Study: 'average sea levels rising; but tide levels, have undergone little change'

From the University of Southampton:

Blackpool, Lancashire. 16 August 2010. Low water 11.20am, high water 4pm
Blackpool, Lancashire. 16 August 2010. Low water 11.20am, high water 4pm

The tides they are a changin’

Scientists from the University of Southampton have found that ocean tides have changed significantly over the last century at many coastal locations around the world.

Increases in high tide levels and the tidal range were found to have been similar to increases in average sea level at several locations.

The findings of the study are published online in the journal Earth’s Future.

It is well documented that global average sea levels are rising; but tide levels, have generally been considered to have undergone little change on decadal time scales. It is also often presumed that tides will not change much over the next century. As such, long-term changes in tides are not accounted for in many practical applications and scenarios affected by rising sea levels.

The team used a dataset of 220 sea level records from around the world, which ranged in length from 30 to 150 years. By extracting the tide data from the other components of sea level, they were able to isolate changes in 15 tidal levels by looking at different records of high and low waters from the tidal signal.

Lead author Robert Mawdsley, postgraduate research student in Ocean and Earth Science, says: “We find that at many sites around the world significant changes in tidal levels have already occurred, and at some sites the magnitude of the changes are comparable with the increase in global mean sea level through the 20th century.

“For example, increases in average high water of over one millimetre per year have occurred around the world, including Calais in France, Manilla in the Philippines, Wilmington in the USA and Broome in Australia. Increases in mean high water of approximately half a millimetre per year occur at UK sites, such as Heysham, Millport and Port Patrick, all of which are around the Irish Sea. Decreases in mean high water and tidal range occur at many sites around the UK, including Milford Haven, Lowestoft and Ilfracombe. This has potential impacts on energy extraction, such as the tidal lagoon in Swansea Bay.”

“The magnitude and global distribution of changes in tides have been hinted at before,” said co-author Dr Ivan Haigh, Lecturer in Coastal Oceanography. “However, here we have been able to assess changes in different tidal levels, which are used for many practical applications. Tides exert a major influence on the coast, affecting coastal flooding and erosion, navigation, tidal energy extraction, sediment movement and the extent of species in coastal ecosystems. Therefore, the changes we have identified have wider ranging practical and scientific implications, particularly if they increase in the future.”

“The cause of these changes is complex and appears to be a combination of mechanisms from local to global, with the primary driver being the rise in sea level associated with climate change,” says co-author Dr Neil Wells, Associate Professor in Physical Oceanography and Meteorology. “Further research is required to more fully understand the mechanisms causing these changes and to understand how tides might further change in the future.”

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Beethoven
March 6, 2015 1:09 pm

This is what happens when people asks questions (to the head of the EPA). The tide is changing alright.

Beethoven
Reply to  Beethoven
March 6, 2015 1:10 pm
Bohdan Burban
Reply to  Beethoven
March 6, 2015 2:47 pm

A well-deserved roast …

Mark from the Midwest
Reply to  Beethoven
March 6, 2015 4:07 pm

Wow, wow, wow!

Reply to  Beethoven
March 6, 2015 4:13 pm

Thank you for that. Made my weekend. 😉

CodeTech
Reply to  Beethoven
March 6, 2015 7:52 pm

Excellent link! I watched it 3 times and passed it along…

Reply to  Beethoven
March 6, 2015 7:55 pm

Thanks Beethoven, you made some lovely music for us tonight!

William Astley
Reply to  Beethoven
March 6, 2015 8:16 pm

As noted in the attached video clip, the Obama EPA Chief does not know whether planetary temperature is rising faster or slower than the GCM models and hence declined to answer the senator’s question. Astonishing.
Correct answer: Planetary temperature is not rising and has not risen for 18 years which is a paradox.
She appeared to be stumped by that difficult highly technical question and I has half expecting that she would take her fifth amendment right to refuse to answer as the answer might be incriminating.

Reply to  Beethoven
March 7, 2015 2:12 am

A good illustration of the sort of nincompoops that push the climate hysteria. The EPA stinks, McCarthy is a witless fool if she can peddle that sort of horse grunt to people who can think.

Chris Wright
Reply to  Beethoven
March 7, 2015 4:28 am

Thank you! It also made my weekend.
That woman clearly knew the answers to those basic questions. She did not have the integrity to give a truthful answer. All her answers were evasions. Because the true answers would have been, shall we say, inconvenient.
I assume the chairman asking the questions was a Republican. I strongly hope the next US president is a Republican (I’m British). I don’t agree with all Republican ideas, but it does seem that Republicans tend to be more realistic – and knowledgeable, judging from this clip – about global warming.
Thinking about it, I’m not sure which is more extraordinary: her deceitful and shameful evasions or the chairman’s dogged persistence and knowledge of climate science.
Chris

Craig W
Reply to  Beethoven
March 7, 2015 4:43 am

The insanity of the EPA:
My company was threatened with a fine of nearly two million dollars for wording on a label that could not be read without the use of a magnifying glass.
We were forced to remove the fifty cases from our inventory and dump the product in our dumpster.
The product, manufactured in the US, had a label that contained the unauthorized use of the word “antibacterial”.
Rather than repackage, destroy, or, blackout the offending word the manufacturer exported the product to Mexico. Their distributor sold it back to the US market, it even cleared customs.
In the end we payed hundreds of thousand dollars in legal fees and the EPA extorted twenty thousand during the worst economic downturn since the great depression.

Alan Robertson
Reply to  Beethoven
March 7, 2015 7:26 am

It comes as no surprise that Gina McCarthy is a know- nothing, or that she tried to bluff Sen. Sessions, who actually has a pair.
It was a real treat to get up this morning and watch the video again with a fine cup o’ coffee.

Coach Springer
Reply to  Beethoven
March 7, 2015 7:31 am

Can’t say I enjoy that clip. It makes me sick and then some. But so very important.

TYoke
Reply to  Beethoven
March 7, 2015 12:44 pm

So now we have indisputable evidence that the EPA head is unaware of the gross disagreement between the models and observation over the past 18 years. If the world made any sense, every media organization in the world would be running a story illustrating her ignorance and the actual size of the disagreement.
Instead, pin drop silence from the Fourth Estate.

Robert of Ottawa
Reply to  Beethoven
March 7, 2015 3:22 pm

Correction
A good illustration of the sort of nincompoops ideologues that push the climate hysteria. The EPA stinks, McCarthy is a witless fool if she can peddle that sort of horse grunt to people who can think.

jbird
Reply to  Beethoven
March 8, 2015 6:17 am

No one should be surprised by this woman’s ignorance. Most of us posting here have known for several years that climate alarmism isn’t about saving the planet. It’s about money, power and control.

empire sentry
Reply to  Beethoven
March 9, 2015 7:09 am

EPA HEAD: “What does it matter” if the models don’t work?”
That’s the same as saying the science does not work. Incredible.

Mac the Knife
Reply to  Beethoven
March 6, 2015 8:21 pm

Beautiful!!! The vapid head of EPA forced to use ‘appeal to authority’ evasions rather than answering direct questions of fact vs AGW fiction…..
Just beauuuuuuutiful!

Alan the Brit
Reply to  Beethoven
March 7, 2015 12:42 am

Pettitio principii: Why did AlaGorical spend $4M on sea front property, & why are sea front property prices not tumbling? Last I heard, property prices at Sandbanks, Dorset, UK, were the only thing rising, along with envy at such a fab location to live!!!

1sky1
Reply to  Alan the Brit
March 9, 2015 3:54 pm

Years ago, at a CAGW lecture held at Birch Aquarium in La Jolla, I asked the question: how high up Mt. Soledad should I buy in order to assure that my great grandchildren own beachfront property. Predictably, the response was crickets.

emsnews
Reply to  Beethoven
March 7, 2015 4:26 am

BREAKING NEWS: Google is going to start ranking websites not based on search words or topic but ‘according to science truth rankings’ as designed by global warmists on the West Coast.
Antony Watts was already on FOX TV talking about this terrible decision. Already, if you test Google using various anti-global warming terms you might get one or two websites like this one but mainly you get a bunch of global warmist fanatics lying about the weather telling readers to avoid websites like this one.

Reply to  emsnews
March 7, 2015 2:03 pm

So switch to a different search engine and tell all your friends. I stopped using Google ages ago. Eventually they will get the message.

Unmentionable
Reply to  emsnews
March 7, 2015 8:45 pm

Wayne:
So switch to a different search engine and tell all your friends. I stopped using Google ages ago. Eventually they will get the message.

That is not the point Wayne, this is Google acting with premeditation to deliberately insert the thin-end of the censorship wedge to staunch all informed public debate, and reach around facts to favor a dump truck full of official lies.
First they come for …, then they come for …, then they … there will be an endless stream of this from here on, throttling of inconvenient facts and elimination of informed intellectual discussion.
This is the online equivalent of Google, the biggest corporate on the internet taking a digital filter Molotov cocktail to the global public library and burning it down.
Google is not the internet, it is a corporate the is not happy with the billions $$$ it made from the internet, and now wants to dictate terms of its access and Balkanise information, further accentuating the disconnect on basic issues of public policy.
Alexandria V2.0.
Not acceptable.

jbird
Reply to  emsnews
March 8, 2015 6:30 am

The MSM has lost millions upon millions of viewers as they gradually discovered that the news being presented was either censored by omission, by minimization or by spin. Google will ultimately find out that people who can’t find what they are looking for, because it has been censored, will turn to other search engines.

empire sentry
Reply to  emsnews
March 9, 2015 7:18 am

what a bunch of syndicalist socialists.
Catastrapharians and their sister leftist causes are getting louder, more blatant and have been calling out for assaults and attacks. Its gone too far.
The feedback loop of money from DC, to these groups and then back to DC is fraud on a grand scale.

rms
March 6, 2015 1:10 pm

If climate change is temperature change, and the temperature has not changed, so the water should not have expanded and ther is no extra water from polar melting … Where is the water coming from?

Reply to  rms
March 6, 2015 1:31 pm

You have your explanation within your hypothesis. The Climate is warming, and sea levels are rising, per the physics of thermal expansion and melting land ice.

ralfellis
Reply to  warrenlb
March 6, 2015 1:58 pm

Yeah – but the climate has not warmed for 18 years and Antarctic ice is growing steadily. So where is the thermal expansion and melting ice coming from?

tjfolkerts
Reply to  warrenlb
March 6, 2015 2:19 pm

Antarctic SEA ICE has increased, but since that is temporary floating ice, it has no impact on sea level. The LAND-BASED ice does indeed seem to have decreased, adding net water to the oceans.

Reply to  warrenlb
March 6, 2015 4:35 pm

The climate has been warming slowly the past 18 years, per both satellite and surface measurement, and heat uptake of the oceans continues (over 90% of the incremental heat energy from increased greenhouse effect due to increasing CO2 levels goes in to the oceans).
Also, overall global land ice has been in a multidecadal decline, further raising sea levels.

noaaprogrammer
Reply to  warrenlb
March 6, 2015 5:38 pm

Where did Earth’s water come from in the first place? Ice comet impacts over billions of years – or does the current conjectured flux of such not support the volume?

Robert Austin
Reply to  warrenlb
March 6, 2015 8:22 pm

warrenlb,
You appear to assume that the oceans are in thermal equilibrium whereas (due to their immense thermal inertia) the oceans have been warming since the end of the last ice age and will continue to warm until the next ice age. The important factor is that the RATE of rise has been relatively constant since tide guage measurement began.

William Astley
Reply to  warrenlb
March 6, 2015 8:30 pm

As many noted the European Envisat satellite data unequivocally showed that sea level was falling (fell about 10 cm). Shame the Envisat satellite mysteriously stopped working and odd that the raw sea level data was mysteriously changed to show sea level is increasing.
Odd that material balance (ice melting) plus expansion does not agree with party line sea level rise. The problem however a seagate problem rather than a scientific issue.
P.S. They (the silly warmists) are not going to be able to hide significant in your face global cooling or the drop in atmospheric CO2.
http://joannenova.com.au/2012/05/man-made-sea-level-rises-are-due-to-global-adjustments/

After the Envisat stopped transmitting, the whole series was changed dramatically. In addition, the full length of the data beginning in 2002 is now shown. It appears that Envisat data from 2002-4 shows a fall in sea level, but this dive was not shown until now when the new stronger increase in sea level dominates the picture.

http://spacenews.com/european-space-agency-declares-envisat-satellite-lost/

spangled drongo
Reply to  warrenlb
March 7, 2015 1:44 am

On the east coast of Australia I have several benchmarks and the oldest shows that the highest astronomical tides in recent years are 6 – 12 inches lower than they were during the period from 1946 to 1953.
69 years and still waiting for SLR.

hunter
Reply to  warrenlb
March 7, 2015 3:38 am

slr is not changing its rate of rise in any significant way for the past 150 years.

The Ghost Of Big Jim Cooley
Reply to  warrenlb
March 7, 2015 8:42 am

warrenlb, the thermal expansion from this tiny rise doesn’t gel with sea level rise – it just doesn’t. The last 17 years have been virtually flat.
http://www.woodfortrees.org/graph/wti/from:1998/plot/wti/from:1998/trend

ralfellis
Reply to  warrenlb
March 7, 2015 9:39 am

tjfolk
Antarctic SEA ICE has increased, but since that is temporary floating ice
___________________
Yeah, we all know that tjfolk – you think we are idiots here or something? But are you really claiming that Antarctic sea ice is continuing to increase, and yet no additions have ever been made to land ice accumulations at the same time? Where is your evidence for that implied observation?
R

tjfolkerts
Reply to  warrenlb
March 7, 2015 4:02 pm

“Where is your evidence for that implied observation [ of mass loss from land-based Antarctic ice]?
R, I don’t see what it would be so difficult to imagine that sea ice might be doing one thing while land ice is doing another. There is plenty of info on the internet about this topic. you might start here: http://nsidc.org/cryosphere/sotc/ice_sheets.html

Barry
Reply to  rms
March 6, 2015 2:28 pm

Also the oceans have warmed over the past 18 years, leading to thermal expansion.

RH
Reply to  Barry
March 6, 2015 3:03 pm
Bart
Reply to  Barry
March 6, 2015 3:06 pm

I seem to recall a report highlighted at WUWT a few years back estimating a significant amount of sea level rise from the draining of land based aquifers.

Reg Nelson
Reply to  Barry
March 6, 2015 5:23 pm

Really? And what data is there to support that? How many fixed location measuring stations are there in the oceans? And are they evenly spatially distributed?
I’m not aware of any. Scientifically how do you support your statement?

rogerknights
Reply to  Barry
March 6, 2015 7:02 pm

@Reg Nelson
The amount of groundwater extracted annually is well-known (relatively), so it’s easy to compute how much it adds to rising sea levels. (IIRC, it’s about 25%.)

Jimbo
Reply to  Barry
March 7, 2015 4:13 am

Even after ‘necessary adjustments’ no acceleration in the rate of sea level rise has been detected. So what’s up? Where is my thermal expansion? Where did the glacial meltdown go? These are devastating results for alarmists. Sea level has been rising for over 15,000 years.

Letter To Nature – 23 March 2014
The rate of sea-level rise
Anny Cazenave et al
…..Here we present an analysis based on sea-level data from the altimetry record of the past ~20 years that separates interannual natural variability in sea level from the longer-term change probably related to anthropogenic global warming. The most prominent signature in the global mean sea level interannual variability is caused by El Niño–Southern Oscillation, through its impact on the global water cycle13, 14, 15, 16. We find that when correcting for interannual variability, the past decade’s slowdown of the global mean sea level disappears, leading to a similar rate of sea-level rise (of 3.3 ± 0.4 mm yr−1)…..
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v4/n5/full/nclimate2159.html
[Pre and post adjustments]
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v4/n5/carousel/nclimate2159-f1.jpg

Jimbo
Reply to  rms
March 7, 2015 3:44 am

warrenlb, I do hope that you explain to alarmists that:
a) Sea level has been rising for over 15,000 years.
b) There is no evidence of an acceleration in the rate of sea level rise this century. Some people argue that there has been a deceleration.

Abstract – January 2014
Global sea level trend during 1993–2012
[Highlights
GMSL started decelerated rising since 2004 with rising rate 1.8 ± 0.9 mm/yr in 2012.
Deceleration is due to slowdown of ocean thermal expansion during last decade.
• Recent ENSO events introduce large uncertainty of long-term trend estimation.]
… It is found that the GMSL rises with the rate of 3.2 ± 0.4 mm/yr during 1993–2003 and started decelerating since 2004 to a rate of 1.8 ± 0.9 mm/yr in 2012. This deceleration is mainly due to the slowdown of ocean thermal expansion in the Pacific during the last decade, as a part of the Pacific decadal-scale variability, while the land-ice melting is accelerating the rise of the global ocean mass-equivalent sea level….
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921818113002397
=============
Letter To Nature – 23 March 2014
The rate of sea-level rise
Present-day sea-level rise is a major indicator of climate change1. Since the early 1990s, sea level rose at a mean rate of ~3.1 mm yr-1 (refs 2, 3). However, over the last decade a slowdown of this rate, of about 30%, has been recorded4, 5, 6, 7, 8. It coincides with a plateau in Earth’s mean surface temperature evolution, known as the recent pause in warming1, 9, 10, 11, 12……
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/v4/n5/full/nclimate2159.html
=============
http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/pubs/ipcc2007/fig68.jpg

Sleepalot
Reply to  rms
March 7, 2015 6:48 am

Sea-level should always rise due to the perpetual erosion of land.

F. Ross
Reply to  rms
March 7, 2015 1:47 pm

Local isostasy?

Paul B
Reply to  rms
March 8, 2015 5:42 am

Maybe the soil of the earth ( being compressible ) is sinking.

Dave in Canmore
March 6, 2015 1:12 pm

…so like thousands of interested amateurs, they looked data already available online and describe what was there with some AGW biffle-gab thrown in for good measure. Man, I work too hard to make a living!

velcro
March 6, 2015 1:13 pm

So if mean high water rises that would imply that mean low water has dropped, to give the greater range, and vv. Implied in the release, but not stated.

wayne Job
Reply to  velcro
March 7, 2015 1:12 am

Research the british admiralty”s program in the nineteenth century as big as the space program, all around the world they marked low tide dry rocks and catalogued the lot, many are around Australia, they are still dry at low tide. One easily assessable site in Tasmania has high and low tide marks nothing has changed.

Reply to  wayne Job
March 7, 2015 4:45 am

Good point. However, and here are the words:
“We find that at many sites around the world SIGNIFICANT changes in tidal levels have already occurred, and at some sites the magnitude of the changes are comparable with the increase in global mean sea level through the 20th century.
“For example, increases in average high water of over ONE MILLIMETRE per year have occurred around the world, including Calais in France, Manilla in the Philippines, Wilmington in the USA and Broome in Australia….”
I’m having trouble understanding why 1 mm (0.001 Metres) is significant.

rgbatduke
March 6, 2015 1:13 pm

Compared to average sea level increases over the last century known exactly how? I mean, they’ve got to be kidding me. Before the satellite era, there is no data, nor any possible way of obtaining data, about tide levels or mid-ocean sea levels. The only way we can infer anything at all about the sea level in the year (say) 1925) is to look at coastal tide gauges. And we cannot infer anything precise or accurate from that because of the comparative paucity of the record and because the record does not and cannot retroactively correct for things like land uplift and subsidence, variations in the trade winds and pressure that cause water to pile up (or not) on certain coasts, local variations due to thermohaline circulation and thermal expansion not connected with any secular change. Our beliefs about past SLR are inferences made from the tide gauge record at the coasts because we can’t make precise measurements mid-ocean — even if you tether a tide gauge to the ocean bottom with a perfectly unstretchable rope, the slightest current shift and the natural catenary shape of a massive rope would cause errors much larger than any possible measured effect.
So I have no idea what they think they are doing. Creating a model that shows that the model fits the model, I imagine. Past tide gauge data matches up remarkably well with the average of past tide gauge data. I am profoundly surprised.
rgb

David A
Reply to  rgbatduke
March 6, 2015 3:23 pm

R.B., adding to the complexity is 16 year lunar cycles.

old construction worker
Reply to  rgbatduke
March 6, 2015 5:40 pm

Bingo, We have a winner.

Chip Javert
Reply to  rgbatduke
March 6, 2015 7:27 pm

Tree rings to model sea levels.
I mean we got millions (maybe billions) of trees RIGHT NOW, and we’ve been growing trees an awfully long time, so maybe trillions of trees in earth’s history.
Surely somebody could cut & paste some “proxy” tree ring data for sea levels. How hard can this be?
The fact that trees are not in the ocean and rings have absolutely nothing to do with sea level just proves tree rings are objective.
Why somebody else hasn’t thought of this is really disturbing. I mean, this is settled science.
/sarc (barf)

tjfolkerts
Reply to  rgbatduke
March 7, 2015 11:30 am

Robert, I usually have a lot of respect for what you have to say, but here I think you fall way short of your usual quality.
RGB says: “So I have no idea what they think they are doing. “
It might help if you (and other readers) actually read the original paper
, rather than just speculating. The paper can be found here. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2014EF000282/pdf
“Before the satellite era, there is no data, nor any possible way of obtaining data, about tide levels or mid-ocean sea levels.
Not a problem, since they make no claims about mid-ocean sea levels, nor do they consider how mid-ocean sea levels might be affecting the tides and any given coastal location.
“Compared to average sea level increases over the last century known exactly how?”
By looking at the records from each location individually. They have decades of data at a given location. They can easily fit a trend line to that series of data points to see if that site has had increasing, decreasing or steady mean values. They are NOT comparing with any sort of global mean sea level changes.
“Creating a model that shows that the model fits the model, I imagine.”
Again, why “imagine” rather than looking what they actually wrote? You are following the clear path toward strawman arguments. They do a bit of curve fitting to deal with things like spring tides/neap tides, but there is no “modeling” of global sea levels.
“Our beliefs about past SLR are inferences made from the tide gauge record at the coasts because we can’t make precise measurements mid-ocean”
Then it is a good thing that they were using those tide gauge records at the coast, and not some model of unknown mid-ocean sea level. They are basically saying “We have the long record at a given location on a given coast. Let’s see what is happening there. Then lets do that 220 times at different locations around the world.”
Basically they are find that the range between high tide and low tide is getting larger at many locations and smaller at fewer locations. The tides are not simply rising over all, they are getting more extreme (more often than they are getting less extreme). And since people are often interested in the highest high tide, having larger ranges on top of rising sea level would result in higher high ties that would be predicted simply from any increase in mean sea level. Thus recognizing that the RANGES are changing and not simply the mean will allow better understanding of what might happen in the future.

knr
Reply to  tjfolkerts
March 8, 2015 3:06 am

“Our beliefs about past SLR are inferences made from the tide gauge record at the coasts because we can’t make precise measurements mid-ocean”
and form that you get mm levels of accuracy, and you believe that is possible , how ?

Stephen Richards
March 6, 2015 1:13 pm

I worked with Southampton à l’epoque. This is unbecoming of them. It’s shit science yet again OR bad PR writing.

Reply to  Stephen Richards
March 6, 2015 1:32 pm

Or its correct.

Reply to  warrenlb
March 6, 2015 3:28 pm

It seems to be not wrong.
But still meaningless.
The world has been warming since the last Ice Age The glaciers aren’t advancing anymore (good).
The sea level has been rising consistently. So the glaciers are melting. As we should expect. This leads to three conclusions:
1) The next ice age hasn’t started.
2) The land movements up and down are either too slow to affect the measurements or are dwarfed by the change from melt and expansion.
3) The rate of sea level rise has not increased or decreased with the increase in atmospheric CO2. QED: CO2 i not that significant

Reply to  warrenlb
March 6, 2015 3:39 pm

god is angry with you for choosing the wrong religion, warren, or for choosing no religion. You’re going to burn in hell. How do you know that’s not true? Your logic demands a life of repentance, warren.
(There’s as much data proving the burn in hell hypothesis as there is that CO2 emissions have warmed the climate. And, after all, all the best religion-science models agree.)

Reply to  warrenlb
March 6, 2015 4:37 pm

Frank.. Where is your vaunted scientific analysis? It seems to have fled, only to be replaced by sputtering and personal attack. Maybe that’s why you didn’t get your submittal accepted.

Stephen Richards
Reply to  warrenlb
March 7, 2015 12:34 am

Try explaining how it is correct using real genuine facts. RGB already blew it out of the water hee hee. Stop trolling and gives us facts. If you know what they are , of course.

Reply to  warrenlb
March 7, 2015 10:10 am

My comment directly extrapolates your logic, warren. As you call that sputtering, then by your own diagnosis that’s what you’re doing.
The (not) science of your position was refuted elsewhere and more than once.

PiperPaul
Reply to  Stephen Richards
March 6, 2015 4:50 pm

Much of the problem is how much PR is used by the climageddonites.

A C Osborn
March 6, 2015 1:14 pm

Increases in mean high water of approximately half a millimetre per year occur at UK sites, such as Heysham, Millport and Port Patrick, all of which are around the Irish Sea. Decreases in mean high water and tidal range occur at many sites around the UK, including Milford Haven, Lowestoft and Ilfracombe.

GeeJam
Reply to  A C Osborn
March 7, 2015 4:09 am

My thoughts exactly. I think I’ve got this right. From their claim, I deduce that the UK may be gradually (very gradually) tilting downward and will eventually fall in to the Irish Sea bit by bit as the sea laps up around the north western coastline. This must be true because, from their dataset of 220 sea level records, they point out that coastal towns further south are witnessing a decline in average high water. So, whilst the Irish Sea is seeing average high water rise, the Celtic Sea and North Sea are going down. Even more bizarre is that Calais, just 19 miles away from the UK (on the other side of the English Channel), is witnessing a one millimetre per year average high water rise!
http://i.imgur.com/788Yqfk.jpg
If the figures are true . . . .
For the Irish Sea
Half a millimetre rise per year means 1cm every 20 years.
1cm every 20 years means a 10 cm rise in 200 years.
10 cm rise every 200 years means a whopping 1 x metre rise will occur in 2,000 years time.
So, in 20,000 years time, the coastline of north western UK will be under 10 x metres of water!
For the English Channel
The French side (Calais) will see a one millimetre rise per year meaning that, in 1,000 years from now, they will be under 1 x metre of water.
Conclusion
Climate Change is causing the sea to BEND. Can I have my grant money now?
Final Thought:
Despite trying to read the full Southampton University report, it would appear that the paper is “currently unavailable while we conduct essential maintenance”. I smell a rat.

rms
Reply to  GeeJam
March 7, 2015 5:14 am

It is my understanding that the UK landmass is bending/tilting down at to right.

The Ghost Of Big Jim Cooley
Reply to  GeeJam
March 7, 2015 8:45 am

rms. Yes, read this years ago. Scotland was depressed(!) by the weight of ice during the last ice peak, and is still rebounding. I should think it’s small though.

old44
Reply to  GeeJam
March 7, 2015 9:02 am

I was in Scotland two years ago Ghost of Big Jim, it snowed on the first day of summer, wouldn’t you be depressed.

Neil
March 6, 2015 1:23 pm

I don’t get it. If sea levels have risen, why have tide levels not changed?

Barry
Reply to  Neil
March 6, 2015 2:31 pm

You don’t get it because Anthony intentionally posted a confusing headline. All this study has found is that the average difference between high tides and low tides has not changed — both have risen. This would seem obvious as long as the orbit of the moon hasn’t changed. (And I haven’t heard any AGW theory suggesting we are changing the moon’s orbit, although there is probably some whacko out there who has said this.)

David A
Reply to  Barry
March 6, 2015 3:32 pm

Barry, see the link above. You are the wacko. There is an 18.5 year lunar cycle that has long been a study of interest affecting tides, weather, ocean currents etc.

David A
Reply to  Barry
March 6, 2015 3:55 pm

Barry, for your “wacko” consumption…
(The lunar cycle consists of a 2.2 cm median amplitude)
Sea-level rise rates have become important drivers for policy makers dealing with the long-term protection of coastal
populations. Scenario studies suggest that an acceleration in sea-level rise is imminent. The anticipated acceleration is
hard to detect because of spatial and temporal variability, which consequently, have become important research topics. A
known decadal-scale variation is the 18.6-year nodal cycle. Here, we show how failing to account for the nodal cycle
resulted in an overestimation of Dutch sea-level rise. The nodal cycle is present across the globe with a varying phase and
a median amplitude of 2.2 cm

David A
Reply to  Barry
March 6, 2015 3:56 pm
noaaprogrammer
Reply to  Barry
March 6, 2015 5:53 pm

I heard somewhere that the moon is receding from the earth at about 4 cm. per year. Over time, that would decrease the average difference between high and low tides.

u.k.(us)
Reply to  Barry
March 6, 2015 7:04 pm

“intentionally”, I think not, but confusing yep.

Mac the Knife
Reply to  Barry
March 6, 2015 9:12 pm

David,
Thanks for the link!
I learned something today about the 18.5 year long sinusoidal cycle of lunar effects on earth ocean tide levels.
Mac

David A
Reply to  Barry
March 7, 2015 4:27 am

Mac you are welcome. E.M. Smith did some good work on this as well if you are interested.
(Barry, sorry for the snark)

Reply to  Barry
March 7, 2015 5:38 am

Я тоже не слышал об изменении орбиты Луны но this Changes Everything по принципу домино потому,что космос это система все частицы в которой движутся по своим законам синхронно с другими по этому любое изменение любой частицы системы приведёт к её нарушению.Рост внутреннего ядра http://go.nature.com/w6iks3,http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-31322817 деформируя кору изнутри http://shar.es/lnjxx0 меняет форму Earth.От формы планеты зависит её прецессия,либрация и скорость вращения вокруг своей оси.Изменение этих показателей и учитывая,что формирование Луны связано с ядром Earth http://www.ipgp.fr/pages/02050408.php однобокий рост внутреннего ядра неминуемо нарушит равновесие в системе и сместит центр тяжести в системе Земля-Луна и Луна начнёт приближаться к Earth как к самому близкому источнику притяжения.На monumental Earth Changes также указывает изменение гравитации http://news/discovery.com/earth/global-warmingearths-gravity-dips-from-antarcticice-loss-141001.htm.Earth уже изменила форму своей орбиты http://wp.me/p7y41vDW.
[I also heard about changing the orbit of the moon but this Changes Everything in a domino effect because the cosmos is a system in which all particles are moving under its own laws in sync with the other on this, any change of any particle system will lead to its inner core narusheniyu.Rost http: / /go.nature.com/w6iks3,http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-31322817 deforming crust inside http://shar.es/lnjxx0 changes the shape of the planet depends Earth.Ot form its precession, libration and the speed of rotation around its osi.Izmenenie these indicators and given that the formation of the Moon is associated with the nucleus Earth http://www.ipgp.fr/pages/02050408.php lopsided growth of the inner core will inevitably disrupt the balance in the system and shift the center of gravity in the system Earth-Moon and the Moon will begin to approach the Earth as to the closest source prityazheniya.Na monumental Earth Changes also indicates the change in gravity http://news/discovery.com/earth/global-warmingearths-gravity-dips-from-antarcticice-loss-141001.htm.Earth has changed the shape of its orbit http://wp.me/p7y41vDW.%5D

rd50
Reply to  Barry
March 7, 2015 6:20 am

To David A at 3.56
Thank you for this link. This is top notch science. I guess we can expect such on sea level concerns from the Netherlands.
I get two things from the them.
1. They wrote “Coastal policy shifting from observation-based reactions to scenario-based anticipation (Ministerie Van Verkeer en Waterstat, 2009) it is, therefore interesting to compare trends with predicted rates.” I love the way they wrote “scenario-based anticipation”. Indeed.
2. I don’t know who did the statistical analysis but it is absolutely top notch. The presentation of their results, including not only the confidence interval, but much more importantly the prediction interval, is perfect. This places the IPCC data analysis to shame and I may add many silly plots I see on climate blogs, and yes including this one on occasions.

nankerphelge
March 6, 2015 1:26 pm

“The cause of these changes is complex and appears to be a combination of mechanisms from local to global, with the primary driver being the rise in sea level associated with climate change,” States that it is complex, local and global and then simplifies it – climate change!!!! Says it all really. Can’t wait for the follow up and review in 10 years!!

albertalad
March 6, 2015 1:27 pm

When exactly has the earth’s ocean water level ever been static? For numerous reasons ice at the poles waxes and wanes over time as it has always done. Historically the planet has experienced sea level rise up to 200 meters – what’s new? We’re in a interglacial period. Moreover, plate tectonics contribute to sea level rise and fall as it does on land. In fact where I live and work in Alberta was once part of the North American Inland Sea. We dig up aquatic dinosaurs from that period of time at the oil sands – all can be seen at the Tyrrell Museum in Alberta, Canada. But it appears it is the usual answer to all the problems on this planet – climate change. Who didn’t know that was the answer?

D.I.
March 6, 2015 1:28 pm

Hope they explained the maths like they did here,

rgbatduke
Reply to  D.I.
March 6, 2015 1:44 pm

Which is a really, really good video and I suggest that ANYBODY who wants to talk about SLR watch it if only so that they can gain some slight appreciation for how difficult a problem it is now, with GRACE, GPS, and satellite-based telemetry. Suggesting that tidal gauge data from 1890 is sufficient to resolve SLR to high precision is intrinsically absurd. However, the deepest problem with the paper is that I, at least, cannot see any possible way that they could know the sea level relative or absolute in 1890 by any means but tide gauge data. So stating that tide gauge data corresponds, on average, to our beliefs about average sea level in 1890 is pretty much like saying:
Yes, stupid, the average is obtained from the tide gauge data so you betcha that there is a correspondence between the two right up to the point where we had a second way of measure SLR via satellites. You can see the two records together here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Trends_in_global_average_absolute_sea_level,_1870-2008_%28US_EPA%29.png
and — wait for it — we have a second way of measure it only since roughly 1993. So allowing for the most generous interpretation of “the last century”, for 22 years out of 100 we have some vague clue about global sea level obtained from global observations from space, although there is plenty that could be said about that and the difficulty of comparing satellite oranges with tidal gauge apples (see the video, you’ll see what I mean on both sides of the problem). Before 1993 — 78 years of it to 1915 — we only know SL via tidal gauges with any precision at all and hence there cannot possibly be any surprise that average SLR corresponds well, on average, with tide gauge data.
What I can’t tell is whether the people who published this study are that clueless, or if they think they have some way of contacting the dead with a ouija board or using coral reefs in the pacific as some sort of proxy for non-coastal SLR. Oh, wait, coral reefs are coastal, back to ouija.
rgb

Reply to  rgbatduke
March 6, 2015 2:53 pm

Satellite altimetry isn’t so hot either. The specs for the newest bird (Jason 2) are available on line. The design repeatable accuracy at any location is to within 3.5 cm. (you have to take into account confounding stuff like waves, since the sea is almost never level anywhere, doh!). The design precision is a random drift of not more than 1mm/year. Essay Pseudo Precision goes into some of the ludicrous recent papers purporting to explain a possible recent SLR slowdown based on Jason 2 and its predecessors— since warmunist dogma says SLR is accelerating. How can anyone know, if the average rate before an artificial GIS correction ( for water volume, not sea level) is and has been about 1.8mm/ yr, versus repeatability of 35mm and annual drift of 1mm?
Separating flysh*t from ground pepper. And that is before the closure problem, wherein the sum of estimated ice sheet loss plus thermosteric rise never sum to more than 2/3 of supposed SLR of 1.8mm/yr—that is, unless you suppose SLR has slowed to less than 1.4mm/yr, and that either ice loss has accelerated, or thermosteric rise has accelerated, (or both) despite the now 18 year pause. Contradictions wrapped in contradictions. Riddles wrapped in enigmas. This awful paper calls for more research- whole careers spent wallowing at taxpayer expense in imprecise data with error bars an order of magnitude larger than the annual results, in order to create climate alarm about SLR man has been adapting to for centuries. Defunding would be appropriate.

D.I.
Reply to  rgbatduke
March 6, 2015 3:27 pm

This is the problem with climatologists,they seem to have ‘Tunnel Vision’ and speculate on findings from one observation without looking at the broader picture.

Mac the Knife
Reply to  rgbatduke
March 6, 2015 9:31 pm

Rud,
How can anyone know, if the average rate before an artificial GIS correction ( for water volume, not sea level) is and has been about 1.8mm/ yr, versus repeatability of 35mm and annual drift of 1mm?
Separating flysh*t from ground pepper.

Wow! Didn’t realize it was that bad….
Mac

3x2
Reply to  rgbatduke
March 7, 2015 9:04 am

Yes, it really does illustrate the problems involved in measuring sea levels. To start talking about mm since 1850 does nothing to promote credibility. As someone pointed out earlier, the UK is a case in point … Parts rising, parts falling, erosion, deposition. What are we measuring?

Reply to  rgbatduke
March 7, 2015 5:27 pm

I’ll take tidal gauge data for my sea level, thank you.

Richard G
Reply to  D.I.
March 8, 2015 12:32 pm

Gravitational tidal forces induce resonant waves and interference patterns in not only the oceans but also the earth crust and mantle (Earth tides), and atmosphere. The Moon orbit is dynamic, ocillating near and far and north and south, in and out of faze with the sun’s gravity. Quite simple really, no? Relatively.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_tide

Reply to  Richard G
March 14, 2015 3:02 pm

phase
Everyone searches for one, stable accurate metric to relate the others to. So far, no luck.

nankerphelge
March 6, 2015 1:32 pm

Oh, I just got the science behind the findings. They are using 220 sea level records from around the world. Under the Australian BoM methodology they can use any 220 records to support their findings and when reviewing they can use a different set of 220. Now that is real science.

March 6, 2015 1:36 pm

It seems Mr Watts has the title of his article wrong. Here is what the article actually says: “Scientists from the University of Southampton have found that ocean tides have changed significantly over the last century at many coastal locations around the world.” and “Increases in high tide levels and the tidal range were found to have been similar to increases in average sea level at several locations.”
What was he thinking?

Chip Javert
Reply to  warrenlb
March 6, 2015 7:42 pm

warrenlb
The answer to your snarky question probably lies in this quote from Anthony’s comment”…average sea levels are rising; but tide levels, have generally been considered to have undergone little change on decadal time scales…”.
Apparently, unlike every other computer on the planet, yours didn’t show the highlighting on this (and only this) text.

Reply to  Chip Javert
March 6, 2015 8:24 pm

My post was not snarky, nor intended to be so. It points out a contradiction between Watt’s title, vs what the article actually says.
And the highlighted text you reference refers to what has been considered to be true PRIOR to this new research, ie. that tides haven’t been rising. The entire point of the article is to cite new research that concludes that tides ARE rising with sea levels.
The highlighted text is poorly worded –and it confused Mr Watts, apparently.

Louis
Reply to  Chip Javert
March 6, 2015 8:45 pm

Chip, I’m with Warrenlb on this. To say that tides “have undergone little change,” and then say the tides “have changed significantly” is a contradiction. The highlighted text talks about what has “generally been considered” about tide levels previous to this study. Because of this assumption, “tides are not accounted for in many practical applications…” So what they are saying now is that their research refutes the old assumption and shows that “ocean tides have changed significantly.” I think Anthony took the highlighted text as a conclusion from the study when it appears to be a poorly stated previous assumption made by scientists that they are refuting. This study is actually being used to overturn that old assumption. Why else would the lead author, Robert Mawdsley, say this:
“We find that at many sites around the world significant changes in tidal levels have already occurred, and at some sites the magnitude of the changes are comparable with the increase in global mean sea level through the 20th century.”
I’m sorry, but that doesn’t match what Anthony said in the title. You can’t read the study’s conclusion that the magnitude of the changes are “comparable” with the increase in sea level, and then say “average sea levels rising; but tide levels, have undergone little change.” That is a contradiction. One of them has to be wrong.

markx
Reply to  Chip Javert
March 6, 2015 10:09 pm

Yeah, I know the psper is c**p, but Anthony’s headline is pretty dodgy…..

Stephen Richards
Reply to  Chip Javert
March 7, 2015 12:36 am

Louis
It’s a blind by warrenlb. Strawman, irrelevent.

Louis
Reply to  Chip Javert
March 7, 2015 12:11 pm

Steven, I’m not saying the paper is correct. I think it has problems. I’m just saying that Anthony’s headline does not reflect what the paper is actually trying to claim.

Reply to  Chip Javert
March 8, 2015 6:44 am

Warrens a troll but bere i think he right i thought title was miss leading

Larry Hamlin
March 6, 2015 1:45 pm

Excellent article. The huge discrepancy between ocean sea level rise measurements usually involving complex use of satellite survey information with claims that the rate of sea level rise is increasing is inconsistent with and sharply contradicted by global wide NOAA tide gauge data.
The NOAA tide gauge data which addresses the measurement of the rate of sea level rise at coastal locations shows no acceleration of sea level rise rates anywhere in the world with many of these measurement locations having records of 100 years duration or longer.
The latest NOAA tide gauge data regarding the rate of sea level rise updated through 2013 is addressed at:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/07/16/latest-noaa-mean-sea-level-trend-data-through-2013-confirms-lack-of-sea-level-rise-acceleration-2/
This article notes the following regarding rate of sea level rise assessments in the UN IPCC AR5 WGI report and discrepancies between NOAA tide gauge data and satellite ocean sea level rise measurements:
“The UN IPCC AR5 WG1 report claims that:
“It is very likely that the mean rate of global averaged sea level rise was 1.7 [1.5 to 1.9] mm yr–1 between 1901 and 2010, 2.0 [1.7 to 2.3] mm yr–1 between 1971 and 2010, and 3.2 [2.8 to 3.6] mm yr–1 between 1993 and 2010. Tide-gauge and satellite altimeter data are consistent regarding the higher rate of the latter period. It is likely that similarly high rates occurred between 1920 and 1950.” (3)
As discussed in detail below the latest mean sea level rise trend data from NOAA simply does not support IPCC assertions that mean sea level rise trends are increasing since 1971. The IPCC report describes the fact that individual location tide gauge measurement values can vary significantly from global average values (4) generally because of the consequences of location specific topography and geology related impacts.
But what the UN IPCC AR5 WG1 report completely fails to address is the fact that the long duration period NOAA mean sea level trend data behavior represent constant and unchanging linear records over time which present major challenges to IPCC claims of increasing sea level rise rates since 1971. The NOAA data is simply unsupportive of IPCC claims of increasing rates of sea level rise in recent decades.
Furthermore the unchanging and constant linear NOAA mean sea level trend records from worldwide tide gauge station data versus the UN claims of increasing rates of sea level rise based on satellite sea level data suggests the latter outcome is driven by anomalous analytical artifacts associated with the measurement and measurement analysis methodology not reflective of real world outcomes.”
Those pushing climate alarmists views of sea level rise acceleration have no support at all for these claims based on extensive empirical sea level rise data measured at hundreds of coastal locations worldwide.

Admin
March 6, 2015 1:46 pm

Personally I blame the Southampton geothermal plant, for any change to tide in Southampton – the geothermal plant is extracting heat from deep under the city, at a cost of millions of dollars, to power a single shopping centre. No doubt the thermal contraction from the reduced heat load will cause the “tide” to appear to rise… 🙂
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geothermal_power_in_the_United_Kingdom#Southampton_District_Heating_Scheme

Bevan
Reply to  Eric Worrall
March 6, 2015 3:16 pm

>>>”…at a cost of millions of dollars, to power a single shopping centre, ”
Eric, this is untrue. I don’t think you even read the wikipedia article your posted? You seem to have a habit of posting misinformation here.
From the wikipedia article you posted:
“The scheme now heats a number of buildings in the city centre, including the Southampton Civic Centre, the WestQuay shopping centre, Royal South Hants Hospital, Solent University and the Carnival offices”
“The electricity generated from the scheme is used by Associated British Ports via a private electrical connection to the Port of Southampton, with any surplus electricity sold back to the grid”
Or from http://www.cofely-gdfsuez.co.uk/solutions/district-energy/district-energy-schemes/southampton-district-energy/ :
“Users include TV studios, a hospital, a university, a shopping centre, a civic centre, residential buildings and several hotels.”

Admin
Reply to  Bevan
March 6, 2015 5:48 pm

Its a pathetic waste of money Bevan. OK so a few other buildings get a bit of scratch sometimes. They’re a long way from powering the city. The geothermal plant is a white elephant, if it was economically viable they would have built more of them.
I used to live in Southampton, the plant was a curiosity, nothing more.

March 6, 2015 2:12 pm
lee
Reply to  Bubba Cow
March 6, 2015 11:04 pm

Well that’s a good study. Wyndham has moved from the top end of WA to the NSW South Coast (fig 9). Do I need to look further?

Roy Jones
March 6, 2015 2:15 pm

The next IPCC report will use the two photographs above this article to show how sea level rise is so serious that high tide has now reached the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

PhysicistsGroup
March 6, 2015 2:16 pm

Sea levels have nothing to do with carbon dioxide.
The reasons for the pause are all to do with natural cycles. Back radiation does not raise surface temperatures, so it has nothing to do with carbon dioxide levels. At Mauna where those levels are measured there has been no increase in temperature since 1959 as shown here.
To really understand what is happening you need an understanding of entropy and thermodynamic equilibrium. Without such, you are likely to be totally misled by those who likewise don’t understand thermodynamics.
When a ball is falling through a vacuum tube gravitational potential energy is converted to kinetic energy (just as happens to molecules in flight between collisions) and total energy remains constant. However, entropy increases and that is what the Second Law of Thermodynamics tells us.
As a result of that law, a stable density gradient forms in a planet’s troposphere. This happens when, in any horizontal plane, the pressure from below equals the pressure from above.
In Kinetic Theory we understand that pressure is caused by molecules striking a wall or imaginary boundary. Temperature is proportional to mean molecular kinetic energy and pressure is proportional to the product of temperature and density.
Hence, when we have thermodynamic equilibrium (with maximum entropy) we have equal numbers of molecules going upwards across a horizontal boundary as there are going downwards. In addition, when molecules are about to collide they have equal kinetic energy. This situation occurs when the sum (PE+KE) is constant even at different altitudes, and so that is why we have a temperature gradient.
As I said, this state of thermodynamic equilibrium also has a density gradient. This is because there is a slightly greater propensity for molecules to go downwards than upwards due to the fact that gravity curves their path if there is any horizontal component in their motion.
Now, because the temperature gradient is an equilibrium state, then we get what happens in the diagrams at the foot of this page which we suggest you now read.

PhysicistsGroup
March 6, 2015 2:18 pm

Sea levels have nothing to do with carbon dioxide.
The reasons for the pause are all to do with natural cycles. Back radiation does not raise surface temperatures, so it has nothing to do with carbon dioxide levels. At Mauna where those levels are measured there has been no increase in temperature since 1959 as shown here.
To really understand what is happening you need an understanding of entropy and thermodynamic equilibrium. Without such, you are likely to be totally misled by those who likewise don’t understand thermodynamics.
When a ball is falling through a vacuum tube gravitational potential energy is converted to kinetic energy (just as happens to molecules in flight between collisions) and total energy remains constant. However, entropy increases and that is what the Second Law of Thermodynamics tells us.
As a result of that law, a stable density gradient forms in a planet’s troposphere. This happens when, in any horizontal plane, the pressure from below equals the pressure from above.
In Kinetic Theory we understand that pressure is caused by molecules striking a wall or imaginary boundary. Temperature is proportional to mean molecular kinetic energy and pressure is proportional to the product of temperature and density.
Hence, when we have thermodynamic equilibrium (with maximum entropy) we have equal numbers of molecules going upwards across a horizontal boundary as there are going downwards. In addition, when molecules are about to collide they have equal kinetic energy. This situation occurs when the sum (PE+KE) is constant even at different altitudes, and so that is why we have a temperature gradient.
As I said, this state of thermodynamic equilibrium also has a density gradient. This is because there is a slightly greater propensity for molecules to go downwards than upwards due to the fact that gravity curves their path if there is any horizontal component in their motion.
Now, because the temperature gradient is an equilibrium state, then we get downward convective heat transfer when that equilibrium is disturbed by newly absorbed solar radiation in the upper troposphere. This heat is what supplies that energy which James Hansen thought back radiation did.

Reply to  PhysicistsGroup
March 7, 2015 8:26 am

You are correct in your statement of the 2nd Law but you overlook details of the greenhouse effect: When GHG molecules in the upper troposphere absorb IR thermal radiation leaving the Planet, they re-radiate IR in all directions. So the re-radiated IR returns to the lower troposphere and the surface of the planet, warming both. In order for convection to play a role in this phenomenon in the upper troposphere, the GHG molecules would have to convert IR to kinetic energy; but they don’t.

A C Osborn
Reply to  warrenlb
March 7, 2015 12:04 pm

“for convection to play a role in this phenomenon in the upper troposphere, the GHG molecules would have to convert IR to kinetic energy; but they don’t.”
Of course they do, are you trying to suggest that they do not collide with other atoms?
Funny how that at night those DWIR photons make things COLDER isn’t it?

George Lawson
March 6, 2015 2:23 pm

As a non scientist, but someone who can read and assimilate data and see that nothing has really changed regarding climate over the last twenty years, can anyone explain to me how on earth the level of the sea can be determined to half or one millimeter? We have two tidal movements a day, we have winds that move sea volumes from one area to another. We have temperature changes in different areas of the oceans that impact on volume, and different from the previous year, We have the Gulf stream changing from year to year. We have wave movements that are for ever changing across the world and we have El Ninos and other periodic weather changes globally, and these so called ‘experts’ tell us that the sea has risen by half a centimetre. Just how do they come to their conclusions?

George Lawson
Reply to  George Lawson
March 6, 2015 2:27 pm

Sorry mod, The last line should have read Millimeter not centimater. could you change it please.

Bohdan Burban
Reply to  George Lawson
March 6, 2015 2:54 pm

Then there are tsunamis …

George Lawson
Reply to  Bohdan Burban
March 7, 2015 2:42 am

Yes, and I did not mention the different levels of melting and freezing of the seas at the Poles which vary from year to year.

Reply to  George Lawson
March 6, 2015 3:02 pm

George, you got the essence. They cannot. They pretend to, since a warming world melts ice and drastically raises sea level and that is a catastrophe since Tuvalu will drown (but not if Darwin’s 1834 observations about coral atolls are correct). Essay Pseudo Precision outs the specifics.

BFL
Reply to  Rud Istvan
March 6, 2015 3:53 pm

I call it statistical modeling devination.

George Devries Klein, PhD, PG, FGSA
March 6, 2015 2:26 pm

Translation of the following partial quote by Dr. Wells:
““Further research is required to more fully understand ….”
means SEND MO E MONEY
[Or, more precisely, “SEND ME MO MONEY” ? .mod]

JimS
Reply to  George Devries Klein, PhD, PG, FGSA
March 6, 2015 2:29 pm

That is about it, George.

Reply to  George Devries Klein, PhD, PG, FGSA
March 6, 2015 5:27 pm

Exactly…that is the main reason for this useless research. A rise of 1mm per year is hardly worth current research funds let alone endless appeals for “further research”.

March 6, 2015 2:30 pm

I am confused. The article states:
“For example, increases in average high water of over one millimetre per year have occurred around the world, including Calais in France, Manilla in the Philippines, Wilmington in the USA and Broome in Australia. Increases in mean high water of approximately half a millimetre per year occur at UK sites, such as Heysham, Millport and Port Patrick, all of which are around the Irish Sea. Decreases in mean high water and tidal range occur at many sites around the UK, including Milford Haven, Lowestoft and Ilfracombe. This has potential impacts on energy extraction, such as the tidal lagoon in Swansea Bay.”
For SLR rates of +1 mm per year to (undocumented) values below 0.0 mm per year. Yet the NOAA data quoted in Mr Hamlin’s comment indicate that actual data indicate no acceleration in SLR worldwide. So the values quoted in the article must be local values (right?) while the NOAA data are averages? And the IPCC values are fiction?

George Lawson
Reply to  Retired Engineer Jim
March 7, 2015 2:53 am

Yes, and why pick out local areas anyway when we are talking about the whole of the world’s oceans. The more you analyse this report, the more you feel that it has been put together either by schoolchildren or idiotic adults. But I suppose it does the job of scaring those who believe everything they read, like American Presidents, the BBC and the world’s media.

March 6, 2015 2:37 pm

1 mm/y. That’s a little more than 1/32nd of an inch, 00.0313, 31,300 ppm.
You’ve got to be joking. No way is that an actual measurement, has to be a statistical construct.
I would think it challenging to measure tides, sea levels, to an inch with any repeatability or accuracy. Can’t get six significant figure results, xxx.xxx” out of two significant figure data, xxx.0″. Measuring tides and sea levels to 0.1″? Get real.

Jake
Reply to  nickreality65
March 6, 2015 2:54 pm

Ditto. I teach AP Chemistry in the US, and begin the year teaching how to determine the precision of a scaled measuring device, which then move to the defined tolerance of an electronic measuring device. This, of course, is how the instrument performs under perfect conditions. We then discuss how confident we are using said device in compromised conditions. And then learn to propagate error blah blah blah …..
So, please help me (Barry, warrenlb, etc) …. how we are to hold any type of significance in a measurement taken in less than optimal conditions [moving water, rippled, differing sediment values, etc] that’s delta value is 0.1″. I mean, are we using a micrometer to produce precision that allows 0.1″ to be significant? HOW? I mean, really, this is getting ridiculous. These people have got to be policed, they are “scientists” committing felonies in front of our eyes ….. I mean, won’t this allow them to procure more grant money? In other words, aren’t they stealing?

Jake
Reply to  Jake
March 6, 2015 2:58 pm

So, to finish my original thought ….. I would expect that my classroom filled with juniors and seniors in high school would look at this study, wrinkle their brow and utter (“huh”?) …. so yes, high school kids would be laughing out loud (let’s go with their vernacular … lol) at this study. Congrats to the laughing stocks ….

Reply to  Jake
March 6, 2015 3:51 pm

Jake, your comment about instrumental error, limits of accuracy, and error propagation is exactly on target. Climate modelers know nothing about those topics. As a result, their work is physically meaningless. Take a look at my WUWT article here.

Jake
Reply to  Jake
March 6, 2015 8:56 pm

Pat; Just read your article, it should not only be required reading for anyone who is interested in AGW, it could be used in the Freshman courses of which you speak. Your best quote?
“Result ± error tells what one knows. If the error is larger than the result, one doesn’t know anything.”
Brilliant … enough said.

Reply to  nickreality65
March 6, 2015 4:10 pm

Ditto ditto.
Measuring sea levels to the millimeter?
Measuring average temperature changes to the hundredth of a degree C?
(And what the bleep does average temperature even mean for a non-equilibrium system?)
Mathematically modeling climate a hundred years into the future?
Claiming any event anywhere is directly caused by man’s contribution to climate change?
These are delusional people who think they have a hotline to Heaven.
We are looking at narcissistic personality disorder.

PiperPaul
Reply to  Max Photon
March 6, 2015 5:02 pm

There’s a lot of that (NPD) going around, and it’s a useful trait to seek, encourage and exploit for agenda gains.

Mary Brown
Reply to  nickreality65
March 7, 2015 7:02 am

The trick a lot of these paper writers use is to say that the error of one measurement is X so a 100 or a 1000 measurements gives an error much much smaller. I can’t remember the math off hand. I’ve seen this done with Argo ocean temp data.
The problem with this is that is assumes the errors are random and unbiased and consistent with time. That’s not true in the real world. So, bottom line, errors are generally much bigger than presented and the true error size is very difficult to estimate.

Dave in Canmore
Reply to  nickreality65
March 7, 2015 7:35 am

For the many people questioning the accuracy of the data, here is summary of the errors for the Topex/Poseidon satellite:
Altimeter Errors (Topex/Poseidon)
The most accurate observations of the sea-surface topography are from Topex/ Poseidon.
Errors for this satellite altimeter system are due to:
1.Instrument noise, ocean waves, water vapor, free electrons in the ionosphere, and mass of the atmosphere. Topex/Poseidon carries a precise altimeter system able to observe the height of the satellite above the sea surface between ±66° latitude with a precision of ±2 cm and an accuracy of ±3.2 cm. The system consists of a two-frequency radar altimeter to measure height. The system also included a three-frequency microwave radiometer able to measure vapor in the troposphere.
2.Tracking errors. The satellite carries three tracking systems that enable its position in space, its ephemeris, to be determined with an accuracy of ±3.5 cm (Tapley et al. 1994a).
3.Sampling error. The satellite measure height along a ground track that repeats within ±1 km every 9.9156 days. Each repeat is a cycle. Because currents are measured only along the sub-satellite track, there is a sampling error. The satellite cannot map the topography between ground tracks, nor can it observe changes with periods less than 2 x 9.9156 d.
4.Geoid error. The permanent topography is well known over distances shorter than 1,600 km because geoid errors dominate for shorter distances. Maps of the topography smoothed over 1,600 km are used to study the dominant features of the permanent geostophic currents at the sea surface.
Taken together, the measurements of height above the sea and the satellite position give sea-surface height in geocentric coordinates with an accuracy of ±4.7 cm. The geoid errors adds further errors that depend on the size of the area being measured.
taken from:
ocean.stanford.edu/courses/EESS141/lecture6.doc

Doug Proctor
March 6, 2015 2:40 pm

During my lifetime the seas have risen 73mm relative to the shoreline. On a shoreline with a 1 degree slope, this means the shoreline has moved inland 4.2m. A 1 degree slope is completely flat to the human eye. Any noticeable shoreline is much more than 1 degree; a lifetime of this rise is meaningless outside of academia.

James at 48
March 6, 2015 2:41 pm

Is there something else going on, related to the actual forces that are drivers of the tides?

David A
Reply to  James at 48
March 6, 2015 4:13 pm

James, many things are going on, including an 18.5 year lunar cycle not even considered in the study. This cycle has a mean amplitude of 2.2 cm.
http://www.bioone.org/doi/pdf/10.2112/JCOASTRES-D-11-00169.1

Tim
March 6, 2015 2:42 pm

I can’t believe no one has pointed out the total and utter stupidity of this. Here two a quoted comments from the article.
By extracting the tide data from the other components of sea level, they were able to isolate changes in 15 tidal levels by looking at different records of high and low waters from the tidal signal.
The cause of these changes is complex and appears to be a combination of mechanisms from local to global, with the primary driver being the rise in sea level associated with climate change,
Okay people look up tides and what causes them. Are you ready for this…. It is the moon’s and the sun’s gravity. It has nothing to do with climate, nothing. In fact the moon is slowly moving farther from the Earth and thus tides are slowly getting smaller. The shape or topography of the sea coast and depth of water next to the beach will affect tides.
Now storm surges are a different thing, but they are not tides.
Good grief where do these people go to school.

Reply to  Tim
March 6, 2015 6:21 pm

Storm surges are not tides but they are also determined by coastal geometry (e.g., Sandy’s storm surge enhanced by the New York Bight) and coastal topography (shape of the sea floor). There are also natural changes over time (e.g., the Mississippi Gulf coast from pre-Camille to post-Katrina) and manmade changes (e.g., the dredging of harbors and shipping channels in the Chesapeake Bay) to consider.

old44
March 6, 2015 2:51 pm

The tide at Calais changes 8,480mm every 6 hours and they can measure it to within 1mm?
And then there is Broome, ever seen the tide at Broome? 9.2 metres, again 1mm.

Tom Harley
Reply to  old44
March 6, 2015 3:44 pm

I have lived and worked at the high tide mark in Broome over the past 30 years, a 1mm rise each year for the past 100 years, would have the Chinatown shopping precinct underwater at high spring tides. It isn’t. Even BoM built new facilities close to the high tide mark. http://pindanpost.com/2011/05/03/underwater-broome-developers-dont-think-so/

zemlik
March 6, 2015 2:58 pm

when I used to watch waves ( 10 years or something ) it seemed like ever fourth one was bigger than the previous three, would try to catch that one to get on to the slipway which was at right angles to the flow and so a little bit tricky

Reply to  zemlik
March 6, 2015 3:11 pm

Where I bodysurf in Florida, it is every seventh wave. Or so. Of course, our offshore reef messes things up unless only really big slow roller swells from some offshore storm…
Which is why sat altimetry is imprecise. Is continuously integrating a return signal over the wavy sea surface. Darned ocean won’t stand still for its picture…

zemlik
Reply to  Rud Istvan
March 6, 2015 5:16 pm

the affection for the sea is a real thing bro

Reply to  Rud Istvan
March 6, 2015 6:04 pm

Yup. I sail too. Don’t tell Willis. Oh, and snorkel and scuba reefs. Heck, why just stay on dry land?

Reply to  Rud Istvan
March 6, 2015 8:30 pm

@ Rud, I blame it on the Dutch, they probably ringed and diked in another polder, pumped out the seawater raised the sea level but smart buggers that they are, are now using the rising CO2 levels to grow more fruit and vegetables!

Paul Westhaver
March 6, 2015 3:14 pm

Nope.
I refer you to a WUWT article about the Maldives, supposedly threatened by rising sea levels.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/03/19/despite-popular-opinion-and-calls-to-action-the-maldives-is-not-being-overrun-by-sea-level-rise/

ROM
March 6, 2015 3:22 pm

Quoted from the headline post;
“For example, increases in average high water of over one millimetre per year have occurred around the world,
including Calais in France,
Manilla in the Philippines,
Wilmington in the USA
and Broome in Australia.
Manila, S. Harbor tide gauge data per PSML.
http://www.psmsl.org/data/obtaining/stations/145.php
[quoted ]INCREASE IN TREND IN MSL RISE SUSPECTED TO BE DUE TO DEPOSITION
FROM RIVER DISCHARGES AND EXCESSIVE RECLAMATION ALTHOUGH SUBSIDENCE
NOT TOTALLY DISCARDED (LETTER FROM COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY 13/5/1987).
My comment ; Manila tide gauge data was flat until around 1960 when it began a rising trend.
See above PMSL note.
Broome; in Australia’s NW per PMSL data;
http://www.psmsl.org/data/obtaining/stations/1159.php.
The 1997/8 super El Nino sea level rise for the western Pacific and it’s delayed flow on
effects into the Indian Ocean is very obvious in the Broome PMSL data.
________
Perhaps this is the real reason for the supposed increase in tidal range levels at least in the western Pacific.
A shift in western tropical Pacific sea level trends during the 1990s
Merrifield, M. A., J. Climate, 24, 4126-4138, doi:10.1175/2011JCLI3932.1, 2011.
Abstract;
Pacific sea surface height trends from satellite altimeter observations for 1993-2009 are examined in the context of longer tide gauge records and wind stress patterns. The dominant regional trends are high rates in the western tropical Pacific and minimal to negative rates in the eastern Pacific, particularly off North America. In the western tropical Pacific, tide gauge records indicate that the recent high rates represent a significant trend increase in the early 1990s relative to the preceding 40 years.
>>This sea level trend shift in the western Pacific corresponds to an intensification of the easterly trade winds across the tropical Pacific. In the eastern Pacific, tide gauge records exhibit higher-amplitude decadal fluctuations than in the western tropical Pacific, and the recent negative sea level trends are indistinguishable from these fluctuations.
The shifts in trade wind strength and western Pacific sea level rate resemble changes in dominant global modes of outgoing longwave radiation and sea surface temperature. It is speculated that the western Pacific sea level response indicates a general strengthening of the atmospheric circulation over the tropical Pacific since the early 1990s that has developed in concert with recent warming trends.<<

ROM
Reply to  ROM
March 6, 2015 9:15 pm

I should have added that Broome’s tides in NW Australia range from low tide to high tide through at least 8.2 METRES [ 26.9 Ft ]
It is the largest tide range in Australia.
From this the paper’s authors can apparently diferentiate and derive tide measurement variations at Broome down to a millimeter or so.
http://tides.willyweather.com.au/wa/kimberley/broome.html

Tom Harley
Reply to  ROM
March 6, 2015 9:55 pm

Once every 18 to 20 years, Broome has a tidal movement of over 10 metres. The 1998 El Nino gave us a cyclonic near miss with Cyclone Rosita, a Cat 4 system that destroyed Eco Beach Resort, about 40 km south. The previous wet season saw a 5 hour period of almost 20 inches of rain. I guess that was the warmest period of the last 80 or so years.
This year is almost as warm, but no cyclones this season with just a month to go. That must be some sort of record.
2011 saw the biggest spring tides in nearly 20 years. Fortunately, no cyclone arrived during spring tides. The town’s activities revolve around tides. It’s especially interesting when the tide is out: http://pindanpost.com/2014/03/05/cable-beach-mud-reef-garden-part-2/

Gary Pearse
March 6, 2015 3:38 pm

I’ve been in the delta of the Red River of the North, where its distributaries enter Lake Winnipeg – a location on one of the the continents major wild duck and goose flyways. Because of the long N-S length of the lake, a north wind, naturally common during the bird hunting season, can pile the water up in the delta up to 3 feet (anecdotally) and you can have a very uncomfortable time sloshing around in the square miles of reeds and deepened water channels on a cold cloudy November day. As kids we did this in running shoes having no waders, which can be dangerous to wear if you trip and fill them up – we carried dry clothes and shoes in the car. I had a Springer Spaniel to fetch for me, but when the winds were a bit too strong, we waited for a lull seated on top of a muskrat reed hut because her short legs meant she had to swim too much.
Surely, tide measurements must also be confounded by variations in winds and longshore currents. The measurements also vary with air pressure Do they collect all this data at the gauge stations, too? If not, how do they remove all these effects to get at ~1-2mm sea level rise? They simply can’t. If we are worried about 5-6m of sea level rise per century, we don’t need to measure with a micrometer each day to detect trouble.

Reply to  Gary Pearse
March 6, 2015 3:59 pm

IPCC worries about that much occurring in year 2500.

March 6, 2015 3:40 pm

“For example increases of over one millimetre have occurred around the world”. Sorry, call me a crazy skeptic, but 1mm a year??? 1cm per decade, 10cm per century. 4 inches per century. The margin of error in this must surely negate the assertion. What the hell are we freaking out over 10cm a century for anyway?

Reply to  wickedwenchfan
March 6, 2015 11:58 pm

1/2 mm floors me. whats that , the diameter of a grain of sand? Some very sophisticated equipment would be required to measure the sea to that kind of tolerance. I am skeptical that they have that kind of technology. they must have determined that by assuming or measuring 1″ over 50 years.

icarus62
March 6, 2015 3:41 pm

In the long term we can expect around 20 metres of global sea level rise per degree C of global warming, with peak rates of multiple metres per century. The crucial question is how much effort and resources we put into adaption vs mitigation. It’s easy to say “We’ll just wait and see, and deal with what happens”, but that’s something which is a lot easier for rich countries than poor ones.

Chris H
Reply to  icarus62
March 6, 2015 4:01 pm

The globe has stopped warming for now so the assumed trend is on hold and may reverse.

icarus62
Reply to  Chris H
March 7, 2015 2:41 am

In fact global warming accelerated around 2000AD, and there is a lot more ‘in the pipeline’.

Reply to  Chris H
March 7, 2015 9:09 pm

There is ice in the pipeline. Arctic and Antarctic sea ice extent [are] both expanding. AGW RIP.

Reply to  icarus62
March 6, 2015 4:02 pm

Repetitive: IPCC worst, worst, worst case GCM sees that sort of rise stretching out to year 2500 and it also requires major ice sheet melting. Think 485 years is enough time to adapt?

icarus62
Reply to  nickreality65
March 7, 2015 2:44 am

We’ll definitely adapt, but it will be costly and disruptive, and we’ll lose a lot of land (plus of course sites of scientific and cultural value). We could be condemning our kids and grandkids to have to deal with half a metre of sea level rise each decade, for centuries.

David A
Reply to  icarus62
March 6, 2015 4:18 pm

20 meters per degree??? So the assumed warming over the last 150 years or so should raise the sea level what 90 to 120 feet? And Gore buys more ocean front property with OPM.

icarus62
Reply to  David A
March 7, 2015 2:51 am

You have to remember that we’re only now just exceeding the temperature of the Holocene Thermal Maximum. As the last deglaciation came to a halt and global temperature leveled off and started to slowly decline, global sea level rise just about stopped, which means that the world’s ice was roughly in equilibrium with the climate up to the 19th Century. I suggest that it’s the warming from now on which will produce the really large rises in global sea level. I’m happy to defer to anyone with a better analysis of the situation though.

Reply to  David A
March 7, 2015 3:34 am

Icarus:
Horse grunt. Temperatures are at the MWP level. Holocene max was 2-3°C higher than now. You have imbibed a bunch of alarmism.

David A
Reply to  David A
March 7, 2015 4:42 am

Icarus says, “You have to remember that we’re only now just exceeding the temperature of the Holocene Thermal Maximum”
—————————————————-
An assertion with zero evidence, and much evidence against. We are nowhere close to the Thermal Maximum. it is well accepted that todays SL is one to three meters below the Holocene high.
Here is one link. Many more if you wish.
http://www.cato.org/blog/evidenced-based-sea-level-rise-projections-remain-low

Reply to  icarus62
March 6, 2015 4:30 pm

Icarus – so add ONE grain of sand to your foreshore dykes each year and “Voila!” No problemo. Come down from the sun and check out that bouncy little flexible ball we live on. (Think of a water balloon flying through the air with all its oscillations in flight.) You think you are standing on solid ground – but like all climate scientists, you aren’t. The earth is quite flexible – and adaptable. “What? Me worry?”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_E._Neuman
http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=What+Me+Worry+Images&qpvt=What+Me+Worry+Images&FORM=IGRE

u.k.(us)
Reply to  icarus62
March 6, 2015 4:33 pm

You ever ask the “poor countries” what they really need ?
What they worry about ?
I can almost guarantee it ain’t millimeters of sea level rise.
Probably more to do with the guys holding the guns and machetes.

icarus62
Reply to  u.k.(us)
March 7, 2015 2:53 am

Fair point… although individuals are already losing their land, homes and livelihoods to rising sea level in low-lying countries.

Reply to  u.k.(us)
March 7, 2015 3:30 am

Icarus:
Do not let reports of local coastal subsidence fool you.

u.k.(us)
Reply to  u.k.(us)
March 7, 2015 4:05 pm

Icarus,
Seeing as sea level has not risen enough to affect anyone (with enough sense to plan for 1/4″ of sea level rise in their lifetime), personally, I’d be investing in chain mail to thwart the machetes.
Just like olden times.

old44
Reply to  icarus62
March 6, 2015 5:49 pm

20 metres per degree? The temperature is supposed to have risen 0.7C in the last 60 years. Last time I looked St Kilda pier and the 14foot jetty that I played on in the mid 50’s were still above water so there is something wrong with your calculations.

icarus62
Reply to  old44
March 7, 2015 2:54 am

Obviously it doesn’t happen instantly. It takes a long time to melt thousands of cubic kilometres of solid ice.

George Lawson
Reply to  old44
March 11, 2015 4:12 pm

Icarus
‘individuals are already losing their land, homes and livelihoods to rising sea level in low-lying countries’
How about listing a few of those places you refer to, and telling us how much the sea level worldwide has risen to cause those problems?

Reg Nelson
Reply to  icarus62
March 6, 2015 5:50 pm

“We’ll just wait and see, and deal with what happens”
We’ve already done this. These doom and gloom predictions have been going on for 35 years running and none of them have come true. I think we’ve had plenty of time to see they these theories are bogus.

icarus62
Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 7, 2015 2:55 am

Sea level rise is at the top of the predicted range, so that’s not very reassuring.
http://images.sodahead.com/profiles/0/0/2/0/7/6/2/8/5/sealevelvsipcc-56452112061.jpeg

Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 7, 2015 3:28 am

Icarus:
Sea level guages on stable coasts show no rise, so relax. Do not pay any attention to satellite sea level data, which is unreliable.

Bevan
Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 7, 2015 5:34 pm

“Sea level guages on stable coasts show no rise, so relax.”
“Do not pay any attention to satellite sea level data, which is unreliable.”
do you have any evidence to support either to these statements?

Bevan
Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 7, 2015 5:35 pm

*of these statements 🙂

Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 7, 2015 5:52 pm

See NOAA Mean Sea Level Trends, plotted for each gauge. Some locales, such as Grande Isle or Chesapeake Bay area are subsiding and the guages show a rise in SL. Neah Bay is being uplifted hence shows falling sea level. NE coast shows rise, which has been variously attributed to isostasy or change in ocean currents.
Satellite altimetry is unreliable for raw data accuracy problems and the fact that some places, like the U of Colorado or NOAA plot the data on a sloped base.
Global warmers have no qualms about fabricating data and presenting it as honest.

Bevan
Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 7, 2015 8:16 pm

@mpainter
What I mean to say is, do you have any evidence of sea level gauges on “stable coasts” that show no rise in sea level as you claim?

Bevan
Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 7, 2015 8:20 pm

@mpainter
“Sea level gauges on stable coasts show no rise, so relax.”
So do you have any evidence as to which gauges are on stable coasts and also show no rise then?

Bevan
Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 7, 2015 8:50 pm

so you don’t have evidence of any sea level guages on stable coasts that show no rise?

Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 7, 2015 9:12 pm

Bevan, how long have you had your disability?
See above for evidence.

Chris
Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 8, 2015 6:33 am

mpainter,
So let me see if I am clear on this. Satellite data relating to sea levels is unreliable, so we should rely on sea level gauges. When it comes to temperatures, however, it is just the opposite – ground level thermometers are not reliable, but satellite temperature data is. Do you have evidence to back up those opposite conclusions?

Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 8, 2015 11:42 am

Satellite altimetry is a different measurement from satellite temperature measurement. Do you find that difference difficult to grasp? And do you require evidence that these are different satellites, different measures, etc.?
NOAA tide gauges are reliable, as the data has not been fabricated as in surface temperature data. There are several score of these on US and Canadian [!] coasts. For each gauge is plotted a separate Mean Sea Level Trend. These show a flat sea level trend for the past 15-20 years on the west, Gulf, and east coasts, except for 3-4 gauges at locales that are subsiding, such as Grande Isle, La. The Chesapeake Bay region experiences subsidence and those gauges record sea level rise.
For reliable information on sea level trends, I rely on gauge data. Satellite altimetry is a joke.

Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 8, 2015 12:00 pm

Oh, Chris, why ask for evidence?
Rud Istvan’s comment above at 2:53 pm, March 6, gives the information in altimetry satellite data. This shows that it is good for +/- 3.5 cm.
The reliability of surface temperature measurements is doubtful because of the uncertain accuracy but mostly because the keepers of the data cook it to achieve confirmation bias. This is done by lowering past records and raising current data. This is well documented.

George Lawson
Reply to  Reg Nelson
March 15, 2015 3:20 am

Icarus. Can we have your reply to my post above please?

bones
Reply to  icarus62
March 6, 2015 5:54 pm

So we have had 0.8C temp increase since about 1750. Maybe only half that is anything but unwarranted adjustments. But where did sea level increase by even 8 meters? Sheesh.

William Astley
Reply to  icarus62
March 6, 2015 8:43 pm

I see, WATTUP had a thread on the mysterious failure of the envisats and the mysterious revision of the envisats sea level data to changing falling sea level to rising sea level.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/04/12/envisats-satellite-failure-launches-mysteries/
P.S. Global sea level is now falling, why it is falling is due to an interesting phenomena and is directly related to what causes the solar TSI to change. As Leif noted TSI for some unexplained reason has risen when the solar magnetic cycle slowed down which is the opposite of what is expected based on the standard solar model (the standard solar model is incorrect). TSI is now starting to drop and will continue to drop.
(See this site, sun, recent TSI)
http://www.climate4you.com/

William McQuiddy
March 6, 2015 3:58 pm

My cousin was the pilot on a PBY flying boat in the Pacific during WWII, and he said they would time their launch into the sky on a specific wave crest which was higher then the rest. I don’t recall which one it was.

Reply to  William McQuiddy
March 6, 2015 5:18 pm

What is even more fun is landing a seaplane on 3 to 4 foot rollers – gets really interesting trying to get it to “stay” on the water. You know you might be in trouble when 20 or so people are standing on the dock to watch your plane try to land …

u.k.(us)
Reply to  Wayne Delbeke
March 6, 2015 6:08 pm

Think of them as witnesses to your flying skills, then ask if any of them want to do a touch-n-go with ya 🙂

Luke Warmist
March 6, 2015 4:26 pm

A thousand years ago as a beginning pilot we learned that navigating was measured with a micrometer, marked with a crayon, and then cut off with an axe. An approximation was all you ever got. The same is currently true with sea level.

Michael Jankowski
March 6, 2015 4:29 pm

Abstract alone says a mouthful…
“…For the tidal levels assessed, between 36% and 63% of sites had trends significantly different (at 95% confidence level) from zero. At certain locations, the magnitude of the trends in tidal levels were similar to trends in mean sea level over the last century, with observed changes in tidal range and high water levels of over 5 mm yr−1 and 2 mm yr−1, respectively. More positive than negative trends were observed in tidal ranges and high water levels, and vice versa for low water levels. However we found no significant correlation between trends in mean sea level (MSL) and any tidal levels”…”
So there you have it. Either most of the assessed sites did or did not have any change (somewhere between 37% and 74% had no significant trend). Some followed trends of the past century. More high water levels went up rather than down, and more low water levels went down rather than up. And there was no correlation between tidal levels and sea level.
Groundbreaking stuff.

UK Sceptic
March 6, 2015 4:35 pm

Well at least Blackpool tower hasn’t yet suffered the same fate poor Liberty did when the photoshoppers drowned her.

Eugene WR Gallun
March 6, 2015 4:37 pm

Sorry, could not get beyond the open blurb — the tides they are a changin”.
My mind switched it to — the lies they are a changin’ — which about sums up the history of CAGW.
Will now go back and read the article.
Eugene WR Gallun

March 6, 2015 4:54 pm

An engineer is a person who passes as an exacting technical expert on the basis of being able to turn out with prolific fortitude, infinite strings of incomprehensive estimates calculated with microscopic precision from vague assumptions and debatable figures taken from inconclusive data obtained with recording devices of problematical accuracy by uninformed persons of doubtful reliability and questionable mentality under the influence of ….
So what is a climate scientist?

u.k.(us)
Reply to  Wayne Delbeke
March 6, 2015 5:05 pm

I thought you guys added a 50% “fudge factor” 🙂

Mac the Knife
Reply to  Wayne Delbeke
March 6, 2015 9:45 pm

Q: So what is a climate scientist?
A: A person that flunked out of Engineering.

Reply to  Mac the Knife
March 7, 2015 6:12 am

That is an unfair criticism of anyone who flunked out of Engineering.

Harold
Reply to  Mac the Knife
March 7, 2015 7:51 am

To be fair, Bill Nye and Pachy made it through. Then again, we have these guys.
http://www.ae911truth.org

Reply to  Wayne Delbeke
March 7, 2015 12:02 am

A paid official who works by fixed routine without exercising intelligent judgement

March 6, 2015 4:56 pm

Oh, and in case you wondered, “I are one.” 😉

Reply to  Wayne Delbeke
March 6, 2015 7:40 pm

Me, too. And w/ that BSME came demonstrated competence in: chemistry, physics, heat transfer, thermodynamics, statistics, calculus, algebra, etc. Get the picture? A “climate scientist” is just a snake oil peddler trying to impress everyone that they have some kind of specialized or inside knowledge no one else has.

zemlik
March 6, 2015 4:59 pm

( I do presume )
Hockney is interested in theatre doing Jarre and something else ( about television )
then I notice Picasso wanted to be a playwright.
giving a form to reality that they liked the look of
do you see ?
people try to imagine things
why do they do that ?

Catcracking
March 6, 2015 5:02 pm

As I recall the rates of sea rise went up when they added in the subsidence of the floor below the sea thus re defining sea level relative from the bottom of the sea bed rather than the surrounding land.
Of course this exaggerates the claimed rise

zemlik
March 6, 2015 5:07 pm

If something is perfect why would somebody try to change it?

March 6, 2015 5:22 pm

increases in average high water of over one millimetre per year
*****************************************************
ONE mm….
1
oooohhhh thats a huge amount, I bet their instrument error range more than that.

Gamecock
March 6, 2015 5:30 pm

The two pix at top show a sea level change of several feet in 4 hours and 40 minutes. Concerns about millimeters in decades is asinine.
It’s akin to warnings about temps changing 2 degrees, when temps change 20 degrees EVERY DAY.

Mary Brown
March 6, 2015 7:16 pm

1mm a year rise cited in this study for the fast rising gauges is less than the ambient rise in sea level BEFORE AGW.
So, sounds like the centuries long rise is sea level is slowing.
I did a quite scan of this…am I missing something ?

Walt D.
March 6, 2015 7:25 pm

Mt. Everest is also rising. I suppose that is also due to CO2 emissions. It never ceases to amaze me how people can come up with dogmatic statements about measurements of fractions of a millimeter or hundredths of a degree when we have only had the instrumentation to measure this accurately for the last 35 years. (I don’t even think there was an operational laser until 1957).

March 6, 2015 8:05 pm

Reading this paper reminds me that the sea level debate needs an audit similar to Anthony Watts’ Surface Stations research.
Even after their reported “quality control” measures, most of the data used by the authors remains subject to large potential errors. For example, many of the tidal gauges that survived their culling process still had enormous uncertainties due to sea wall construction, land subsidence and tectonic activity, estuarine environments, dredging and construction, etc. Although they were aware of these potential problems, they still report statistical confidence based upon the precision of the mathematics employed, rather than the accuracy of the actual data.

john
March 6, 2015 10:00 pm

So we have land subsidence and erosion in play.

K-Bob
March 6, 2015 10:16 pm

The great assumption over sea levels is that the land is static. Shorelines, in particular.
If you look at the islands and atolls making up the Hawaiian Island chain, the biggest are where the hotspot is still making land. Where the land has moved north and west of the hotspot, they get smaller and eventually become seamounts. Does anyone know how large they were during initial formation?
Any kid who’s ever made sandcastles knows water always wins. So is the land actually getting higher (as in the Himalayas and where vulcanism is active, or is the land sinking, as is the fate, apparently of all dormant sea mountain islands?
And what about the “permanence” of so-called continental shields? How do we know they aren’t rising and falling on some scale?

jakee308
March 6, 2015 10:33 pm

So the ocean levels are increasing 10mm per decade? Did I get that right?
Less than 1/2″ every ten years?
hahahahahahahahhahahahahahahhahahahahhahahahahha
So in 100 years it’s less than 5″. And I would guess there’s no way to tell if there’s some component of the earth/coast subsiding as some of that.
Yet NYC and other places will be inundated according to the chicken littles.
Why do we continue to allow those people to govern the discussions?
They are looking for anything to claim we must go back to the caves for the sake of saving ourselves. Frankly if that’s the choice, I’m going to buy some property inland and set up a few lifeguard towers and docks.

perplexed
March 6, 2015 11:15 pm

I think that title of the post was based on a misreading by Mr. Watts of a passage from the article. The paper concluded that there WERE significant changes in the tides. The preceding statement that “tide levels, HAVE GENERALLY BEEN CONSIDERED to have undergone little change on decadal time scales” was merely a statement about what prior assumptions had been made regarding tidal changes, and not a conclusion of the paper. In other words, the article claimed that the study contradicted what had previously been assumed or what had “generally been considered.”
That’s not to say that I agree with the premise. I don’t understand how one could assume that sea level is rising, while at the same time not inferring changes in tidal levels that accompany the sea level change. This seems like puffery in the paper – trying to make the result of the study seem to break new ground when it really just confirms the obvious.

William Astley
March 6, 2015 11:42 pm

As I said, mass and volume (expansion) does not explain sea level rise.
I suppose most are unaware that half of the sea level rise ‘rise’ is due to assumed deepening of the oceans due to the extra mass of the water. Come on man.
ftp://falcon.grdl.noaa.gov/pub/bob/2004nature.pdf

Mass and volume contributions to twentieth-century global sea level rise
The rate of twentieth-century global sea level rise and its causes are the subjects of intense controversy1–7. Most direct estimates from tide gauges give 1.5–2.0 mm/yr, whereas indirect estimates based on the two processes responsible for global sea level rise, namely mass and volume change, fall far below this range. Estimates of the volume increase due to ocean warming give a rate of about 0.5mmyr21 (ref. 8) and the rate due to mass increase, primarily from the melting of continental ice, is thought to be even smaller. Therefore, either the tide gauge estimates are too high, as has been suggested recently6, or one (or both) of the mass and volume estimates is too low.

Eric ah
March 7, 2015 12:55 am

I read recently that there are 38000 bulk carriers (ships) displacing 100,000 thousand tons or more. I wonder how much the displaced water causes sea level to rise?

Mary Brown
Reply to  Eric ah
March 7, 2015 6:37 am

I would completely discount that except that it never occured to me that groundwater extraction raises sea level. But it does. Best to keep an open mind on this stuff… except for chemtrails…LOL

RACookPE1978
Editor
Reply to  Eric ah
March 7, 2015 7:22 am

No. The ocean is too large to show that change. To illustrate.
Do the math if all of those 38,000 ships were 100,000 tons dispalcement, but all very in the Hudson Bay (area 1,200,000 sq kilometers) at one time.
1. How much water would this event cause Hudson Bay “spill” out into the Atlantic Ocean?
2. If that much water caused Hudson Bay to increase in height, how far would it increase to balance?

knr
March 7, 2015 1:00 am

220 sea level records from around the world, so we back to the idea that one grain of sand from one beach can tell us about all grains of sand from ever beach , because its ‘better than nothing ‘
And it is before we get to the issue with collecting the data , the changes in land use and even geographical changes that makes statements like ‘ increases in average high water of over one millimetre per year have occurred around the world’ hilarious.
One mm accuracy from 150 years ago!
Let me guess they ‘corrected for errors although they have little idea what the errors where in the first place , well such is the nature of magic .

wayne Job
March 7, 2015 1:33 am

When i read these stories of scientists predicting and pretending to measure the coming inundation of our lands I am reminded of Noah and his ark. We have more problems than Noah he only needed some good cedar from Lebanon, some shittem wood and tar to pitch within and without.
We on the other hand have to forgo all freedoms of choice, live in a bark hut, worship Gaia and only eat vegetables to fix the problem.

Reply to  wayne Job
March 7, 2015 6:53 am

What to do if sea levels rise?
Move 10 meters inland.

tango
March 7, 2015 1:53 am

it is total BS

March 7, 2015 2:34 am

Datum from only one sea level gauge suffices to inform about sea level change, if that gauge is located on a stable coast, i.e., no isostatic adjustment or subsidence. There are numerous such gauges around the world and these agree that sea level is stable. See NOAA Mean Sea Level Trends for the west coast, Gulf coast, and east coast (south of Chesapeake Bay). These show no trend for past 15-20 years. Satellite SL data is not reliable.
Claims of sea level rise of, say, 1.9 mm or 2.4 mm or 3.1 mm is horsegrunt, as many have so commented here.

Bill Murphy
March 7, 2015 4:20 am

A suggestion,
Just as all advanced classes have prerequisites, it might be a good idea to have any researcher interested in writing a paper like this one that claims sub-millimeter accuracy in SL measurement to complete certain prerequisites. I propose the following:
A. Camp out on the shore of the Bay of Fundy for 1 week. (average tides > 14 meters) may accept King Sound as an alternate for SH applicants (> 11 meters)
B. Crew a small craft (less than 35 meter) across the North Atlantic in winter.
C. Work a season as a deck hand on a crab boat in the Bering Sea.
D. Fly at least 3 missions with a Hurricane Hunter aircraft penetrating a Cat 4 or larger storm while recording average sea level to 0.1mm.
E. Demonstrate proficiency at surfing the Oahu North Shore with at least 3 rides on 15 meter waves while simultaneously recording the distance from the board to the wave crest to an accuracy of 0.1mm.
F. Compete as a crew member in the The Antarctica Cup Ocean Race.
G. Demonstrate a proficient understanding of the following: radio altimetry, Laser altimetry, GPS altimetry, plate tectonics including a field trip to Alaska to review the effect of the 1964 earthquake (some areas near Kodiak were permanently raised by 9.1m), tide gauge construction, operation and maintenance including hands-on experience with 19th century equipment, meteorology including the effect of high and low pressure systems on local sea level, orbital mechanics including all applicable effects of lunar cycles, masscons etc.
The survivors will have a new appreciation of the profound difference between their comfy little academic cubbys and the Real World they so glibly profess to measure micro-metrically.

March 7, 2015 4:26 am

So that’s how Bass Strait got filled up with water just over thousand years back!
Give these people a Peace Prize or an Emmy or something.

Reply to  mosomoso
March 7, 2015 4:29 am

I meant to say ten thousand years back, but I homogenised. Or something.

tommoriarty
March 7, 2015 6:50 am

The most commonly quoted 20th century sea level data derived from tide gauges has the average rise rate at about 1.8 mm per year, but the satellite data since 1993 has the rise rate at about 3 mm per year. I have always wondered if those two facts could be reconciled. If they are both true, does that mean there has been an extreme acceleration in sea level rise rates at the tail end of the 20th century? Shouldn’t such an acceleration be apparent in the tide gauge data?
I have taken an honest look at this question, and developed a scheme to analyze the data in search for and answer. For all my searching, the outcome is still somewhat ambiguous. If such an acceleration exists at all, then it is very subtle, not some obvious danger that people in tie-dyed tee shirts are so sure about.
Here is a series of posts on this search…
https://climatesanity.wordpress.com/the-search-for-acceleration/

March 7, 2015 7:06 am

The unformation is in the errers.

Patrick
March 7, 2015 8:00 am

Being from this area, there has been NO sea level rise in hundreds of years. Gosport, Emsworth, Havant, Southampton, Portsmouth, Exeter, Plymouth etc etc etc etc…most of which are very old sea ports. It’s bullcarp!

TXMichael
March 7, 2015 8:04 am

“The cause of these changes is complex and appears to be a combination of mechanisms from local to global, with the primary driver being the rise in sea level”
‘Holy Climate Change, Batman!!’ … If the ocean level increases, the ocean level at high tide increases!!
Who would have thunk?
———–
Excuse me for asking, but we are dealing with a highly fluid system and basic gravitational forces, right? So other than the nuances of a little sloshing around in the “bath tub” of the world’s oceans, the author’s are simply stating the obvious.
I am thinking this might get an Honorable Mention at the Hampshire County high school science fair competition (they love the socially responsible projects), but not a Ph.D.

tjfolkerts
Reply to  TXMichael
March 7, 2015 11:35 am

“If the ocean level increases, the ocean level at high tide increases!!
Who would have thunk?”
If you read the paper, you would know that this it NOT what they are finding. The RANGE between high tide and low tide is INCREASING (more often than it is decreasing). They are finding the high tides are more often increasing and the low tides are more often decreasing!
Who would have think that actually reading the paper would be more informative than creating strawmen! /sarc

RACookPE1978
Editor
Reply to  tjfolkerts
March 7, 2015 12:07 pm

tjfolkerts

If you read the paper, you would know that this it NOT what they are finding. The RANGE between high tide and low tide is INCREASING (more often than it is decreasing). They are finding the high tides are more often increasing and the low tides are more often decreasing!

It’s all that dark matter impacting the Far Side of the moon. Oh. And we left them lunar landers, the lunar crashers, and few vehicles up on the moon between 1966 and 1978. Gotta be making it heavier.

richard
March 7, 2015 8:25 am

nothing to worry about – “A new geological study has shown that many low-lying Pacific islands are growing, not sinking”
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10222679

jakee308
March 7, 2015 10:19 am

The phrase “a drop in a bucket” comes to mind.

tommillerjones
March 7, 2015 10:28 am

An important variable which seems to be missing is Atmospheric Pressure. On a day-to-day basis this can (and often does) amount to a foot or more on tide levels. Without taking it into account it how can projections in terms of single millimetres have any significance?

DesertYote
March 7, 2015 3:22 pm

“Lead author Robert Mawdsley, postgraduate research student in Ocean and Earth Science…”
“Science” by yet another kid with a fresh install of “Marxist World-View v2.0”, trying to be “relevant”.

tjfolkerts
Reply to  DesertYote
March 7, 2015 4:04 pm

Wow. Such an amazingly empty ad hom attack based purely on ideology. What specifically in the paper do you disagree with?

DesertYote
Reply to  tjfolkerts
March 7, 2015 10:55 pm

Everything. Other commenters have explored the problems quite well. I was just offering an explanation way such an unscientific paper would even be produced. “Marxist World-View v2.0” contains so many invalid equivalencies and fallacious dichotomies as to yield the platform unable to produce rational thought. like it or not, the researcher IS part of the measurement system. Speaking of measurement systems, It is impossible to derive deltas smaller the the measurement uncertainty of the systems used to collect the data.

Tim Folkerts
Reply to  tjfolkerts
March 10, 2015 9:57 am

“Everything [is specifically wrong with the paper].”
I just have to laugh at that. Presumable that would include the font used and reporting results in millimeters instead of meters.
““Marxist World-View v2.0″ contains so many invalid equivalencies and fallacious dichotomies as to yield the platform unable to produce rational thought. “
Then once again, it should be easy to find specific scientific problems, but you instead double down on ad hom political rebuttals. What in the paper is irrational?
“Other commenters have explored the problems quite well. “
Some commenters consider the work so simple and obvious that it should be a high school project; others think it is hopelessly flawed an over-reaching. Most commenters are discussing other things altogether.
Please find even ONE SPECIFIC EXAMPLE where you think the commenter explored the problem quite well.
“It is impossible to derive deltas smaller the the measurement uncertainty of the systems used to collect the data.”
The results were on the order of 1 mm/yr for on the order of 50 years = 50 mm change. While changes from one year to the next might be very hard to detect, trends over the course of several decades can become quite apparent. Sure, it is a small change, that is what the data shows.

u.k.(us)
Reply to  DesertYote
March 7, 2015 4:50 pm

I think he got ya.

tjfolkerts
March 7, 2015 7:55 pm

Again, for anyone actually interested in the original science, the paper is available here: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2014EF000282/pdf
* The paper is NOT about global warming.
* The paper is NOT about global sea level rise.

DesertYote
Reply to  tjfolkerts
March 7, 2015 11:31 pm

““The cause of these changes is complex and appears to be a combination of mechanisms from local to global, with the primary driver being the rise in sea level associated with climate change,” says co-author Dr Neil Wells, Associate Professor in Physical Oceanography and Meteorology.”
It is not the paper itself that is important, but its utility as a vehicle for generating propaganda. The paper itself is pretty weak tea, high school science project stuff.

knr
Reply to  tjfolkerts
March 8, 2015 3:03 am

But it does claim to use levels historic of accuracy unlikely to exist in reality , while the range of measurements it has is hopelessly limited given the vast size of that its claiming to measure. They effectively do a count of cats in their street then claim they can tell you to high degree of accuracy the total number of cats in the world .
Its nonsense .

A C Osborn
Reply to  tjfolkerts
March 8, 2015 3:16 am

Having read the paper I have to disagree about the seal level rise.
The paper is very much about MSL rise, with the necessary addition of a reference to global warming.
I quote ” water column stratification
[Kang et al., 2002;Müller, 2012] (Note: the latter could have a large influence over longer time-scales as
global warming causes widespread changes in the global oceans)”
The whole theme of the paper is to do with changes in MSL the trend in MSL is mentioned all the time.

knr
Reply to  A C Osborn
March 8, 2015 8:18 am

But do they have the actual data needed to make such a judgement
If I need 1000 points to make a valid judgement but I only have 10 because that is all there is , can I actual make a valid judgement in the first place.

tjfolkerts
Reply to  A C Osborn
March 8, 2015 12:20 pm

A C Osborn,
But they are referencing LOCAL changes in the mean sea level (MSL) and the LOCAL tidal changes. For each of the 220 locations, they do find the local trends in the local MSL, and explore how that trend might be related to the changes in tides. But they are not determining how the local MSL changes might give a global MSL changes, and they are not determining how global MSL changes relate to specific locations.
The closest they seem to come to studying/discussing global MSL changes are
1) noting that others have reported global MSL are rising
2) noting that more of the 220 locations have rising MSL than falling MSL

tadchem
March 9, 2015 8:55 am

Given ANY set of data in the form of Ordered Pairs, i.e. (measurement) vs (time), one can ALWAYS perform a linear regression to find a ‘trend’. The ‘removal’ of the trend, subtracting the values calcuated for each ordinate using the secular ‘trend’ from the original raw data, will leave an ‘adjusted’ data set with only non-secular variations, which Fourier’s Theorem tells us can be *exactly* described as a linear compbination of *periodic* functions.
Any effort to assign significance to any part of this procedure without a rigorous examination of the variances, signal-to-noise ratios, etc. involved in linear regressions (which I have YET to see in any such discussion of the measurable quantities associated with climate) can only lead to self-delusion through pareidolia.