly what was the official storm surge?  Can you quantitatively demonstrate that SLR had any appreciable impact on the storm surge? 

    Statements and predictions are easy.   Scientifically proving those statements is not. As one multi-degreed and practicing environmental scientist to another,  I am challenging you to show valid proof of your statements. 

    Moderator Response:

    [JH] Please lose the snark.

  45. Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    Klause Flemlose @1, the statistics in the chart are simply for the thirteenth strongest tropical cyclones at landfall.  That does not include, fairly obviously, all landfalling tropical cyclones and hence the trend in the sample does not show the trend in speeds at landfall of tropical cyclones.  Nor is a sample of thirteen large enough to draw any significant conclusions from.  Further, the trend you show is probably almost entirely an artifact of the increased frequency of observation of tropical cyclones in the satellite era.

    That cuts both ways, of course.  The chart does not provide enough information for the downward trend to be significant, but neither does it show enough information to suspect an upward trend if more data was included.  In particular, the higher frequency of tropical cyclones with a one minute wind gust velocity greater than 164 mph in recent decades is almost certainly a result of better tracking of cyclones with satellites.

    Further, a significant confounding factor in the period of satellite observation is the switch from predominantly El Nino conditions from the late 1970s to the mid 2000s, to predominantly La Nina conditions.  La Nina conditions reinforce the Western Pacific Warm Pool, increasing SST around the Phillipines and Australia, a factor in 5 of the 6 cyclones listed since 1998.  (It may also be a factor the sixth, striking the caribean coast of Mexico, but I am unsure of the ENSO influence in the caribean).

    That confounding factor does not, however, detract from the point of the OP.  If increased SST increases the frequency of category 5 tropical cyclones, it will do so wether that increase is due to ENSO or global warming.  

  46. Klaus Flemløse at 07:06 AM on 21 November 2013
    Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?
    Will extreme weather like super typhoon Haiyan become the new norm?

    For other reason that presented here, I think the statement is correct.

    The statistics copied from Earth’s Strongest Landfall Tropical Cyclones at landfall does not indicate at all that the wind speed is increasing.

    There too little information in the graph to show anything. The data is sorted by mph creating a picture of an increasing trend.

    Below the data is plotted by year and the histogram is shown:

     

     

    The number of records broken over the years 1935 to 2013 is 4.This is not extreme in any ways.

    This following graph shows 10000 simulated runs of 79 years of observations assuming that no development in wind speed has taken place.

    The probability for 4 broken records or more is 0.5768. 

    Moderator Response:

    [RH] Deleted empty lines.

  47. Global Warming Paws Fails to Materialise: Earth Still Warming and Global Sea Level Rising Like Gangbusters

    Agnostic:

    ... but isn't there a price to pay for all that energy being absorbed into deeper and cooler parts of the ocean

    Well, among other effects, there's thermosteric sea level rise:

    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2012GL051106/full

  48. Global Warming Paws Fails to Materialise: Earth Still Warming and Global Sea Level Rising Like Gangbusters

    Mods, we could use a mouseover def for "GIS."  I gathered it means Greenland Ice Sheet because there is one above for West Antarctic Ice Sheet right next to it.  

    chriskoz: "our selfish hope is that ocean will absorb most of CO2 peak quickly enough (some 100y) before GIS and WAIS start collapsing"

    But is that a "selfish" hope or a naive one?  If marine ecosystems collapse, won't that affect humans too in very nasty ways?  Aside from the obvious loss of a major food source (which would presumably lead to even more livestock consumption with its gluttonous emissions tally => anthropogenic amplifying feedback?), I think I've also read about loss of natural harbors and increased coastal erosion, and who knows what other impacts we may not have even thought of?  

    Moderator Response:

    [AS] GIS Glossary term added.

  49. Help make our coverage bias paper free and open-access

    Still in progress...

  50. 2013 SkS Weekly News Roundup #47A

    “On Thin Ice” at Warsaw climate talks

    Did you know it was the “Day of the Cryosphere” at the Warsaw climate talks COP 19 in Warsaw yesterday? If not, you might be forgiven. I haven’t seen it making the headlines in the mainstream media. That is a pity, given that what climate change is doing to our ice, snow and permafrost has repercussions for the whole planet.

    The cryosphere is a term for the regions of our globe which are covered in ice and snow either seasonally or all year round, from the North Pole to Antarctica. ”Climate change is happening in the cryosphere faster and more dramatically than anywhere else on earth”, says the “International Cryosphere Climate Initiative” (ICCI). It is a network of senior policy experts and researchers working with governments and organisations to bring about initiatives to preserve as much of our ice and snow areas as possible. The group was set up in 2009 immediately after the disastrous COP 15 in Copenhagen.

    “On Thin Ice” at Warsaw climate talks by Irene Quaile, DW (Deutsche Welle) Ice Blog, Nov 18, 2013


    Moderator Response:

    [JH] Thanks for posting this. I will include it in the next edition of the News Roundup as well.

Prev  805  806  807  808  809  810  811  812  813  814  815  816  817  818  819  820  Next



The Consensus Project Website

THE ESCALATOR

(free to republish)


© Copyright 2024 John Cook
Home | Translations | About Us | Privacy | Contact Us