Monthly Archives: July 2010

Barrow Update

By Steven Goddard, A few days ago I did a post Latest Barrow Ice Breakup On Record? Since then, the Barrow webcam has started showing open water, which has confused some of our friends into believing that the ice has … Continue reading

Posted in sea ice | 105 Comments

A note of sincere thanks

I’m on my way back to the USA from my Australian speaking tour.  I’ll be offline a couple of days. There are many, many, people who I owe a debt of gratitude to, for kindnesses big and small, but, there … Continue reading

Posted in Announcements | 209 Comments

What I’m reading on the plane

Quite by accident I took a wrong turn this AM while searching for a Starbucks, and ended up in front of an interesting bookshop in the old Scots Church building in Sydney. I went in and one of the first … Continue reading

Posted in Book Review | 46 Comments

Arctic Ice Graphing Lesson Increasing By 50,000 km2 Per Year

By Steven Goddard [see important addendum added to end of article ~ ctm] [Note: The title and conclusion are wrong due to bias in the start/end point of the graph, the mistake was noted by Steven immediately after publication, and … Continue reading

Posted in sea ice | 174 Comments

My interview on the road

This interview below by Tom Minchin took place in a hospital staff room just a few minutes before my presentation in Hamilton City, Victoria at the hospital auditorium. Tom did a much better job than most reporters because not only … Continue reading

Posted in Opinion | 33 Comments

June 2010 Temperature, cooling a bit as El Nino fades

June 2010 UAH Global Temperature Update: +0.44 deg. C by Roy W. Spencer, Ph. D. The global-average lower tropospheric temperature remains warm, +0.44 deg. C for June, 2010, but it appears the El Nino warmth is waning as a La … Continue reading

Posted in climate data | 57 Comments

AGW Mathematics : -30 + 5 = 0

By Steven Goddard, From The Vancouver Sun, a survey of leading climate scientists. “More than half the experts think there is a more than 10 per chance we’ll get five degrees C warming under that scenario,” he says. “And five … Continue reading

Posted in Alarmism, Antarctic, Arctic, oceans | 147 Comments

Ponderous Pachyderms Prevent Permafrost

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach Anthony Watts has pointed to a curious new paper in his article “Climate Craziness of the Week: The AGU peddles a mammoth climate change theory”  I thought I’d use it as an example of how … Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | 60 Comments

Penn State Report Released

Online here I don’t have a lot to say about this, but I would suggest reading the comments over at the Climate Audit thread on the subject. The acount of Richard Lindzen’s testimony in the report is interesting. ~ charles … Continue reading

Posted in politics | 100 Comments

Waxman Malarkey 4: Impact Zone Ireland

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach In part 4 of this series, I take a look at the Waxman Markey claims about the Emerald Isle, Impact Zone Ireland. My previous analyses of the same site were Waxman Malarkey: Impact Zone US … Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | 98 Comments

The Victorian Warmed Period

I met Ken while on my Australian tour, he’s been doing some fine work. Via Andrew Bolt Retired school principal Kenskingdom was alarmed by this Bureau of Meteorology graph, showing a strong warming trend for Victoria, Australia: He checked the … Continue reading

Posted in climate data | 74 Comments

New Zealand’s Prime Minister: Climate Change bill a “load of rubbish” and “hoax”

Via Andrew Bolt in email, some surprising revelations about New Zealand’s Prime minister and his previous opinion of the ETS. It appears he has done a complete about face from his very strong opinions of 2005. The Prime Minister of … Continue reading

Posted in carbon credits, politics | 76 Comments

Weather vs. Climate

By Steven Goddard I recently had the opportunity to attend a meeting of some top weather modelers. Weather models differ from climate models in that they have to work and are verified every hour of every day around the planet. … Continue reading

Posted in modeling, weather | 211 Comments