Model claims: Future heat waves to roast 60% of the planetary surface by 2075

2015 was the warmest year since modern record keeping began in 1880, according to an analysis by NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
2015 was the warmest year since modern record keeping began in 1880, according to an analysis by NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies.

From NCAR/UCAR:

SEARING HEAT WAVES DETAILED IN STUDY OF FUTURE CLIMATE

February 23, 2016

Sweltering heat waves that typically strike once every 20 years could become yearly events across 60 percent of Earth’s land surface by 2075, if human-produced greenhouse gas emissions continue unchecked.

If stringent emissions-reduction measures are put in place, however, these extreme heat events could be reduced significantly. Even so, 18 percent of global land areas would still be subjected yearly to these intense heat waves, defined as three exceptionally hot days in a row.

These are among the findings of a new study by Claudia Tebaldi of the National Center for Atmospheric Research and Michael Wehner of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The study, funded by the U.S. Department of Energy and published in the journal Climatic Change, quantifies the benefits society would reap, in terms of avoiding extreme heat events, if action is taken now to mitigate climate change.

“The study shows that aggressive cuts in greenhouse gas emissions will translate into sizable benefits, starting in the middle of the century, for both the number and intensity of extreme heat events,” Tebaldi said. “Even though heat waves are on the rise, we still have time to avoid a large portion of the impacts.”

MORE FREQUENT, MORE SEVERE

Tebaldi and Wehner used data generated by the NCAR-based Community Earth System Model to study 20-year extreme heat events—those intense enough to have just a 1-in-20 chance of occurring in any given year. The model was developed with support from the Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation, NCAR’s sponsor.

The researchers looked at two things: how frequently today’s typical 20-year heat wave may occur in the future, as well as how much more intense future 20-year heat waves will be.

Table detailing how heat waves will change in the future

For large portions of the world’s land surface, future heat waves with a 1-in-20 chance of occurring in any given year are projected to become more extreme than heat waves with the same chance of occurring today. Stringent efforts to mitigate human-produced carbon emissions would reduce the amount of land area at risk for these intense heat waves—defined as three days of exceptionally hot temperature. Click to enlarge. (This table is freely available for media & nonprofit use.)

Besides finding that today’s 20-year heat waves could become annual occurrences across more than half of the world’s land areas by 2075, the study also concluded that heat waves with a 1-in-20 chance of occurring during a future year will be much more extreme than heat waves with the same probability of occurring today.

For example, if emissions remain unabated, a heat wave with a 1-in-20 chance of occurring in 2050 would be at least 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) hotter for 60 percent of the world’s land areas. For 10 percent of land areas, a 20-year heat wave in 2050 would be at least 5 degrees C (9 degrees F) hotter.

A few degrees may not seem like much on a mild day, but during extreme heat events, they can mean the difference between life and death for vulnerable populations, Wehner said.

“It’s the extreme weather that impacts human health; this week could be 2 degrees Celsius hotter than last week, and that doesn’t matter,” he said. “Now, imagine the hottest day that you can remember and instead of 42 degrees C (107.6 degrees F) it’s now 45 degrees C (113 degrees F). That’s going to have a dangerous impact on the poor, the old and the very young, who are typically the ones dying in heat waves.”

By 2075, the situation is likely to become much more dire if greenhouse gas emissions—produced largely by the burning of fossil fuels—are not reduced. The percent of land areas subject to 20-year events that are at least 5 degrees C hotter swells from 10 to 54 percent.

However, if emissions are aggressively cut, the severity of these 20-year events could be significantly reduced over the majority of the world’s land areas, though portions of the Earth would still face dangerous heat extremes. For example, in 2075, almost a quarter—instead of more than a half—of land areas could experience 20-year heat waves that are at least 5 degrees C hotter than today’s. “But even with such dramatic reductions in carbon dioxide emissions, future heat waves will be far more dangerous than they are now,” Wehner said.

The researchers also looked at single-day extreme heat events, as well as single-day and three-day blocks when the overnight low temperature remained exceptionally warm. Past research has shown that human health is especially endangered when temperatures do not cool off significantly at night. All of these events had similar increases in frequency and intensity.

A TOOL FOR COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS

The fact that extreme heat events are expected to increase in the future as the climate changes—and the fact that emission reductions could ameliorate that increase—is not a surprise, Tebaldi said. But this study is important because it puts hard numbers to the problem.

“There is a cost attached to reducing emissions,” Tebaldi said. “Decision makers are interested in being able to quantify the expected benefits of reductions so they can do a cost-benefit analysis.”

Tebaldi and Wehner’s paper is part of a larger project based at NCAR called the Benefits of Reduced Anthropogenic Climate Change, or BRACE. For the project, researchers from across NCAR and partner organizations are working to quantify how emission reductions may affect health, agriculture, hurricanes, sea level rise, and drought.

About the article

Title: Benefits of mitigation for future heat extremes under RCP4.5 compared to RCP8.5

Authors: Claudia Tebaldi and Michael F. Wehner

Publication: Climatic Change

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February 23, 2016 8:24 am

Something might happen in 50 years so let’s kill ourselves now.

george e. smith
Reply to  Elmer
February 23, 2016 11:28 am

And Models all the way down.
I preferred it when it was all turtles.
g

Reply to  Elmer
February 23, 2016 6:33 pm

You got it. Also, why did they also include the study of the Benefits of Mitigation of future cold extremes that are just as likely to happen as heat extremes?

Keitho
Editor
Reply to  Elmer
February 24, 2016 9:10 am

Well apart from anything else we have just had Paris 21 where everything was decided. Why do we need this kind of alarmist claptrap anymore. Deals done, end of story.
Now let’s go off and do something about real air and water pollution, can we?

kingofcrap
Reply to  Keitho
February 25, 2016 7:52 am

do do

February 23, 2016 8:25 am

Climate Shite.

philincalifornia
Reply to  Jimmy Haigh
February 23, 2016 10:48 am

Here’s a peer-reviewed climate science paper for that Jimmy:
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/04/22/article-2133643-04D3E19A000005DC-863_468x408.jpg

taxed
Reply to  philincalifornia
February 23, 2016 11:03 am

Yes! that about sums these claims up.:)

george e. smith
Reply to  philincalifornia
February 23, 2016 11:29 am

Izzat ‘ peer ‘ reviewed or ‘ pee-er ‘ reviewed ??
g

ossqss
Reply to  philincalifornia
February 23, 2016 11:33 am

That would be “Rear” reviewed, no?

Bill Powers
Reply to  philincalifornia
February 23, 2016 1:06 pm

Brilliant Phil! As my dear deceased daddy used to say, whenever I explained the remote possibility of childlike nonsense, if that happens a monkey will jump out of you a__! this paper will come in handy in the more likely event of the monkey escape.

Walt D.
Reply to  philincalifornia
February 23, 2016 1:57 pm

Doesn’t a peer review require you to use it? Don’t forget to recycle, this should yield several follow on publications. (See Penn And Teller Recycling on youtube.)

philincalifornia
Reply to  philincalifornia
February 23, 2016 6:45 pm

Yeah, I was actually thinking of the next iteration of Marcott et al., when I posted that. If you roll it all the way out (keeping it exactly straight of course), then the hockey stick blade might just fit on it as the Earth’s temperature exceeds that of a blue hypergiant star next year.

skeohane
February 23, 2016 8:29 am

The flaming stupidity of intellectual-fecal-droppings like this is the only heat wave we have to worry about.

knr
February 23, 2016 8:31 am

by 2075 when the author will no longer be around to be asked how they could get their claims so very wrong , now who says climate ‘scientists’ never learn .

February 23, 2016 8:35 am

Two thoughts:
1) It is utterly amazing that the model output exactly what it was programmed to output, and;
2) *cough* *cough* “bullsh_t!” *cough*
“We’ll always have Paris…”

François
Reply to  theyouk
February 23, 2016 9:56 am

We’ll always have Vermont.

John Robertson
February 23, 2016 8:35 am

Can i have my heatwave right now?
It is freezing here.
This empty speculation of cataclysmic weather is almost as real as government budgets.

February 23, 2016 8:38 am

The authors no longer care whether they are right or wrong, they just want money and attention.
If their masters in the government can just take control of global energy supplies now, under whatever pretext, then they will have achieved the goal of absolute power.
Whatever the future of climate really holds would then not matter one jot.

Reply to  Stephen Wilde
February 23, 2016 1:20 pm

Sure, they no longer have to care about being shown to be complete fools, because step #1 of their process is calculating how many years from now they will retire.
Step two is apparently deciding how big a lie to tell.

Robin Hewitt
February 23, 2016 8:42 am

I might be tempted to invest in a bit of lakeside Siberia, or will it still be -40degC off peak?

DonK31
Reply to  Robin Hewitt
February 23, 2016 2:24 pm

Global warming..It will be only -35C off peak.

Mark from the Midwest
February 23, 2016 8:46 am

More heatwaves and more extreme cold
More drought and more flooding
More food shortages and more greening of the planet
More hurricanes, (ooops)
Seems like a zero sum game right about now

HelmutU
Reply to  Mark from the Midwest
February 23, 2016 10:33 am

Mark, you are right, remember the following song:
https://youtu.be/9vdl3TRxv0c

February 23, 2016 8:47 am

Say whatever you want. Project any hysterical outcome and no one cares… as long as you advocate for penalizing Western Civilization and transferring wealth from the developed world to the developing world. It’s simple actually. It’s all about the dialectic…

February 23, 2016 8:49 am

A truckload of “could”s haven’t the weight of a single “will”.

Reply to  Sam Grove
February 23, 2016 1:24 pm

I disagree.
Predictions are hard, especially about the future.
But that is not even the biggest reason why all the maybe words in the world do not add up to one single fact.
I doubt if these people could possibly be stupid enough to believe their own lies, but I may be wrong about that.

Oops. So solly.

Bill Powers

There are people who make up the lies – to them the ends justify the means and they are well paid for it.
There are the people who believe the lies – they were placed into public schools and force fed propaganda sometimes masked as movies from ex vice presidents who only took one science course at Yale with a passing C grade. Maybe he aced his “Making Documentaries” 110 course regardless it qualifies as brainwashing.
And then the rest of us that believe that science should be motivated by the truth and not politics and realize that CAGW is a global fraud perpetrated by the wealth holders against the masses.

Tom Halla
February 23, 2016 8:49 am

So my computer model that cannot predict short-term weather is valid to predict intermediate-term weather? I am missing something here. The only value of this seems to be continued funding.

Tom Judd
February 23, 2016 8:50 am

“Tebaldi and Wehner’s paper is part of a larger project based at NCAR called the Benefits of Reduced Anthropogenic Climate Change, or BRACE.”
Well, seems like all the papers for this project are deliberately guaranteed to have a preordained conclusion (PC?). I guess we should BRACE ourselves for when they come to take our wallets.

george e. smith
Reply to  Tom Judd
February 23, 2016 11:32 am

At least when Renata sang, she was at least on pitch !
g

February 23, 2016 8:50 am

These folks never seem concerned about hypotheses of events so far in the future they can’t be checked. What are the intermediate predictions? Or do these scorching days just spring upon us in 44 years?

Tom Judd
February 23, 2016 8:52 am

(This table is freely available for media & nonprofit use.)
How very thoughtful.
sarc

Jeff
February 23, 2016 8:53 am

Dang this sounds bad! I’d like to provide more funding to Claudia Tebaldi of the National Center for Atmospheric Research and Michael Wehner of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory so that we can learn more about it, please.

Freedom Monger
February 23, 2016 8:54 am

What a bunch of mother falcon, son of a pigeon, yellow-bellied sapsuckers!
Pleas forgive my fowl language, but these kind of fear-mongering predictions really upset me.

Bob Boder
Reply to  Freedom Monger
February 23, 2016 9:08 am

Good work

barryjo
Reply to  Bob Boder
February 23, 2016 10:29 am

But they have degrees or something. They should know.

Tom Judd
Reply to  Bob Boder
February 23, 2016 11:21 am

I concur.

ShrNfr
February 23, 2016 8:54 am

The inflation in horse droppings is getting out of control. Never mind that the models do not accurate predict that the sun might come up tomorrow, they now have to predict the earth turning into a white dwarf to get new funding.

Damron
February 23, 2016 8:56 am

This BS not real future warm or heat. It natural cycle weather or solar cycle weak can cause little ice age or global cooling. Never know it natural cycle earth

Russell
February 23, 2016 8:56 am

National Laboratory. The study, funded by the U.S. Department of Energy and published in the journal Climatic Change, Do these people ever feel embarrassed for this stupidity with taxpayer MONEY.

george e. smith
Reply to  Russell
February 23, 2016 11:35 am

I can get climatic change just by driving ten miles down the road; or 18,520 meters if I go nautical miles.
g

February 23, 2016 8:57 am

How timely that this appears concurrent with the new GRL paper showing how unreliable such ‘projections’ are. Discussed just two posts ago here.

Curious George
Reply to  ristvan
February 23, 2016 9:52 am

NCAR-based Community Earth System Model neglects a temperature dependence of a latent heat of water vaporization. That introduces a 2.5% error in an energy transfer by evaporation from tropical seas.
I asked NCAR for an analysis of an impact of this approximation. They did not supply any. I estimate that it limits the usefulness of the model to 100 time steps (usually 100 hours) at best.

Paul Westhaver
February 23, 2016 8:57 am

Just put a paper sack over our heads and lie down and wait for it.

ferd berple
February 23, 2016 9:00 am

Sour Grapes. The Paris Agreement sets future CO2 emission levels. All countries have agreed.
Computer models from this point forward are a waste of time. We are going to get the climate agreed in Paris.

Ron Clutz
Reply to  ferd berple
February 23, 2016 10:36 am

True that. Reality is what we all say it is.

MarcT77
February 23, 2016 9:05 am

The increase in the greenhouse effect should reduce the highest temperature of the year. Look at regions with a lot of water vapor in the air. And the data also shows a drop. The drop might be hidden by the increase in sensibility of the instruments. At some stations, if you take the hourly data and find the highest value taken at the start of an hour an compare with the daily max. You will find a growing difference. Possibly because the instrument can catch any quick variation in temperature. The Stevenson screen might be smaller also. Anyway, the highest temperature of the year should go down based on science and is going down based on most of the data.

Ron Clutz
Reply to  MarcT77
February 23, 2016 10:40 am

Your point is shown empirically in longitudinal studies of long service weather stations. Most often, the maximums have decreased slightly while minimums have increased more strongly. So less cool overnight, earlier Springtimes, later Autumns, milder winters. Not scary enough.

Reply to  Ron Clutz
February 23, 2016 12:23 pm

+1000. Per recent WUWT posts – Mauna Loa diurnal trends and a whole truck load of others. But why look at data when you have a nice model? Unprecedented. 😉

Odin2
February 23, 2016 9:05 am

Invest now in companies that manufacture and sell marshmellows and hot dogs!

3x2
February 23, 2016 9:08 am

I’ve just devised a model that clearly demonstrates that nothing out of the ordinary will happen so you can all relax now and plan for a ‘so so’ future (climate wise at any rate).

ossqss
February 23, 2016 9:10 am

One wonders if the authors are confident enough to move their retirement monies into HVAC futures?
Sarc/

ferdberple
February 23, 2016 9:10 am

From NCAR/UCAR:
==========
have they moved their headquarters to Alaska?
How is it that Alaska remain one of the least populated places on earth in terms of people per square mile?
Are we seeing flocks of retired people picking up and moving from Arizona and Florida up to Alaska?
Why is it that retired people move to Arizona and Florida from colder climates?
Why is it that billions of people live in the tropics, but almost no one lives at the poles?
Why is it that NCAR/UCAR scientists lack an ounce of common sense?

Marcus
February 23, 2016 9:13 am

..This would be funny …if it wasn’t so stupid !

Ryan S.
February 23, 2016 9:14 am

As a Canadian, this news has truly made my day.

philincalifornia
Reply to  Ryan S.
February 23, 2016 10:50 am

Sorry to disappoint you, but it’s a climate model, so it’s the last thing that will happen.

Katherine
Reply to  Ryan S.
February 23, 2016 5:35 pm

Clearly they don’t view the opening of more land to agriculture due to warming in Canada, Greenland, and Russia to be a good thing. Nor extended growing seasons. Nor the shortening of shipping times by going through the Arctic. Nor fewer hurricanes due to less temperature contrast. Nor lower excess winter mortality.
Since they’re advocating against warmer temperatures.

MarkW
February 23, 2016 9:18 am

Aren’t heat waves defined based on what is normal for that place and time of year?
For example the same temperature that qualifies as a heat wave in Nome, Alaska, would not be a heat wave in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Ralph Kramden
February 23, 2016 9:28 am

It is my understanding that global warming has a much greater effect on nighttime low temperatures than on daytime high temperatures. I think mild winter nights are much more likely than hot summer days. Another possibility is that global warming will be minimal and no one will notice any difference.

george e. smith
Reply to  Ralph Kramden
February 23, 2016 11:41 am

Kevin Trenberth’s planetary model doe not permit ANY night time. Sun shines all day from 186 million miles altitude at the zenith.
g

Resourceguy
February 23, 2016 9:29 am

Model extremism is not to be outdone by extreme weather assertions, extreme psychology research, and extreme policy plays. It’s great for Hollywood scripts too.

Matt G
February 23, 2016 9:31 am

A definition based on Frich et al.’s Heat Wave Duration Index is that a heat wave occurs when the daily maximum temperature of more than five consecutive days exceeds the average maximum temperature by 5 °C (9 °F), the normal period being 1961–1990.

This does vary a little around different countries, but still 3 c or 4 c above normal for maximum temperatures have generally never been a heatwave and needs to last for around 5 days not 1 or 2.
Scientists expect future cooling over the next few decades so we need to get a rise of 5 c on average summer temperatures to increase the frequency of heat waves in just a 20 year period after it. We struggle to rise local temperatures over the past century by 1 c so how does 5 c sound over just 20 years? There is so much nonsense in this useless made up assumption of an article it is only worth laughing at it.
You can’t forecast weather next month and you certainly can’t forecast it in 2075, so please just drop the nonsense.

Reply to  Matt G
February 23, 2016 12:39 pm

Calgary, Alberta is in the middle of a “Heat Wave” as we speak. For the reasons you state. The “average high” (whatever that is) is stated as 0 to 1 C for this time of year (depending on which weather station you subscribe to) We have had a couple of weeks that have exceeded the highs by enough to be called a heat wave, but no records – it’s been warmer and it’s been close to 40 below as well – weather.
http://www.theweathernetwork.com/ca/14-day-weather-trend/alberta/calgary
I blame it on El Nino – similar weather pattern to last year and much as predicted by Joe Bastardi and group at the Weatherbell way back last spring and summer.
http://www.theweathernetwork.com/ca/monthly/alberta/calgary?year=2015&month=2&dispt=chart-container-monthly
http://www.theweathernetwork.com/ca/monthly/alberta/calgary?year=2016&month=2&dispt=chart-container-monthly

Matt G
Reply to  Matt G
February 23, 2016 1:32 pm

A heat wave also always refers to the human body maybe overheating causing danger to health, so any weather conditions that don’t cause this are also not considered one.

David Bidwell
February 23, 2016 9:35 am

Uncertainty bands? How about turn that model on the next 5 year period and see how accurate the prognostications are?

Trebla
February 23, 2016 9:47 am

It’s worse than we thought. Much, much worse. To borrow a phrase from the new car advertising industry, “Introducing the all-new climate scare!”

taxed
February 23, 2016 10:03 am

More rubbish from so called climate science.
Notice how there is never any details to these wild claims, beyond its down to CO2. l would take theses claims more seriously if they detailed just how exactly are we going reach this state of affairs.
Are they claiming that there will be a increase in blocking high pressure during the summer months to allow these heatwaves to happen.?
Are they claiming that there will be a large scale shutdown of the jet stream to allow the air to stagnate and grow hotter. ?
Are they saying that all the cold air at the poles will disappear so helping to shutdown the wind patterns across the globe. ?
These peoples claims need to be exposed by science rather then just resorting to insults.

TonyN
February 23, 2016 10:10 am

At last the UK Government is taking action on the misuse of government funds on lobbying, rather than on the actual science.
A certain Bob Ward is ‘communicating’ (aka squawking?) in the Guardian, as his funding is clearly under threat;
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/feb/22/new-funding-rules-bad-for-policy-public-interest-democracy-anti-lobbying
Not a scientist, ‘Bob’ is the Policy and Communications Director for the Grantham Research Institute for Climate Change Economics and Policy, at the London School of Economics.
We can hope that a metaphorical “pause” will affect them, too.
I suggest, before he finds other work to do, Bob spins this bad news as: “Communications on Climate-Change Economics and Policy will be entering a pause owing to the policy of tackling the economic climate change in the LSE caused by the anthropogenic emissions of Tory politicians”

Michael Carter
February 23, 2016 10:22 am

This prediction relies on an assumption that CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere has a lineal correlation with global temperature and hence heat waves. This assumption is looking increasingly flawed
Given the localised nature of weather patterns and LST thermometers, and our very sketchy historical record, there are always going to be ‘records broken’ (hot and cold) each year. Once such heat record (2015) broken in the UK was at Heathrow Airport. A good place to put a thermometer?
We can expect the barrage of media reports on heat waves to continue

E. Martin
February 23, 2016 10:22 am

Key words here are: “Funded by the U.S. Department of Energy”

Peter Miller
Reply to  E. Martin
February 23, 2016 10:48 am

They would not have funded this paper without its conclusion being guaranteed as Imminent Thermageddon.

Ron Clutz
February 23, 2016 10:45 am

This claim is produced by models. The patterns of actual recorded maximums and minimums is not so frightening.
https://rclutz.wordpress.com/2015/06/22/when-is-it-warming-the-real-reason-for-the-pause/

Kaye Green
February 23, 2016 11:15 am

Sixty years ago in Houston Texas I was out shopping,it was a very hot day, even for for Houston in the summer. I went into a Shop that was was pleasantly cool. A Thermometer on the wall showed the temp in the Shop to be 112 deg F. There was an overhead big blade fan, but no air conditioning. I never did find out what the outside Temp was.
I think about that shop with some nostalgia because I now live in New Zealand where ( to me ) cold to chilly is normal summer weather, 32 degrees Cent and considered REALLY WARM. A friend commented just recently that the day was a real scorcher when it was 38 deg C.I took my cotton sweater off. I don’t think the end of civilisation is imminent. KG

February 23, 2016 11:21 am

The insignificant effect of CO2 on climate is quantified at http://globalclimatedrivers.blogspot.com with a near-perfect explanation of annual average global temperatures since before 1900; R^2 = 0.97+. The two factors that have caused climate change for 300+ years are also identified.

Gamecock
February 23, 2016 11:35 am

By 2075? Well,
‘come and find the place where I am lying,
And kneel and say an Ave there for me.’ – Frederic Edward Weatherly 1910

Ivor Ward
February 23, 2016 11:43 am

Very few people die in heatwaves. Thousands die in cold snaps.

Reply to  Ivor Ward
February 23, 2016 1:39 pm

In France, 14,802 heat-related deaths (mostly among the elderly) occurred during the 2003 heat wave. That would be one example of more than “very few”.

Bill Powers
Reply to  Mark Onesky
February 23, 2016 2:29 pm

So what you are saying is they died from old age. That one gets all of us that live long enough.

Reply to  Mark Onesky
February 25, 2016 3:03 am

With less expensive energy (more prosperity), they might have had air conditioning.

taxed
February 23, 2016 11:58 am

Remember all the fuss made about the heatwave in the middle east last summer.
Well to get these conditions then the weather needs to “play ball”. Usually over the middle east in summer there is a jet stream flowing which helps to move the air along. But last summer during this heatwave for some reason this jet stream shutdown over the middle east. Which had allowed the blocking of the airflow
over the middle east. Which allowed the air to stagnate over a number of days and so allowed the heat to build up into the heat wave. So for these claims to come true. There really would have be a noticeable shutting down of the global jet stream. So where are the signs this is happening.?

February 23, 2016 12:06 pm

2075… well that’d get the young pseudo-scientists through their *cough* *cough* careers and into retirement. They have to plan ahead you know.

Bruce Cobb
February 23, 2016 12:10 pm

The good news is that with some curing, this study would make excellent fertilizer. So, at least it’s “green”.

Joel Snider
February 23, 2016 12:33 pm

Again – isn’t the entire premise that all this ‘roasting heat’ is supposed to be coming from increased humidity – which by definition, would result in more tropical fauna? The lushest, healthiest biospheres on the planet?

Robert
February 23, 2016 1:31 pm

So we should move to Labrador or Tierra del Fuego?

February 23, 2016 1:38 pm

These guys should keep up better with the peer-reviewed literature.
Two relatively recent papers in Geophysical Research Letters cast doubt on their claims: http://www.cnrm.meteo.fr/IMG/pdf/douville_grl15a.pdf and http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2015GL067189/abstract.
The first finds that models may be overestimating sensitivity to radiative forcings and the second that unreliable model simulations overestimate danger from extreme events. This paper doesn’t cite either of those. Why not?

February 23, 2016 1:52 pm

All of this on 0 theoretical fundamental quantitative equations or experimental demonstration of “trapping” of energy by spectral phenomena in excess of the equilibrium temperature determined by the planet’s spectrum as seen from the outside .

siamiam
Reply to  Bob Armstrong
February 23, 2016 3:46 pm

Simple, concise and true.

February 23, 2016 1:57 pm

Hmmm….just how many years ago did Hansen predict what would happen if CO2 reached the present level?
Have the temps reached what he predicted?
This isn’t trying to move the goal post. It’s trying to build a new one.

Walt D.
February 23, 2016 1:58 pm

Coming to a broken climate model near you.

February 23, 2016 4:10 pm

What a load of kick the can down the roadery.

Richard
February 23, 2016 5:27 pm

Wait! Wait! I can do this, too! It’s fun! Ready?
A new climate forecast: by 2125, people will only be able to live above 45 degrees latitude, because Global Warming will roast and bake the lower latitudes. And, come visit me when it happens.

TomRude
February 23, 2016 7:00 pm

these intense heat waves, defined as three exceptionally hot days in a row.

and

Tebaldi and Wehner used data generated by the NCAR-based Community Earth System Model to study 20-year extreme heat events—those intense enough to have just a 1-in-20 chance of occurring in any given year.

Ad hoc definition and model based study… Not one reference to the type of weather creating heatwaves.
I expect 100% of Earth surface will experience their next definition of a heatwave: day.

Walt D.
Reply to  TomRude
February 24, 2016 4:57 am

3 days seems like a very poor choice. I like to remember 1976 in London – 15 days of very hot weather in a row.

February 23, 2016 8:10 pm

This kind of ‘paper’ really enrages me to the point of wanting to break something or hit somebody. But all your comments calm me down a little and make me realize I’m not the only one who who sees these tossers as money-grabbing, lying, wretches.
Thank you guys.

Patrick MJD
February 23, 2016 8:47 pm

Here in Sydney, Australia, Peter Hannam, the resident alarmist environment editor at the Syndey Morning Herald, is claiming record heatwaves (40c + for the inner west. /sarc on Sheesh, that’s unusual for the inner west Peter /sarc off). Oh wait! It’s summer Peter!!!

Robert
February 24, 2016 1:36 am

The sky is falling ,the sky is falling get the little boy who cried wolf to safety right now .

February 24, 2016 3:34 am

But the IPCC predict the population to soar in the future so all this extra heat will increase fertility – good news !
http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/sres/emission/index.php?idp=99
http://www.worldometers.info/world-population/

van Loon
February 25, 2016 8:06 am

And now for the REAL problems: Pollution of soil, air, and water; extinction of flora and fauna; population growth (90 years ago there were fewer than 2 billion humans in the world, now on the way to 8 billion). These are REAL, present problems.

Bill Powers
Reply to  van Loon
February 25, 2016 1:46 pm

Therein lies my problem with this whole CAGW scam.
If the GovMint Bureaucrats would simple be honest with the citizenry they would explain that their real concerns are overpopulation, limited resources and the growing demand on natural resources. Then we could all share in an honest discussion on how immediate the problem is and how we go about dealing with it.
But no. They have been dumbing down the citizenry here in the U.S. so that they can peddle a fairy tale complete with cute fuzzy polar bears and lovable little penguins threatened by evil men, designed to scare and guilt a 50% + 1 majority into voting our GovMint the power over the people to restrict their energy use and degrade the quality of life for all but the powered elites including the bureaucrats. The best part? When pressed even they acknowledge that prescribed actions can’t stop their theorized doomsday scenario. They are just delaying tactics. A no win scenario for the citizenry oh and drop your pants and bend over you are not going to enjoy what comes next.

Evan Jones
Editor
Reply to  Bill Powers
February 27, 2016 2:55 pm

overpopulation, limited resources and the growing demand on natural resources.
Heck, I don’t think any of those things are real problems. Modernity cures all.

Bill Powers
Reply to  Evan Jones
February 27, 2016 4:27 pm

I agree.. The puppet masters have created this CAGW scam because they don’t agree and don’t want to share their real concerns since they have no basis to win the argument. CAGW gives them the angle they need.

Evan Jones
Editor
February 27, 2016 2:54 pm

If the CMIP projections come true, more heat waves, yes. But there is little to no indication that will actually happen in the first place.