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Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
JvD - I have replied on an appropriate thread.
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A Detailed Look at Renewable Baseload Energy
As a follow-up to JvDs comments:I would have to disagree.
Capacity: There is certainly enough wind/solar energy theoretically available, many multiples of current and projected demand, even if limiting to only otherwise undesireable real estate.
Renewable baseload: Distributed networks can and will have baseload capacity - I believe the reliable baseload for a sufficiently distributed network, with zero energy storage, has been shown to be ~1/3 of average capacity (Archer & Jacobson 2007). Average capacity is IIRC ~15-30% of installed capacity, varying with type/site - by no means perfection, but a predictable fraction.
Reliabilty: Wind/solar at least tend to be multiple components (many windmills, many solar panels) at each site, with the possible exception of concentrated thermal. This means source failures are far less likely than with coal/nuclear boilers, but for the sake of argument we can go with the same site reliability figures as fossil fuels use - and we manage with those now. As to supply variations - weather predictions out a few hours are extremely reliable, providing plenty of time for any needed redistribution or backup to ramp up.
International availability: Not often discussed, but certainly an issue. While the US (for example) doesn't have this problem, the UK (small, cloudy, high latitude, high energy use) is probably not going to be able to supply their energy needs with renewables located in the UK - but rather importing from perhaps Northern Africa or other locations. But that's the nature of the world today - some countries are energy exporters, some are energy importers. Particulars will change, but we are dealing with that situation now.
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Composer99 at 01:23 AM on 16 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
Inquiry to JvD on thread suggested by michael sweet.
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Composer99 at 01:23 AM on 16 March 2013A Detailed Look at Renewable Baseload Energy
JvD states on a recent thread:
"As someone who is familiar with the field, you must know there are many peer reviewed studies that disagree with your assessment that renewables cannot be used to power the entire globe." [comment by michael sweet]
Yes I have read probably all of them. None of them disagree with my assessment, since none of them show how renewables can power the globe. All they do is show that there is enough sun, wind, etc. It saddens me that [SkS] it not able to recognise the difference between that and showing actually *how* renewables can power the globe, which is what is demanded in a scientific discussion. IPCC does not do this. Greenpeace does not do this. WWF does not do this. They make a mockery of serious efforts to move to low-carbon economy. This kind of denial is similar to climate change denial and just as damaging to the effort to save the planet for human welfare. I repeat my call for an overhaul of the treatment of this important subject on SS. Dr. Ted Trainer has clearly shown the problem and [SkS] should take it from there. I can't do more than that.
JvD: Could you provide some specifics on this? Perhaps refer to a few of these papers and explaining why they support your view?
After all, the authorship of the reports you are criticizing will very likely include people whose cumulative professional experience will be greater than yours. On what basis is your view superior to theirs?
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dana1981 at 01:11 AM on 16 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
Joris, most of the discussions on SkS (not SS) about renewable energy have included the point that we need to reduce consumption by increasing efficiency. As for moving to 100% renewable energy, I don't agree with you (this can be achieved by connecting a large network of various different types of renewable energy - solar PV, wind, solar thermal, geothermal, etc.), but it's a moot point for several decades anyway, and not relevant to this blog post.
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Philip64 at 01:04 AM on 16 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
An outstanding dissection of Watts's arguments. The claim to be a 'lukewarmist' is the most transparent fiction imaginable, designed, I suspect, only to draw in gullible 'undecideds'.
What also come across is the extraordinary shallowness of his ideas, and the increasing reliance on selective data . In that sense he is the essential climate skeptic.
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JvD at 00:52 AM on 16 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
"As someone who is familiar with the field, you must know there are many peer reviewed studies that disagree with your assessment that renewables cannot be used to power the entire globe."
Yes I have read probably all of them. None of them disagree with my assessment, since none of them show how renewables can power the globe. All they do is show that there is enough sun, wind, etc. It saddens me that SS it not able to recognise the difference between that and showing actually *how* renewables can power the globe, which is what is demanded in a scientific discussion. IPCC does not do this. Greenpeace does not do this. WWF does not do this. They make a mockery of serious efforts to move to low-carbon economy. This kind of denial is similar to climate change denial and just as damaging to the effort to save the planet for human welfare. I repeat my call for an overhaul of the treatment of this important subject on SS. Dr. Ted Trainer has clearly shown the problem and SS should take it from there. I can't do more than that.
Best regards,
Joris
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michael sweet at 00:05 AM on 16 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
JvD,
Renewabel energy has been discussed repeatedly on SkS. Frankly, I used to be in favor of Nuclear, but the people supporting that position here have not made a good case and I no longer support nuclear. Where I live in Florida, the local power company has wasted $1.5 billon US dollars planning a nuclear plant (they have not broken ground yet and never will) and has a second plant that has sustained irrepairable damage during maintenance worth $5-10 billion. Nuclear is simply not economic in the USA. As someone who is familiar with the field, you must know there are many peer reviewed studies that disagree with your assessment that renewables cannot be used to power the entire globe.
If you want to continue this discussion find a suitable thread, perhaps this one, nuclear always goes on forever.
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Water vapor is the most powerful greenhouse gas
Jose_X - Short answer, yes. The sum of equilibrium forcings and temperature changes for 3*2x CO2 will equal 1x8x CO2. Or for any other subdivision.
What is being changed is to total emissivity of the atmosphere, which by the Stephan-Boltzman law and the amount of incoming solar energy sets the climate temperature.
The only possible differences would be if 2^3*concentration did not equal 8*concentration (mathematic nonsense), or if the temporal evolution of feedbacks differed with increment size (at equilibrium, there should be no difference), or passing some hysteresis point (say, driving into an Icehouse Earth state that requires a huge amount of forcing change to switch out of - which would require a forcing overshoot and reversal). So no, there should be no differences whatsoever in equilibrium total forcing, in equilibrium temperature, dependent on the path to that increase.
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michael sweet at 23:51 PM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
Dana,
You need to take much more personal credit for Watts claiming to be a "lukewarmer". I define "Lukewarmer" as a new name deniers call themselves because everyone knows their "skeptic" arguments have been shown to be bunk. They think that if they put on a new hat they can go on as they always have. SkS has been so successful in countering their false claims that Watts no longer wants to be associated with his own legacy!
Keep up the good work! Don't let them get away with putting on a new hat, they are still just deniers.
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Kevin8233 at 23:48 PM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
Like Jose, I like the graph in DS#10. I followed the links, but am curious about a couple of things.
Since it represents a trend, what are the respective confidence limits? Are they (the three trends) close as far as confidence limits goes?
Since the graph has been updated since 2007 when it was first done, have the trend lines been recalculated, or have the lines just been extended?
Was this paper peer reviewed? I am assuming it is, but can't find it.
Is there enough data points to say there is a trend? On a different thread, I was told that 16 years was insufficeint to generate a trend, but here we have 45 years, with 6 years removed for volcanic activity, leaving 39 years to generate 3 different trends?
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JvD at 23:22 PM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
To be clear, I work for a 400+ employee engineering consultancy company in the Netherlands and my function title is Sr. Specialist in Energy and Sustainability. I have 10 years work experience, for what it's worth. My conclusion is that solar and wind energy will grow, but cannot by themselves solve the GHG emission problem. That problem can only be solved by drastic cuts in energy usage (= lifestyle change = not a credible solution pathway) OR a dramatic shift to nuclear power (entirely feasible and sustainable long term in all respects). In my humble opinion, if SS would promote this view than SS has claimed the high ground of a science-based position on sustainable energy systems. If not, then you have opened this site up for unnecessary criticism, which would weaken your cause and mine.
Best regards,Joris
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JvD at 22:57 PM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
In this interesting article, it is stated that renewable energy can substitute for fossil fuels and doesn't even need fossil fueled backup. There is then link to a treatment on this site of the IPCC report on the potential of renewable energy. However, the IPCC report - while full of interesting information - does not at all inspire confidence that renewable energy is able to replace fossil fuels. The IPCC report in fact states in so many words that renewable energy sources will *not* likely reduce GHG emissions as much as is necessary. The claim of 'almost 80% renewables' is no more than an outlier single report by Greenpeace, which is itself deeply unsatisfying and superficial.
I love this website and consult it frequently as a valuable resource for understanding why and how climate change deniers are wrong. However, the treatment on this site of renewable energy and the challenge of moving to them for 100% of our energy supply is very, very poor indeed, I'm sorry to say. I urge the website owner to overhaul that part of the site thoroughly by noting (for example) very carefully the serious problems with the content of the IPCC renewable energy report, as detailed comprehensively by Ted Trainer here:
http://bravenewclimate.com/2011/08/09/ipcc-renewables-critique/
Another option would be for this site to refrain from tackling the question of sustainable future energy systems altogether, which is obviously not it's speciality. As it stands, the treatment of energy systems on this site damages the reputation of SS as a credible source, which I lament. Hopefully, it will be understood that this message is constructive criticism.Beste regards,
Joris
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AndrewDoddsUk at 21:57 PM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
Years of what could be termed 'discussions' with Creationists would lead me to refine #11 to 'when completely and utterly debunked, leave the argument for a while, waiting until you hope people have forgotton, then bring it back'
This goes past intellectual bankrputcy into the concept of negative credit scores..
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gws at 21:25 PM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
Jose @8
"I really like the first graph at DS#10."
In this case, credit goes to John Nielsen-Gammon, Texas State Climatologist, who first used this kind of analysis here and here.
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OneHappy at 18:30 PM on 15 March 2013Shakun et al. Clarify the CO2-Temperature Lag
Thanks for your answer Tom. I'm impressed with the quick response. What you have written is a bit beyond me, but it looks like a good reply. I suspected the Shaviv objection was false. A lesson from this, it seems refutation of sceptical arguments can become a very complex business. This is the first time I've been out of my depth on the topic.
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Tom Curtis at 16:04 PM on 15 March 2013Shakun et al. Clarify the CO2-Temperature Lag
OneHappy @152, Shakun et al use 30 (37%) proxies from the SH, and 51 (63%) proxies from the NH. Because of the method used by Shakun et al, that does mean the global reconstruction is weighted in favour of NH temperatures. Further, in the SH, 13 (43%) proxies are extra-tropical, while 17 (57%) are tropical; whereas in the NH, 24 (47%) are tropical and 27 (53%) extra-tropical. As tropical areas cooled less than polar areas, that difference in weighting also means NH temperatures run warm (show less temperature difference between glacial and interglacial than do the SH temperatures). In fact, the proxies are predominantly (59 out of 81) from a band from 40 degrees north to 10 degrees south, and band that saw minimal temperature change relative to other parts of the planet. That may well have led to an underestimate of global temperature differences between glacial and interglacial.
How very odd that Shaviv did not comment on these other distortions, expecially given the importance of the later to his discussion of climate sensitivity.
The fact is that with a limited number of unevenly distributed proxies, no method will prevent some distortion. Focusing on just one of these (NH vs SH) is nto good science, it is simply (at best) a failure to recognize the issues involved.
That being said, the oddest thing is that Shaviv does not show a comparison between Shakun et al's global temperature reconstruction, and that obtained by averaging the hemispheres. Perhaps the reason is that when you compare them, you get this:
Does that look like deliberate manipulation to you? Or that it would compromise the results?
What it looks like to me is that Shakun et al took a reasonable approach (area weighing on grid cells) and that the difference between that and alternative approaches was so negligible that it was not worthwhile employing more complicated methods.
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heb0 at 15:14 PM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
The other misrepresentations are bad enough, but surely Watts knows by now that "BP" refers to 1950, not 2000 or 2013 or some other date. Sure, I can understand how someone might make that faulty assumption initially, as the naming convention isn't exactly intuitive, but at this point it just seems like it would have to be an intentional error by Watts. There isn't a good excuse for making this mistake repeatedly.
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Jose_X at 14:28 PM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Tom Curtis 31 >> That the distribution of the ensemble predictions is skewed needs to be conveyed because science does not procede by only noting the points that help you make a point, and that fact was conveyed both by figure 3 and by the note about the mean.
OK, so maybe the paper wasn't suggesting that the models tending far from the average be removed (contrary to what I guessed in Jose_X 32).
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Jose_X at 14:23 PM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Kevin:
Look at what the article said:
>> Some models (particularly cccma_cgcm3_1 [1 in Figure 3] and ncar_ccsm3_0 [6 in Figure 3]) predict more overall global surface warming than observed, although most models simulate the observed average global surface warming accurately. Due to those overpredictions, on average the models simulate a 0.167°C per decade average global surface warming trend from 1961-2010, whereas the observed trend is approximately 0.138 ± 0.028°C per decade, approximately 20% lower.
As Tom and/or others pointed out:
a) It appears that some models are off from the others. If we remove those stray cases, the ensemble average gets rather close to the "observed trend". The study highlights that point, perhaps suggesting future improvements to IPCC projections might be in filtering out the models that are far off the mode before calculating the new mean. [Haven't read the paper.]
b) The error bars you quoted are I think from our attempt to pin down the observed trends because there is inherently error in observation. It isn't the error bars of the models. If the observations were exact, there would be no error bars around that 0.138 value. On the other hand, a particular model ensemble might predict a trend of .167/decade with say a 95% confidence envelope through the first 3 decades of +/- .1. So if we had this model and the current observed values with error bars, then we'd have this: the observed might be as high as 0.138+0.028=0.166 while the model predicts that the temp might be as low as 0.167-0.1=0.067. In this case, we have that the actual temp -- best we can observe -- is possibly much higher than the lower bounds of the models. -
Jose_X at 13:51 PM on 15 March 2013Water vapor is the most powerful greenhouse gas
KR 160:
>> To be really clear, I'm speaking of total forcings, not deltas, as the deltas will be dependent on the temperature at the time of the delta - if you are looking at varying temporal evolution without equilibrium, all bets are off.
To clarify a bit on what you mean by "deltas", would you say that the following is a description of deltas that are off the table if each "slug" was carried out to equilibrium in the runs and if both the slugs and the overlapping large jump avoided feedbacks?
> So, not only does the RF of a large slug not equal the RF of the sum of a series of small slugs of the same size, but the RF varies depending on whether you are adding, or removing the slug.
My question was about the nature of RF. Specifically, I am interested in knowing if doing a 2x CO2 and when that is reached doing another 2x CO2 from that new equilibrium point and then another .. if those three added together would give the same value as if we do a single 8x CO2 calculation (or perhaps for some other ghg or other ratio). If the answer is that the values would differ nontrivially, then I have to wonder about the meaning of even a single RF used in a model (though I'm not worried if the model approximations are linear and reflect reality within a limited domain we would work in) and about whether what we get from the ideal situation of doing a 2x in one shot to calculate RF is meaningful to a planet that is adding CO2 in very much smaller increments (smaller relative to the ability of the planet to keep up, if that is true). A primary goal of mine is to understand the model decently. -
Jose_X at 13:36 PM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
1: WRT DS#1, looking just at those two quotes, I agree with the thrust of shoyemore #2. I think the two Watts quotes misrepresent scientists, but they are consistent with each other and in painting a picture that Watts is more rational than the scientists. "Hey, Watts is rational and one of us normal people who realizes the climate is complex and obviously wasn't going to behave as predicted by scientists. The scientists are alarmists and don't even realize obvious things. The scientists are backpeddling and can't be trusted." Do you have other quotes by Watts making predictions that are incorrect?
2: I really like the first graph at DS#10. I hadn't seen that before. Will use it.
One simple improvement to this graph to me would be to have the frame showing the 3 trend lines display a little longer. Another small improvement might be to make the colored squares larger (or grow in some animated fashion as you transition to the 3 trend lines) so we can more easily verify the 3 trend lines (the skeptic that I am) by more easily seeing the colors and that the points do come from where alleged.
The impact of the graph might also be improved if juxstaposed with several other graphs: (a) the one showing clustering of el nino and la nina, (b) the escalator, and (c) the pic (or vid) showing an animated removal of cyclical effects from the temperature leaving a mostly rising temp. Putting the above 4 graphs into a little animated story would be nice. (a) suggests cycles are real and logical. The current graph, also showing the cycles are logical due to their clustering and periodicity, then highlights that a move to a higher trend might almost be inevitable. (c) offers an animated backup confirmation that the cycles are the problem. And (b) shows that in the absence of these further explanations, many of us will find it easy to fool ourselves.
3: DS#7 is a good point but also presents a lose-lose situation in the short term. If the climate scientists are right, you can say they are lucky, that alarmism is having a lucky streak, that they have simple minds and any day now the climate will prove them wrong. OTOH, if they misshoot too much, that clearly wouldn't be good either.
The slog is to try to offer as much evidence as possible as accessible as possible (eg, as is the goal and much success of this website) and within that context show that their decent predictions make sense while many contrarians have been far more incorrect, something that would be more clear only as time ticks away, unfortunately. A reality is that the skeptical mind without time to become an amateur climate scientist ultimately will wait out nature if they suspect scientists are untrustworthy an likely to exaggerate.
Another point is that it is important to try to avoid over-shooting on the high end, downplaying error bars, and downplaying our always somewhat limited understanding. People frequently judge success subjectively based on expectations being met or not. We know the story about crying wolf. While individual contrarians will cry wolf and come and go, the scientific community as a whole would be a greater loss if it placed itself in a position to be dismissed. The label "alarmism" effectively paints scientists as full of naivite or even as full of hubris, supposedly over-estimating dangers at every turn with lots of self-assuredness. Plus, if you are a bit conservative and undershoot a little, what are others going to do? Pick the top side and essentially promote action? Hopefully. Or they may undershoot more so and make it clear the closest predictions was the still conservative scientists. Of course, it's hard to do science in earnest and not try to be as accurate as possible, but the reality is we are biased creatures and we should continue to be careful and guard against actual alarmism.
The FAR report, even if using models less accurate than what we have now, did well in their summary by stating the following in a section titled "How much confidence do we have in our predictions"
> Uncertainties in the above climate predictions arise from our imperfect knowledge of
> future rates of human-made emissions
> how these will change the atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases
> the response of climate to these changed concentrations
> ... Secondly, because we do not fully understand the sources and sinks of the greenhouse gases, there are uncertainties in our calculations of future concentrations arising from a given emissions scenario
> Thirdly, climate models are only as good as our understanding of the processes which they describe, and this is far from perfect -
OneHappy at 13:30 PM on 15 March 2013Shakun et al. Clarify the CO2-Temperature Lag
DSL: no method, little more than a blog post: http://www.sciencebits.com/Shakun_in_Nature
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DSL at 12:57 PM on 15 March 2013Shakun et al. Clarify the CO2-Temperature Lag
OneHappy, can you provide a link to Shaviv's methodology?
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OneHappy at 12:53 PM on 15 March 2013Shakun et al. Clarify the CO2-Temperature Lag
On ScienceBits 21 April 2012 Nir Shaviv raised this objection to the Shakun et al. paper: "in order to recover their average "global" temperature, I needed to mix about 37% of their southern hemisphere temperature with 63% of their northern hemisphere temperature." So he is accusing them of deliberately manipulating the data by weighting it to get the result they wanted (ie that globally on average temperature lags CO2). I am interested in two aspects of this objection. 1) Is he correct, and if so how much does this compromise Shakun's results? 2) Assuming Shaviv is correct, would this mean that temperature does not lag CO2 only during the start of a period of warming (but it would during the mid and latter period), or would this apply across the entire period?
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WheelsOC at 12:45 PM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
The argument in talking point #3 is a guest post by Don Easterbrook, who still refuses to acknowledge getting the dates wrong in the ice core data (he isn't even consistent; his graphic indicates that the last known date in the record would be 1905 yet he refers to the end of the ice core data as 1950 in the body of his text).
Even though Easterbrook is well aware of these things, I posted a comment to that effect. We'll see if it gets through WUWT moderation unmolested.
All this is evidence that there should be a Denial Strategy #11: never give up on a bad argument no matter how often or thoroughly it's debunked.
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Tom Curtis at 10:17 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Kevn @ a model projection is an estimate, from basic principles (Planck's law, Newtons laws of motion and gravitation, the laws of thermodynamics), known current conditions, and projections of future forcings, of the future changes in the climate system. Because of limited computer power they must be run at resolutions in which micro behaviour is not modelled, where micro-behaviour includes such things as tornados and hurricanes. As a result, the such micro behaviour must be matched to the resolution of the model by parametrization. Further, there is uncertainty about the exact values of some current conditions. Each model represents an estimate of the correct parametrization and value of uncertain conditions. Those estimates are not predicted by theory, and though modellers try to constrain them with observations, they cannot entirely do so.
The result is that our best prediction from basic physical principles is uncertain. Each model represents a sample from the range of possible parametrizations given current knowledge, and hence provides a sample from the range of possible predictions from basic physics given our current limitations in computer capacity and knowledge.
Because of that, our best possible prediction from basic physics is determined by the statistical properties of the ensemble of models. As such, our best prediction is the mean of the ensemble, with the uncertainty of the prediction being a function of the range of the predictions by individual models.
If you look at the GM section of figure 3 above, you will see that the mode of the distribution of GM trend predictions is very close to the values observed, but that two models drag the mean away from the mode. The distribution is skewed. In that situation I would have thought it was better to quote the median model trend rather than the mean of the trends, but there are certainly other ways to show this data, including (as the authors did) showing the full range of model projections relative to the observed trends. When you look at that comparison, it becomes obvious that the observations have not falsified the ensemble prediction. Not even close!
In that context, you are focusing on a single comparison to the exclusion of the full range of data presented to try and create the impression that there is a very large discrepancy between the ensemble prediction and observations. In fact, there is only a small discrepancy between ensemble predictions and observations because the observations lie close to the mode (and median) of the individual predictions within the ensemble. That the distribution of the ensemble predictions is skewed needs to be conveyed because science does not procede by only noting the points that help you make a point, and that fact was conveyed both by figure 3 and by the note about the mean.
You, however, faced with a usefull discussion of the full issue, have chosen to ignore the majority of the data presented to make a case that is not supported by the full range of data. It seems to be a specialty of yours.
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Tom Curtis at 09:42 AM on 15 March 2013No alternative to atmospheric CO2 draw-down
An additional note on reserves: the "possible reserves" include all proven reserves, all probable reserves (defined as reserves having a 50% chance of being commercially recovered with current technology and prices), and all possible reserves (defined as having a 10% chance of being recovered at current technology and prices). Obviously as technology improves and prices rise, recovery rates will go well above the 50 and 10% figures. Further, as noted by MA Rodger, these reserves do not include the vast majority of tar sands, oil sands and shale oils, and nor do they include unconventional gas (clathrates and gas recoverable only by fracking or underground gasification).
The total resource base estimate by the IEA includes all fossil fuels currently estimated to be in the ground, excluding the majority of unconventional oil resources (tar sands etc) and clathrates. Gas recoverable only by fracking and gas from underground gasification will be included as part of current gas and coal TRB respectively.
I suspect these distinctions are academic, in any event. Once we get up towards 3,500 GtC total emissions, Mean Global Surface Temperatures are likely to be 6 degrees above the pre-industrial average out to 10 thousand years from now (peaking somewhere between that and 10 C above the preindustrial). I do not expect the ability or will to keep on burning fossil fuels will long survive in that sort of climate.
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Tom Curtis at 09:27 AM on 15 March 2013No alternative to atmospheric CO2 draw-down
MA Rodger @49, thankyou for pointing out my error. As it happens, I made it consistently, ie, at each point where I should have mentioned Pg C, I mentioned Pg CO2. Consequently the entire post is correct once the substitution for the correct figure is made.
I should note that figure of one trillion tonnes Carbon as the achievable lower limit of emissions comes from Allen et al 2009, and certain related papers. A count of the best estimate of emissions todate is kept at trillionthtonne.org. They indicate that at current emission rates, the trillionth tonne will be emitted in June, 2041. Just 28 years!
With regard to the fossil fuel reserve, 5,000 GtC is approximately the World Energy Council 2010 estimate of possible reserves, which with emissions todate comes to 3,575 GtC. Possible reserves include reserves which have not been proven, or are uneconomic with current technology and prices and which estimates of the likilihood of future recovery are uncertain. The International Energy Agency 2011 reports a Total Resource Base of fossil fuels which, together with emissions todate, represents cumulative emissions of 16,700 GtC. Not all of that will be recoverable under any circumstance, but it is likely that new discoveries, especially as that figure does not include oil sands, tar sands and shale oil. If we are determined to exploit every economic fossil fuel resource regardless of consequences, given a few centuries we will, I think, go well beyond the 5,000 GtC estimate used by Archer. (Figures and sources taken from my spread sheet.)
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Cornelius Breadbasket at 07:39 AM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
Thank you dana - I'm very pleased that even a layman like me can grasp a little science :)
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mikeh1 at 07:28 AM on 15 March 2013Pielke Jr and McIntyre Assist Christy's Extreme Weather Obfuscation
This debate is being reprised at The Conversation with an attack on the Climate Commission's Angry Summer report by the Pielke Jr associated Risk Frontiers group at Macquarie Uni. Similar bait and switch tactics being employed. The CC has issued a statement, Pielke Jr has weighed in.
http://theconversation.edu.au/weighing-the-toll-of-our-angry-summer-against-climate-change-12793
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dana1981 at 07:05 AM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
Cornelius @4 - also true. They are causally related (global warming causes climate change), so the terms are often used interchangeably, but they're not the same thing.
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Cornelius Breadbasket at 06:46 AM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
I've been led to understand that Global Warming and Climate Change are two different things. Global Warming means global temperature increase which causes Climate Change - a shift in the long-term weather patterns. Watts 'proponants shifted the term' argument is very easy to deflate when you explain it like this.
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Kevin8233 at 06:33 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Composer99,
What I was using is the reality of the facts.
The observable trend over the period is 0.138 +/- 0.028 degrees C/decade.
The reported average trend is 0.167 degrees C/decade.
The fact is 0.138 + 0.028 = 0.166.
The fact is 0.166 is less than 0.167.
All I'm saying is that it is this article that is not very convincing.
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scaddenp at 06:19 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Kevin, since you keep going on about short term trends, (the flattish last 10 years), then lets see if I understand what you mean.
Am I correct that, deep down, you reject the idea that trend is mostly due to negative/neutral ENSO state and believe it is due to some other part of the climate system. And furthermore, if we only understood this "other part" of the climate system we would realise AGW isnt the problem that we thought. Is this what you believe?
Or alternatively, do you believe the ENSO has gone fundamental change (something models should have found but havent) and it will remain mostly low and temperatures will be stable from now on?
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Composer99 at 05:56 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Kevin:
Since when is it my responsibility to report to the paper's authors (or, since your claim follows from the OP text rather than from the paper, to Dana) what Tom feels are issues with the way the paper handles the observational datasets?
What I was taking issue with was not the content of the paper itself, but your comment upthread, which you defended because you weren't "trying to say anything 'statistically speaking'".
You are questioning the quantified analysis using.. what, exactly? Your gut feelings?
As I said, not very convincing.
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Kevin8233 at 05:21 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Composer99,
Have you expressed these statistical concerns to the author? After all, it was the author who compared an averaged trend with observed trend. As noted earlier by Tom Curtis, these trends are from different models, and averaging them isn't the best thing.
I don't have all the data. I don't want to do all the calculations. I don't need to. I, again, was just making the point that the author's chosen comparrison does not help make his point.
You are making a claim about trends that are computed using statistical techniques. So if you're not trying to say anything about the statistics, your claim won't be particularly convincing.
As noted above, the author made a comparrison of an average trend to the observed trend. It is interesting that his average does not include any +/- , which questions the statistical legitimacy of this averaging. As such, any comment regarding this comparrison does not require a statistical test.
My claim doesn't have to be particularly convincing, the data already is!
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Composer99 at 04:04 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Kevin:
I was not trying to say anything "statistically speaking", [...]
There's your problem right there. You are making a claim about trends that are computed using statistical techniques. So if you're not trying to say anything about the statistics, your claim won't be particularly convincing.
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Kevin8233 at 02:53 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Tom,
I didn't say anything about falsification.
1) I am aware the authors chose the index to compare with. What I am saying is that it is a wrong choice for straightforward reasons.
But you didn't comment on this, except in regards to my comment. Why?
2) Only one Global Mean Surface Temperature record is in fact global. The NCDC record does not include the poles, for example. Therefore, when comparing with NCDC, an NCDC mask of the model results should be used.
Same as above. You have a problem with the paper, but point it out when commenting on my comment.
I was not trying to say anything "statistically speaking", I was just pointing out, using the comparison the author chose, the trends that the models predict, do not seem to be that good.
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dana1981 at 02:33 AM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
shoyemore @2 - the statements are contradictory when taken in context. The first (red Watts) essentially says that we expect linear warming, and the fact that we haven't seen it has scientists scrambling to switch to the term 'climate change'. The second says the climate is complicated and we shouldn't expect linear warming.
It's the intent of the first quote and subsequent baloney that makes them contradictory.
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shoyemore at 02:25 AM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
I am not sure if the first one is a real contradiction on Watts' part - you could call the one on the right a lie or a strawman, and the one on the left exaggerated ("hundreds" of variables?), but the two statements are not mutually exclusive. At least, they do not seem so to me.
But far be it from me to defend Anthony Watts. I think he gets far too much attention, anyway.
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Tom Curtis at 02:20 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Kevin:
1) I am aware the authors chose the index to compare with. What I am saying is that it is a wrong choice for straightforward reasons.
2) Only one Global Mean Surface Temperature record is in fact global. The NCDC record does not include the poles, for example. Therefore, when comparing with NCDC, an NCDC mask of the model results should be used.
3) The meaning of statistical significance is that if the observations lie within the 95% confidence intervals of the prediction, the theory is not falsified by the data. If it exceeds it, it may be falsified given certain other conditions. Saying that indice is very close to the limit shows a problem simply means you do not understand statistical significane. This is especially so as you have reversed the appropriate comparison by comparing the mean of the prediction with the confidence limit of the observations (it should be the ohter way round).
4) If you look at the GM section of figure 2, it is very clear that all three indices used lie, for the most part, within the 1 sigma (66%) confidence interval of the predictions. I know that you are desperate to beat that fact into a "falisification" of the models, but all that is being falsified is any belief that you are capable of a sensible analysis.
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Kevin8233 at 01:49 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Tom Curtis,
I did not specify which observed trend, the Author did that. Regardless, from your data, while only one doesn't encompass the models, another has the upper limit right on the model's prediction, and another just above it (0.002) at 0.169. This still shows a problem with the models. It is not just due to a small sampling time.
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Albatross at 01:46 AM on 15 March 2013Watts Interview – Denial and Reality Mix like Oil and Water
Mr. Watts is now clearly showing the traits of someone in denial-- just look at all the examples that Dana found in a short interview. He is also demonstrating his ignorance of climate science.
Alas, those in denial have a slew of tricks and techniques that they draw upon to misinform and mislead others.
But in doing so they almost always make some critical mistakes-- not only factual mistakes, that alone would be bad enough, but they have trouble formulating an internally consistent and coherent message. What is more they tend to present logical fallacies. Maybe that is one way that those in denial try and deal with their cognitive dissonance.
So what we have here is a failure by someone in denial to communicate coherently (with apologies to Axel Rose). Along those lines, this is very much a war on science and scientists by those in denial. The likes of Mr. Watts seem oblivious to the fact that they are fighting a losing battle with the laws of physics.
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Tom Curtis at 01:40 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Observed trends, Jan, 1961- Dec, 2010:
GISS: 0.151 +/- 0.027 C/decade. (Upper confidence interval: 0.178 C/decade)
NOAA: 0.142 +/- 0.025 C/decade. (Upper confidence interval: 0.167 C/decade)
HadCRUT3: 0.140 +/- 0.029 C/decade. (Upper confidence interval: 0.169 C/decade)
HadCRUT4: 0.139 +/- 0.027 C/decade. (Upper confidence interval: 0.166 C/decade)
So, one out of four temperature indices just fails to scrape in the confidence interval. That index is known to not have global coverage, and in particular to have poor coverage of the Arctic, Asia, and North Africa (all areas showing very high temperatures in 2010) Indeed, the only index of the four to have truly global coverage is also the one that most closely matches the predicted trend.
Kevin does point toward a genuine problem, however, though it is not what he thinks it is. It is about time climate scientists started using a HadCRUT3 (or 4) mask on their predictions when comparing predicted temperatures and trends to the Hadley products. It is known that they do not have global coverage, and it is known that that effects the temperature trends. The continued reliance on HadleyCRU products without produceing a Hadley mask prediction is the equivalent of comparing North American continent temperature predictions to USHCN CONUS temperature products. It is not a prediction of the thing being measured.
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Kevin8233 at 00:35 AM on 15 March 2013Drost, Karoly, and Braganza Find Human Fingerprints in Global Warming
Due to those overpredictions, on average the models simulate a 0.167°C per decade average global surface warming trend from 1961-2010, whereas the observed trend is approximately 0.138 ± 0.028°C per decade, approximately 20% lower.
The max of the observed trend is 0.138 + 0.028 = 0.166.
What does it mean when the max of the observed trend is less than the model's prediction?
Since this covers 49 - 50 years, it is a substantial amount of time. I would say that the model is out of whack!
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Hans Petter Jacobsen at 21:04 PM on 14 March 2013Living in Denial in Norway
I agree with Esop @19 that the return of cold winter weather has affected the opinion in Norway. Cross country skiing, which requires cold winter weather, is still a part of the national identity for many Norwegians, myself included.
Norway is a young nation, and polar explorers like Fridtjof Nansen and Roald Amundsen were important for the national identity both before and after Norway was separated from Sweden in 1905. Nansen tried to reach the North Pole in an expedition that lasted for 3 years. They did not manage to ski all the way to the Pole, but he and his men survived, and they were heroes when they returned home. Most Norwegians know about the expedition and the hardships that the men went through in the Arctic ice. An ice free North Pole may therefore change people's opinion. In 2010 a modern Norwegian explorer sailed around the Arctic in a small fiberglass sailboat, and he got much attention in the media. It took Amundsen 3 years to sail the western part of this route and 2 years to sail the eastern part of it, despite his vessels were designed for the pack ice. I assume that someone will sail to the North Pole in a small fiberglass sailboat soon, and that this will have a greater impact on the opinion in Norway than anywhere else.
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MA Rodger at 19:27 PM on 14 March 2013No alternative to atmospheric CO2 draw-down
Hi Tom Curtiss @49.
Thanks for turning Archer's figure 1 round the right way up. In the past I have always met it on its side which does make fully appreciating its content a bit stressful.
The text of Archer 2009 is a different matter, although you did get me checking who was right.
The pulses of CO2 he models are in Pg carbon (GtC in my-speak) and not in Pg CO2. Archer describes the size of the smaller of these pulses thus "For comparison, humankind has already released 300 Pg C and will surpass 1000 Pg C total release under business-as-usual projections before the end of the century." Archer's 300 GtC for human releases is surely low, even for 2009 (which if you tot them up would have been 350 GtC back then according to CDIAC, and now over 400 GtC). It also ignores land-use emissions which tot up to a further 160 GtC according to CDIAC which makes today's total release probably over 560 GtC.
Thus under BAU, I would put the 1,000 PgC emissions milestone as arriving, not as Archer says "before the end of the century", but by mid-century.
The larger 5,000 PgC pulse he equates to burning of all FF reserves including coal (although likely tar sands & fracked gas probably don't feature). Fuel reserves are always a nightmare, with the numbers quoted ranging from 'reserves from current holes in the ground using current extraction methods' all the way to 'estimated potential global reserves extractable using theoretical methods.' I do think Archer is at the high end of these different figures when he says the 'entire reserviour of fossil fuel' equates to his 5,000 GtC. A figure of 760 GtC (2,795 GtCO2) is encountered commonly which I interpret as 'known reserves less tar sands & fracking'. There is as well resulting carbon feedbacks from permafrost so BAU for 60 years would easily see resultant total accumulative carbon emissions up to 1,500 GtC.
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Leto at 16:43 PM on 14 March 2013Water vapor is the most powerful greenhouse gas
gws #154, thanks.
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Water vapor is the most powerful greenhouse gas
Tom Curtis, Jose_X - If I am referring to running the same experiment in steps (one or many), and you are referring to something else entirely (with/without feedback, under different conditions, for example), then my apologies, that's apples and oranges. Different questions entirely, and comparing the two is not particularly relevant.
What I was discussing is that a numeric analysis of 400ppm will be the same as another analysis of 400ppm, all other things held constant (including the presence/absence of feedbacks and whether or not sufficient time for equilibrium is allowed), regardless of other calculations, and that interim values for GHG levels will and must fall somewhere between the 0ppm and 400ppm numbers. Not retaining feedback levels for one forcing level over to another, which is invalid, but running each step of the experiment under the same conditions as the final 400ppm evaluation. To be really clear, I'm speaking of total forcings, not deltas, as the deltas will be dependent on the temperature at the time of the delta - if you are looking at varying temporal evolution without equilibrium, all bets are off.
But I'll freely admit that I may not be fully following the conversation - I'm still quite unclear on what Jose_X wishes to investigate, what issues he's seeking insight into.
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