Guest essay by Larry Hamlin
NOAA has updated its extensive U.S. coastal tide gauge data measurement records (http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_us.htm) to include data through year 2015. These measurements include tide gauge data coastal locations for 25 West Coast, Gulf Coast and East Coast states along the Pacific Ocean, Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean. In addition 7 Pacific island groups and 6 Atlantic island groups also have coastal location tide gauge data measurements updated as well.
In all more than 200 coastal locations are included in these measurements with more than 100 of these coastal locations with recorded data periods in excess of 50 years in duration. None of these updated NOAA tide gauge measurement data records show coastal location sea level rise acceleration occurring anywhere on the U.S. coasts or Pacific or Atlantic island groups.
In June of 1988 testimony was provided before Congress by various scientists, including NASA’s Dr. James Hansen, claiming that man made greenhouse gas emissions were responsible for increasing global temperatures with the the New York Times reporting (http://www.nytimes.com/1988/06/24/us/global-warming-has-begun-expert-tells-senate.html?pagewanted=all ) “Global Warming Has Begun, Experts Tells Senate”.
The Times article noted that “The rise in global temperature is predicted to cause a thermal expansion of the oceans and to melt glaciers and polar ice, thus causing sea levels to rise by one to four feet by the middle of the next century. Scientists have already detected a slight rise in sea levels.”
Its now been 28 years since the conjecture of these early sea level rise climate alarmist claims was presented to Congress. However the latest updated NOAA coastal tide gauge measurement data shows locations likely to experience only inches of sea level rise by mid century (not one to four feet as climate alarmists speculated to Congress in 1998) with that increase consistent with long standing and unchanging rates of sea level rise measured at these coastal locations. The longest NOAA tide gauge data record is at the Battery, New York with a 160 year long measurement period. This location along with all other U.S. coastal locations show no sea level rise acceleration.
Climate alarmists continue to try and mislead the public by claiming that the Statue of Liberty is in “imminent jeopardy” because of rising sea levels but the unchanging rate of sea level rise present at the Battery would require more than 20,000 years to cover the base (https://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/08/20/national-geographics-junk-science-how-long-will-it-take-for-sea-level-rise-to-reach-midway-up-the-statue-of-liberty/). That time period hardly qualifies as “imminent jeopardy”.
Additionally NOAA performs 95% confidence interval analysis of each location to determine if there are significant changes in the tide gauge measurement trends over time.
NOAA analysis of these 95% confidence interval ranges is stated as “Although the mean trend may change from year to year, there is no statistically significant difference between the calculated trends if their 95% confidence intervals overlap. Therefore, the most recent calculated trend is not necessarily more accurate than the previous trends; it is merely a little more precise. If several recent years have anomalously high or low water levels, the values may actually move slightly away from the true long-term linear trend”.
The 95% confidence interval analysis demonstrates that the linear sea level rise trend is stable and unchanging. This 95% confidence interval analysis is available for all NOAA tide gauge coastal location measurements.
In a May 15, 2016 Rutgers University graduation address President Obama told the assembled gathering (https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2016/05/15/remarks-president-commencement-address-rutgers-state-university-new) that “in politics and in life, ignorance is not a virtue. It’s not cool to not know what your talking about.”
Yet Obama had told the country in his Democratic nomination acceptance speech on June 3, 2008 (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/06/03/obamas-nomination-victory_n_105028.html) that we would be able to look back upon his nomination and tell our children that “this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal”.
Besides the monumental hubris of this statement it is apparent that President Obama was ignorant of the fact that the oceans have been rising for thousands of years since the end of the last ice age.
The rates of ocean sea level change have varied significantly over this time period with more recent studies showing greater detail of ocean sea level change information over about the last two hundred years. These changes in ocean sea level have occurred as a result of natural climate events as clearly shown in information (slide #36) from a recent presentation (https://curryja.files.wordpress.com/2016/05/spe-curry-final.pdf) by Dr. Judith Curry regarding global climate science issues.
Additionally it is apparent that President Obama was ignorant of the fact that based on more than 100 NOAA long time period measured coastal tide gauge data records coastal locations were shown not to be experiencing acceleration of sea level rise.
President Obama has made numerous claims of coastal sea level rise acceleration at various U.S. locations but none of these claims is supported by NOAA tide gauge measurement data (
Perhaps President Obama might be interested in the latest coastal sea level rise tide gauge measurement data from Washington D.C. where he has resided for the last 8 years and for Honolulu, Hawaii where he was born.
NOAA tide gauge data shows the 91 year long Washington D. C. coastal location measurement period with an unchanging 1 foot per century rate of increase and the 110 year long Honolulu, Hawaii coastal location measurement period with an unchanging 5.5 inches per century rate of increase. President Obama’s claims of accelerating coastal sea level rise threatening U.S. locations is based on ignorance. As the President has said “It’s not cool to not know what your talking about.”
President Obama is not alone in being ignorant about ocean and coastal sea level rise concepts, information and data.
Climate alarmist media often carry scientifically flawed stories alleging impending coastal sea level rise catastrophe supposedly being driven by man made CO2 emissions. These flawed news reports many times reflect information provided the by Obama Administration national climate assessment effort through the report “Global Sea Level Rise Scenarios for the United States National Climate Assessment” (http://cpo.noaa.gov/sites/cpo/Reports/2012/NOAA_SLR_r3.pdf).
This report presents various scenarios claiming that global mean sea level rise by 2100 will range between 8 inches to 6.6 feet. The mid range of the scenarios is about 3 feet of global mean sea level rise by the year 2100.
The alleged purpose of the report is to “help” local cities and communities “plan” for future sea level rise that could impact their locations. The report contains the following huge qualifications and limitations regarding the validity and applicability of these scenarios at specific local coastal cities and communities:
- “Scenarios do not predict future changes, but describe future potential conditions in a manner that supports decision-making under conditions of uncertainty”.
- “Probabilistic projections of future conditions are another form of scenarios not used in this report because this method remains an area of active research. No widely accepted method is currently available for producing probabilistic projections of sea level rise at actionable scales”.
- “Thus, specific probabilities or likelihoods are not assigned to individual scenarios in this report, and none of these scenarios should be used in isolation”.
- “None of these scenarios should be used in isolation, and experts and coastal managers should factor in locally and regionally specific information on climatic, physical, ecological, and biological processes and on the culture and economy of coastal communities.”
- “Scientific observations at the local and regional scale are essential to action, and long-term coastal management actions (e.g. coastal habitat restoration) are sensitive to near-term rates and amounts of SLR.”
Exactly how local communities and cities are supposed to use these scenarios for local sea level rise “planning” purposes given these incredible limitations is unexplained.
Also unaddressed in the “National Climate Assessment” report is any explicit discussion of the huge difference between “global mean sea level” and “local sea level” (also called relative sea level) concerning how these vastly different sea level rise data measurements apply or don’t apply at specific coastal locations. .
NOAA clearly notes (http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/faq.htm#q1) that “There is an important distinction between the global sea level trend and relative sea level trends (based on local sea level measurements), which must be understood in order to interpret changes to a coastline or particular location, and to properly apply the information”.
The University of Colorado sea level research group which uses satellites to measure global mean sea level for making estimates of ocean sea level clearly states ((http://sealevel.colorado.edu/faq#n3134)) that satellite global mean sea level measurements “”cannot be used to predict relative sea level changes along the coasts”.
Instead the University of Colorado notes that “”Local tide gauges measure the sea level at a single location relative to the local land surface, a measurement referred to as “relative sea level” (RSL)”
For sea level rise planning purposes local coastal cities and communities need to rely upon NOAA tide gauge data with measurements of coastal sea level rise at specific local and related regional locations to address what kinds of sea level increases should be expected. Global mean sea level data and estimates are not applicable at specific coastal locations and inappropriate for use for local coastal planning purposes.
Southern California has some of the world’s most beautiful and expensive coastal communities on the planet including locations at Long Beach, Seal Beach, Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, Corona del Mar, Laguna Beach and Monarch Beach. The rate of sea level rise at these coastal locations is very important to these communities economic well being and to issues of property protection and enjoyment for the businesses and people that work and live in these communities.
A local newspaper the Orange County Register published two articles on April 24, 2016 (http://www.ocregister.com/articles/sea-713335-rise-level.html), (http://www.ocregister.com/articles/focus-713037-levels-rise.html) alleging that because of CO2 caused global warming the earth’s sea level rise is accelerating and could increase by 3 feet by the year 2100 and inundate local southern California coastal areas causing significant damage to Southern California coastal communities.
These stories based their sea level rise information on the “National Climate Assessment” report and incorrectly applied the mid range scenario to Long Beach, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach. Additionally the articles failed to make any mention of the huge qualifications and limitations of the National Assessment reports global sea level rise scenarios.
There are four NOAA long time period tide gauge sea level rise measurement locations in the Southern California region located at San Diego (http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_station.shtml?stnid=9410170), La Jolla (http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_station.shtml?stnid=9410230), Los Angeles (http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_station.shtml?stnid=9410660) and Santa Monica (http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_station.shtml?stnid=9410840).
The NOAA tide gauge data for these locations which covers time periods from more than 80 to over 100 years ago through 2015 data measurements shows that there is no sea level rise acceleration taking place at these locations and that the rate of sea level rise is stable and between 3 to 9 inches per century at these locations not the 3 feet proclaimed in the alarmist article. This NOAA tide gauge data should have been discussed and presented in these Register articles.
NOAA 95% level of confidence analysis shows that there have been no significant changes in the rate of sea level rise at these Southern California locations during the long time period of these measurements. These 95% level of confidence intervals for the specific Southern California coastal locations are available at (http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_update.htm?stnid=9410170), (http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_update.htm?stnid=9410230), (http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_update.htm?stnid=9410660), and (http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_update.htm?stnid=9410840).
The climate alarmist news media have done a terrible job addressing the valid issues and information about sea level rise acceleration to the public. Much of what is written about this topic is inaccurate, misleading and erroneous. The media appear to have gone out of their way to ignore NOAA tide gauge data and instead incorrectly based alarmist sea level rise stories on inappropriate use of global mean sea level measurements and computer estimates and forecasts.
A recent study published in the Ocean & Coastal Management Journal (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0964569116300205) addressed the importance of using only tide gauge data for coastal planning not speculative global mean sea level estimates derived from ocean computer models using satellite sea level measurements.
Climate scientist Dr. Judith Curry presented some of the results of this paper (https://judithcurry.com/2016/02/23/is-sea-level-rise-accelerating/) which included the following assessment of how communities should evaluate coastal sea level rise issues:
The network of tide gauges provides the only information of value for costal planning.
The worldwide naïve average of sea level is +0.24 mm/year with no acceleration.
The climate models have crucial flaws making them useless.
Planning schemes must only reflect the proven local and global historical data.
Further supporting the importance of using local sea level rise tide gauge measurements for coastal location planning needs NOAA clearly states that “Relative Sea Level Trends reflect changes in local sea level over time and are typically the most critical sea level trend for many coastal applications, including coastal mapping, marine boundary delineation, coastal zone management, coastal engineering, sustainable habitat restoration design, and the general public enjoying their favorite beach”.
Unfortunately misleading, erroneous and inaccurate information about sea level rise issues is often used by climate alarmists to try and make their case. Extensive NOAA tide gauge data measured at hundreds of coastal locations around the U.S.many with measurement periods longer than 100 years do not support claims of coastal sea level rise acceleration.
NOAA tide gauge data represents an extremely important scientific resource to address specific coastal location sea level rise issues. The real story about coastal sea level rise contained in this critical data needs to be told.
Is there ocean floor lift\subsidence anomaly data?
Isostatic re-bound due to glaciers melting – see http://www.antarcticglaciers.org/glaciers-and-climate/sea-level-rise-2/recovering-from-an-ice-age/
But that’s continental crust not sea floor
Ocean floor generally doesn’t lift or subside except at tectonic plate boundaries
Tectonic subsidence occurs along convergent boundaries of tectonic plates, subduction zones, where material from one tectonic plate is thrust down below the other … http://cioss.coas.oregonstate.edu/CIOSS/Documents/Outreach/Feb08/1Global_Subduction_Zone_Map.pdf
Tectonic uplift occurs along convergent boundaries when continental crust on one plate is thrust over the top of crust on the other plate. A good example is India colliding with Eurasia to form the Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau..http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/Plate-Tectonics/Chap3-Plate-Margins/Convergent/Continental-Collision
The Himalayas are rising by about 1cm/year but eroding at about the same rate.
Pacific Ocean sea surface height (SSH) anomalies
in the 2015 one are we seeing El Nino thermal expansion?
Well, that is the question. 1998 had a drop afterward. 2015 was really a two year El Nino.
The prediction envelope is for a moderate La Nina.
The global temperature and sea level should decline, the million dollar question is how much.
How could that be when the thermal aspect of el nino is a near surface phenomenon? More likely the sea level change is a function of the reversal of prevailing winds that bring warm West Pacific water Eastward to N.A.
How could that be when the thermal aspect of el nino is a near surface phenomenon?
The El Nino is moving water from left to right so the rise is accurate.
The 2015 El Nino had about a 5 mm impact on sea level (from eyeballing one of the charts above). If you assume that the effect only goes 100 meters deep and only affects 1/3 of the worlds oceans, the affected area rose 15 mm. How much warmer does 100 meters of ocean have to be to expand 15 mm?
T = 15 mm /(100,000 * 333E-6) = 0.450 K.
Do I think an El Nino warms the surface waters almost 1/2 of a degree Celsius? Sure – because that the is definition of an El Nino.
Excellent, excellent assessment. Our longest term, most reliable, tidal gage data have
destroyed any catastrophic theory of sea level rise.
Even better are the ~70 long record tide gauges with reasonable diff GPS land motion adjustments. They say about 2.2mm/yr, and no change for the last century. Takes the land motion stuff out of the assessment.
Do you have a reference for that, ristvan? When I last looked, a couple of years ago, the CORS data quality appeared to be very poor.
Public perception facts:
1) Most think the ice ages were millions of years ago, and they do not realize that we still live in one that has lasted for almost 3 million years.
2) Most think that climate is static, and that any rise in global temperature should be a concern, particularly if man is responsible for it.
3) Most think that sea levels are also static and that any rise in sea levels should be of great concern, particularly if man is responsible for it.
4) Most are quite susceptible to media propaganda..
>i>Most are quite susceptible to media propaganda..
Particularly if man is responsible for it.
“Most think… Most are…”
—————
Almost anything perceived in others will eventually be revealed within ourselves.
Valuable article. I had been looking for a presentation of this data in one place, and here it is. I see that Larry Hamblin has managed to include a couple of potshots at President Obama. To me these seem well-deserved and in fact my eyes tend to glide right by such stuff while I focus on the data. But including such sniping at the president makes it almost impossible to share this sort of piece with some of my friends. When they read an article like this the information they absorb is the inverse of what I get. They see it as essentially a partisan attack and assume that all the data is worthless (despite coming from NOAA). Consider this a plea to write more objectively in the future.
So just show them the data.
President Obama has significantly damaged the scientific integrity of all government and government funded science by making these endeavors the slave to his political ideology. He has made invalid climate alarmist remarks from the bully pulpit for years and never been held accountable particularly by the Obama loving press. He has misdirected hundreds of billions of dollars in pursuit of climate alarmist folly which could have been used to address the countries real problems with poverty, education and continued economic stagnation. Will anyone ever hold him and his admirers accountable? My article is hardly political to point out his clear ignorance of climate science issue.
President Obama has badly damaged the integrity of all government and government funded science by making these endeavors the salve to his political ideology. He has made numerous climate alarmist claims that are clearly erroneous and shouted them from the bully pulpit for years and never been held accountable for this abuse of scientific truth by the press.
The Obama loving media has not only given him a pass on his absurd and erroneous climate alarmist statements and political interference with the nations scientific pursuits but has supported both his actions and claims which have so damaged the conduct of sound scientific inquiry in the U.S.
He has misdirected the use of hundreds of billions of dollars in his climate alarmist folly and precluded these funds from being used for the nations critical issue regarding poverty, education and improving the continuing economic stagnation.
My comments in this small article exposing his clear ignorance of climate science basic information taken from on his own ridiculous statements, which were never addressed by the media, is hardly political. Someday perhaps someone will have the courage to hold this President, who has so badly politicalized and damaged the pursuit of science, accountable for his folly.
Larry Hamlin May 28, 2016 at 7:21 pm
“President Obama has badly damaged the integrity of all government and government funded science by making these endeavors the salve to his political ideology. He has made numerous climate alarmist claims that are clearly erroneous and shouted them from the bully pulpit for years and never been held accountable for this abuse of scientific truth by the press.”
Let’s see? Could that be because he reflects the current thinking in the field by the overwhelming number of scientists? Can I be sold bold as to say that is entirely responsible given he is not a scientist and so he listens to the people who study the stuff. Unlike Trump who thinks climate change was invented by the Chinese.
Mr. Simon I have bad news for you. What scientists “think” isn’t measured data. The data doesn’t support climate alarmist “thinking”. When the measured data shows otherwise the “thinking” is wrong and the alarmists claims are disproven.
Larry Hamlin
But the “measured data” supports Obama’s stance too. Two hottest years in modern history (and we are heading for a third), the arctic in poor shape the the antarctic not much better.
Funny how Trump says climate change is a hoax and at the same time says it’s real and the reason for his needing to build a wall at one of his golf courses. Now there’s a man who will say and do whatever he needs to to get what he wants… as opposed to what’s right.
http://www.politico.com/story/2016/05/donald-trump-climate-change-golf-course-223436
Simon sez:
…he reflects the current thinking in the field by the overwhelming number of scientists…
If I had a dollar for every time Simon repeated his Appeal to Authority logical fallacy, I could buy a mansion next to Algore’s.
Besides, as I’ve pointed out dozens of times: the true ‘consensus’ (for whatever that’s worth in science; not much) is heavily on the side of skeptics of the AGW scare.
Simon asserts a consensus, but he can’t produce names. I can post the names of tens of thousands of professionals, all with degrees in the hard sciences, who have stated in writing that human emissions are most likely harmless, and beneficial to the biosphere.
Skeptics are the consensus. I can produce names. Simon can’t. Case closed.
DB
Great let’s see your list? But DB not the Oregon Petition please. It’ nearly 20 years old and so 20th century.
Here’s mine…
https://www.opr.ca.gov/s_listoforganizations.php
Simon,
You still haven’t produced a single name. You just deflected, as usual.
And as you are well aware, the OISM list of names is online. Your argument that it’s 20 years old is as big a FAIL as all your other failed arguments. In science, facts don’t lose their credibility because time has passed. But thanx for demonstrating that you’ve got no argument — and of course, still no names of any scientists who contradicted the OISM co-signers. So you fail the challenge.
And your ridiculous list of unqualified ‘authorities’ shows just how desperate you are. Tell us, Simon, how extensive is climate research in the American Academy of Pediatrics, or in the College of Preventive Medicine, or the Canadian Society of Soil Science, or the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, or in the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums? heh.
You’re beyond desperate, Simon.
DB
And what do you think of your hero Trump who calls climate change a hoax and then uses it to get permission to build a retaining wall on his golf course? I mean, that has got to be the height of hypocrisy… doesn’t it?
More ^deflection^.
Mr. Simon you misunderstand and mischaracterize the global temperature data.
The last years have been higher in temperature because of the very large 2015- 2016 naturally occurring El Nino as clearly shown at (https://wattsupwiththat.com/2016/05/25/climate-models-dont-work/). Climate alarmists consistently conceal the El Nino force as driving the recent global temperatures and temperature trends.
Climate models that supposedly represent that CO2 emissions drive global temperatures have failed and grossly overstate the impact of atmospheric CO2 levels on global temperatures as addressed in detail in the referenced article.
The climate models don’t work and the data shows it clearly. Obama’s claims as always conceal the failure of the climate models, the significance of the El Nino event on recent global temperatures and of course the failure of NOAA tide gauge data to show coastal sea level rise acceleration.
Additionally Obama fails to inform the public that the U.S. is not a contributor to growing global CO2 emissions as addressed here: (https://wattsupwiththat.com/2016/05/24/the-latest-eia-co2-emissions-data-shows-that-the-u-s-is-not-a-significant-contributor-to-increasing-global-co2-emissions/).
The free market energy impacts of low cost natural gas from fracking has overtaken any need for heavy handed and costly government programs to reduce U.S. CO2 emissions. Of course President Obama conceals this information from the public.
Hamlin
El Nino has no effect on the long term trend. Take El Nino out of the picture there is warming. Put it in…. there is warming. Focus only on La Nina years… there is warming. Bottom line El Nino and La Nina have only a short term influence. Enso is not the driver and never has been. And it seems to me your flimsy grasp on the science is driven by your love of the free market. Sadly a condition many here seem to suffer from.
The global temperature graphs provided by climate scientist Dr. Judith Curry at (https://wattsupwiththat.com/2016/05/25/climate-models-dont-work/) clearly show the impact that El Nino events have on long term global temperatures and temperature trends. Try looking at some actual measured global temperature trend data and observe where the El Nino events come unto play. It might open your eyes a bit.
Ummm …. yes El Nino are the peaks and guess what, La Nina’s are the troughs. But … hello… they are not the long term drivers. If they were we would have been getting hotter for a very long time and would have fried quite some time ago. Can I suggest you take some of your own advice and “open your own eyes.”
DBStealey
“Skeptics are the consensus. I can produce names. Simon can’t. Case closed.”
So I produce mine… you produce nothing…. I guess the case is closed.
Simon,
I’ve repeatedly challenged you to produce the names of scientists and/or engineers who dispute the OISM statement. But you’ve never posted a single name.
I can produce the names of more than thirty thousand professionals, all with degrees in the hard sciences, including more than 9,000 PhD’s. Can you produce even thirty (30) names of professionals with hard science degrees, who have contradicted the OISM statement in writing?
I didn’t think so. But prove me wrong, if you can. That will be a first.
Simon sez:
yes El Nino are the peaks and guess what, La Nina’s are the troughs. But … hello… they are not the long term drivers. If they were we would have been getting hotter for a very long time and would have fried quite some time ago.
Your “logic” is as big a failure as your “appeal to corrupt/irrelevant ‘authorities’ fallacy.
DB
So I produce a list that has pretty much every scientifically representative national body on the planet and you produce…. wait for it…. a nearly twenty year old list called the Oregon Petition. It was a highly dubious when it was produced, but that is even irrelevant now. It is an out of date worthless piece of history. DB, why do you allow yourself to be set up like this?
With regard to Mr. Simon’s inaccurate claim that El Nino’s are not drivers of long term temperature trends Bob Tisdale provided the following comments for an individual who made the same incorrect claim in a comment associated with (https://wattsupwiththat.com/2016/05/25/climate-models-dont-work/) as:
“After presenting an intentionally misleading graph, Toneb said, “They are just internal variations and in a cycle such as the PDO/ENSO they will average out in the long term.”
You obviously do not understand, or you’re intentionally misrepresenting, the processes of ENSO, Toneb. Strong El Nino events, very obviously, can and do contribute to long-term global warming. See Chapter 3.7 of “On Global Warming and the Illusion of Control – Part 1”:
https://bobtisdale.files.wordpress.com/2015/11/tisdale-on-global-warming-and-the-illusion-of-control-part-1.pdf
Specifically, see the discussion starting on page 603.”
Larry Hamlin
Believe what you want. Doesn’t make it right. Saying El nino contributes to long term warming is like saying you can lift yourself into the air by pulling on your shoelaces.
Mr. Simon the expert analysis of climate scientist Bob Tisdale regarding global temperatures as documented by numerous books on the subject and his clear analysis and discussion of the long term global temperature and temperature trends impacts of El Nino’s, which you have tried to deny, isn’t “belief” but solid science.
Solid science is something foreign to climate alarmist “believers” who base their beliefs largely on deception and distortion of information as propagated by the media to try to manufacture and exaggerate something that isn’t a crisis. The schemes to push climate alarmism are part of a massive government and media political campaign supporting the views of a President who is clueless about climate science and driven completely by a scientifically unsupported ideological.
The “truths” about climate science which include the facts that the U.S. is not contributing to growth of future global CO2 emissions thus negating the need for heavy handed and costly government mandates to address future emissions, that climate models have failed and been proven to grossly exaggerate and overstate global temperatures therefore demonstrating these models are inappropriate for climate policy action, that global temperatures and temperature trends are largely driven by natural climate variables including recent strong El Nino’s and that despite decades of alarmist speculative claims otherwise coastal rates of sea level rise are not accelerating.
In the end solid science backed by reliable measured data will win out over the tactics of deception and distortion, lead by the efforts of President Obama, that have so dominated the scientifically unsupported political campaign of climate alarmism.
Larry Hamlin
Oh dear. Tin foil hat anyone?
Simon wrote on May 29, 2016 at 4:43 pm, “DB[dbstealey] So I produce a list that has pretty much every scientifically representative national body on the planet and…”
Not so much, Simon.
Despite your disdain for it, there’s nothing “dubious” about the OISM Climate Petition. It is a compelling statement of what 31,487 American scientists (including engineers in relevant specialties) understood to be true, and it is as true now as it was when it was written:
“There is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon dioxide, methane, or other greenhouse gases is causing or will, in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of the Earth’s atmosphere and disruption of the Earth’s climate. Moreover, there is substantial scientific evidence that increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide produce many beneficial effects upon the natural plant and animal environments of the Earth.”
That statement is factual. This statement by President Obama is not:
“Ninety-seven percent of scientists agree: #climate change is real, man-made and dangerous.”
A great many scientific “national body” (political) organizations have issued statements supporting climate alarmism (at least tepidly), but the consensus of such bodies is weaker than you might think. Outside of academia and government institutions (left-wing bastions), surveys of scientists reveal widespread skepticism toward climate alarmism. The OISM Petition Project is certainly proof of that, but here are some more examples:
From the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society we learned that a 2009 survey found most broadcast meteorologists say that they disagree with the IPPC claim that humans are primarily responsible for recent global warming.
A 2010 survey of all American broadcast meteorologists by researchers at George Mason University confirms that result.
A 2013 survey of all AMS Professional Members (not just broadcast meteorologists) yielded similar results. Of 1821 Members who completed the survey, there were 1203 Meteorologists & Atmospheric Scientists, 232 Climatologists, and 386 others. (33 other Members returned incomplete surveys.) Of the 1821 Members who returned complete surveys, 52% believe global warming is real and mostly caused by humans. Of the 1435 Climatologists, Meteorologists & Atmospheric Scientists just under 50% believe global warming is real and mostly caused by humans, and of the 1203 Meteorologists & Atmospheric Scientists only 45.5% believe global warming is real and mostly caused by humans. (Unfortunately, the survey didn’t ask how many of those Members who think global warming is real & man-made also think it is a problem. Most scientists who are skeptical of climate alarmism accept that global warming is real, and at least partially man-made, but also think it is modest and non-threatening; I’m one of these “lukewarmist” scientists. -DB)
A 2008 survey of members of the Association of Professional Engineers, Geologists and Geophysicists of Alberta (APEGGA), who, like meteorologists, are mostly privately employed, found that:
Subsequently, a 2012 survey of APEGGA’s members found that only 36% of them were in general agreement with the IPCC position “that climate change is happening, that it is not a normal cycle of nature, and humans are the main or central cause.” 51% think there’s little or no danger from anthropogenic chimate change, either because human activity has little effect and/or because the effects are benign. An additional 5% estimate the danger as moderate but say the debate is not settled. (Note: APEGGA shortened its name to the “Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Alberta” [APEGA] in 2012.)
Hundreds of highly qualified scientists have signed The Manhattan Declaration On Climate Change, declaring their belief that global warming is not a crisis, and CO2 is not a pollutant.
Even back in 2007, before Climategate [etc.], when Harris polled 500 leading American Meteorological and Geophysical scientists (details here), there was no consensus. Harris found that:
The June 2013 newsletter (TAG 167) of the Geological Society of Australia (GSA) illustrates the ongoing lively debate in the scientific community about anthropogenic climate change. In 2009, the GSA’s Executive Committee issued a statement in support of global warming alarmism, but they subsequently withdrew it due to intense criticism from the Society’s members. On p. 9 of the June 2013 newsletter you’ll read that in 2010 an independent poll of GSA members found that 53% disagreed with the Executive Committee’s 2009 statement. So, in 2012, the Executive Committee tried again. They drafted a new, more balanced position statement (from TAG 165 pp. 6-7), more accurately reflecting the Members’ beliefs. But the Society’s members were so divided on the subject, and the debate was so rancorous, that they finally gave up on trying to reach a consensus. That’s why the GSA takes no position on climate change.
daveburton
OK so I started reading then saw you were quoting the Heartland Institute. Maybe a ship load of tin hats is needed.
@Simon,
That was a truly despicable comment. Pure ad hominem.
Your ‘consensus’ argument has been totally demolished. There’s nothing left of it. But instead of being a stand-up guy and admitting Dave Burton thrashed you with facts and evidence, you deflected onto ‘Heartland’.
But I’m glad you made your comment. It proves that as usual, you’ve got nothin’.
Simon, the Heartland Institute is one of the world’s finest public policy think tanks. If you don’t realize that, maybe you’re the one who wears AFDBs.
Or perhaps you were misled by the Peter Gleick / DeSmogBlog forged document smear. If you’re not familiar with the story, read on. Dr. Gleick tried to anonymously distribute a “strategy memo” purportedly leaked from Heartland, which was actually a forgery, almost certainly created by Gleick, himself. Here’s an article about the affair, in The Atlantic.
Gleick was subsequently rewarded for his crimes by National Geographic’s ScienceBlog subsidiary, where he’s now their resident “scientist, innovator, and communicator” on global water, environment, climate, identity theft, fraud, character assassination, and forgery.
BTW, Heartland has compiled an impressive collection of information about the COP-21 Paris climate conference. You could learn a lot from it, if you’re willing: https://www.heartland.org/Cop21/
Unfortunately, someone who dismisses the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society and George Mason U. simply because they were quoted by Heartland is probably not open-minded enough to learn from Heartland’s resources.
Dave Burton says:
Unfortunately, someone who dismisses the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society and George Mason U. simply because they were quoted by Heartland…
That kind of ad hominem nonsense is from the same kind of non-thinker who actually believes that the Canadian Society of Zoologists, and the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums are the go-to experts on “climate change”.
They are among Simon’s ‘climate change authorities’, if you can believe that. The next time he makes his ‘appeal to authority’ logical fallacy his argument, I think I’ll ask for a study of climate change done by a pediatric academy. ☺
BD and DB
Heartland is a right wing think tank that does little more than spread propaganda about issues that threaten the free market. Tobacco regulation and mitigation against climate change are two areas they have thrown a lot of effort into producing misinformation. Clearly they have had some success if you believe they have credibility. In my world though they are the lowest of the low, happy to spread their nonsense so they can keep the money rolling in. All the time people were dying from smoking and they cheerfully called the (now proved beyond doubt) research phoney. No self respecting scientist would have their name anywhere near theirs. So when I read you (Dave B) were quoting them, I stopped reading. Life is too short.
To Simon, either first name or last which ever your trying to hide, there is a great article at (http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.com/2016/05/dr-willie-soon-takes-on-bill-nye.html) which describes you and your comments perfectly.
“True science requires that data, observations and other evidence support a hypothesis – and that it can withstand withering analysis and criticism – or the hypothesis is wrong.
That’s why Albert Einstein once joked, “If the facts don’t fit your theory, change the facts.” When informed that scientists who rejected his theory of relativity had published a pamphlet, 100 authors against Einstein, he replied: “Why 100? If I were wrong, one would be enough.”
In the realm of climate scientism, the rule seems to be: If the facts don’t support your argument, talk louder, twist the facts, and insult your opponents. That’s certainly what self-styled global warming “experts” like Al Gore and Bill Nye are doing. Rather than debating scientists who don’t accept false claims that humans are causing dangerous climate change, they just proclaim more loudly:
Our theory explains everything that’s happening. Hotter or colder temperatures, wetter or drier weather, less ice in the Arctic, more ice in Antarctica – it’s all due to fossil fuel use.
Climate scientism aggressively misrepresents facts, refuses to discuss energy and climate issues with anyone who points out massive flaws in the manmade climate chaos hypothesis, bullies anyone who won’t condemn carbon dioxide, and brands them as equivalent to Holocaust Deniers.”
Boy this shoe sure fits you regarding your comments. You should be so proud!
Larry Hamlin
“In the realm of climate scientism, the rule seems to be: If the facts don’t support your argument, talk louder, twist the facts, and insult your opponents.”
Change scientism to skepticism and you are 100% correct. Could not have written it better myself. I mean what laugh the likes of DB and yourself claiming the facts are on your side…. Read the facts by one of the most prestigious scientific organisations on the planet….
https://royalsociety.org/~/media/Royal_Society_Content/policy/projects/climate-evidence-causes/climate-change-evidence-causes.pdf
Now tell me you have the facts to win this debate…..
Simon
The Royal Society has yet to be right about most of its top-level politically-inspired decisions. And that goes back to its founding members: Newton’s astrology, The lunar position tables and longitude vs the chronometer, physics predictions in the late 1800’s, opposition to tectonic theory, support of ether, choice of naval gunnery computers, germ theory-infections-water supplies, plumbing, blood-letting, opposition to nuclei theory of the atom, to fission, to fusion in the sun, to elements in the sun ….
I’ll leave you to decide which of the two groups that joined forces to write the document that destroys your “we have the facts” argument, is the most prestigious?
I visited the beach in front of SIO in 2005. I used to bodysurf south of the Scripps pier and spearfish north of the pier in 1975-82. The surf line had no discernible change in 30 years (same for the La Jolla Shores surf line). I’ve been visiting San Francisco’s Ocean beach since the 1970’s. There is no discernible ocean incursion onto the wide beach, as in if there has been sea level rise, it has been minuscule.
I trust my observational judgment. I feel confident that if a substantial sea-level rise had occurred in 30-40 years, i would have noticed it. I started doing science observations and experiments at age 5 when I started catching and collecting insects, and identifying them, as well as bird species. A age 8 I received a football for Christmas, but never used it, while I did spend my Christmas money to buy a microscope, which I used a lot, more Xmas and B-day money spent at age 10 to buy a Newtonian reflector and chemistry set. I got to work with electron microscopy at age 19, then at age 22 did some early bimolecular engineering.
I was also a National Merit Finalist, and graduated 3rd in my class at Berkeley, double majoring in 4 years.
Then you have not-even-credible “scientists” like Hansen (conflating Venus with Earth, PhD in Physics at Iowa, okay Van Allen, but Van Allen sent his top undergrads to MIT et al. Only his crappy students stayed at Iowa.
Then Berkeley undergrad Mann, couldn’t get into PhD Physics at Berkeley, Caltech, Stanford, Harvard, MIT or Princeton, or even Chicago or Cornell. He went to Yale, a place that had ZERO Physics Nobel Laureates, but even then, physics was too hard for him. Switched to geosciences. Took 9 years working straight through to get his doctorate (after 5 years for his AB), only after doing research at U Mass–perhaps the first Yale degree issued for research not done under a Yale professor. Then you have Phil Jones, EAU, graduate of UK third tier U.
And these are people who are changing science. Not to mention Blondie, former Science Editor-in-Chief, now NAS prez, who is the first Science EIC, and NAS prez with a bachelor’s from a 2nd tier humanities college.
Real sea level rise is measurable in inches per century. If humans can’t deal with that, humans aren’t as smart as they used to be.
.
I’m not quite sure why you felt the need for such a public mea culpa, admitting that the guttersnipes and underlings have taken you and your learned whizkid peers to school for the past couple of decades.
The likes of Schmidt and Hansen have kept you and your übermenschlich pals silenced, “getting along” (but keeping your job?) while the little petty tyrants took the science world apart.
Who knows, you’re still alive, so maybe you and your “esteemed” pedigreed cohorts will figure out that the only way that you’re ever going to really amount to anything is to grow a pair and step up and do the right thing and put an end to this!
Failing that, shut up.
well said alan.
I agree with you. I sold out. I bought into a corrupt scheme that promised intelligence, hard work, and delayed gratification, (also no drugs or EtOH), could protect me from living on the street, or dependent on government welfare.
Now let’s consider the “environmentalists” (whatever that means) who say that Central Valley Farmers are grabbing 80% of the water produced by the Sacramento River. By which they mean 30-40% of the Sac River’s actual capture and diversion from flows to the Pacific Ocean.
But, regardless of that twisting of numerical fact, why aren’t the enviros saying “80% of the diversion of free-flowing Sacramento River flows is going to feed us enviros in SF, NYC, Washington DC, which is great, but it is also feeding the undeserving masses in every state of the U.S., not to mention undeserving masses in China, Japan, and the EU. California’s Central Valley could feed us deserving enviros, without having to feed the world’s trash population, if we had no dams on the Sacto. We admit the Central Valley’s farmers aren’t the actual primary problem-maers, they are only stupid and greedy respondents to the 40 million people living in California, the vast majority of whom are worthless eaters who want food, which doesn’t include us. Yes, we eat, but we do so for a higher purpose than the trash-masses. We want social justice, which means reducing the world’s population to 500 million, and California’s population to 1 million, and starvation by shutting down mass-irrigated agriculture is a smart means to do this. Let the Central Alley be a desert as Gaia intended.”
Alan, you’re right. Except for the “shut up”.
I learned that working hard, doing grueling jobs, studying hard when other students were partying, delaying gratification, were worthwhile.
How about yu?. Did you ever mow people’s lawns and weed their bedding-plant yards at age 10-12, or pick strawberries, or transplant celery, or weed, cut or load lettuce cartons age 14-19? Did you? Because only Mexicans will do that. Ignoring some Anglo-American youth.
What hard, grueling physical jobs have you done in your life? If none, then I don’t say to you, “Shut up”. But I can conclude you have no credibility.
I did jobs that fed other people. How ’bout you Alan?
Choosing tide gauge data derived from stable regions (not influenced by techtonics or isostatic rebound), generally shows < 2mm per annum increase. Would it be fair to suggest the satellite data is reading too high ?.
Sydney AU shows 0.65mm with an error margin of 0.1mm.
One more time:
They add 0.3+ mm/y because the ocean is sinking (GIA)
They add 0.7+ by masking land which is rising 0.7+ mm/y [0.3 mm * (7/10)/(3/10) = 0.7 mm/Y ]
So the “real” satellite sea level is 2.3 mm/Y or less.
PA, do you have any links explaining the 0.7mm adjustment.?.
http://sealevel.colorado.edu/content/what-glacial-isostatic-adjustment-gia-and-why-do-you-correct-it
The ocean floor is dropping 0.3 mm/Y. (the justification for the GIA) adjustment).
Further, they claim it is greater than that but they are being conservative.
Read their explanation. The land is rising and the ocean is sinking because of magma flows.
7/10 of the planet is sinking 0.3+ mm because of magma flowing to the other 3/10ths of the earths surface.
0.3+ * (7/10) / (3/10) = 0.7+ mm.
The magma isn’t flowing into the atmosphere, it is flowing under the land and the volumes have to be equal.
You can test this at home with a cup and a cork or other solid object 3/10 the area of the cup and is slightly buoyant . You don’t have to take my word for it. Just lift the solid object and measure how much you have to raise it for the water to drop 0.3 mm.
UC esplicitly states that they mask the land area. That means a 0.7+ mm/y uplift is reported as 0 (zero).
Further they add 0.3+ mm to account for the sinking of the ocean floor which has absolutely nothing to do with sea level.
Lets say the land wasn’t rising just the ocean floor was sinking and the tidal gauges were reporting 0 (zero) sea level rise and in point of fact there was no actual sea level rise. How much would UC report? 0.3 mm/Y.
For the real story on NY City Relative Sea level, see my essay re Hurricane Sandy.
The only sea level pertinent to human affairs is LOCAL RELATIVE SEA LEVEL — the level at which the land and the sea meet. For most places, it is the level between High Tides and Low Tides, with some attention to highest possible tides — coupled with the local geography/bathymetry (land features and sea floor “geography”) that help predict the effects of storm surges. For instance, Tropical Storm Sandy’s effects on NY City were greatly increased by the restriction of access to the Meadowlands — the historic flood plain for NY Harbor — access to the Meadowlands for storm surge waters have bee cut off by development.
Didn’t Hurricane Sandy also coincide with a “Spring Tide” – much higher than normal high tide?
Reply to J. Philip Peterson ==> Yes, it was the “Perfect Storm” of storm surge plus extreme high tide plus years of forgetting how high the water could come if you don’t allow the Meadowlands to act as a natural relief valve. It would take some historical sleuthing to find the last time that the Meadowlands was able to perform this function successfully to ward off disaster.
Right on, Kip! I guess you’re not related to James.
The third graph in your article seems to imply two stages of sea level rise since the maximum extent of the last North American, Western European Ice Age. The first stage was a rapid rise in sea level due to the rapid melting of glaciers. The second stage, which we seem to be in today, seems to be caused by the slow but steady rebound of low-elevation land after the ice burden had been removed. This rise, especially in the vicinity of Canada and around Scandinavia, seems to be displacing ocean water, causing a gradual sea level rise elsewhere. It looks to me like the graphs are rather smooth, over the long term
Obama needs to take a lesson from King Cnut.
Australia’s best scientific estimates are produced by the CSIRO-
https://www.cmar.csiro.au/sealevel/sl_hist_few_hundred.html
“One of the oldest tide gauge benchmarks in the world is at Port Arthur in south-east Tasmania. When combined with historical tide gauge data (found in the London and Australian archives) and recent sea level observations, it shows that relative sea level has risen by 13.5 cm from 1841 to 2000.”
and globally-
“We have used a combination of historical tide-gauge data and satellite-altimeter data to estimate global averaged sea level change from 1880 to 2014. During this period, global-averaged sea level rose about 23 cm, with an average rate of rise of about 1.6 mm/yr over the 20th Century. The sea level record indicates a statistically significant increase in the rate of rise from 1880 to 2014.”
Whereas the geology of Hallet Cove in South Australia shows us from the past that average sea level rise can be 16.25mm a year for 8000 years from point 6 here-
http://www.sa.gsa.org.au/Brochures/HallettCoveBrochure.pdf
and it would be silly to assume that average rise didn’t mask centuries of above and below that mean outcome, so much so that it could easily dwarf the global 1.6mm a year estimate today.
What planet do these doomsayers live on when faced with such evidence or are they denying the science?
Now the scramble will begin to “homogenize, smooth and adjust” data to get the desired results?
You have a nicely written and well researched article, so I’d like to thank you for that. Yet it seems you have a basic misunderstanding of the science behind sea level rise.
The rise that you cite in your article (the inches we’ve seen) is due to a combination of melting of high altitude glaciers and warming oceans. Both are caused by climate change, which is in turn linked to (mainly) human emissions such as carbon dioxide and methane.
The sea level rise that’s estimated by scientists for mid and late century are based on the collapse of large land based ice sheets, mainly in Greenland and Antarctica. So far, the land ice in those areas have not seen significant decline (though they have declined, most of the decline had been in sea ice that had no effect on sea levels).
So, in short, your conclusions don’t take into account all of the facts of the situation.
That said, there is some debate about how much of the land ice will melt. If we continue on like we aren’t causing any harm then it’s likely we’ll see rise on the middle to high side of estimates. If we take action, we can still likely stave off the more dire effects.
Finally, you don’t really mention how detrimental even a few inches of sea level rise can be. Florida is already witnessing the effects of higher sea levels, and we’ve not even seen that much of a rise yet (as you’ve made clear).
and you realize the sea level has dropped a couple of meters in the last 4-5000 years? How devastated was the world back then?
Eric,
1) You spent a great deal of time trying to convince the reader that you have greater expertise than the author, even claiming that the author omitted relevant facts, then you used Florida’s issues as an example.
You blew it.
2) Your call to action was a factually wrong and logically weak invocation of the precautionary principle.
Even NASA is no longer supporting the claim that Antarctica is losing ice mass.
What Florida is seeing, Eric, is something it has seen for 22,000+ yrs. The sea level has been rising before man-made CO2 emissions, and as the data here shows, it has not accelerated since man-made CO2 emissions started.
And I assume by Florida you mean Miami, because I don’t see any other areas of Florida reacting to anything about sea level rise. A big issue has been made of “King tides” in recent years at Miami Beach, failing to note that local variations occur but are balanced-out over larger periods of time.
When you talk about local areas, you need to consider other aspects, such as subsidence due to the withdrawal of groundwater for drinking and irrigation use. As far back as 1976, municipal withdrawals were up to 345 million gallons per day (mgd) in Dade County and an average of 155 mgd in Broward County. Both groundwater and freshwater canal levels have dropped over the past 20 years despite a flat trend in annual rainfall.
Take a look at places like New Orleans and Houston where the rate of subsidence due to groundwater withdrawal can be 10-100+ times the rate of sea level rise.
And subsidence is what in your theory of everything, Dr. Eric?
For three decades now we have been bombarded by climate alarmists with speculative claims of melting glaciers, melting Greenland, melting Antarctica (which is wrong Antarctica is gaining ice (https://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/11/05/yet-another-study-shows-antarctica-gaining-ice-mass-accumulation-highest-we-have-seen-in-the-last-300-years/ )), melting everything, etc. all of it supposedly accelerating the rise of the world’s oceans. Global tide gauge data worldwide (NOAA and PSMSL) shows no coastal sea level rise acceleration anywhere. Florida NOAA tide gauge data shows no coastal sea level rise acceleration just the same unchanging rates of sea level rise for more than 100 years for the longest period data records. We are being scammed.
Eric, if “The rise [in sea-level is] caused by climate change, which is in turn linked to (mainly) human emissions such as carbon dioxide and methane,” then how do you explain the fact that there’s been no acceleration in rate of sea-level rise since the 1920s?
Despite a 30% increase in CO2, and a 75% increase in CH4, the rate of coastal sea-level rise hasn’t increased at all. Every high-quality, long-term measurement record of coastal sea-level shows that fact. When CO2 was under 308 ppmv and CH4 was 1.0 ppmv sea-level was rising just as fast as it is now, with CO2 at 400 ppmv and CH4 at 1.8 ppmv. All that anthropogenic carbon has caused no increase in the rate of sea-level rise.
The wildest high-end estimates for 2050 are for less than 2 °C of warming. A more likely number is somewhere between 0 and 0.5 °C.
Such modest warming doesn’t necessary raise coastal sea-level. If you melt more glaciers, without simultaneously increasing snow deposition, that will raise sea-level. But we know that reduced ocean ice cover does increase snow deposition on nearby ice sheets, which reduces sea-level.
Temperature increases do not necessarily melt ice. Increasing the temperature in Antarctica from -57 °C to -56 °C will not raise sea-levels. Neither will increasing the sea surface temperature in the mid-Pacific from 17 °C to 18 °C. Neither will increasing the temperature of the Gobi Desert, or the temperature of Hotlanta.
If you want to know what happens to sea-level as a result of the tiny warming effect of CO2, you need to look at history, and what history tells us is that anthropogenic CO2 doesn’t significantly affect sea-level.
Eric wrote, “The sea level rise that’s estimated by scientists for mid and late century are based on the collapse of large land based ice sheets, mainly in Greenland and Antarctica.”
“Mainly?” The Laurentide ice sheet is gone. In order to melt ice you’ve got to have some ice to melt. Greenland and Antarctica have the only remaining large ice sheets.
Contrary to what you might have seen reported on PBS, neither Greenland nor Antarctica are showing any signs of ice sheet “collapse.” Neither would be endangered by a 2 °C or smaller temperature increase.
Greenland is losing ice mass, but slowly — probably about 50 cubic miles per year. (Estimates vary, but it’s almost certainly between 25 and 75 cubic miles/year.) 50 cubic miles sounds like a lot, but it’s only enough to raise sea-level by about 0.5 mm.
What’s more, we know that southern Greenland’s climate was milder during the Medieval Climate Optimum than it is now, yet there was no noticeable global sea-level rise due to a melting Greenland ice sheet. We know the climate there was milder then than now, because the Norsemen were growing barley there:
https://ancientfoods.wordpress.com/2012/02/17/viking-barley-in-greenland/
A few years ago there was an article about a man named Kenneth Hoeth who was trying, experimentally, to grow barley in modern Greenland. I haven’t found any subsequent news about how that experiment came out. But even if he succeeded we should remember that he has two advantages over the Norsemen:
1. Mr. Hoeth presumably has access to modern, improved strains of barley, bred for quicker maturity; And,
2. He’s growing his barley at ~400 ppmv CO2, which makes barley (and other C3 plants) grow grow considerably faster and mature slightly faster than they do at the ~280 ppmv level which prevailed 8-10 centuries ago.
Since, in spite of those disadvantages, the Norsemen nevertheless managed to successfully cultivate barley, they must have enjoyed either a substantially longer growing season, or else warmer temperatures (which speed up the growing cycle), or both, compared to Greenland today.
Antarctica might not be losing any ice at all. Ice accumulation and loss are very, very close to being in balance in Antarctica.
Based on GRACE, Shepherd 2012 concluded that Antarctica ice mass change since 1992 has averaged – 71 +/- 83 Gt/yr, which means they couldn’t tell whether it’s actually gaining or losing ice mass.
Based on ICESat, Zwally 2012 found that Antarctica is gaining ice mass: +27 to +59 Gt/yr (averaged over five years), or +70 to +170 Gt/yr (averaged over 19 years). Ref:
Based on CryoSat, McMillan (2014) found Antarctica is losing 79 to 241 Gt/yr of ice, though that’s based on only 3 years of data.
More recently, this 2015 NASA study reported that Antarctica is gaining 82 Gt of ice per year:
http://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/nasa-study-mass-gains-of-antarctic-ice-sheet-greater-than-losses
The range from those various studies, with error bars, is from +170 Gt/yr to -241 Gt/yr, which is equivalent to just -0.47 to +0.67 mm/yr sea-level change. That’s equivalent to less than 3 inches of sea-level change per century.
In other words, although we don’t know whether Antarctica is gaining or losing ice, we do know the rate, either way, is so tiny that it’s having a negligible effect on sea-level.
What’s more, the bulk of the anthropogenic CO2 pulse is likely to last only a few hundred years, which is far short of the thousands required for equilibrium ice sheet response.
Typo correction:
“..that anthropogenic carbon has caused in increase in the rate…”
should be:
“…that anthropogenic carbon has caused no increase in the rate…”
Sorry!
To put sea level rise into perspective, search ‘monash sahul time’
Neat site!
Why is there a green triangle over Timor?
With reference to the sea level gauge at Port Arthur
http://www.warwickhughes.com/agri/HunterTasmania2003GRL.pdf
and this from…….http://soer.justice.tas.gov.au/2003/casestudy/4/
“Global predictions are for the rate of change to increase, such that by 2100 sea-level will be between 9 and 88 cm above the 1990 global average sea-level”.
A bit of wiggle room there…
Looks like the global map on NOAAs website shows mostly green arrows (0 to 1 ft per century). Lol. That’s not very alarming, in my humble opinion.
The worlds oceans have been rising for thousands of years but they fell for thousands of years before that, if you actually do the math so to speak, if the worlds ice caps were to melt over the next few thousand years and raise the sea level by a few millimetres or even meters, how on earth do you get from ‘sea level’ to politicising a natural process? it’s unbelievable that we have an unaccountable political system that promotes their own barefaced cronies who abuse science, this is a global pandemic, people do not cause changes in earths climate, I have nothing but contempt for any type of civil service or people who are just doing their job, no matter what country it comes from, Opportunistic bureaucracy is disgusting and causes harm…
Tiny bit of a rant. but if I have to start swearing… 😀
Curry quote appears to be off-key.
“The worldwide naïve average of sea level is +0.24 mm/year with no acceleration.”
I would guess the number to be +2.4 mm/year. Am I missing something?
The alarmists should go back to 1250 AD Holland and ask the Dutch how they managed to live in a town 22 ft below sea level. The network of dikes dates back to 1250. The Dutch literally drained the Zuiderzee bay with pumps and reclaimed an area 24x larger than Manhattan. They also created the artificial Palm Island in Dubai. If alarmists tell Dutch engineers the Statue of Liberty is threatened by rising sea level, the engineers just might reclaim and expand Ellis Island to form the face of Mickey Mouse laughing at the alarmists.
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01970/palm_1970288c.jpg
I just clicked on every city in Florida and every one is increasing 2mm per year rate,
https://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/sltrends/sltrends_states.htm?gid=1238
From when? and on a longer scale isn’t sea level dropping?
Sparks asked, “on a longer scale isn’t sea level dropping?”
In parts of Canada and Scandinavia it is (due to PGR). Not in most places, and not in Florida.
daveburton
As you said “sparks asks” I’ll say, Sparks didn’t actually ask about the specific geographical parts that you’re referring to? Sparks asked “From when?” and Sparks clearly went to great lengths in a short sentence to infer a longer scale of time of events. And the audacity of Sparks to point out that sea level is dropping on this longer time scale it ENRAGED YOU TO!!! squeeeeek… Plablllablaplabthhhthrolobblebobblethhhhhhppppip… (that’s you’re balloon deflating)
I sorry daveburton you asked me so I will be serious for once, Pull my finger!!
*am
“Um we don’t have that data”
Yes, most of the Florida tide gauges are seeing +2.something mm/yr of sea-level rise.
Vaca Key looks like 3.5 mm/yr, but that’s based on only 44 years of data, which is really too short to deduce a robust trend from a single tide-gauge record.
Clearwater Beach looks like 3.4 mm/yr, but that’s based on only 42 years of data, which is even worse.
All the Florida gauges with at least 50 years of data show trends between between 1.9 mm/yr and 2.9 mm/yr (7.5″ to 11.3″ per century).
Though SIO in La Jolla has eagerly capitalized on the CAGW scare for much funding, no plans whatsoever have been made to move the original seashore campus up the hill and out harms way for rising sea level. Moral: watch the actions, not the words.