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Climate Change: The Megathread - Read Post #1 before posting

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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 31 PercyBlakeney


    Akrasia wrote: »
    It's funny how 'those who believe in global warming' are held responsible for every single claim ever made by anyone who believes in AGW

    Well, if you think the IPCC is just “anyone who believes in AGW” then that’s your view. I differ.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    If you can find any mistakes by anyone on this side, that means that nobody can be trusted and all of the evidence must be wrong

    Again, I disagree with your conclusion. My view is that if one body is found out to be making claims, and those claims later turn out to not only be untrue, but based on dubious and very flimsy, or in reality no, “evidence” (in the case of the claim about the Himalayan glaciers based on one pamphlet produced by an obscure activist), the my conclusion is that one has to be

    1. suspicious of the how that body reaches all conclusions and
    2. it seems to demonstrate that body has its own agenda
    Akrasia wrote: »

    You are cherry picking errors and claims and only discussing data that you think supports your pre-existing opinion.

    That’s how evidence by example works. No one could cherry pick unless the examples are true.
    Akrasia wrote: »

    'Glaciergate' boils down to one source in one volume of a 3 volume publication with tens of thousands of scientific references getting into the final draft of the paper without it being fully verified first.

    I am sure we all realise that every single issue is one issue in a whole publication.

    Your innuendo here seems to be that it’s not relevant because it was buried somewhere in a document, which is a bizarre argument, as everything in any document is to be found somewhere within the document. It would be interesting for someone who house is being repossessed to argue that the bit in the contract they signed about “your house may be repossessed if you don’t keep up the payments” was one source in a very big and complex document, and should be ignored and made invalid due to that fact.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    What do the climate change 'sceptics' predict about arctic sea ice?

    You’d really have to ask them.

    It’s a bit much to tell someone “well we know all those computer predictions we made for the last 17 years didn’t happen, and we got it all wrong, but really, we know what we are doing – trust us” and not expect a little scepticism.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 38 theLegion


    djpbarry wrote: »
    And yet, six years on from its publication, no further evidence of an agenda has been found. The reasonable conclusion is that it was an isolated mistake.
    Really?
    Really?

    Nasa et al have only been keeping records of sea ice in the Arctic since the 70's. It's madness to think we have enough data to predict a global apocalypse based on insufficient information. Same as predicting global doom based on computer models that have been shown to be totally wrong.

    In 1903, Roald Amundsen sailed through the North West passage. In 2013, to mark the anniversary 22 yachts attempted to repeat the feat. They had to abandon and be rescued by Canadian Coast Guard due to their boats being caught in the ice!! How did that happen?? Aren't the polar bears drowning??

    The Northwest Passage after decades of so-called global warming has a dramatic 60% more Arctic ice this year than at the same time last year. The future dreams of dozens of adventurous sailors are now threatened. A scattering of yachts attempting the legendary Passage are caught by the ice, which has now become blocked at both ends and the transit season may be ending early.

    http://www.sail-world.com/UK/North-West-Passage-blocked-with-ice%E2%80%94yachts-caught/113788


    Why don't you comment on the Antartic Sea Ice being at records high:

    S_bm_extent.png
    Antarctic sea ice extent on September 22 compared to 1981-2010 median depicted by orange curve (NSIDC)


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,104 ✭✭✭✭djpbarry


    Again, I disagree with your conclusion. My view is that if one body is found out to be making claims, and those claims later turn out to not only be untrue, but based on dubious and very flimsy, or in reality no, “evidence” (in the case of the claim about the Himalayan glaciers based on one pamphlet produced by an obscure activist), the my conclusion is that one has to be

    1. suspicious of the how that body reaches all conclusions
    Even though said body explicitly states in the introduction to its report that not entirely scientific sources were used in places?
    Each chapter presents a balanced assessment of the literature which has appeared since the Third Assessment Report (TAR), including non-English language and, where appropriate, ‘grey’ literature.
    http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg2/en/tssts-1.html
    That’s how evidence by example works. No one could cherry pick unless the examples are true.
    Science generally works by considering all of the available evidence, not just the bits you agree/disagree with.
    It’s a bit much to tell someone “well we know all those computer predictions we made for the last 17 years didn’t happen, and we got it all wrong, but really, we know what we are doing – trust us” and not expect a little scepticism.
    Fortunatley, the IPCC have said no such thing.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,104 ✭✭✭✭djpbarry


    theLegion wrote: »
    Nasa et al have only been keeping records of sea ice in the Arctic since the 70's.
    And what do those records show?
    theLegion wrote: »
    Why don't you comment on the Antartic Sea Ice being at records high:
    There’s lots of things I haven’t commented on in this thread. What’s your point?


  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Well, if you think the IPCC is just “anyone who believes in AGW” then that’s your view. I differ.
    The IPCC is an organisation that comprises of thousands of scientists across dozens of organisations and countries. The fact that there are a small number of errors in their publication does not invalidate the entire body of research.

    Do you think that there are no errors in the Encyclopaedia Britannica?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Errors_in_the_Encyclop%C3%A6dia_Britannica_that_have_been_corrected_in_Wikipedia
    Do you think the fact that there are some errors in the Encyclopaedia Britannica that this means that we can't trust any information in that publication?
    Of course not

    Should we blindly trust either an encyclopaedia or the IPCC? Of course not, but neither should we go looking for isolated errors and then using them as a reason to completely disbelieve everything in the publication.

    Again, I disagree with your conclusion. My view is that if one body is found out to be making claims, and those claims later turn out to not only be untrue, but based on dubious and very flimsy, or in reality no, “evidence” (in the case of the claim about the Himalayan glaciers based on one pamphlet produced by an obscure activist), the my conclusion is that one has to be

    1. suspicious of the how that body reaches all conclusions and
    2. it seems to demonstrate that body has its own agenda
    There is overwhelming evidence in support of the claims made in the IPCC reports. The science underlying the theory of AGW is very strong. The predictions are not absolute, they are contingent and are based on a range of different possible outcomes and they need to be read as such. Honestly and with integrity. The predictions are constantly being measured and reviewed and if they start to diverge from the measured outcomes in ways that are statistically and scientifically significant, then the scientific community will absolutely start to re-assess the evidence.
    That’s how evidence by example works. No one could cherry pick unless the examples are true.
    What is 'evidence by example'
    There's no such thing. In order to make a scientific claim about anything, you need a proper sample that is controlled for bias.
    If you wanted to properly assess the IPCC, you would take a random sample of IPCC claims and then honestly assess them. You are not doing this, you are taking a biased sample of one or two instances that you believe support your claim and then using that to generalise that all claims by the IPCC are illegitimate.

    I am sure we all realise that every single issue is one issue in a whole publication.

    Your innuendo here seems to be that it’s not relevant because it was buried somewhere in a document, which is a bizarre argument, as everything in any document is to be found somewhere within the document. It would be interesting for someone who house is being repossessed to argue that the bit in the contract they signed about “your house may be repossessed if you don’t keep up the payments” was one source in a very big and complex document, and should be ignored and made invalid due to that fact.
    You will find in every single important legal document the following notation 'E&OE'

    it means 'errors and ommissions excepted'
    It is an acknowledgement that even carefully prepared legal documents can have errors, and a legitimate error in the document does not confer or remove legal rights other than what is intended in the contract. (if I sign a mortage agreement that says the bank will lend me €100000,00 and I only have to repay €100000.00 (it's interest free wahey) does that mean I have just made a cool 9.9 million euros profit?
    No, because the error would be recognised as an error.
    You’d really have to ask them.
    According to many global warming sceptics, we're heading for an ice age. (those who say that AGW was all due to solar cycles)
    Do you have anything to say about the credibility of this position?
    It’s a bit much to tell someone “well we know all those computer predictions we made for the last 17 years didn’t happen, and we got it all wrong, but really, we know what we are doing – trust us” and not expect a little scepticism.
    They didn't 'get it all wrong'
    The temperatures are still increasing well within the margin of error in their predictions (unfortunately)


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,087 ✭✭✭Duiske


    Akrasia wrote: »
    It's funny how 'those who believe in global warming' are held responsible for every single claim ever made by anyone who believes in AGW
    If you can find any mistakes by anyone on this side, that means that nobody can be trusted and all of the evidence must be wrong

    You are guilty of using the same ploy yourself.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    The IPCC 4th assessment prediction was that global warming would increase global average temperatures by about .2 degrees per decade. Meanwhile the global warming deniers were predicting an ice age.

    By the way, you keep throwing this "global warming deniers" slur about. Can you show an example of a skeptic who believes the globe has not warmed over the past century ?


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,104 ✭✭✭✭djpbarry


    Duiske wrote: »
    By the way, you keep throwing this "global warming deniers" slur about. Can you show an example of a skeptic who believes the globe has not warmed over the past century ?
    Ah, come on. The accuracy of the temperature record is frequently questioned. For example:

    http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/surfacestationsreport_spring09.pdf


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 31 PercyBlakeney


    Akrasia wrote: »
    The IPCC is an organisation that comprises of thousands of scientists across dozens of organisations and countries. The fact that there are a small number of errors in their publication does not invalidate the entire body of research.

    You have already previously made the same point, which I have already answered above.
    Akrasia wrote: »

    Should we blindly trust either an encyclopaedia or the IPCC? Of course not, but neither should we go looking for isolated errors and then using them as a reason to completely disbelieve everything in the publication.

    Well, that’s what they ask us to do. They make claims and tell us we have to believe them because they are the experts.

    All errors are “isolated” and they are still errors, whether isolated or not isolated.
    Akrasia wrote: »

    There is overwhelming evidence in support of the claims made in the IPCC reports. The science underlying the theory of AGW is very strong. The predictions are not absolute, they are contingent and are based on a range of different possible outcomes and they need to be read as such. Honestly and with integrity. The predictions are constantly being measured and reviewed and if they start to diverge from the measured outcomes in ways that are statistically and scientifically significant, then the scientific community will absolutely start to re-assess the evidence.

    Predictions are not “theory” but facts. And when the predictions don’t come true, then they can be said to be incorrect.

    The term scientist is one which is much bandied about. Anyone can call themselves a scientist. Much of the scientific community has done just that and many noted scientists have concluded that AGW as a theory is less and less credible due to the lack of evidence when measured against the predictions made many years ago.

    That’s not to say that the climate isn’t changing, but its not changing the way it was predicted to by those who claim they can predict how it will change, and how they can then manipulate that change.
    Akrasia wrote: »

    What is 'evidence by example'

    As ever, context is everything.

    The context we were talking about was the IPCC making a claim that the Himalayas would be glacier free by 2035, and this was the example referred to. The evidence they relied upon to make this claim was more than dubious, it was nonsense with no scientific backing and just the rather mad imaginings of a fringe activist. Yet the IPCC reproduces these claims and gave them the imprimatur of the IPCC.

    This is evidence of how the IPCC operates, by example.
    Akrasia wrote: »

    They didn't 'get it all wrong'

    The temperatures are still increasing well within the margin of error in their predictions (unfortunately)

    Weasel words “”margin of error”.

    The fact is we have seen virtually no increases in temperature in the last 17 years. I don’t remember being told that virtually no increases were within the “margin of error”.

    The ice caps are not melting, despite the dire warnings. The Himalayan Glaciers will probably still be intact despite the dire warnings. None of the dire predictions seem to be happening, and thankfully there has been virtually no increase in temperatures.

    It just seems to be a minor, or non, issue.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,087 ✭✭✭Duiske


    djpbarry wrote: »
    Ah, come on. The accuracy of the temperature record is frequently questioned. For example:

    http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/surfacestationsreport_spring09.pdf

    Anthony Watts wrote that report. He also recently said the following.
    "Now I'm in the camp of we have some global warming. No doubt about it, but it may not be as bad as we originally thought because there are other contributing factors."
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Watts_%28blogger%29

    So, back to my original question, which I asked because of Akrasia's use of the term "global warming denier". Can you show an example of a skeptic who believes the globe has not warmed over the past century ?


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,104 ✭✭✭✭djpbarry


    Well, that’s what they ask us to do. They make claims and tell us we have to believe them because they are the experts.
    No, they don’t. That’s why any and every claim made in an IPCC report is referenced, so any member of the public can verify it.
    Predictions are not “theory” but facts.
    So if I predict that Ireland will win the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, that’s a fact, is it?
    The term scientist is one which is much bandied about. Anyone can call themselves a scientist. Much of the scientific community has done just that...
    Could you list some climate scientists who don’t have any formal scientific training?
    That’s not to say that the climate isn’t changing, but its not changing the way it was predicted to by those who claim they can predict how it will change...
    So the planet is not getting warmer then?
    The context we were talking about was the IPCC making a claim that the Himalayas would be glacier free by 2035, and this was the example referred to. The evidence they relied upon to make this claim was more than dubious, it was nonsense with no scientific backing and just the rather mad imaginings of a fringe activist. Yet the IPCC reproduces these claims and gave them the imprimatur of the IPCC.

    This is evidence of how the IPCC operates, by example.
    The fact that the error was corrected is also evidence of how the IPCC operates, but you’re choosing to ignore that evidence because it doesn’t suit your agenda.
    Weasel words “”margin of error”.
    No, it’s proper scientific practice to state the margin of error associated with a result.
    The fact is we have seen virtually no increases in temperature in the last 17 years.
    First of all, yes we have.

    Secondly, what’s this arbitrary 17 year cut-off point all about? Where’d that come from?
    The ice caps are not melting...
    The Arctic is not melting? Seriously?


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  • Registered Users Posts: 13,104 ✭✭✭✭djpbarry


    Duiske wrote: »
    Can you show an example of a skeptic who believes the globe has not warmed over the past century ?
    Look at the post I just responded to.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,087 ✭✭✭Duiske


    djpbarry wrote: »
    Look at the post I just responded to.

    In your first reply you posted a link to a report by Anthony Watts, a well known climate sceptic. Which leads me to believe that you knew I was referring to sceptics who would be relatively well known to anyone interested in the climate debate, and not some anonymous poster on a social networking site.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,104 ✭✭✭✭djpbarry


    Duiske wrote: »
    In your first reply you posted a link to a report by Anthony Watts, a well known climate sceptic. Which leads me to believe that you knew I was referring to sceptics who would be relatively well known to anyone interested in the climate debate, and not some anonymous poster on a social networking site.
    Actually my first instinct was to direct you to various posters on this forum.

    But anyway, The Heartland Institute in the US routinely question the validity of the temperature record and they've been doing it since long before Watts' report came out. The (in)famous Hockey Schtick blog also jumps on any opportunity to question the temperature record.

    If you absolutely have to have the name of an individual sceptic who questions the validity of the temperature record, then Ross McKitrick is probably the most prominent example I can think of.


  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Duiske wrote: »
    In your first reply you posted a link to a report by Anthony Watts, a well known climate sceptic. Which leads me to believe that you knew I was referring to sceptics who would be relatively well known to anyone interested in the climate debate, and not some anonymous poster on a social networking site.
    What a short memory you have.

    Michael Mann was the subject of brutal harrassment from the climate denier camp because of his hockey stick graph that showed that the temperature in the 20th century was higher than normal. Denying that global warming was happening at all was the strategy of the denialist movement for most of the last century. it is only recently that they have moved to phase 2. Accepting that it is real, but denying that it's a cause for alarm.

    Anthony Watts admits now that the global temperatures have increased in the 20th century, but up until very recently, he was denying this and claiming that the measurements were biased by the 'urban heat island effect'
    He is involved with the Surfacestations.org website which exists explicitly to undermine the temperature statistics and claim that they are being exaggerated due to poor measurement practises.


    The fact that he now admits that global temperature have actually increased just shows how irrefutable that evidence has become, but now it's time to move on to phase 2 of the denialist strategy. (although he still uses the urban heat island argument whenever it suits him to hand wave individual pieces of evidence)

    Climate change 'sceptics' have been following the same pattern that tobacco causes cancer 'sceptics' established decades ago. There are 4 distinct phases (although not all those involved are on the same phase at the same time, some Deniers are on phase 3 while there are others still beavering away at phase 1 (and some have even started working on phase 4.)

    Phase 1
    Deny that there is any problem. There is no global warming

    Up until very recently most 'climate sceptics' were claiming that there is no issue, that the increases in temperature measured in the US and the UK are all due to
    A) a conspiracy by scientists to manufacture a crisis for some reason or another (funding, big government, taxes etc)
    B) Mistakes in the measurements, bad scientific practises, inconsistencies between different data sources
    C) the temperatures in recent the past were warmer than they are now therefore temperatures are just part of a normal natural cycle

    Phase 2
    Admit that the world is warming(like we've always done), but we don't know why, and even if it was carbon dioxide that was causing it, it's not as bad a problem as the 'alarmist' scientists say it is.

    Here we have all the libertarian economists argue against fiscal measures to control the release of carbon on the basis that it would be cheaper to use that money dealing with the consequences of global warming (which won't be that bad)

    Phase 3
    Admit that global warming is a serious problem (like we've always said) but still deny that it's caused by humans, global warming is mainly a natural phenomenon caused by the sun, or a long term cycle or some other unknown mechanism. Therefore, there is no point reducing carbon emissions because it won't have any effect

    Phase 4
    Global warming is real, it is caused by carbon emissions (we've said so all along), but now it's too late to prevent global warming, we need to focus on dealing with the problem, taxing carbon emissions is too late, we need to focus on geo-engineering or steps to protect ourselves from the harm caused by all these floods and storms and droughts and famines and plagues.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 31 PercyBlakeney


    Akrasia wrote: »
    Michael Mann was the subject of brutal harrassment from the climate denier camp because of his hockey stick graph that showed that the temperature in the 20th century was higher than normal.

    It seems incredible that anyone can still examine all the available evidence, and still appear to claim Mann's hockey stick graph as good evidence.

    Michael Mann's hockey stick graph has been subjected to rigorous peer review, and has been demonstrated to be unreliable. If your judgement is that Michael Mann's hockey stick graph is reliable, then that's good information about how you reach conclusions.


  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    It seems incredible that anyone can still examine all the available evidence, and still appear to claim Mann's hockey stick graph as good evidence.

    Michael Mann's hockey stick graph has been subjected to rigorous peer review, and has been demonstrated to be unreliable. If your judgement is that Michael Mann's hockey stick graph is reliable, then that's good information about how you reach conclusions.
    The fact that you think this only demonstrates what kinds of sources you trust on this issue.

    Those sources are currently being sued for defamation by Michael Mann and he has a strong case. Recently they tried to get the case thrown out of court but a Judge has rejected their attempt stating that there is enough evidence of malicious attacks against Mann's character and professional reputation as to justify this defamation suit.
    http://arstechnica.com/science/2013/07/hockey-stick-graph-climate-researchers-defamation-suit-to-go-forward/

    There have been multiple 'hockey stick' graphs that have been produced by independent researchers that use seperate and independent temperature records and they are consistent with Michael Mann's findings.

    if anything, Michael Mann's graph under estimated the true impact of Human induced climate change

    http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23247-true-face-of-climates-hockey-stick-graph-revealed.html#.UkQdBdJJNA8


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 31 PercyBlakeney


    Akrasia wrote: »
    The fact that you think this only demonstrates what kinds of sources you trust on this issue.

    Maybe that is the difference between us because I don’t decide who to “trust”, but look at all the evidence I can find.
    Akrasia wrote: »
    Those sources are currently being sued for defamation by Michael Mann

    It’s simply untrue that “those” who worked on the hockey stick graph are being “sued” , and even if they were it would not take from the evidence. Your claim is (i) untrue and (ii) would be irrelevant even if it were true. Stephen McIntyre and Ross McKitrick are not being sued by Mann.
    Akrasia wrote: »

    There have been multiple 'hockey stick' graphs that have been produced by independent researchers that use separate and independent temperature records and they are consistent with Michael Mann's findings.

    That’s true. But if you look at all the work done and not just the studies you like, for example, Stephen McIntyre and Ross McKitrick’s work, and others, (which has been peer reviewed and verified), then we can understand why you are bound to reach the conclusions you do.

    Akrasia wrote: »

    if anything, Michael Mann's graph under estimated the true impact of Human induced climate change

    That you make such statements seems to show that you have decided to not look at all the available evidence, and have decided to “trust” one “side”, ignore any evidence to the contrary, and just keep rushing to make statements which are unbalanced and partial.

    To be honest, I am more worried about the intellectual climate.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,104 ✭✭✭✭djpbarry


    But if you look at all the work done and not just the studies you like, for example, Stephen McIntyre and Ross McKitrick’s work, and others, (which has been peer reviewed and verified), then we can understand why you are bound to reach the conclusions you do.
    The McIntyre & McKitrick paper that you're referring to was referenced in the IPCC's 4th Assessment Report. It was noted that McIntyre & McKitrick's claim that Mann's "Hockey Stick" could not be reproduced was demonstrably false, as evidenced by the subsequent work of Wahl & Ammann, for example.

    Put simply, McIntyre & McKitrick had not implemented Mann's method correctly, hence they obtained a different result:
    McIntyre and McKitrick (2003) reported that they were unable to replicate the results of Mann et al. (1998). Wahl and Ammann (2007) showed that this was a consequence of differences in the way McIntyre and McKitrick (2003) had implemented the method of Mann et al. (1998) and that the original reconstruction could be closely duplicated using the original proxy data.
    http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch6s6-6.html#6-6-1


  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Maybe that is the difference between us because I don’t decide who to “trust”, but look at all the evidence I can find.

    You can look at all the evidence that you like, it doesn't mean that you're qualified to properly assess it.
    The IPCC is an organisation that gathers together thousands of the most highly qualified and highly respected scientists in the most relevant fields and asks them to review all of the published research into the topic of global warming.

    What makes you think that you are more capable of assessing the available evidence than the IPCC?
    That’s true. But if you look at all the work done and not just the studies you like, for example, Stephen McIntyre and Ross McKitrick’s work, and others, (which has been peer reviewed and verified), then we can understand why you are bound to reach the conclusions you do.

    I am not qualified to look at 'all of the work done'. Neither are you. The IPCC is the best qualified body to do this, and they have done this, and they have looked at McIntyre and McKitrick's work (their one published journal article from 2003 in the less than prestigious 'Energy and Environment' journal)

    Even if McIntyre and McKitrick completely discredited Mann's work, which it doesn't, it would barely scratch the totality of evidence that supports the AGW hypothesis.

    That you make such statements seems to show that you have decided to not look at all the available evidence, and have decided to “trust” one “side”, ignore any evidence to the contrary, and just keep rushing to make statements which are unbalanced and partial.

    To be honest, I am more worried about the intellectual climate.
    I very much doubt that you have looked at 'all' of the available evidence on climate change. I very much doubt you have the qualifications to properly assess even one piece of academic research in atmospheric sciences. Yet you feel you are able to conclude that the scientific consensus on this very important issue is all wrong.

    I think you should re-assess your position as it appears to be a bit unreasonable.


  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    The IPCC press conference is on at the moment and unfortunately, as expected, it's not good news at all

    Australia will see maximum daily temperatures increase by 6 degrees by the end of the century and average temperatures increase by 2 degrees by 2060 and another 3-4 degrees by 2100! That's a massive massive change

    Australia has already seen increases in droughts and storms, and so far there has only been a temperature increase of less than 1.5 degrees since the start of the 20th century on that continent.

    http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/sep/27/climate-change-report-hotter-australia


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  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia




  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/sep/27/ipcc-climate-change-report-ar5-live-coverage
    Low-income countries will remain on the frontline of human-induced climate change over the next century, experiencing gradual sea-level rises, stronger cyclones, warmer days and nights, more unpredictable rains, and larger and longer heatwaves, according to the most thorough assessment of the issue yet.

    The last major UN assessment, in 2007, predicted runaway temperature rises of 6C or more by the end of the century. That is now thought unlikely by scientists, but average land and sea temperatures are expected to continue rising throughout this century, possibly reaching 4C above present levels – enough to devastate crops and make life in many cities unbearably hot.

    As temperatures climb and oceans warm, tropical and subtropical regions will face sharp changes in annual rainfall, says the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, released on Thursday in Stockholm before online publication on 30 September.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 31 PercyBlakeney


    Akrasia wrote: »


    I very much doubt that you have looked at 'all' of the available evidence on climate change. I very much doubt you have the qualifications to properly assess even one piece of academic research in atmospheric sciences. Yet you feel you are able to conclude that the scientific consensus on this very important issue is all wrong.

    I think you should re-assess your position as it appears to be a bit unreasonable.

    Your doubts are your own and, as such, are subjective.

    You have said that you "trust" one "side" of the debate. I disagree and I don't "trust" either or any "side".

    "All the evidence" means all the evidence one can get at a particular time. That doesn't mean its physically all the evidence, nor does it mean one should not be aware that new evidence might emerge later.

    Again, "wrong" is just not a scientific term, and I would never claim such. I might express doubts, I might be sceptical in the wake of evidence, I might be all sorts of things. But it simply isn't possible to claim someone else's opinion is wrong, any more than you can claim, with apparent complete certainty here, that Australia will be warmer by 5-6°C by 2100.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 996 ✭✭✭HansHolzel


    BBC news website today

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24173504

    In the draft report, the panel agrees that "the rate of warming over the past 15 years (1998-2012) is smaller than the trend since 1951".

    The effect of this slowdown means that the future temperature range predicted by the IPCC will be wider than in 2007, and with a lower starting point.

    Many sceptical voices believe this is a recognition that the IPCC modelling process has been too sensitive to carbon dioxide, a claim given some credence by the text of the draft which states that some models have "too strong a response to increasing greenhouse gas forcing".

    There is a feeling among many scientists involved with the process that this report will be more complicated and cautious than in 2007.

    In the wake of that year's report, a small number of embarrassing errors were detected in the underlying material. The organisation's reputation was also questioned in the Climategate rumpus.

    "Overall, the message is, in that sense more conservative I expect, for this IPCC report compared to previous ones," said Prof Petersen.

    "The language has become more complicated to understand, but it is more precise.

    "It is a major feat that we have been able to produce such a document which is such an adequate assessment of the science. That being said, it is virtually unreadable!"


  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    HansHolzel wrote: »
    BBC news website today

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24173504

    In the draft report, the panel agrees that "the rate of warming over the past 15 years (1998-2012) is smaller than the trend since 1951".

    The effect of this slowdown means that the future temperature range predicted by the IPCC will be wider than in 2007, and with a lower starting point.

    Many sceptical voices believe this is a recognition that the IPCC modelling process has been too sensitive to carbon dioxide, a claim given some credence by the text of the draft which states that some models have "too strong a response to increasing greenhouse gas forcing".

    There is a feeling among many scientists involved with the process that this report will be more complicated and cautious than in 2007.

    In the wake of that year's report, a small number of embarrassing errors were detected in the underlying material. The organisation's reputation was also questioned in the Climategate rumpus.

    "Overall, the message is, in that sense more conservative I expect, for this IPCC report compared to previous ones," said Prof Petersen.

    "The language has become more complicated to understand, but it is more precise.

    "It is a major feat that we have been able to produce such a document which is such an adequate assessment of the science. That being said, it is virtually unreadable!"

    That BBC report was from the 23rd of September and it was speculation about what will be in the actual report. Today part 1 of the 5th IPCC report on Climate change has been released, perhaps we should focus on this, and not speculation from before.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 31 PercyBlakeney


    Akrasia wrote: »
    Australia will see maximum daily temperatures increase by 6 degrees by the end of the century and average temperatures increase by 2 degrees by 2060 and another 3-4 degrees by 2100! That's a massive massive change
    Akrasia wrote: »
    perhaps we should focus on this, and not speculation

    Are you saying that it's ok to speculate about something which is 87 years in the future, but not about something which happened this week?

    :confused:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 361 ✭✭Filibuster


    Akrasia wrote: »
    The fact that you think this only demonstrates what kinds of sources you trust on this issue.

    Those sources are currently being sued for defamation by Michael Mann and he has a strong case. Recently they tried to get the case thrown out of court but a Judge has rejected their attempt stating that there is enough evidence of malicious attacks against Mann's character and professional reputation as to justify this defamation suit.
    http://arstechnica.com/science/2013/07/hockey-stick-graph-climate-researchers-defamation-suit-to-go-forward/

    There have been multiple 'hockey stick' graphs that have been produced by independent researchers that use seperate and independent temperature records and they are consistent with Michael Mann's findings.

    if anything, Michael Mann's graph under estimated the true impact of Human induced climate change

    http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23247-true-face-of-climates-hockey-stick-graph-revealed.html#.UkQdBdJJNA8

    Michael Mann removed data from 1961, because it went against his hypothesis and substituted actual temp data to the graph. That's not science, it's using a scissors to make a jig-saw puzzle fit together. How do we know the pre-1961 data on the graph is accruate?? We don't!!. The hockey stick graph is junk science.


  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Your doubts are your own and, as such, are subjective.

    You have said that you "trust" one "side" of the debate. I disagree and I don't "trust" either or any "side".
    When you're assessing the evidence for or against something, trust has to be a part of that assessment. We have to have trust, and we also have to know the limits of that trust. Can we trust our own memory, our own senses, our own ability to understand complex data?

    In science, evidence is cumulative, individual datapoints are useless by themselves. Scientists collect data and this data is analysed to establish trends, and then this data is peer reviewed and in theory, errors and Biases are weeded out to make the analysis more robust.

    I trust the 'side' of this debate that uses the scientific method.
    I distrust the 'side' of the debate that is anti-scientific

    The reason I trust the scientific method is because it has been designed specifically to minimise bias.

    The fact that I 'trust' something or somebody doesn't mean that I trust it 100%. The trust is contingent.

    Can you tell me, when you are assessing two pieces of evidence, one comes from a highly regarded research study in a highly regarded scientific journal, and the other comes from a fringe study in a journal that is regarded as having very low standards, do you give the conclusions of both of these studies equal weight?

    "All the evidence" means all the evidence one can get at a particular time. That doesn't mean its physically all the evidence, nor does it mean one should not be aware that new evidence might emerge later.
    That's ridiculous. What standard do you consider evidence to be available to you at a particular time? The IPCC reports are all fully available to the public, have you read these reports fully?
    Or do you consider 'available to you at a particular time' to only include information posted in newspapers or blogs that you read?
    The daily Mail can post 10 blog articles a day that repeat the same discredited misinformation while the IPCC releases a report every 6 years?
    It is much much easier for a blogger to write a piece of propaganda that makes up a lie about climate change than it is for a climate scientist to rigourously refute it. The lies spead virally and they consume vast time and resources to keep under control.

    What quality control do you insist on?

    Have you heard of the 'Availability Heuristic?'
    Again, "wrong" is just not a scientific term, and I would never claim such. I might express doubts, I might be sceptical in the wake of evidence, I might be all sorts of things. But it simply isn't possible to claim someone else's opinion is wrong




    Opinions can be wrong all the time, facts can be wrong. Opinions that are based entirely on wrong facts are also wrong.
    Opinions and facts are often completely mixed up.


    If I believe that all women should be prevented from going to school because of the fact that women are 80% less intelligent than Men, is that opinion right or wrong?
    any more than you can claim, with apparent complete certainty here, that Australia will be warmer by 5-6°C by 2100.

    My language in that post above was wrong, I should not have said 'will' the prediction is not guaranteed, it is a prediction of what could happen if the models are accurate and we don't reverse our global CO2 emissions.
    The models are not 100% accurate, but they are accurate enough that we should stop burying our heads in the sand and pretending that everything is going to sort itself out.


  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Are you saying that it's ok to speculate about something which is 87 years in the future, but not about something which happened this week?

    :confused:
    Yes, it's ok to speculate about what might happen in the future, not what might happen in the past


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  • Registered Users Posts: 22,243 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    Filibuster wrote: »
    Michael Mann removed data from 1961, because it went against his hypothesis and substituted actual temp data to the graph. That's not science, it's using a scissors to make a jig-saw puzzle fit together. How do we know the pre-1961 data on the graph is accruate?? We don't!!. The hockey stick graph is junk science.
    There are lots of hockey stick graphs, and the IPCC today have said that they are 95% - 97% certain that human activity has caused the unprecedented climate change we are currently experiencing

    Get with the program. Smoking does cause cancer, CO2 does cause global warming, HIV does cause AIDS. Are we 100% sure about any of these? no. Are we sure enough to justify action? Absolutely.

    By the way, your username is perfectly Apt, given that Filibuster is exactly the strategy of the Oil industry at the moment, just like it was with the tobacco industry


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