working now:http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/3/8/1603/pdf
7/29/2011 7:56:50 AM
I finally got to skim through it, I forgot how boring and technical climate science can be, bleh.a couple things:The forbes article kinda blows the findings of the paper out of proportion IMO. I just don't see how this "blows a gaping hole in AGW." Nowhere in the paper does Spencer claim that AGW is not happening, only that the rate of heating may be slower than what has been previously modeled. The rate of change has always been an area of uncertainty.alsohttp://news.yahoo.com/climate-change-debunked-not-fast-234403696.htmlhopefully we can get a more thorough discussion from both sides of the article than what that link above gives us.
7/29/2011 1:26:30 PM
sounds like earth can take care of itself to me.
7/29/2011 2:28:05 PM
It looks like the modeling system that predicts global climate change did not take adequate care in address other details which could largely affect the climate change. Some stuff that might help;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiative_forcingThis appears to be the main issue:
7/29/2011 2:47:49 PM
7/30/2011 8:15:09 PM
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2011/07/misdiagnosis-of-surface-temperature-feedback/
8/1/2011 11:20:16 AM
8/1/2011 12:47:25 PM
8/2/2011 1:14:38 AM
You should put that in it's own thread since it has nothing to do with global warming.
8/2/2011 10:19:52 AM
Just wait until 6 months from now when pryderi will be scolding us all on how weather has nothing to do with climate.
8/2/2011 11:13:25 AM
More people die every year from cold-related issues but you'd never know that since the MSM prefers fear mongering us with global warming doom and gloom.
8/2/2011 11:48:52 AM
Just saw a comment on a news thread about massive solar flares in 2013 and thought it was pretty funny:
8/9/2011 12:00:26 PM
Deniers are so quick to point out the imperfect knowledge of AGW proponents, warning that failure to acknowledge their imperfect knowledge could lead to economic consequences when policies are enacted based on that.Do they (deniers) ever stop to think that their own knowledge is imperfect, and if incorrect their insistence on inaction could lead to global catastrophes that might plunge civilization into famine and collapse?Just saying that a very basic pro/con list quickly reveals, if you acknowledge that all of us have imperfect knowledge, that one side clearly has the best cost-risk ratio.[Edited on August 11, 2011 at 11:17 AM. Reason : .]
8/11/2011 11:15:54 AM
the cost-risk ratio only supports the AGW crowd when they use their bullshit scare tactics of 100' sea rise and impending hurricanes. When those turn out to be bullshit, the cost-risk ratio swings rapidly back towards doing nothing. I, for one, don't want to see us spend trillions of dollars and destroy the economy just so people on a message board will stop bitching about the heat.
8/11/2011 12:11:35 PM
Uh, no, you don't need those kinds of catastrophes at all to see huge risks. Two or three degrees rise would shift arable land hundreds of miles and in some cases eliminate it. How do you think you'll like living in the US if the breadbasket suffers a dust bowl that lasts a decade?Likewise, it only takes a few degrees temperature change to shift currents and thus fishing sources, add that to PH changes and you can see entire species of fish go extinct. It doesn't take extremes at all, climates are very sensitive systems and we've built our civilization around a rather specific configuration of one. The entire balance of food production could shift dramatically with just a degree or two shift, it's already shifting slowly over the past century as the temperature has inched upward. That's just food supplies. What happens when desertification in Africa and China and to an extent the western US accelerates to the point that communities and cities become increasingly expensive to supply with food and water? There are many, many communities worldwide that rely on glacial runoff for water, what happens when those glaciers that took thousands of years to freeze melt away in a matter of years (already happening) ? Shifting air currents have bearings on pollination and migration, leading to declining populations or invasive species, putting even more species (Many of which we depend on for food or raw materials) at risk. A sea level rise of a few inches, not even a foot, would put many coastal cities into much higher risk categories for flooding, prevention of which requires massive infrastructure investment. It only takes a few degrees to change everything. And God help us if negative feedback loops start set in as well. It's extremely brazen to even toy with the idea of taking no actions that might prevent a long-term global increase of just a couple degrees. Even if you assume the most meager negative effects, it is wildly more expensive to deal with the consequences of climate change than it is to try and prevent it by shifting to more futuristic energy sources.edit: In either event, you're missing the point. You're purposely latching onto the most wild predictions, calling them bullshit, and then concluding we should do nothing. That leaves the unanswered question of "What about everything between 'no effects' and 'utter doomsday scenarios'?". Do you see the fundamental flaw in your logic there? Do you even acknowledge your imperfect knowledge on this?[Edited on August 11, 2011 at 1:26 PM. Reason : .]
8/11/2011 1:13:49 PM
youre being very greedy-i hear russia is very excited to start growing more of their own food.
8/11/2011 1:29:48 PM
I'm just saying that it doesn't take extreme things like 100' sea level rises or huge temperature swings to cause massive upheaval of our current world order and disruption of the vast majority of peoples' lives. Seemingly trivial changes in climate have very non-trivial consequences.[Edited on August 11, 2011 at 1:37 PM. Reason : .]
8/11/2011 1:37:06 PM
8/11/2011 2:36:11 PM
aaronburro, so what if you're wrong and it was the deniers who were spreading lies?
8/11/2011 2:54:37 PM
throughout the history of the world civilizations have always prospered greatly during warm periods...and faltered greatly during cool periods.
8/11/2011 2:54:59 PM
^^ what if YOU are wrong and it is the AGWers spreading lies? I've got facts on my side. they've got fraudulent studies and faked graphs on theirsI declare that ants are planning to destroy every single person on earth. They easily outnumber us, and the number of anthills outside my back door is growing with every passing day. mrfrog, i assume you dispute this. what if you are wrong about it? We should eradicate every single ant, just to be sure.I declare that there is an alien fleet on the dark side of the moon, poised to strike. We better nuke the moon, just to be sure. You disagree? What if you are wrong and we could have stopped it just by nuking the moon?do you now see the folly of such a stupid statement? Simply saying "what if you are wrong" is a HORRIBLE basis for policy and action. You act based on fact, especially in the realm of science. That this is the bullshit that AGWers fall onto is telling[Edited on August 11, 2011 at 3:24 PM. Reason : ]
8/11/2011 3:19:45 PM
Occam's Razor people...The burden of proof is on warmists to prove something problematic is going on. It's not on "non-believers" to prove otherwise.
8/11/2011 3:33:25 PM
But they already made the argument, a strong argument.All of your current statements are not based on an absence of evidence given by the proponents of AGW, but based on a litany of crack science that supposedly debunks it. It is not that we lack evidence, it is that you refute the evidence.Occam's Razor applies in the case of all other things being equal, and if there was no external stress on the ecology of the Earth, then yes, the possibility of temperature remaining same is the most likely outcome, although it is not guaranteed. That is a correct application of Occam's Razor.Now, if we know that we've emitted a greenhouse gas with a know quantifiable amount of greenhouse effect, then the simplest possibility becomes the one in which the temperature raises by that quantified amount. Do you disagree?
8/11/2011 4:25:36 PM
I'm kinda for eradicating all ants. And nuking the moon would be kind of cool..
8/11/2011 5:06:46 PM
8/11/2011 5:08:57 PM
8/11/2011 5:10:24 PM
^Both China and India have schemes they are developing for carbon trading or emission limits. I have no idea how effective they will be but its still a step ahead of anything we've developed in the UShttp://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/jul/10/carbon-tax-emissions-trading-international
8/11/2011 6:06:44 PM
8/11/2011 7:19:33 PM
For the record, I do agree that a consensus among scientists is not an argument. History shows that a scientific consensus is hard to break and many valid breakthroughs in understanding had to fight uphill battles against a consensus.
8/11/2011 7:55:19 PM
jesus christ, conniption alert[Edited on August 11, 2011 at 8:49 PM. Reason : also tldr;]
8/11/2011 8:42:32 PM
8/11/2011 10:20:45 PM
That was just a recent comic so I posted it.
8/12/2011 11:03:41 AM
Aaaron I want to preface this by saying you are dumb as a fucking brick and I don't know why I humor this but here goes
8/12/2011 11:42:46 AM
8/12/2011 11:43:37 AM
8/12/2011 12:25:11 PM
8/12/2011 1:08:35 PM
8/12/2011 1:49:02 PM
8/12/2011 2:18:21 PM
^only part of it was found to be in error I believe.aaronburro, people will take your side of the argument more seriously if you stop cursing and name calling. Come on man!
8/12/2011 2:33:44 PM
The journal retracted the entire article. Part of it plagarised Wikipedia (among others) -- pretty much calls everything into question IMO
8/12/2011 2:39:42 PM
sounds just like an IPCC report then!yuk yuk yuk
8/12/2011 4:11:51 PM
8/12/2011 4:21:51 PM
8/12/2011 5:06:36 PM
8/12/2011 5:24:52 PM
I found this kinda funny and relevant. http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/archives/ebs/ebs_322_en.pdf
8/12/2011 5:36:21 PM
8/12/2011 6:00:04 PM
8/12/2011 7:43:12 PM
Can someone post a link (or just a citation) to a peer reviewed journal article that argues the anti-AGW position, retracted or not? Thanks.The only thing I can find is about the citation network of climate scientists. I don't care. I want to see the science that people think backs the anti-AGW position, that appeared in a peer reviewed format.
8/12/2011 7:56:20 PM
a peer-reviewed format that has been co-opted to exclude such papers. Yep, that's a fair request. yep.
8/12/2011 7:58:46 PM
I think you misheard. I didn't say "give me a paper in X journal". Do you have any idea the sheer number of papers in journals that fit the definition of peer reviewed?
8/12/2011 8:08:16 PM