By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
One of the most interesting statistics from the recent mid-terms was the New York Times’ exit poll (Fig. 1), showing that more than two-thirds of “Democrat” voters thought climate change was a serious problem. Five-sixths of Republicans didn’t.
Figure 1. The New York Times’ exit poll showing the partisan divide on climate.
Put this interesting statistic with another interesting statistic: the growth in the CO2 emissions from the burning of fossil fuels. In 1988, the year in which IPeCaC was founded and James Hansen first bleated about the imagined threat of “global warming” before Congress after Senator Tim Wirth had had the air-conditioning turned off in the hearing room, the world emitted 22 million tonnes of CO2 a year.
In 2013, just 25 years later, 35 million tonnes of CO2 were emitted. For all the chatter about the need to cut CO2 emissions, for all the taxes and fines and subsidies and profiteering, for all the pompous posturing at international grandstanding sessions and global gabfests, there is nothing to show but a 50% increase in the world’s annual emissions of CO2.
If the world really thought global warming was a serious problem, it is not likely that so large an increase in the emission of the supposedly dangerous (but actually innocuous and beneficial) trace gas CO2 would have been allowed to occur.
So, should anyone have been worried? On the data, the answer is No. Since October 1996 there has been no global warming at all (Fig. 2). This month’s RSS temperature plot comes within a whisker of pushing up the period without any global warming from 18 years 1 month to 18 years 2 months: however, on a strict interpretation the period without warming remains at 18 years 1 month. Within a month or two, the current weakish el Nino may begin to influence global temperatures, shortening the Great Pause. However, if the el Nino is followed by a la Nina the Pause could lengthen again by late next year – perhaps even in time for the Paris climate summit of December 2015, at which the next major attempt to introduce a global “government” on the back of the climate scare will be made.
Figure 2. The least-squares linear-regression trend on the RSS satellite monthly global mean surface temperature anomaly dataset shows no global warming for 18 years 1 month since October 1996.
The hiatus period of 18 years 1 month, or 217 months, is the farthest back one can go in the RSS satellite temperature record and still show a sub-zero trend.
Figure 3. Near-term projections of warming at a rate equivalent to 2.8 [1.9, 4.2] K/century, made with “substantial confidence” in IPCC (1990), January 1990 to October 2014 (orange region and red trend line), vs. observed anomalies (dark blue) and trend (bright blue) at less than 1.4 K/century equivalent, taken as the mean of the RSS and UAH satellite monthly mean lower-troposphere temperature anomalies.
A quarter-century after 1990, the global-warming outturn to date – expressed as the least-squares linear-regression trend on the mean of the RSS and UAH monthly global mean surface temperature anomalies – is 0.34 Cº, equivalent to just 1.4 Cº/century, or a little below half of the central estimate in IPCC (1990) and well below even the least estimate (Fig. 3).
The Great Pause is a growing embarrassment to those who had told us with “substantial confidence” that the science was settled and the debate over. Nature had other ideas. Though more than 50 more or less implausible excuses for the Pause are appearing in nervous reviewed journals and among proselytizing scientists, the possibility that the Pause is occurring because the computer models are simply wrong about the sensitivity of temperature to manmade greenhouse gases can no longer be dismissed.
Remarkably, even the IPCC’s latest and much reduced near-term global-warming projections are also excessive (Fig. 4).
Figure 4. Predicted temperature change, January 2005 to October 2014, at a rate equivalent to 1.7 [1.0, 2.3] Cº/century (orange zone with thick red best-estimate trend line), compared with the observed anomalies (dark blue) and zero real-world trend (bright blue), taken as the average of the RSS and UAH satellite lower-troposphere temperature anomalies.
In 1990, the IPCC’s central estimate of near-term warming was higher by two-thirds than it is today. Then it was 2.8 C/century equivalent. Now it is just 1.7 Cº equivalent – and, as Fig. 4 shows, even that is proving to be a substantial exaggeration.
On the RSS satellite data, there has been no global warming statistically distinguishable from zero for more than 26 years. None of the models predicted that, in effect, there would be no global warming for a quarter of a century.
The Great Pause may well come to an end by this winter. An el Niño event is underway and would normally peak during the northern-hemisphere winter. There is too little information to say how much temporary warming it will cause, though. The temperature spikes of the 1998, 2007, and 2010 el Niños are evident in Figs. 1-4.
El Niños occur about every three or four years, though no one is entirely sure what triggers them. They cause a temporary spike in temperature, often followed by a sharp drop during the la Niña phase, as can be seen in 1999, 2008, and 2011-2012, where there was a “double-dip” la Niña that is one of the excuses for the Pause.
The ratio of el Niños to la Niñas tends to fall during the 30-year negative or cooling phases of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, the latest of which began in late 2001. So, though the Pause may pause or even shorten for a few months at the turn of the year, it may well resume late in 2015 . Either way, it is ever clearer that global warming has not been happening at anything like the rate predicted by the climate models, and is not at all likely to occur even at the much-reduced rate now predicted. There could be as little as 1 Cº global warming this century, not the 3-4 Cº predicted by the IPCC.
Key facts about global temperature
Ø The RSS satellite dataset shows no global warming at all for 217 months from October 1996 to October 2014. That is more than half the 429-month satellite record.
Ø The global warming trend since 1900 is equivalent to 0.8 Cº per century. This is well within natural variability and may not have much to do with us.
Ø The fastest measured warming trend lasting ten years or more occurred over the 40 years from 1694-1733 in Central England. It was equivalent to 4.3 Cº per century.
Ø Since 1950, when a human influence on global temperature first became theoretically possible, the global warming trend has been equivalent to below 1.2 Cº per century.
Ø The fastest warming rate lasting ten years or more since 1950 occurred over the 33 years from 1974 to 2006. It was equivalent to 2.0 Cº per century.
Ø In 1990, the IPCC’s mid-range prediction of near-term warming was equivalent to 2.8 Cº per century, higher by two-thirds than its current prediction of 1.7 Cº/century.
Ø The global warming trend since 1990, when the IPCC wrote its first report, is equivalent to below 1.4 Cº per century – half of what the IPCC had then predicted.
Ø Though the IPCC has cut its near-term warming prediction, it has not cut its high-end business as usual centennial warming prediction of 4.8 Cº warming to 2100.
Ø The IPCC’s predicted 4.8 Cº warming by 2100 is well over twice the greatest rate of warming lasting more than ten years that has been measured since 1950.
Ø The IPCC’s 4.8 Cº-by-2100 prediction is almost four times the observed real-world warming trend since we might in theory have begun influencing it in 1950.
Ø From September 2001 to September 2014, the warming trend on the mean of the 5 global-temperature datasets is nil. No warming for 13 years 1 month.
Ø Recent extreme weather cannot be blamed on global warming, because there has not been any global warming. It is as simple as that.
Technical note
Our latest topical graph shows the least-squares linear-regression trend on the RSS satellite monthly global mean lower-troposphere dataset for as far back as it is possible to go and still find a zero trend. The start-date is not “cherry-picked” so as to coincide with the temperature spike caused by the 1998 el Niño. Instead, it is calculated so as to find the longest period with a zero trend.
Terrestrial temperatures are measured by thermometers. Thermometers correctly sited in rural areas away from manmade heat sources show warming rates appreciably below those that are published. The satellite datasets are based on measurements made by the most accurate thermometers available – platinum resistance thermometers, which provide an independent verification of the temperature measurements by checking via spaceward mirrors the known temperature of the cosmic background radiation, which is 1% of the freezing point of water, or just 2.73 degrees above absolute zero. It was by measuring minuscule variations in the cosmic background radiation that the NASA anisotropy probe determined the age of the Universe: 13.82 billion years.
The graph is accurate. The data are lifted monthly straight from the RSS website. A computer algorithm reads them down from the text file, takes their mean and plots them automatically using an advanced routine that automatically adjusts the aspect ratio of the data window at both axes so as to show the data at maximum scale, for clarity.
The latest monthly data point is visually inspected to ensure that it has been correctly positioned. The light blue trend line plotted across the dark blue spline-curve that shows the actual data is determined by the method of least-squares linear regression, which calculates the y-intercept and slope of the line via two well-established and functionally identical equations that are compared with one another to ensure no discrepancy between them. The IPCC and most other agencies use linear regression to determine global temperature trends. Professor Phil Jones of the University of East Anglia recommends it in one of the Climategate emails. The method is appropriate because global temperature records exhibit little auto-regression.
Dr Stephen Farish, Professor of Epidemiological Statistics at the University of Melbourne, kindly verified the reliability of the algorithm that determines the trend on the graph and the correlation coefficient, which is very low because, though the data are highly variable, the trend is flat.
RSS itself is now taking a serious interest in the length of the Great Pause. Dr Carl Mears, the senior research scientist at RSS, discusses it at remss.com/blog/recent-slowing-rise-global-temperatures.
Dr Mears’ results are summarized in Fig. T1:
Figure T1. Output of 33 IPCC models (turquoise) compared with measured RSS global temperature change (black), 1979-2014. The transient coolings caused by the volcanic eruptions of Chichón (1983) and Pinatubo (1991) are shown, as is the spike in warming caused by the great el Niño of 1998.
Dr Mears writes:
“The denialists like to assume that the cause for the model/observation discrepancy is some kind of problem with the fundamental model physics, and they pooh-pooh any other sort of explanation. This leads them to conclude, very likely erroneously, that the long-term sensitivity of the climate is much less than is currently thought.”
Dr Mears concedes the growing discrepancy between the RSS data and the models, but he alleges “cherry-picking” of the start-date for the global-temperature graph:
“Recently, a number of articles in the mainstream press have pointed out that there appears to have been little or no change in globally averaged temperature over the last two decades. Because of this, we are getting a lot of questions along the lines of ‘I saw this plot on a denialist web site. Is this really your data?’ While some of these reports have ‘cherry-picked’ their end points to make their evidence seem even stronger, there is not much doubt that the rate of warming since the late 1990s is less than that predicted by most of the IPCC AR5 simulations of historical climate. … The denialists really like to fit trends starting in 1997, so that the huge 1997-98 ENSO event is at the start of their time series, resulting in a linear fit with the smallest possible slope.”
In fact, the spike in temperatures caused by the Great el Niño of 1998 is largely offset in the linear-trend calculation by two factors: the not dissimilar spike of the 2010 el Niño, and the sheer length of the Great Pause itself.
Replacing all the monthly RSS anomalies for 1998 with the mean anomaly value of 0.55 K that obtained during the 2010 el Niño and recalculating the trend from September 1996 [not Dr Mears’ “1997”] to September 2014 showed that the trend values “–0.00 C° (–0.00 C°/century)” in the unaltered data (Fig. 1) became “+0.00 C° (+0.00 C°/century)” in the recalculated graph. No cherry-picking, then.
The length of the Great Pause in global warming, significant though it now is, is of less importance than the ever-growing discrepancy between the temperature trends predicted by models and the far less exciting real-world temperature change that has been observed.
IPCC’s First Assessment Report predicted that global temperature would rise by 1.0 [0.7, 1.5] Cº to 2025, equivalent to 2.8 [1.9, 4.2] Cº per century. The executive summary asked, “How much confidence do we have in our predictions?” IPCC pointed out some uncertainties (clouds, oceans, etc.), but concluded:
“Nevertheless, … we have substantial confidence that models can predict at least the broad-scale features of climate change. … There are similarities between results from the coupled models using simple representations of the ocean and those using more sophisticated descriptions, and our understanding of such differences as do occur gives us some confidence in the results.”
That “substantial confidence” was substantial over-confidence. For the rate of global warming since 1990 is about half what the IPCC had then predicted.
Thanks, Christopher. You must’ve had fun writing this post, because it was, as were your posts that came before it, fun to read.
Cheers.
I’ll second that,Bob. In my vision of a better future, Lord Monckton and the other brave skeptics who went public and woke me from my “save the planet” hypnosis should be regarded as folk heroes, while the dogma and tactics of McCarthyism should be renamed Gore-Mannism. Their cinematic contribution could understandably be a laughable, popular cult film, and continue making them rich (darn it).
Thanks, Christopher, Lord Monckton.
I was not surprised by the NYT exit poll you show, just sad.
But I think the ongoing El Niño is so weak that most probably the temperature hiatus will continue for another year.
Then, who knows? Our prediction capacity shrinks to nothing.
Multivariate ENSO Index (MEI):
http://www.oarval.org/MEI_1950-2014-Nov5-ts-Opt.png
From ESRL-PSD: Multivariate ENSO Index (November 5 ’14, Klaus Wolter, NOAA), at http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/enso/mei/
The upward warming spike this year and first half of next will likely be more than offset by cooling in the 2016-2018 period.
I would like to know which of the IPCC models most closely correlate with the RMS/MSU/AMSU data? Same question for IPCC models and RSS data. It appears to me that a few models might correlate fairly well, but impossible to confirm from Dr. Mears’ chart presented here. Of those models (if any) that correlate the best (no expectations here), what are their climate sensitivity assumptions?
Steve, this is the best I have
http://www.oarval.org/gsr_010114_fig1.jpg
From ‘Worse Than We Thought’ Rears Ugly Head Again (Patrick J. Michaels, Paul C. Knappenberger. Cato @ur momisugly Liberty, January 6, 2014), at http://www.cato.org/blog/worse-we-thought-rears-ugly-head-again
Answer: There are no GCMs that correlate well with observations.
clearly the models with lower sensitivity correlate better.
Thanx Andres.
Steve, it is a great question, and the IPCC should be forced to answer it. What is different about the best models. My hunch is that the assumptions of the best models have simulated conditions that we know do not exist, but they show no indication of wanting to learn from their wrong or few close to right models.
From the Met Office in 2007. It’s a laughing stock.
“PAY NO ATTENTION TO THAT MAN BEHIND THE CURTAIN!” …I am the great and powerful Ozmodel!
Met Office successes continue unabated.
97 million reasons tell us that accuracy is not important for the MET , so why bother in the first place as long as you get the ‘right result ‘ you do not need to worry about its being the factual correct.
Mod: I left a brief comment at around 6:50 PST on this article. Same with the part 2 article.
[Found & restored. ~mod.]
It’s worth stressing that all the incorrect predictions are within the stated margin of error, but having said that, they have all been on the warm side and none have been too cold…
==================
the odds that this is simply due to chance error are vanishingly small. it points to systematic error. the Met Office has an uncorrected bug in their computer software.
buying a faster machine will not correct the bug. it will simply make the bug execute faster.
So 15% of Repubs and 27% of Dems can’t do math. Got it!
Dr Mears writes:
“The denialists like to assume that the cause for the model/observation discrepancy is some kind of problem “with the fundamental model physics, and they pooh-pooh any other sort of explanation. ”
Actual the problem is although the ‘physics ‘ may be know in theory what that means in reality is not . For the the planet is nothing like gilling a bell jar with CO2 in action , and so the models fail because the cause and effect relationships is poorly understood no matter how much it is claimed to be ‘settled science’, hence the need for 40 plus reasons for the ‘missing heat ‘ in the first place.
Dr Mears writes:
“My view is that the subduction of heat into the ocean is very likely a significant part of the explanation for the model/observation discrepancies.”
And the oceans are now the hottest since records began in 1880! So much for a pause in Global warming hey!
Martin,
You need to study the radiation physics of water. CO2 has nothing to do with ocean heat content. Those who tell you that it does are feeding you rank propaganda.
Rather, _radiative_ physics of water
The start of this post should be changed from millions of tonnes of co2 emissions to billions of tonnes. Why is such a simple mistake not changed in the first hour? Incredible.
Incredible indeed given you paid zero Dollars for it.
And your point is DUH? When I last looked a billion was one thousand million or haven’t you woken up yet? Sort of important don’t you think? Or not? And so easily fixed.
Can’t believe I’m defending DirkH but he is so obviously right.
Millions is not exaggerating from billions – it is understating. There is no deception here.
This is a volunteer website. Correcting irrelevant inaccuracies is not worth the effort. It is inaccurate – not wrong or misleading.
Neville, what exactly is your concern?
M Courtney I only write simple English so I don’t know how to make this any easier. If it doesn’t matter to you if you’re out by a factor of 1,000 times I think I’ll just give up.
These simply mistakes are usually corrected quickly with little fuss, so why is it not the case here? Simple mistake and simple correction.
Jo Nova made a similar mistake a couple of days ago quoting billions $ when it should have been millions $. This was corrected quickly without any fuss.
You have a sign error. One is significant, the other is not.
Remember Dickens in David Copperfield:
As I said…No! Let me clarify more simplistically.
Over-estimation hits a point of pain when the inaccuracy is discovered.
Under-estimation is inefficient and inaccurate but not immediately flawed.
Ideally, the accuracy would be assured either way.
But with volunteers you have to take what you get and avoid causing pain.
This avoids causing pain
DirkH is right, This time
I agree with you. The mistake is of no consequence, with respect to understanding the post, but it should be corrected, with an acknowledgment of your finding it.
that is, I agree with Neville.
Despite the NY Times reporting a sharp difference by party on the seriousness or not of global warming, the electorate said the top issues for them were:
The economy 45%
Health care 25%
Illegal immigration 14%
Foreign policy 13%
Since global warming is not a top issue, it is unclear how much of a driver it was in the election. A little bit like unclarity about CO2 as a driver of climate.
You repeatedly concede that the temperature continues to rise at “half” the rate that some other guys predicted. Yet you conflate and obfuscate. Some places you claim zero, other times you claim less. The trend is still upward. So the question is: what’s your interest in this? How does it affect you personally, financially, or not?
Sorry but GAT is not rising at all for 13 years in the mean of the disparate global data sets. Billions going into costly wind energy and solar raise the cost of every product on earth, and billions going into alarmist studies take from every tax payer, and threats of and implementation of different cap and trade schemes cost more billions. All of this harms the poor the most and takes resources from real problems. Also, as C.M. points out, despite all of the above, CO2 emissions do and will continue to rise.
The half-the-rate-rise is from 1990. The no-warming-since rise is from a later year.
Reblogged this on US Issues and commented:
Climate Models are crap! For example, they didn’t forecast any chance of a zero global temperature rise during the last 18 years 1 month, which has occurred. Read the analysis below.
I have a problem with how you draw the temperature trends. The super El Nino of 1998 divides the satellite temperature graph in two and physical conditions change because of its influence. First, the segment from 1979 to the beginning of the super El Nino in early 1997 is a very normal ENSO oscillation, consisting of five El Nino peaks with La Nina valleys in between. The global mean temperature for such an ENSO segment is defined by the halfway points between the El Nino peaks and their neighboring La Nina valleys. Mark them all with dots. Next draw a trend line through these dots. It will be a horizontal straight line, indicating that this 18 year temperature segment was just like the current hiatus/pause is. You do not see this in ground-based temperature curves because the temperature “guardians” have decided to give it a fake upward slope in the eighties and nineties to create a “late twentieth century” warming. This continues into the twenty-first century and becomes their basis for calling the hiatus just “slow warming” instead of a complete standstill. This is easy to see because raising the right end of the curve makes the 2010 El Nino taller than the 1998 super El Nino, which is absurd. Both RSS and UAH are free of this fakery. The super El Nino itself is not a part of the ENSO oscillation but incorporates a large amount of warm water from an extraneous source. It is a once a century happening and has no connection with the ENSO or with global warming. The huge amount of extra warm water it brought did have a global influence, however, because as soon as the super El Nino had subsided there was a step warming in 1999. It was short one – only 3 years – and was not a greenhouse warming. But in those three years it raised global temperature by a third of a degree Celsius and then stopped. For reasons unknown global temperature then stabilized at that high level and remained the same during the rest of the century. If it were a normal El Nino peak it would have gone down again. The warm platform established was constant for the next seven years and then temperature suddenly dropped by 0.5 degrees. That turned out to be nothing more exotic than the 2008 La Nina which signified restart of ENSOI that the super El Nino had interrupted. Today we are ready for another El Nino peak but things look muddled and another period of uncertain warming like at the start of the century seems a possibility. As to your preference for RSS – I prefer UAH. That is because in the middle of this temperature segment RSS decided to change their procedures and the two satellite data sets started to slowly diverge. As a result, RSS today shows cooling where UAH shows steady temperatures. I am inclined tho think that there is no cooling and that is what UAH shows.
I have much sympathy with Arno Arrak’s comment. The Singer Event from 1993-1998 is of course startling when compared with the total absence of warming either side of it. That is surely not the profile of an atmosphere slowly being warmed by CO2. However, I have decided that the simplest and clearest method is to determine the least-squares linear-regression trend on the RSS dataset for the longest period backward from the present – currently a whisker under 18 years 2 months.
I prefer RSS because it alone correctly represents the startling magnitude of the Great el Nino of 1998, which, unlike any of the others in the decade and a half either side of it, caused widespread coral bleaching. Also, UAH is about to undertake a major revision to its dataset which – if my inside information is correct – will bring it much more closely into line with RSS, marking a significant departure from the endlessly upward-revised terrestrial datasets.
Before the three terrestrial datasets recently all upped their recent-warming rates, their mean and the mean of the two satellite datasets showed exactly the same number of months without global warming – about 13 years 4 months. Then the revisions began. The terrestrial datasets now show only 13 years without global warming.
So I shall continue to publish RSS trends for the time being, but I shall also continue my six-monthly updates of all five principal global-temperature datasets.
[Snip. ~mod]
It would take political power for that, and now a climate realist is heading the US climate committee.
Christopher Monckton of Brenchley: I have much sympathy with Arno Arrak’s comment. The Singer Event from 1993-1998 is of course startling when compared with the total absence of warming either side of it. That is surely not the profile of an atmosphere slowly being warmed by CO2. However, I have decided that the simplest and clearest method is to determine the least-squares linear-regression trend on the RSS dataset for the longest period backward from the present – currently a whisker under 18 years 2 months.
I am sympathetic to you both. The literature on dynamical systems has many examples of systems in which something accumulates (or is input) steadily, maybe linearly, but the measured outputs appear as steps. Without more complete knowledge of the climate system, one can not tell whether the step-wise appearance of the temperature mean or the regression line is a more appropriate summary of the “trajectory” of the system; or which is a sounder basis for forming an expectation about the future. The “steady input” in this case could be extra radiation from CO2; the something accumulating could be ocean heat content. I usually come down on the side that “there is not sufficient evidence for a conclusion with much confidence”. The value of computing and displaying the regression line is that it shows that, even from the IPCC point of view, IPCC has overestimated the effect that it believes is there.
arnoarrak,
You write:
“The super El Nino itself is not a part of the ENSO oscillation but incorporates a large amount of warm water from an extraneous source. It is a once a century happening and has no connection with the ENSO or with global warming.”
I am curious as to where the warm water came from and how it got there – the “extraneous source.” Usually the warm water of an El Niño is thought to have been generated in the equatorial/tropical Pacific and has a residency in the Western Pacific – The WP warm pool. Are you saying this is not the case for this one? Are you saying you don’t know? Or perhaps you know but are not saying?
John F. Hultquist: I am curious as to where the warm water came from and how it got there – the “extraneous source.”
You and me both. And how does he know that it is a [once per century event] that can not recur next year, or in 2025 or 2035 to put the hypothetical CO2-induced warming back on track? In other posts here and elsewhere I have written that I don’t believe in much future warming, but for statements like that I’d appreciate more details.
A memorable quote…..
“We have been building models and there are now robust contradictions,” says Liu, a professor in the UW-Madison Center for Climatic Research. “Data from observation says global cooling. The physical model says it has to be warming.”
From : http://phys.org/news/2014-08-global-temperature-conundrum-cooling-climate.html#jCp
GregK – did you even read this article? The authors specifically point out how anthropogenic warming has changed the trend.
“the bio- and geo-thermometers used last year in a study in the journal Science suggest a period of global cooling beginning about 7,000 years ago and continuing until humans began to leave a mark, the so-called “hockey stick” on the current climate model graph, which reflects a profound global warming trend.”
This might make it clearer. We have had a little more than 15 years since the end of that El Nino so I looked at the 7.5 year moving means.
The first 90 months of RSS data shows a mean of -0.948°C going up to 0.008°C in the last 90 months before 1997. That is a rise of 0.92°C / decade. A OLS fit from 1979 to 1997 give 0.07°C/decade but to 1999.75, it is 0.15°C/decade. It sort of highlights the problem with using OLS when the monthly data varies so much.
The first 90 months of RSS data after 1999.75 have a mean of 0.248%deg;C going down to 0.216°C or a rate of warming of -0.02°C/decade. OLS fit gives 0.00°C /decade.
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/rss/from:1999.75/mean:90/plot/rss/to:1997/mean:90
Eighteen years without any significant warming, just politics and hyperbole. Pity the moneys spent on AGW weren’t spent on something useful for humanity. Thanks Viscount Monkton for your recent analysis of the trends.
I think i have seen it all now.
Someone comparing SkS against Bill Illis.
LOL!! Thats just too funny.
Cook and Nuttercelli are not even in the same galaxy as Bill Illis.
Try to pay attention Bevan, SkS is a propaganda machine.
Being a cartoonist though do we expect anything else?
Listen to anthonyvioli. There is really no comparison; SkS is a thoroughly dishonest propaganda blog run by a cartoonist who likes to dress up as a neo-Nazi. If you think SkS has any credibility at all, simply look into their claims that “97%” of all scientists believe that human emissions are the cause of most global warming.
If you want to be taken seriousl, link to serious authorities. SkS has no credibility whatever, and people who link to them run the risk of being mocked by readers who know better.
There are good links you can use. Don’t denigrate your good name by associating with neo-Nazis.
Inhofe is a step in the right direction, :), but, on the major issues, there is not enough difference between the two parties. Both are owned by big money. This post, with great & amusing graphics, is instructive :
globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.co.uk/2014/11/crony-capitalism-tribute-mafia-dons-vs.html
At a minumum, the GOP congress will stop the wind-farm subsidy.
We live in hope.
http://www.globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.co.uk/2014/11/crony-capitalism-tribute-mafia-dons-vs.html
Mafia Dons v Politicians ; Who really won the Election ?
thanks for the graph
i used it in a video of obama’s climate facts
http://youtu.be/abhCbkVHQjg
Does anybody have any copies of early ‘thirties German news reels giving out facts of that day?
Please post them also to put this into perspective.
Sorry, John Finn, for asking you to provide proof of facts. If the President doesn’t have to the nobody should.
I like this vid.
Nevertheless, … we have substantial confidence that models can predict at least the broad-scale features of climate change. … There are similarities between results from the coupled models using simple representations of the ocean and those using more sophisticated descriptions, and our understanding of such differences as do occur gives us some confidence in the results.”
Waning: Long, somewhat disorganized rant follows, but, it is interesting.
This is the last paragraph in this article. Read it. Because their models agree with each other, that means the models are right.
Is this what passes for rigorous scientific reasoning in the climate sciences today?
And about those models. You can’t model what you don’t know. Reading “The West Without Water”, a book by two environmental extremists masquerading as scientists, they note that the PDO was not identified until the late 1990’s, by fisheries scientists. Climatology is a very young science. There is nothing “settled” about. According to this web page,
http://jisao.washington.edu/pdo/
the cause of the PDO is unknown. The PDO was discovered by a PhD candidate (Dr. Hare) and his advisor looking into salmon harvests in the North West. You know, real world, grubby data. A practical problem. Then, some climatologists ran with the ball. This website refers to computer models of the PDO, which are “not skillful.”
Let’s face it, it is so much more fun to sit in a lab and make computer models and pretty graphs than go out and interact with the real world, which is very, very messy, often unpredictable, and unrewarding (no publication.)
Realize that if such variation in salmon harvests were discovered today, such variability would be simply attributed to man-made climate change and there would be calls for carbon taxes and/or a ban on fishing.
Of interest, if you read the abstract for Hare’s paper in 1994, available here,
http://www.readcube.com/articles/10.1111%2Fj.1365-2419.1994.tb00105.x?r3_referer=wol&show_checkout=1
you will note the authors spend most of their abstract defending historical research as a way of advancing climatology. I guess that was a radical idea in 1994. After all, just dismiss history and you are free to make any predictions that strike your fancy, and call every unusual event signs of the coming apocalypse.
It’s like H. Lamb never existed. Very Orwellian.
Here is the webpage of Dr. Hare. He is not a climatologist. He is a fisheries expert.
http://www.spc.int/fame/en/contacts/46-contacts-scicofish-project/24-steven-hare-steven-hare
He made one of the fundamental discoveries about climatology, yet he didn’t remain in academia. He did it by analyzing data, not doing computer models. My guess is a data driven guy couldn’t find a place in academia in climatology. It would be interesting to hear him talk about his career.
Ocean temperatures alone (be they absolute or anomalous) provide no evidence of source. One must study currents and winds to gain knowledge of that aspect of ocean warming. One must also study visible and IR penetration based on zenith angle (solar energy engineers know this forwards and backwards). It is reasonable to say that a significant part of ocean warmth outside the equatorial band is brought there from other places. And that the equatorial band is warmed to a greater or lesser degree by atmospheric processes letting in or keeping out the full measure of solar irradiance. It’s surface is also warmed or cooled by processes that happen in-situ through Westerly wind-driven Kelvin waves, Easterly churned up mixing, or windless layering. From there sloshing and currents transport this water to points North and South of the equator.
Unfortunately, these processes, hidden from plain view, lead some to think it was humans what dun it. The equatorial oceanic band is huge and serves as the main deep absorber of direct solar heat. If you think this natural deep heating cannot be transported to other regions and spread itself out on the surface to belch that heat out over land, you need to get out of kindergarten global warming class. Why? Because the tiny, tiny addition to natural downwelling longwave infrared radiation sourced from just the anthropogenic CO2 molecules in the atmosphere don’t have the cajoles to do that. Not even close and it is laughable to think otherwise.
http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/phod/research/po/currents/index.php
http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/phod/research/po/currents/index.php
http://www.applet-magic.com/insolation.htm
http://www.physics.arizona.edu/~cronin/Solar/References/Shade%20effects/sdarticle%20(18).pdf
oops. Here is the last link
http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/MET/Faculty/jff/1997_02a-%20Jin%20An%20equatorial%20ocean%20recharge%20paradigm%20for%20ENSO.%20Part%20I%20Conceptual%20Model.pdf