^ Actually, I just repeated what Gavin S (an actual climate scientist at NASA) was saying on RealClimate.org. If you have a problem with the PEER REVIEWED research he was citing, you should probably take it up with him. Personally, I am not a climate scientist. Last I heard, you were not either. So for any additional queries you can probably refer to my posts to TKE-Teg and arronburro concerning people that insist they can distinguish between good climate science and bad climate science with ZERO training in the subject matter.[Edited on June 30, 2009 at 8:45 PM. Reason : ``]
6/30/2009 8:22:16 PM
^ yea i hate how the science on this issue ends up getting fucked up by politics like it is interpreting shakespeare or some shit.
6/30/2009 8:36:47 PM
No need. Occam's razor, it is far more likely that you have misunderstood the statements the scientist was making. He was probably addressing the assertion that ground stations are discredited by UHI effects, which I can imagine being wrong. My assertion is different: changes in land use on a global scale has caused temperatures to rise, an assertion which does not require any fancy training, any engineer capable of passing the FE should do. My assertion need not be in conflict with his. Where I do probably disagree with him is when it comes to positive environmental feedbacks, where my engineering background is probably more valuable than his climate science degree (I have studied the operation of far more non-self destructive machines than he has).
7/1/2009 12:01:39 AM
It never ceases to amaze me how people underestimate the effects of the massive amount of energy that this beast releases onto the Earth.
7/1/2009 1:51:15 AM
7/1/2009 6:09:40 AM
I've been meaning to post this for a while, but got distracted.A couple of weeks ago, the Synthesis Report of the Copenhagen Congress was published. This is really sort of a highlights was the largest climate change conference this year and over 2,000 scientists attended from all research areas . You can find a copy here:http://www.pik-potsdam.de/news/press-releases/files/synthesis-report-web.pdfBoxes throughout the document call out specific research that was presented. The first box is probably the most interesting to readers here. It discusses how two researchers used satellite measurements to estimate the amount of mass lost by large polar ice sheets sheet through ice discharge. They then use this data to update projections of sea-level rise over the next century.
7/1/2009 8:10:26 AM
why would sea level rise predictions bother me? the seas have been rising and falling long before humans were around, and they will continue to do so long after we're gone. Given that ice mass on Antartica is increasing, and that ice formation in the artic is at a 30 year high, as well as the fact that sea level rise has all but stopped the last few years, its not hard to see there's no reason to worry.
7/1/2009 8:48:25 AM
7/1/2009 9:47:25 AM
7/1/2009 1:49:39 PM
Yeah....okay.It's plain as day, but sure...
7/1/2009 1:58:42 PM
Polar bear expert barred by global warmistsMitchell Taylor, who has studied the animals for 30 years, was told his views 'are extremely unhelpful’ , reveals Christopher Booker.According to the world's leading expert on polar bears, their numbers are higher than they were 30 years ago Photo: AP
7/1/2009 2:01:18 PM
^^I see a trend line that continues to rise as plain as day. But, then I don't know what I'm talking about. Could you help me?
7/1/2009 2:09:24 PM
^the argument he is pushing is that since 2006 sea level rise has stopped. If you isolate the data from that graph from 2006 forward, your best fit trend line would more or less be flat.Here ya go:[Edited on July 1, 2009 at 2:15 PM. Reason : k]
7/1/2009 2:14:53 PM
forest/trees
7/1/2009 2:26:07 PM
TKE-TegInterestingly enough, that is a picture where inverse barometer is not applied. The Univ of Colorado has another picture where the inverse barometer HAS been applied. Guess what? It doesn't look so flat. Of course, I have no clue what any of that fucking means and neither do you (at least not without your google brain). So what are you doing arguing about pictures you don't fully understand?[Edited on July 1, 2009 at 2:31 PM. Reason : ``]
7/1/2009 2:26:14 PM
this thread makes me laff
7/1/2009 2:32:45 PM
Inverse barometer effect - the potential response of the water column from atmospheric changes.Thanks for compelling me to learn what it means. Doesn't discount our argument though.
7/1/2009 2:32:49 PM
7/1/2009 2:35:34 PM
If you isolate the data between 1992 and 1995 the trend line is flat, if you isolate the data between 97 and 99, its negative.That isn't how statistics and forecasting works, especially ones that track slowly changing bodies like global climate. you cant look at the last two years and claim there isn't an upward trend without looking at the last 10, or 50
7/1/2009 2:36:57 PM
If 2006 to 2008 is "flat," isn't 1994 to 1996 flat, too? It kind of looks flat if you draw a trend line between those two points. Also, there wasn't really any rise between 1998 and 2000. But, it's "flat" from 2006, so that must mean global warming doesn't exist. Do I have it right?
7/1/2009 2:37:15 PM
TKE-TEG, um it kinda does. Should the inverse barometer be applied or not? Because it looks like applying it blows your "pictorial inference" out of the water. Sounds to me like it should be applied:
7/1/2009 2:37:16 PM
POTENTIALseeing as its a POTENTIAL it doesn't really strengthen what you said. But I'm not a scientist, so I don't know what potential means either.Guess what else it doesn't take into effect? Sinking land masses.[Edited on July 1, 2009 at 2:39 PM. Reason : oh nos]
7/1/2009 2:38:26 PM
7/1/2009 2:40:18 PM
7/1/2009 2:47:08 PM
7/1/2009 5:46:22 PM
7/1/2009 6:10:03 PM
^^^just so we're clear: seas naturally rising and falling over time + people building cities on the coast = seas rising b/c of CO2 emissionsIt don't add up bro[Edited on July 1, 2009 at 9:47 PM. Reason : j]
7/1/2009 9:47:37 PM
no, he's saying that we should care about sea-level rise because we now have major cities that would be affected.what doesn't add up is the massive leap to blame CO2, which, again, he isn't really doing. However, it seems logical, if CO2 is actually a problem that is affecting sea levels, to attempt to contain the problem. But, I'd say that if CO2 isn't the cause, then we are fucked if we focus solely on CO2. Instead, maybe we should invest in technologies that would actually help the cities cope with the problem, no matter the cause.
7/1/2009 10:11:52 PM
fuck, i had a big response and I lost it all because of a shitty connection. anyway, ^ is right w/r/t ^^. I was not making a claim as to why or if sea levels are rising now. All i'm saying is that just because "____ event happened in the past" (sea levels rose/fell, temps rose by 3C, whatever) doesn't mean that we can go along happily with our lives and let them happen again (or at least, contribute to them happening sooner or more severely than the otherwise naturally would have) and just chalk it up to "hey, it's natural - humans survived before, we'll survive again." It's true that whatever happens, humans will survive, but in our modern times, we have a much lower threshold of acceptable damages to our lifestyles and populations. In the past (x-thousand years ago), if sea levels rose or drought struck an area, then people would either move gradually to other areas over years or decades, and lots of them would probably die. Today, though? Well, try moving NYC or Mumbai a few miles inland to avoid rising oceans and see how that works out.
7/1/2009 11:18:00 PM
^I'm not an unreasonable person. For those reasons you recently stated yes I'm concerned about sea level rise. I agree with you. But I don't blame AGW on sea level rise. Considering that the sea level has been increasing ever since the last ice age I find it hard to blame on humans.slightly OT, but I read something pretty interesting in an article less than a month back. Apparently sea level rise is more severe on the North Atlantic Seaboard b/c the continent is actually sinking a little bit. During the last ice age the enormous weight of glaciers in North America pushed up the part of N. America not under glaciers (like a see-saw). So ever since they melted the continent has been slowly sinking back to where it should be. I dunno if this is common knowledge to the average geologist geek, but I found it pretty cool.
7/2/2009 9:01:07 AM
7/2/2009 4:44:54 PM
and how many other people who worked on that EPA report were scientists? But, I know, HOW DARE an employee speak out when his employer is engaging in political chicanery. By all means, lets let that dirty bastard be fired. I guess it's OK to fire people now who are whistleblowers if it isn't their job to blow the whistle.
7/2/2009 6:40:44 PM
7/24/2009 10:34:57 AM
A response to the report:http://tamino.wordpress.com/2009/07/24/old-news/
7/24/2009 2:02:35 PM
Michael Tobis already beat me to this point but my first thought when reading about this study was, "Ah, so now we can stop having this stupid argument about the sun driving recent warming."
7/24/2009 8:22:45 PM
^what exactly do you mean recently? The sun's been highly active for the last 150 years (ending in the late 90s)COMING SOON TO A COUNTRY NEAR YOU:
7/30/2009 3:46:24 PM
My point is that there is a certain incoherence of thought if you accept both ENSO driving recent climate trends and solar forcing driving recent temperature trends. I suppose in some convoluted way you could combine them but it won't make a very clean story.Anyway, it's nice to see even some skeptics are calling the McLean et al. ENSO paper crap. Mostly climate auditors are so asymmetrical in their auditing they make a joke out of themselves.[Edited on July 30, 2009 at 8:57 PM. Reason : x]
7/30/2009 8:57:14 PM
So I'm curious if the global temperatures are higher this year than last year or the year before that? It seems this global warming theory or consensus has dragged on for quite a while now. I'm just curious to see if there is any recent data available to the public to suggest it's truthfulness.
7/30/2009 9:31:37 PM
^lol, its absolutely available and probably posted a page or two back. Satellite data is readily available for the last 10 years, and will show you roughly 7 years of no gain followed by 3 years of declining temp.[Edited on July 31, 2009 at 7:30 AM. Reason : hj]
7/31/2009 7:29:48 AM
I would support the flourescent bulb thing. Incandescent bulbs are incredibly inefficient, and it's something we can do right now to improve our greedy energy consumption. It's also throwing a bone to environmentalists.
7/31/2009 9:28:13 AM
In many instances buying a CFL will use more energy over its lifetime than buying an incandescent bulb. Remember, not all bumps wind up being left on all day in the living room. Some get put into atics, closets, or spare rooms and then only get used a few hours. Meanwhile, just manufacturing a CFL consumed quite a bit more energy (and resources) than their brethren. They cost ten times more for a reason.
7/31/2009 11:07:26 AM
7/31/2009 11:30:20 AM
I wonder if or how much the proposed Human induced effect on global climate is actually changing the amplitude and/or frequency of the ecosystem's natural oscillations and patterns as pertaining to global temperatures. Usually for simplification purposes the proposed global warming "effects" are described as an overall offset, increasing global temperatures.Due the huge number of variables and cycles that relate to climate I could see the human "interference" causing more of a ripple than a ramp over the long term.If you do not understand the terms i use in paragraph one or grasp the idea in paragraph two, than you probably do not deserve voice in the global climate change debate and should go back to listening Rush Limbaugh on your radio.
7/31/2009 11:41:49 AM
It was in the context of CFLs vs Incandescent bulbs
7/31/2009 4:50:51 PM
it doesn't cause the bulb to be inefficient, and he's not claiming that. Rather, he's saying that all of the energy put in to making the bulb, which is significantly higher for CFLs than for incandescents, is wasted, because the higher efficiency of the bulb isn't used. That you failed to comprehend this is, frankly, telling
7/31/2009 8:57:47 PM
I like how there are so many fucking armchair electrical engineers in this thread now.
8/1/2009 12:22:57 PM
8/1/2009 12:47:10 PM
not to mention the sea level isn't rising much at all, and at less of rate than it historically has for the last several thousands of years.
8/1/2009 2:24:36 PM
part of this could be due to the offset that higher temperatures allow for increased moisture content in the atmosphere.Both sides of the debate imho are idiots and do not fully grasp the complexity of the system.[Edited on August 1, 2009 at 5:22 PM. Reason : l]
8/1/2009 5:22:03 PM
yes, but only one side is screaming that the sky is falling. The other side is, for the most part, saying that we don't fully comprehend the system. oh wait, isn't that what you just said?
8/1/2009 5:47:46 PM