Oh Noes, The "Must Not Cross" Climate Tipping Point

line_crossing

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

Greens are fretting that we may be about crash through their arbitrary 1.5C global warming “limit”. But what will they do, when nothing bad happens?

As Earth Swelters, Global Warming Target in Danger

The Earth is so hot this year that a limit for global warming agreed by world leaders at a climate summit in Paris just a few months ago is in danger of being breached.

In December, almost 200 nations agreed a radical shift away from fossil fuels with a goal of limiting a rise in average global temperatures to well below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times while “pursuing efforts” for 1.5°C (2.7°F).

But 2016 is on track to be the hottest year on record, also buoyed by a natural El Niño event warming the Pacific, according to the U.N.’s World Meteorological Organization. The first six months were a sweltering 1.3°C above pre-industrial times.

“It opens a Pandora’s box,” said Oliver Geden, of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs. “The future debate about temperature targets will be about overshoot.”

Many climate scientists say the Paris targets are likely to be breached in the coming decades, shifting debate onto whether it will be possible to turn down the global thermostat.

Read more: http://www.climatecentral.org/news/as-earth-swelters-global-warming-target-in-danger-20597

Leaving aside the increasingly likely possibility that temperatures will continue falling back to average, or possibly further, I actually enjoy when we cross hyped up green lines in the sand.

The green movement has a terrible problem with “tipping points” and “limits”. If they set the bar too high, catastrophe is way to distant for anyone to care about. Greens set the tipping point bar too low, their credibility is damaged when nothing bad happens.

The green tipping point dilemma reminds me something horror fiction author Stephen King once said, in his story and essay collection Danse Macabre;

What’s behind the door or lurking at the top of the stairs is never as frightening as the door or the staircase itself. And because of this, comes the paradox: the artistic work of horror is almost always a disappointment. It is the classic no-win situation. You can scare people with the unknown for a long, long time (the classic example, as Bill Nolan also pointed out, is the Jacques Tourneur film with Dana Andrews, Curse of the Demon but sooner or later, as in poker, you have to turn your down cards up. You have to open the door and show the audience what’s behind it. And if what happens to be behind it is a bug, not ten but a hundred feet tall, the audience heaves a sigh of relief (or utters a scream of relief) and thinks, “A bug a hundred feet tall is pretty horrible, but I can deal with that. I was afraid it might be a thousand feet tall”….

Stephen King himself sadly appears to support climate initiatives. We can but hope that one day the great writer will recognise a poorly constructed narrative and badly executed plotline for what it is.

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Latitude
August 13, 2016 3:21 pm

shifting debate onto whether it will be possible to turn down the global thermostat…..
They have been saying all along that it is.
Personally, I hope they come to the conclusion that it’s not…and just shut up

Louis
Reply to  Latitude
August 13, 2016 3:56 pm

The Greens will never come to the conclusion that it’s not possible to turn down the global thermostat. That would require them to accept that humans are not the primary cause of warming in the first place. Their whole religion and their reason for being is to blame humans for everything bad that happens on the planet. If future temperatures go up, they will blame it on countries failing to keep the targets agreed to in Paris. If temperatures go down, they will either give all the credit to the success of the Paris climate summit, or they will continue to claim that the heat is hiding in the deep oceans ready to spring and wreak havoc at any moment. The best we can hope for is that the public gets tired of hearing them constantly cry wolf and chooses to ignore them.

Huhne
Reply to  Louis
August 13, 2016 11:22 pm

They are taking after King Cnut, who couldn’t turn back the tide. I call them cuts.

Huhne
Reply to  Louis
August 13, 2016 11:23 pm

….cnuts

Reply to  Louis
August 14, 2016 4:39 am

Huhne,
Of course Cnut (or Canute as he was called when I was younger) was smarter than the Greens. He was taking his flattering courtiers down a peg by showing that no matter how powerful he was he was not all-powerful and he could not stop the tide.

gary turner
Reply to  Louis
August 14, 2016 1:27 pm

@HUhne: Don’t you need to fix the transposition in “cnuts”? 😀

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
Reply to  Latitude
August 13, 2016 5:16 pm

When we talk of hottest month or hottest year, we must analyse what are the components that were contributors for such condition as the global average temperature rise is not global warming related fossil fuel. Without such analysis, to say hottest has practically no meaning. Global temperature curve is a sum and total of such highly localised and regionalised / globalised factors. Part of natural variability component is also play an important role.

William H Partin
Reply to  Latitude
August 15, 2016 3:43 am

Not going to work that way. The Greens and the dishonest polititions and the corrupt scientist have been given plenty of reason to shut up, and only squeal louder.

Keitho
Editor
Reply to  William H Partin
August 17, 2016 1:48 am

I wonder what will be different enough to cause concern when we go from 1.9 to 2.0?

NW sage
August 13, 2016 3:31 pm

The better question is: What WON’T ‘they’ do when proved to be wrong [about the tipping point]? answer: They will NOT admit they are wrong, EVER! EVEN A LITTLE BIT WRONG.

JohnKnight
Reply to  NW sage
August 13, 2016 9:49 pm

Summary
The Western world’s leading climatologists have confirmed recent reports of a detrimental global climate change. The stability of most nations is based upon a dependable source of food, but this dependability will not be possible under the new climatic era. A forecast by the University of Wisconsin projects that the earth’s climate is returning to that of the neo-boreal era (1600-1850) – An era of drought, famine, and political unrest in the western world. …
‘A study of climatological research as it pertains to intelligence problems’ ~ CIA 1974

Reply to  JohnKnight
August 14, 2016 4:08 am

So, industrial man is causing detrimental climate change? If that is true, then how can the climate be returning to an era of pre-industrial climate change? Once again the premise makes no sense. One could say that climate changes and often goes in cycles. Our research says that world climate may be cycling back to a past time that was fraught with drought
, famine and political unrest.

auto
Reply to  JohnKnight
August 14, 2016 11:37 am

John K
1974 – the CIA words you quote – was about the high point of the ‘Coming Ice Age’ scare.
Look at the Jethro Tull Album ‘Stormwatch’ from 1979 – the popsters take a year or three to catch up with ‘fashionable’ thought, I guess.
A year or two from now, expect 1D to bring out a download on the Perils of Plantfood.
Auto – not one whit /sarc, I promise.

JohnKnight
Reply to  JohnKnight
August 14, 2016 3:17 pm

Steven,
“So, industrial man is causing detrimental climate change?”
It seems to me that report was warning of the perils of a return to what is now treated as a sort of “safe space” by the CAGW pushers. The once bad old days (pre-industrial) have been recast as the good old days we all must sacrifice mightily to avoid getting away from . . In that sense, the ‘they’ NW Sage spoke of were wrong from day one, though it only becomes obvious as their “tipping point” gets closer to the one-time opposite “tipping point”, back into a climate state they then called the neo-boreal era.

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
Reply to  JohnKnight
August 14, 2016 9:05 pm

The following article of mine Titled “2nd Green Revolution must be a sustainable system” was published on 11 August 2016 edition of newly started Hindi Daily News paper from Meerut “NEWS FIRST TODAY” in page 8 under “Editorial & Opinion”. — this a part of Recommendation Chapter of my book, which is now with the publisher.
2nd Green Revolution must be a sustainable system
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy Agricultural Scientist
The traditional agriculture was soil and climate driven farming system that encompasses the animal husbandry. It provided socio-economic, food and nutrient security with the healthy food. Those were the “Golden Days” in the history of farming. It was an environment-friendly system and was highly successful & sustainable. No pollution, no worry about seeds and fertilizer adulteration as they used good grain as seed and compost of farmyard manure and green manure as fertilizer.
Following growth in population the food production balance got disrupted and in order to find a solution to evergrowing problem, 60s saw the chemical inputs technology and genetically modified seed technology entering India in the form of much eulogised Green Revolution Technology. With the help of those technologies, food security was achieved up to an extent. But, it came at huge costs with disastrous impact on environment. The Green Revolution increased the production substantially in terms of quantity but failed to achieve the quality of traditional agriculture in terms of food and fodder. The technology includes high yielding seeds, chemical inputs (fertilizers & pesticides, insecticides, herbicides, etc) and irrigation. However, newly developed high yielding seeds used in ‘Green Revolution’ created new problems hitherto unknown to farmers. Use of chemicals in the crop management caused the cost of production jump several folds. Here entered government’s input subsidy, a huge component.
Studies on paddy/rice production figure of 70s & 80s in Andhra Pradesh revealed that the traditional paddy under irrigation yielded 1300 kg/ha; by adding high yielding seed this increased by 500 kg/ha; and by adding chemical fertilizers the yield level rose further by 2000 kg/ha. That means total yield achieved was 3800 kg/ha under farmers’ fields. This was far less than research station yields of 5000 to 6000 kg/ha. The present average yields of farmers’ field are 2600 – 2800 kg/ha as the yield curve flattened since 1984-85. Only increase in area under irrigation contributed to additional increase in production after 1984-85.
Studies clearly reflect that high yielding seeds introduced during and after the Green Revolution were tailored to chemical fertilizers under irrigation. This severely affected dry-land agriculture that constituted around 60% of the cultivated land. This lead dry-land farmers migrating to urban areas as the dry-land agriculture with high input costs became unsustainable and non-remunerative.
Forty years later, genetically modified (GM) seed entered into Indian agriculture system. Most innovations in this have been profit-driven rather than need-driven. Global seed industry is controlled by four western MNCs hands and at the same time GM seed industry is in one MNC’s hands. The GM technology responds to the need of GM companies to intensify farmers’ dependence upon seeds protected by the so-called intellectual property rights, which conflicts directly with the age-old rights of farmers to reproduce, share or store seeds. In fact, to get overnight profits, the Indian seed companies changed their high yielding seed into GM seed and ensured that nonGM seed is “not sold in the market”. This has resulted markets flooding with spurious/ adulterated GM seed varieties under different names.
One such GM Seed, Bt-cotton, is in use since 2002-03. Use of chemical fertilizers and irrigation increased the area under cotton under GM seed and reduced the area under non-GM seed without much yield advantage. The Bt-cotton area during 2002-03 to 2010-11 increased from 0.04 Lha to 17.95 Lha in Andhra Pradesh and at the same time area under non-Bt-cotton reduced from 8.03 Lha to 0.22 Lha. At all India level area under cotton increased from 7.667 Mha to 11.161 Mha. During the same period the yields increased from 212.5 to 545.7 kg/ha in Bt- and 229.1 to 919.5 kg/ ha in non-Bt at Andhra Pradesh level. At all India level cotton yields increased from 302 in 2002-03 to 554 in 2007-08 and there onwards declined to 475 kg/ha in 2010-11. That is, the productivity has been stagnant for the past five years. The yield increase is associated with the high yielding cotton seed, both GM & non-GM, to chemical inputs and irrigation.
Newer technologies were portrayed as a solution to all human problems, especially the problem of hunger and poverty forgetting their impact on the environment. However, the use of chemical inputs reduced the quality of food and created bad impact on environment. This “western profit driven” chemical input technology was found to be more dangerous on longterm, over the short-term gains. It has destroyed the environment drastically- soil degradation & salinization, health hazards to human, animal & plant life with air, water, soil & food pollution. The pollution related health hazards necessitated the introduction of drug manufacturing industry and establishment of hospitals who in turn cause air and water pollution, turning this into a vicious circle. Even with all these ill effects, the yield growth curve has flattened after 1980-85.
In fact, the chemical input technology is like “scratching the head with fire”. When this technology was introduced nobody knew that this technology is going to create such environmental catastrophe. Even the Nobel Prize awarding organization was not aware of this while awarding Nobel Prize to Norman Borlaug.
We must not forget the fact that GM technologies also work under chemical inputs -irrigation only and thus the above discussed impacts apply to GM seed technology also. In addition, GM seed technology presents several other impacts on biodiversity, contamination, re-generation, herbicide-tolerant weeds, new pests-diseases etc. Because of some of these, in USA & China GM crops were not permitted to grow in some zones. In India GM crops are grown everywhere including prohibited zones. There are several other aspects like food safety and ethics. India has no mechanism to study such aspects. Thus, with the GM seed technology, the cure has become more dangerous than the disease
To achieve sustainable agriculture, therefore, the governments must change the policy on agriculture. The policy must include low input costs, pollution free quality food technology such as organic inputs under cooperative farming setup. This not only brings down the cost of production but also reduces drastically man hours spent on procuring basic inputs by individual farmers, improves the utilization of natural resources and thus helps to reach sustainable agriculture.
In fact progressive farmers with traditional wisdom have developed technologies and achieved far higher yields than the research station yields and received national and international awards/rewards and recognition but neither the government nor the scientists showed any interest, though there is a mechanism in government departments, to stabilize that technology and provide packages to farmers to achieve environmental friendly progress in agriculture. The states and central governments must allocate sufficient funds to collect traditional inventions of progressive farmers and integrate these in traditional technology to achieve the 2nd Green Revolution that safeguards the environment and provide food safety, biosafety, food & nutrient security; and protect the farmers from committing suicides and provide socio-economic security.
Also, as proposed in new Food Security Bill, distribution of locally produced foods can be given under PDS by which the food subsidy component will come down substantially. This shall also reduce wastage and loss in FCI storage facilities and transportation.
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy

Reply to  JohnKnight
August 15, 2016 8:12 am

Dr. Reddy, This article is nothing but an oversimplified “Golden Age” fallacy. You state that the pre-1960s were some golden era in India, where everyone had high quality food, and there was no pollution. Nothing can be farther from the truth.
Why do you think India’s (and the whole world’s) population was growing (as you mentioned). Better nutrition and better medicine. So, by definition, your assertion can not be true. Food production did not improve due to higher populations. Population increased due to improved food production.

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
Reply to  JohnKnight
August 15, 2016 5:16 pm

jeff in calgary — Rise in population was associated with better transport facilities. Take the case of Ethiopia, on one side [Red sea side] with low rainfall, starvation deaths and on the otherside [border to Sudan] excellent production but it is affected by war. There is no transport mechanism to transport surplus food to deficit food areas with poor rood network and war. In India poor transport system affected the people prior to 60s but not due to food none availability. With PL-480 wheat, politicians were benefitted and entered a weed, Perthanium which has spread far and wide reducing the agriculture area — One former DG of ICAR who joined GM group after retirement says this could be eradicated with UN banned system “Terminator” like scratching head with fire. It is still a menace.
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
Reply to  JohnKnight
August 15, 2016 11:45 pm

The total subsidies [food & fertilizer] have increased from Rs. 12,158 crore [10 lakhs is one million; 100 lakhs or 10 million is one crore] in 1990-91 to Rs. 1,29,243 crore in 2008-09, an increase by 10.6 times. The fertilizer subsidy has increased from Rs. 4,389 crore in 1990-91 to Rs. 75,849 crore in 2008-09 representing an increase of over 17 times. The total food subsidy has jumped to Rs. 43,627 crore in 2008-09 from 2,450 crores in 1990-91, about 18-fold increase in less than two decades in absolute terms.
During the nineties (1990-91 to 2000-01), fertilizer subsidy accounted for about 47% of the total subsidies and share of food subsidy was 35.1%. In the 2000s (2001-02 to 2008-09), food subsidy became dominant, accounting for 49.1% of the total subsidy while fertilizer subsidy accounted for 39.5%. However, during the last three years, fertilizer subsidy has taken the largest share and accounted for 58.7% of total subsidies in 2008-09. Around 30-35% subsidy is going in to black market; and now government introduced Aadhaar Card system [like USA social security number] –with my proposal – to control black market in subsidy component. However it is not fully operative as yet.
PDS system was successful with excellent rail based transport system.
According to FAO report, globally around 30% of food produced is going as waste. In India it is around 40-50%. That is, we are wasting natural resources to that extent. Nobody is looking at it.
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy

PiperPaul
August 13, 2016 3:38 pm

The whole climate issue would be hilarious if there weren’t so many billions of dollars being wasted on it.

rogerthesurf
Reply to  PiperPaul
August 13, 2016 6:39 pm

Agreed, the real dangers are the political and economic consequences of the continuous and excessive spending, both on this pseudo research and the measures mooted to lower the world temperatures.
It seems the UN isnt too worried. https://thedemiseofchristchurch.wordpress.com/2016/05/06/un-headquarters-and-usd1-2-billion-upgrade-and-rising
Cheers
Roger
http://www.thedemiseofchristchurch.com

Reply to  PiperPaul
August 14, 2016 2:13 am

Paul, I feel the same but we need a basic change before it would make any difference. When the cAGW campaign falls on its butt they’ll find something else to waste billions on, maybe another war someplace no one can spell the name of. These folks don’t have productive lives, they feed from the public trough and that’s it.
Some of the scientists, the ones with degrees in something practical, could probably find something useful to do but there isn’t much hope for the rest of them so they’ll just join onto some other popular scam and keep right on going.

jake
Reply to  PiperPaul
August 14, 2016 7:57 am

Right on!

Resourceguy
Reply to  PiperPaul
August 15, 2016 9:00 am

Trillions you mean when also accounting for deficit spending to pay for the policy adventures and lower growth resulting from high taxes just to partly keep up with the deficit spending machine. Negative interest rates are also proving not to be a substitute.

August 13, 2016 3:44 pm

“…a sweltering 1.3°C above pre-industrial times…”
I strongly doubt that if a room heated up by 1.3 deg. C, anyone would be able to notice the change.

Tom in Florida
Reply to  James Schrumpf
August 13, 2016 4:24 pm

I am not so sure. Yesterday morning it was 78F and when it went up to 81F, no you are right, I couldn’t tell the difference.

Reply to  James Schrumpf
August 13, 2016 8:59 pm

In a closed room I would notice, we keep our room temp at 19C, 20.3 for us would be noticeable but in a open environment with all the chaos going on we would not, it is in the semantics.

Paul
Reply to  James Schrumpf
August 14, 2016 4:14 am

My wife would notice in a heartbeat.

JohnKnight
Reply to  Paul
August 14, 2016 3:28 pm

I think it has to do with the temp range in question . . twenty three below zero vs twenty six below . . definitely not gonna notice ; )

John Boles
August 13, 2016 3:50 pm

The public, after a little fact checking, can see that the greens are worried about a few TENTHS of a degree, when everyone know the daily and yearly temps at home go up and down several tens of degrees, the greens are just spinning their wheels. trying to get anyone to care.

Bohdan Burban
August 13, 2016 3:54 pm

The forecast temperature range in Los Angeles tomorrow is 21ºC – 31ºC … a whopping 10ºC spread. Are we doomed?

RoHa
Reply to  Bohdan Burban
August 13, 2016 8:54 pm

Yes. Always.

Juan Slayton
August 13, 2016 3:59 pm

Stephen King himself sadly appears to support climate initiatives. We can but hope that one day the great writer will recognise a poorly constructed narrative and badly executed plotline for what it is.
Or perhaps he will recognize its potential for farce and weave it into a comedic best seller.

auto
Reply to  Juan Slayton
August 14, 2016 12:22 pm

Juan S
I don’t think the late, great, Terry Pratchett ever strayed into the horrors awaiting us if temperatures rose by 2,5 degrees Fahrenheit,
But he certainly speared a few receptacles of holy water.
And – a terrific sense of humour, and turn of phrase!
If you haven’t tried Terry – do – oh . . . do do so!

TonyL
August 13, 2016 3:59 pm

I recently saw “Hillary’s America” by Dinesh D’Souza. What does this have to do with the Climate Wars?
The Climate Hustle is a Con. It is a Great Con.
You never give up the con.
Any crook will tell you, “You never give up the con.”
Every criminal will tell you, “You never give up the con.”
Even when you get caught, never admit, never give in.
Never give up the con.
This is why the alarmists do what they do.
Latitude:
No, they will not shut up, no matter how badly we wish they would.
NW sage:
No, they will never admit they are wrong, not even a little bit.
They know to never give up the con.

Reply to  TonyL
August 13, 2016 4:03 pm

Which is primarily why Hillary won’t ever stop lying about her email setup.

August 13, 2016 4:01 pm

Same thing with 350.org. Their wholepoint of being is gone, which is probably the real reason McKibben cut loose from his creation. 350 also got their Keystone pipeline wish from our dishonest Obama, but the Canadian oilsand operations and development have been far more hurt by the low prices for crude oil due to fracking and the House of Saud Economic War on the frackers.
The inevitability of a climate cooling means that when it comes, generation stations and grid operators are going to be strained to provide the reliable power needed. So the real frightening thing, that isn’t some Hollywood movie, are rolling extended blackouts during a cold snap in winter. The whole green climate scam will collapse once the lights go out.

Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
August 15, 2016 8:17 am

I agree with you on most of your points. However, the House of Saud is not waging war on the frackers, they have merely stopped waging war (along with their allies, OPEC) against energy consumers.

Latitude
August 13, 2016 4:03 pm

In December, almost 200 nations agreed…to get paid
The first six months were a sweltering 1.3°C above pre-industrial times….and almost all of that “adjusted”

Bruce Cobb
August 13, 2016 4:12 pm

And since when did a 6-month time period become “climate”?

John Silver
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
August 14, 2016 9:56 am

Any time period is “climate”
What is the exact scientific definition of “climate”?
You don’t know? Neither do anyone else.

auto
Reply to  John Silver
August 14, 2016 12:28 pm

Long John
“What is the exact scientific definition of “climate”?
You don’t know? Neither do anyone else.”
They w I l l know if it helps towards publishing, tenure, etc.
And – no – not /sarc.
Auto

John Harmsworth
Reply to  John Silver
August 14, 2016 3:18 pm

Climate is that dangerous, unpredictable thing that drove the evolution of man and has kept us alive for 100,000 years. It presents in two forms; too cold and too hot, plus a third, theoretical state of “just right” which can only exist in the past.

Rhoda R
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
August 14, 2016 2:04 pm

If it is warmer it it climate. If it isn’t it’s weather.

Ross King
August 13, 2016 4:14 pm

As a lay-person, I might assume a 1.5C. rise in a commensurate time-frame is *not* unique in the measurable ages? (Or is it?)
If it’s one of several, so what? …. We’ve been there before and the planet has survived and self-rectified..
If it is unique, let’s hear the so-called Experts hang their hat on the proposition and work from there as to the consequences. .

commieBob
August 13, 2016 4:19 pm

FWIW. The difference between the top of the Medieval Warm Period and the Little Ice Age is about 1.5°C according to this graph. Both sides of the debate will think this fact bolsters their case.

Marcus
Reply to  commieBob
August 13, 2016 4:40 pm

….Ummm, that graph also shows that the temperature has only gone up by 0.5 degrees since the Little Ice Age until present !

commieBob
Reply to  Marcus
August 13, 2016 6:26 pm

Yep, it’s an ice core without using Mike’s Nature Trick. Verrry interesting.

MarkW
Reply to  commieBob
August 15, 2016 7:24 am

Since the alarmists always start the rise from the end of the Little Ice Age, an temperature increase of 1.5C would only get us back to the warmest point of the Medieval Warm Period. Which is widely acknowledged as a time of prosperity.
It would still be cooler than Roman Warm period, the Minoan Warm period, and way short of the Holocene Optimum.

n.n
August 13, 2016 4:24 pm

This isn’t the first time they have set arbitrary limits for viability.

August 13, 2016 4:25 pm

1.5 C above an Ice Age is called an Interglacial. Long live the Interglacial. Used to have 115 F temps here in the Mojave Desert during summer. Haven’t seen that for ten years here. Last week, for the middle of summer, highs were in the low 90’s. This is called Spring. But, an unprecented, dangerous tipping point of 100 F has come back today. I am enjoying the last of my evil A/C until Oslama del Presidente Fascismo gets rid of Freon-22. I am thinking if they stop using CO2 in canned sodas and fountain drinks, and start using nitrogen, the climate will stay under control.

PiperPaul
August 13, 2016 4:30 pm

Greens […] credibility is damaged when nothing bad happens.
But given a complicit, negligent, beneficiary and/or stupid media, their failures are not publicized, so ClimateTheater™ continues.

Pauly
August 13, 2016 4:46 pm

Can we guess the future behaviour of these CAGW folk?
If temperatures continue to rise, and the mythical average global temperature exceeds 1.5 degC, will they be overwhelmed with joy that their prediction has actually been achieved? But what if nothing cataclysmic occurs after that?
If temperatures plateau again, so that the “pause” extends beyond 20 years, will they look for other magic heat sinks? All that CO2 must be having an effect, but some other mysterious heat transfer must be occurring.
If average temperatures actually start to decline, and CO2 continues to rise, what will they do then? If we never get to the target tipping point, will they say that the danger has been averted, but is still there?
In all cases, I would suggest that science is going to be the big loser. If the results don’t go their way, a lot of CAGW supporters may shoot the messenger. Humans find that easier to do that than accept that your underlying belief structure was wrong.

commieBob
Reply to  Pauly
August 13, 2016 7:05 pm

In all cases, I would suggest that science is going to be the big loser.

I’ve just started reading Listen Liberal! by Thomas Frank. He points out that all kinds of professional are immune from public criticism. Substitute Climate Scientist for Economist in the following quote.

Leading active members of today’s economics profession … have joined together into a kind of politburo for correct economic thinking. As a general rule – as one might expect from a gentleman’s club – this has placed them on the wrong side of every important policy issue, and not just recently but for decades. They predict disaster where none occurs. They deny the possibility of events that then happen … No one loses face, in this club, for having been wrong. No one is disinvited from presenting papers at later annual meetings. And still less is anyone from the outside invited in.

The only punishable sin for such professionals is rocking the boat.
Thomas Frank has put into words what I have long believed. The Democrat party has quit standing up for the little guy. They are now the party of the professionals and the professionals are a bunch of out-of-touch, entitled little s**ts.
Climate science isn’t just going to be bad for all science, it’s going to be bad for all professions. Respect for various professions is eroding. For instance, nobody has much respect for teachers. I think this phenomenon will spread as people realize how badly they are being misled and ripped off.

Mickey Reno
Reply to  commieBob
August 14, 2016 9:16 am

CommieBob, the economics group seems highly analogous to that “Journo-list” group from a few years back, wherein “objective” reporters colluded with opinion pundits in quasi-secrecy to help defeat rightist candidates and and get more leftists elected.
In the teaching profession, of course you have several large teacher’s unions doing the same thing.

August 13, 2016 4:58 pm

The first six months were a sweltering 1.3°C above pre-industrial times.

And the first six months on GISS averaged 1.10, but July, at 0.79, was about 0.3 below that. With the drop in ENSO numbers, lower anomalies are in the pipeline.

August 13, 2016 5:14 pm

The meme has shifted to carbon pollution being the problem, arguing about temps is futile.if crooked hillary gets in we,re screwed. There will be no stopping this bull. Vote Trump!

Mike Restin
Reply to  John piccirilli
August 14, 2016 8:35 am

And that will change what, exactly?
Congress?
Bureaucracy?
Islam?
SSDD?

Alan Davidson
August 13, 2016 5:30 pm

Expect NOAA/NASA’s global average temperature to be adjusted so that a decline is not permitted. Would be interesting if at the same time satellite-measured temperature trends show a decline.

August 13, 2016 5:44 pm

Maybe they can just change to different “pre-industrial times.”

Amber
August 13, 2016 5:48 pm

Climate changes obviously . That means it doesn’t stay the same and it is either warming or cooling
apparently in cycles extending thousands of years with bumps along the way . The climate fixers
can’t be so delusional that humans are going to shape it to some arbitrary world temperature.
So what if humans add to the warming cycle ? Life on earth has flourished at much higher levels of CO2 before Hollywood actors were zipping around the world trying to lay the newest cool model .
If the pretend Greens claim a warming world is oh so scary and bad they must be advocating for global cooling . Were the plants and animals better off in an ice age ? Humans will adapt so we don’t count .

Brett
August 13, 2016 5:59 pm

…Like this one?
World will get too hot for Olympics
By the end of the century most of the world will be too hot to host the Olympics in summer, researchers say.
A study from the University of Auckland has found by 2085 almost 90 per cent of the large cities in the Northern Hemisphere will be so affected by climate change, the temperature and humidity will be too high to safely run a marathon in summer.
The study found only three cities in North America, two in Asia and none in Africa would be considered “low-risk” for outdoor exercise in the future.

Bob boder
Reply to  Brett
August 14, 2016 8:39 am

Funny how Australia since it is winter during August would make a perfect place to hold the games isn’t it

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  Brett
August 14, 2016 8:42 am

Well they had better tell the Kenyans because they will be wasting their time practicing in tropical heat. If it is going to be hotter than that in Toronto I won’t have to move to my tropical hut where I intend to spend my dotage.

Mikkel Nielsen
Reply to  Brett
August 14, 2016 9:03 am

Well that would be yet another benefit of higher temperatures, if indeed they do eventuate.

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Brett
August 14, 2016 10:11 pm

I hope so. I can’t wait to see that crap finish for good and if not, then get the crap off of free to air TV. You want your olympics on TV, then pay for it!

rogerthesurf
August 13, 2016 6:00 pm

I notice that everyone is keeping quite about “Peak Oil”.
I forget when peak oil was going to take place and I seem to remember that there were several dates mooted.
However one cannot fail to notice the world wide prices thats been happening for some time now.
The fact is that an oil shortage or an exhaustion of natural oil/fossil fuel will in reality be preceded by a rapid and probably “unsustainable for users” but “sustainable for the greens and believers”, (so they think) rise in prices.
A drop in prices, of course, means exactly the oppposite. Oil supply is exceeding demand.
Doesn’t sound very peaky to me! 🙂
Of course some of this over supply may be caused by some minority moving out of oil consumption.
Well so long as they are not using tax payers money to do this, I say all power to them. Hope its “sustainable” for them 😉
Cheers
Roger
http://www.rogerfromnewzealand.wordpress.com

Another Ian
Reply to  rogerthesurf
August 13, 2016 6:09 pm

Roger
IIRC the first mention of “peak oil” was about 1919 when the petrol available got so bad that they had to lower the compression ratio on the Model T

catweazle666
Reply to  Another Ian
August 13, 2016 7:03 pm

Earlier than that, Ian.
Back in the mid-1800s when Scotland was the World’s leading exporter of petroleum products – derived from oil shale, ironically – there was talk of oil running out.
Interestingly, the increasing use of cheaper petroleum products for lamp oil started the decline of whaling, and so shale oil probably saved the whales.

Jim G1
August 13, 2016 6:01 pm

The lefties are always drawing lines in the sand and when one gets crossed, like with Obama’s red line, then it’s, ” Oh, never mind”.

Leonard Lane
Reply to  Jim G1
August 13, 2016 10:41 pm

Jim, it is more often just ignore the red line and that it has passed and attack someone on a different issue.