Winton Capital Sets Up Climate Change Prediction Market

From The GWPF

Date: 12/09/17

|Lindsay Fortado, Financial Times

One of Europe’s largest hedge funds is looking to move into the gambling industry in the UK, as it sets up a new venue where players can bet on the effects of climate change. The project is hoping to tempt climate scientists to put their money where their models are.

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The new “climate prediction market” is the brainchild of Winton Capital, founded by David Harding, and is aimed at finding a market consensus on the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and global temperature rises in the future.

The not-for-profit project, which is being funded out of Winton’s philanthropic budget, is hoping to tempt climate scientists to put their money where their models are, and to provide a clear benchmark of the academic consensus at a time of intense interest in man-made climate change.

News of the project comes as the UN General Assembly meeting in New York focuses on the theme of a sustainable planet. Climate change also continues to dominate the political agenda around the world, after President Donald Trump declared he will withdraw the US from the Paris climate accord and roll back regulations on the production of coal.

“With a prediction market, getting the information is the primary objective,” said Mark Roulston, a scientist at Winton who is overseeing the project. “There’s not necessarily a consensus on all the implications of climate change. The idea is to have a benchmark which could track any emerging consensus.”

Under the plan, scientists and experts from around the world will be able to trade contracts based on the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide and how far temperatures increase, going decades into the future. Winton will act as a market maker and subsidise trading, rather than taking a cut or skewing the odds in its favour.

Winton’s market, which will be based in the UK, will be one of only a few prediction markets and is believed to be the first dedicated to climate issues. Such markets are mostly barred in the US because of more restrictive gambling laws; one exception is at the University of Iowa, which has developed a political futures market run for research and teaching.

If the Winton market is successful, Mr Roulston envisions it being a source to show how experts believe world events — such as the US withdrawing from the climate accord — could impact climate change.

Robin Hanson, a professor of economics at George Mason University who helped pioneer the use of prediction markets, said there is little incentive for anyone to try to manipulate the market, because that will only make the potential profits bigger for those who predict CO2 concentration and temperature correctly.

 

Read Full Post at  The GWPF

HT | Roger Knights.

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Tom Halla
September 17, 2017 8:04 pm

The green blob’s credo is “other people’s money”, so I think this betting market will be a dud.

Reply to  Tom Halla
September 18, 2017 8:04 am

Even so, it will be interesting to see where the predicted temperatures settle. If you’re right and they don’t want to bet, then the skeptics who are willing to bet on these things will push the predictions closer to something resembling a random walk.
The question of which dataset they use will be interesting.

rocketscientist
Reply to  talldave2
September 18, 2017 8:35 am

My question exactly: “What data set will be the definitive rule?”
Who gets to concoct it? How will any “gamblers” ever agree on what the real answer is if they cannot agree before this?
Whose money will they actually be gambling with? How about just reputation? List their names and let the credit fall where it may.

Bryan A
Reply to  talldave2
September 18, 2017 2:21 pm

I’m hoping that potential predictions are eventually graded A – F WRT how they eventually pan out.
Perhaps Mann shal be awarded straight F’s.
Would also like to see those who consistently earn “F” grades be forced out of climate science.
I wonder how many science teacher openings there will be??
Those who can, Do, those who can’t …..

rocketscientist
Reply to  talldave2
September 18, 2017 4:33 pm

Bryan A,
…those who can’t, teach.
Those who can’t teach, …administrate.
And, those who can neither do, nor teach, nor administrate, …legislate.

Reply to  Tom Halla
September 18, 2017 8:07 am

Ah, temps are UK’s Hadley Centre. I wonder how they match up against the others.
I doubt the Mauna Loa data is interesting enough to bet on, unless a lot of people want to bet they are unrelated to emissions or that BRIC is going green..

Reply to  Tom Halla
September 18, 2017 8:18 am

BTW another article quotes Mark Boslough (remember him?) saying his “mainstream consensus” side would have won most of those bets against “contrarians” over the last few decades.
Not sure if he considers people like Firor (Excecutive Director of NCAR) or Hubert Lamb (Director of CRU) to be contrarians, or if (more likely) he doesn’t realize they still predicted falling temps as late as the early 1970s.

Lurking
September 17, 2017 8:15 pm

Well, it will give them a chance to “put their money where their mouth is” and if correct, score big.

John Coghlan
Reply to  Lurking
September 18, 2017 12:43 am

It’s more likely that it will give them a chance to put “our” money on the outcome, everything they have is “our” money….we pay they play !!

Gerry, England
Reply to  John Coghlan
September 19, 2017 2:37 am

They must be able to get a grant to bet with?

crowcane
September 17, 2017 8:15 pm

No some of the non science idiots who are true believers will feel obligated to force it to be successful. Otherwise the only thing that it will do is demonstrate to the world just how little the so called scientists actually believe in their own BS.

Reply to  crowcane
September 17, 2017 9:33 pm

You do understand though it makes no difference in the outcome? If a sufficient number of people believe something, it will happen, come hell or high water.
In this dimension, consensus plays a role that can’t be denied. If you tell people to believe in something, and enough people do it, it will happen.
Traditionally we’ve called this a “self fulfilling prophecy”. It exists simply because people believe it exists.

Reply to  Bartleby
September 17, 2017 9:35 pm

That’s exactly why all those people died at Jonestown BTW.

richard verney
Reply to  Bartleby
September 18, 2017 1:10 am

But the TEAM control the adjusted temperature record. That gives the house an unfair advantage.

Reply to  Bartleby
September 18, 2017 1:29 am

Structures in the mind exist because peole believe they exist. No amount of belief has ever had me floating out of the window on a Persian Carpet…

1saveenergy
Reply to  Bartleby
September 18, 2017 3:09 am

“No amount of belief has ever had me floating out of the window on a Persian Carpet…”
Leo, to achieve that you need to imbibe certain illegal substances to assist your belief.
You could always try a Wilton Carpet (:-))

Bryan A
Reply to  Bartleby
September 18, 2017 2:24 pm

Perhaps Dr Karl will reduce the past ground level record thereby proving that the carpet is in fact floating in the present

TonyL
September 17, 2017 8:21 pm

Kewl!
I already have a list of people I want to bet against.

Sixto
September 17, 2017 8:22 pm

I bet that NOAA, GISS and HadCRU will continue cooking the GASTA books.
I bet that this year will not be the warmest year Evah!
I know, I can’t get any action for such sure things.
Id like to be able to bet that minimum U Arctic sea ice extent will average higher in 2017-26 than in 2007-16. Unless NOAA cooks those books, too. No bureaucrat can ever be trusted to tell the truth.

reallyskeptical
Reply to  Sixto
September 17, 2017 8:40 pm

‘I bet that this year will not be the warmest year”
But you wouldn’t get much money on that bet, non-Niño years are rarely, actually never record. If I were you, bet that this year is the second highest (EVAH!) and the highest non-Niño year. Of course you would be betting with all the scientists on that, so still not much of a pay off.

Sixto
Reply to  reallyskeptical
September 17, 2017 8:47 pm

Do all scientists predict that this year will be higher than 2015 in the UAH satellite data?

crackers345
Reply to  reallyskeptical
September 17, 2017 8:53 pm

scientists know better than to make
predictions about 2017 vs 2015. it’s
not climatologically relevant.

Sixto
Reply to  reallyskeptical
September 17, 2017 9:16 pm

Crackers,
Reallyskeptical claims that scientists predict 2017 to be warmer than 2015.

AndyG55
Reply to  reallyskeptical
September 17, 2017 10:51 pm

It certainly will be in the four “chummy” sets. GISS, JAXA etc etc
Sort of pre-ordained,. no matter what the reality.

AndyG55
Reply to  reallyskeptical
September 18, 2017 2:30 am

Hey , really gullible, how about you and crackpot produce some empirical evidence that CO2 causes warming in a convective atmosphere.
Or do you just live in a fantasy world of computer games ?

schitzree
Reply to  reallyskeptical
September 18, 2017 7:34 pm

I predict that the 2015 temperature as measured in 2015 will be warmer then the 2015 temperature as measured in 2018.
~¿~

Sixto
Reply to  reallyskeptical
September 18, 2017 7:39 pm

Schitz,
You might be able to take that prediction to the bank, when the market opens.

crackers345
Reply to  Sixto
September 17, 2017 8:50 pm

sixto – how exactly are noaa & giss
& hadcru “cooking the books?”
it’s a serious charge. you’d better have
a serious answer

WR
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 9:09 pm

You haven’t been paying attention for very long obviously.

Sixto
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 9:12 pm

It’s a fact. The ways are numerous. You haven’t been paying attention.
Phil Jones even admitted it. As I said, all governments lie.

Old44
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 9:23 pm

Two words regarding temperature manipulation.
Goulburn
Thredbo

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 9:38 pm

sixto – that’s a non answer.
wr – same to your comment.

AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 10:59 pm

DENIAL seem to be your only way to avoid the fact, isn’t it crackers.
Sparse, limited, infilled, homogenised, continually changing of stations and past measurements.
Individual stations that bare no resemblance to what was actually recorded.
Cooling trends wiped to give warming trends, NH 1930-40 peak squashed flat by “adjustments”.
You name it, they have done it.

Hugs
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 12:32 am

how exactly are noaa & giss & hadcru “cooking the books?”

For me it is still a mystery. But the fact that books keep changing a lot (more than the initial error estimates) means there can’t be much trust on them.
The basic problem is the anomaly. They say they know the anomaly of a certain year, but it appears there is some drift and the uberaccurate 0.01 degree anomaly keeps changing with respect to the rest of the series.
But you didn’t even want to know that. You just wanted to claim “they don’t cook the books”. Well, it is a question of trust. Do you trust anomalies that change beyond the original error limits (well, they don’t show them, do they)? Do you trust adjustments which clearly show a tendency to create exactly the hockeystick that was expected?
I don’t. What is the exact method of cooking the book, I don’t know.

Sixto
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 11:41 am

Crackers,
OK, I’ll do some of the research for you which you’re apparently afraid to do. I can however only scratch the surface of the massive ho@x that is “surface data” gatekeeping.
1) Totally unwarranted adjustments to raw data, which invariably cool the past and warm the present.
2) As for instance, Karl’s SST “Pause-buster” sc@m and GISS’ UHI adjustment algorithm, which, when finally dragged out of them by FOIA, were shown to warm the “data” rather than cool them.
3) As Jones admitted, HadCRU artificially warmed its sea “data” because it no longer agreed with land “data”, which of course had previously been unjustifiably cooked.
4) Infilling, which means making up “data” for vast swathes of the earth’s surface, by picking which stations within 1200 km or the empty regions to use.
5) Homogenization of “data”.
7) And so many more shenanigans to make the warming of the 1910s to ’40s and cooling of the ”40s to ’70s disappear, while boosting whatever warming did in fact occur since the PDO flip of 1977.
I suspect you already knew all this.

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 4:56 pm

sixto says:
“1) Totally unwarranted adjustments to raw data, which invariably cool the past and warm the present.”
why “unwarranted?”

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 4:57 pm

sixto says:
“1) Totally unwarranted adjustments to raw data, which invariably cool the past and warm the present.”
wrong!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
adjustments reduce the long-term warming
trend!
see the paper Karl+, Science 2015, in particular Fig 2.

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 4:59 pm

sixto says – “2) As for instance, Karl’s SST “Pause-buster” sc@m and GISS’ UHI adjustment algorithm, which, when finally dragged out of them by FOIA, were shown to warm the “data” rather than cool them.”
a FOIA by whom? first I’ve heard of it.
as i showed in my last comment, the
adjustments lead to a lower trend. Fig 2!

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 5:00 pm

sixto wrote, “I suspect you already knew all this.”
actually what i know are the facts. which are 100%
against you. you need to read papers more carefully
and get rid of your pre-conceived biases.
Fig 2. Fig 2. Fig 2.

Sixto
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 5:06 pm

Crackers,
You clearly are devoid of all facts, and yet you feel competent to post out of utter ignorance.
http://www.judicialwatch.org/press-room/press-releases/judicial-watch-sues-for-documents-withheld-from-congress-in-new-climate-data-scandal/
Apparently the first you have heard of all reality is here.

Leon0112
September 17, 2017 8:22 pm

Bet the over on CO2 levels and the under on temperature change.

Ken Mitchell
September 17, 2017 8:26 pm

The problem with this approach is that “climate change” supporters are terribly allergic to making actual testable predictions.

crackers345
Reply to  Ken Mitchell
September 17, 2017 8:59 pm

specify all the future parameters of co2, ch4, n2o, aerosols,
sun, volcanoes, and you’ll get a prediction.
by month, please

AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 2:32 am

rubbish, assumption driven “predictions” !!!

Old44
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 2:43 am

You left out the bit about no Arctic sea ice by 1st January 2018.
Whoops, it just got changed to 2135 OR 2068.

Old44
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 2:44 am

Mis-typed, that was 2168.

Michael Carter
September 17, 2017 8:32 pm

Great concept. But I see a black cloud on the horizon: what is the global mean temperature at any given time (the benchmark)? How can this be proven beyond reasonable doubt in a court of law, where I expect many challenges to occur?

crackers345
Reply to  Michael Carter
September 17, 2017 9:00 pm

no one can predict that.
or needs to

WR
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 9:07 pm

Yeah you just want to remake the world’s economy by us taking your word for it, I suppose?

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 9:39 pm

climate models predict warming of about 1 C by now. The
warming by now is about 1 C.
just who are you
trying to fool?

AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 11:01 pm

NO warming in the last 40 years except those period and places affected by NATURAL ocean events.
And in corrupted data sets.

Chris Hanley
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 11:56 pm

“… climate models predict warming of about 1 C by now. The warming by now is about 1 C …”.
===============================
CO2 is not pollution, computer models are not evidence and hindcasts are not predictions.

September 17, 2017 8:37 pm

If you haven’t seen a political forecast market, go to https://www.predictit.org/Contract/839/Will-Donald-Trump-win-the-2016-US-presidential-election#data and then click the Open Chart button. After that click the 90 Day button.
Prior to November 2016 there had been a lot of talk about how accurate futures market forecasts could be.

markl
September 17, 2017 8:41 pm

This is an elaborate joke…… right? A numbers game on climate change theory? No one will take part. The alarmists are all talk and no substance when it come to putting their money where the truth is. The odds will be in favor of the skeptics because odds are based on history.

crackers345
Reply to  markl
September 17, 2017 9:00 pm

future climate isn’t determined
by “history.” should be
obvious

Sixto
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 9:24 pm

Of course it can. Climate is cyclical. Nothing has happened in the past 30 and 300 years that hasn’t happen in the past 3000 years.
Same goes for past 30,000 years and past 300,000 years. Ditto for three and 30 million and 300 million and three billion.

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 9:41 pm

“climate is cyclical?” ??
do tell. tell us what these great cycles are, and
what the cycles are of — sunshine? toad
populations? pippa’s b-days?

AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 11:02 pm

“tell us what these great cycles ”
WOW.. you really are playing on your wilful ignorance, aren’t you !!

Sixto
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 11:45 am

Crackers,
You’re wasting everyone’s time here.
Look at a graph of the Pleistocene glaciations if you want to see a cycles on the order of 100K years. Look at a graph of Holocene climate if you want to see secular cycles on the order of 1000 years and pro-trend and counter-trend cycles on the order of centuries.
The glacial cycles are predominantly driven by Milankovitch cycles.
Clearly, you’ve never even touched a climatology text.

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 4:52 pm

sixto, just answer the challenges without
the snark. maybe no one here has ever asked
you to prove anything, but
i expect it.
everyone knows of the 100 kyr cycle in (the late part of) the
Pleistocene, in the last 1 Myr.
btw, before about 1 Ma it wasn’t in the Pleistocene.
but what are these other cycles you are claiming about?
where do they come from?
where do they show up in the reconstruction
of temperatures?
>> Look at a graph of Holocene climate if you want to see
secular cycles on the order of 1000 years <<
which graph,
specifically?

Sixto
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 5:03 pm

crackers345 September 18, 2017 at 4:52 pm
Your ignorance knows no bounds.
The Pleistocene began 2.58 million years ago. What you are trying to discuss, out of total ignorance, is the Mid-Pleistocene Transition from a 41K to a quasi-100K year cycle.
For the other cycles, please look at the first IPCC report, showing the recent climatic cycles of the Dark Ages Cool Period, Medieval Warm Period and Current Warm Period. The whole Holocene is all over the Internet, showing the Holocene Climatic Optimum, which ended ~5 Ka, the Egyptian WP of ~4 Ka, the Minoan WP of ~3 Ka, the Roman WP of ~2 Ka, the Medieval WP of ~1 Ka and the Current WP. The peak warmth of each of the WPs since the Minoan has been lower, and generally the cool periods have also been getting lower, too.
As I mentioned, you have everything to learn. So much in fact that I find it hard to believe that you don’t really already know all this.

Roger Knights
Reply to  markl
September 17, 2017 10:35 pm

“No one will take part. The alarmists are all talk and no substance when it come to putting their money where the truth is.”
The warmists bet heavily on the nine climate-related topics on the old Intrade site. And they won sometimes.

reallyskeptical
September 17, 2017 8:46 pm

“that will only make the potential profits bigger for those who predict CO2 concentration”
Guess I don’t see the game in predicting CO2 concentration. Or does some one here see it going down dramatically in the near future. I wonder how precise the estimate for next years max CO2 reading needs to be?

crackers345
September 17, 2017 8:49 pm

of course, no scientists are
going to bet on their
models.
most of their models aren’t even
constructed for such
purposes.

WR
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 9:08 pm

You are correct. They are constructed to generate grant money and press releases.

Old44
Reply to  WR
September 17, 2017 9:25 pm

Spot on.

crackers345
Reply to  WR
September 17, 2017 9:44 pm

when i see someone claim scientists are only in
it for the money, i assume *they* are only in it for the
money, and so they naturally think everyone else is too. they’re
willing to sell their opinions to the highest
bidder. image an employee like that, working for
your company, like WR, on the take

John Harmsworth
Reply to  WR
September 18, 2017 8:25 am

Yeah crackers, you’re good at assumptions.

schitzree
Reply to  WR
September 18, 2017 7:50 pm

Well, at least we know crackers isn’t in it for the money. The paid Trolls and Climate Bots the warmists send out to preach the Faith on blogs and comment sections are much better at it then they are.
So far crackers’ only real argument seems to be ignorance.
~¿~

Sixto
Reply to  WR
September 18, 2017 7:54 pm

It’s a thing. Argumentum ad ignorantiam.

Sixto
Reply to  crackers345
September 17, 2017 9:26 pm

And yet we are supposed to starve humanity of energy based upon model projections for 2100, when they’ve failed miserably already?

crackers345
Reply to  Sixto
September 17, 2017 9:44 pm

no one wants to starve anyone of energy.
where did you ever get such an idea??

AndyG55
Reply to  Sixto
September 17, 2017 11:08 pm

Then why the battle against the one gas that provides for ALL life on EARTH?
Coal and other fossil fuels were cheap and plentiful.
Clean and well controlled for the most part, and providing CO2 for world plant growth.
…. then along came this totally idiotic ANTI-CO2 madness. !
Where-ever this madness takes hold, prices exponentiate !!
Denmark, Germany, Australia… massive price increased because the irregular unreliables get preferential treatment and huge subsidies.. This AGW scam is an anti-science, CO2 HATRED, religion based madness. !!!
USA looks to have been spared most of the madness so far, thanks to your current President.

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Sixto
September 17, 2017 11:52 pm

“crackers345 September 17, 2017 at 9:44 pm”
Of course not. Just energy suppliers want “users” to pay heavily for it.

Sixto
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 11:47 am

Crackers,
Then why have we squandered so much on environmentally disastrous, worse than worthless “renewables”, while shutting down coal plants?
Why have millions of people died from energy starvation during winter?

crackers345
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 4:46 pm

sixto, yet again all you give is
opinions with no evidence to support
them.
you’re going to have to start doing so if
you want to be taken seriously.

Sixto
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 4:58 pm

Crackers,
You are hilarious. You’ve never provided even a shred of evidence for your unsupported, knee jerk, antiscientific assertions.
Are you really not aware that “renewables” are environmentally disastrous and incapable of powering an advanced industrial society?
Wind turbines and solar farms kill billions of birds and bats every year, to include endangered species, meaning that destructive insect pests go uneaten. Production of solar panels and batteries are among the most dangerously polluting enterprises on the planet.
You have everything to learn, grasshopper. Including capitalization, formatting, spelling and sentence structure.

crackers345
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:02 pm

suxto says, “Wind turbines and solar farms kill billions of birds and bats every year”
data?

crackers345
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:07 pm

sixto: “Avian Mortality by
Energy Source,” US News, 8/22/14
http://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/data-mine/2014/08/22/pecking-order-energys-toll-on-birds
US coal: 8 M bird deaths
US oil: up to 1 M bird deaths
US solar: up to 0.028 M bird deaths
US wind: up to 0.328 M bird deaths

Sixto
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:08 pm

Crackers,
I’m getting tired of doing all your research for you.
Millions of birds and bats massacred each year in Spain alone:
http://savetheeaglesinternational.org/releases/spanish-wind-farms-kill-6-to-18-million-birds-bats-a-year.html

crackers345
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:08 pm

Sixto says, “”Production of solar panels and batteries are among the most dangerously polluting enterprises on the planet.”
data?

Sixto
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:10 pm

Crackers,
No surprise that you uncritically accept utter garbage, made up, pretend “data”, as from your “source”:
“Coal: Huge numbers of birds, roughly 7.9 million, may be killed by coal, according to analysis by Benjamin K. Sovacool, director of the Danish Center for Energy Technologies. His estimate, however, included everything from mining to production and climate change, which together amounted to about five birds per gigawatt-hour of energy generated by coal.”
The “climate change” factor is complete, total rubbish.

Sixto
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:15 pm

Crackers,
Seriously, do your own research, dude.
Anyone even casually familiar with reality knows that windmill components and solar panels are made in China because US environmental regulations won’t permit them to be made here.
https://en.reset.org/blog/potential-environmental-impacts-and-obstacles-solar-energy
Batteries and other electric car components are also hugely polluting, as well as exploiting poor, Third World workers, as in the tantalum mines of Central Africa and to a perhaps slightly lesser extent the lithium workers in Bolivia, Argentina and Chile.
You’re still evidence-free and I’ve given you the straight scoop. But you can’t handle the truth.
Why do I have to educate you, when the Internet is there for you to school yourself?

crackers345
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:25 pm

partrick says – “Just energy suppliers want “users” to pay heavily for it.”
what is heavily?
does it include enough to pay for the
damage that energy’s pollution does?
or do you think you should be able to pollute for
free?

crackers345
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:47 pm

sixto, supporting your claims with data is always
necessary with
me
maybe you’ve been commenting here
too long among like-minded people who
do’nt ask for data

crackers345
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:49 pm

sixto said – “Millions of birds and bats massacred each year in Spain alone:”
got any science, peer reviewed and published, not something
from an advocacy group.
i guess you are all fine with activist groups as
long as they confirm your prejudices

Sixto
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:59 pm

Crackers,
Again, hilarious, since you’ve got nothing.
The data on bird and bat death are facts, not made up by activists.
Go to any windmill farm early in the morning, before workers or coyotes pick up the carcasses.
Why do you suppose that wind farms need exemptions from EPA and FWS rules?
You exist in a dream world.

Sixto
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 6:00 pm

As if “Green Energy” companies are not special interests.
You are deluded and have drunk to the last drop the Kool Aid of CACA.

September 17, 2017 9:01 pm

What temperature measurements will they use? Will they factor in adjustments made to make things appear warmer?

crackers345
Reply to  rayvd
September 17, 2017 9:49 pm

ray – adjustments lower the warming trend.
you know that, right?

Gary Pearse
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 2:23 am

Crackers, man you can’t be this gullible, it’s not even good for your continued survival. They pressed the 1990s temps down enough alright and 2015 up slightly to get rid of the embarrassing pause, and then brazenly announced they’d lowered temperature anomalies,knowing that ordinary folk and useful idiots would be compliant.

1saveenergy
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 3:16 am

Yes Gary, he can & proves it almost every time he posts…sad

stevekeohane
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 5:44 am
F. Leghorn
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 11:32 am

Are you serious? Or are you a plant by the Koch brothers to make warmists look dumb?

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 5:11 pm

gary, adjustments lower the long-term warming trend.
see Karl+, Science 2015,
Fig 2B:
https://www.nas.org/images/documents/Climate_Change.pdf

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 5:14 pm

Zeke Hausfather of BEST:
“Turns out that global temperature adjustments actually reduce the long-term warming trend, mostly due to oceans.”
https://twitter.com/hausfath/status/564921572096348160

ossqss
September 17, 2017 9:03 pm

Show me the climate model hindcast scores. We have them for hurricane forecasting, where are the climate model scores? Just sayin, perspective should be in the house………

crackers345
Reply to  ossqss
September 17, 2017 9:46 pm

what is a model “score?”
how about these?
https://www.climate-lab-book.ac.uk/comparing-cmip5-observations/

crackers345
Reply to  ossqss
September 17, 2017 9:47 pm

what is a model “score?”
how about these?
ed hawkins comparisons to cmip5.
can’t post the link

Reply to  ossqss
September 18, 2017 7:56 am

The biggest problem is that (as with most pseudoscience) it’s very hard to pin down what temperature was actually predicted, because everything is an anomaly against some baseline or dependent on some variable they don’t control, plus they “forecast” into the past.
Just try to get anyone at GISS to tell you what temperatures Hansen 1988 actually predicted — they still claim the model was accurate because “hey if you adjust for how methane didn’t do what they expected or pretend we didn’t have CO2 massive emissions rises the model kind of looks like the real trend!”
The Climate Lab link on CMIP-5 is a great example of this — if you don’t pin predictions against absolute temperatures, anyone can slide around the baselines or start dates and make models fit some recent trend in “real” temperatures. Throw in the past and it looks like you’re doing really well, since CMIP-5 is only a few years old and models can be tuned to fit anything in the past.

crackers345
Reply to  talldave2
September 18, 2017 5:15 pm

all temperatures are easily turned into anomalies.
all trends are independent of baseline.

crackers345
Reply to  talldave2
September 18, 2017 5:16 pm

talld wrote – “if you don’t pin predictions against absolute temperatures, anyone can slide around the baselines or start dates and make models fit some recent trend in “real” temperatures”
linear least square trends are independent
of the baseline chosen.

commieBob
September 17, 2017 9:07 pm

There is a ‘bet’ that Scott Armstrong’s ten year prediction will be better than Al Gore’s. There are only a couple of months to go. link I think Armstrong is winning.

September 17, 2017 9:12 pm

This is of course not a new idea at all, and follows John Brunner’s 1975 model of the “Delphi” project he described as harnessing the common consciousness to predict future events.
Read “The Shockwave Rider” by that author for a more complete understanding of the hypothesis.

Gary Pearse
Reply to  Bartleby
September 18, 2017 2:13 am

Curious, Bartleby, that I participated in a Delphi project in 1971, 4yrs before this publication. It was a project in Canada by the federal department of mines involving estimates by industry of how much ore of various metals were to be found in various areas. IIRC they gridded the country into squares of a certain size. I was in mining exploration. It was definitely called Delphi.

Reply to  Gary Pearse
September 18, 2017 2:51 pm

Brunner was a dystopian futurist so it doesn’t surprise me to hear the idea was based on a real experiment.

ThinAir
September 17, 2017 9:15 pm

This market should be open to all. Limiting it to the “scientists and experts” (who must be approved by someone) will produce meaning less results.
And….. any quantities on which we can bet must be independently verifiable by a trusted accounting firm (if there still are any) that does not allow its principals to bet in this market.
This rules out betting on global average temp and even makes betting on temps at any particular location tricky without excellent security at that site.

ThinAir
Reply to  ThinAir
September 17, 2017 9:31 pm

For these reasons a better alternative to measuring temps is to bet on the “ice out” dates in the spring for rural lakes of a certain minimum size (>1000 sq km) that have a long record (50+ years) of those dates. Or the average date for 10 such lakes in same geographic region. This is something object not easily tampered with. Then everyone can bet (without depending so much on accountants or climate “experts” to guard or interpret the data.
Other options for what to measure that are objectively obvious are possible. E.g. Position of the front edge of some glaciers perhaps.
Overall with this approach I think this betting market is an excellent idea.

The Reverend Badger
Reply to  ThinAir
September 17, 2017 11:16 pm

Unfortunately ice out dates and similar will be bets on local weather variability not global climate change. The 2 are not related (apparently).

Nick Stokes
Reply to  ThinAir
September 18, 2017 12:48 am

“This market should be open to all. Limiting it to the “scientists and experts” “
What makes you think it isn’t open? After all, someone has to take the other side of the bets, else no market. And in fact, you won’t know who’s betting, on either side.

HotScot
Reply to  ThinAir
September 18, 2017 1:25 am

ThinAir
I know nothing of hedge funds or investing of any type (one of the big advantages Americans have over us Brits as you guys are largely responsible for your own pensions etc.) but here’s something that might interest you http://www.coolfuturesfundsmanagement.com

Gary Pearse
Reply to  HotScot
September 18, 2017 2:00 am

It should be taught in schools. But I suspect the elites want to keep plebes in the dark on finances.

reallyskeptical
September 17, 2017 9:31 pm

“most of their models aren’t even constructed for such purposes”
What ever. I wonder what data the odds makers are using to figure out what odds to give bettors.

crackers345
Reply to  reallyskeptical
September 17, 2017 9:49 pm

i don’t think you understand
why scientists build models. it is only
rarely for predicting the consequences
of RCPs.

Doug
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 1:15 am

What do they build models for?

AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 2:34 am

I don’t think crackpot has the faintest idea why real scientists and engineers build models.

AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 5:12 am

And reallygullible is just brain-washed zero-science AGW suckophant.

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 5:18 pm

doug – they build models
to test hypotheses.
does this parametrization better explain
changes in antarctic sea ice, or did the
previous one?
and so on and so on.

Roger Knights
Reply to  reallyskeptical
September 18, 2017 12:25 pm

“I wonder what data the odds makers are using to figure out what odds to give bettors.”
There are no odds-makers; the odds are set indirectly by a bid/asked price setting among market participants, like a futures market. This is how other prediction markets work.

AndyE
September 17, 2017 10:26 pm

Not a bad idea – but I think yearly “rests” are too short – the scheme needs at least three years betting limit.

September 17, 2017 10:36 pm

Go short.

The Reverend Badger
September 17, 2017 11:06 pm

The only surprise here is that they have not also announced that you can pay for your long term bets in Bitcoin and that next year they will be setting up 2 more markets covering the belief in a Flat Earth and the existence of God(s).

Coeur de Lion
September 18, 2017 12:47 am

Can I short it?

HotScot
Reply to  Coeur de Lion
September 18, 2017 1:27 am

Coeur de Lion
I believe you can here http://www.coolfuturesfundsmanagement.com

Gary Pearse
September 18, 2017 1:55 am

So the experts get to gamble on what the temperature will be with a certain level of CO2. Aren’t they in a conflict of interest position since they manufacture the temperatures? Can they be arrested for gaming the system?

crackers345
Reply to  Gary Pearse
September 18, 2017 5:23 pm

manufacture? what does that
mean?
does BEST also ‘manufacture’
temperatures? the japanese?

September 18, 2017 4:14 am

If you make a bet on NCDC version 4.4.2.5, and 10 years from now, they are on version 99.5.66.4c (and no one can find the original because it has been scraped off the Internet everywhere), how would that work?
I would be into it if there was some actual rules involved but in climate, they just make the rules up as they go along.

BallBounces
September 18, 2017 5:17 am

I believe that all serious weather events will have been made worse, i.e. “intensified”, by climate change. Prove me wrong.

Sixto
Reply to  BallBounces
September 18, 2017 11:51 am

That can be demonstrated by showing that weather was more extreme in the past.

BallBounces
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 2:35 pm

I will claim that a Cat 2 would have been a Cat 1, a Cat 3 a Cat 2, and so on. People now readily believe that, whatever the weather event, it has been made “worse” by climate change. Everyone except climate deniers will accept my view as settled science 😉

crackers345
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:43 pm

so where is that evidence?

Sixto
Reply to  Sixto
September 18, 2017 5:56 pm

Crackers,
The evidence is everywhere. Have you really never seen graphs comparing hurricane frequency in recent decades with the past?
All your objections are nothing but appeals from your complete, total and utter ignorance.
BB,
It’s easy to show that storms were not only more frequent in the past, but more powerful. Getting CACA acolytes and the media to spread that news is of course hard.

Rob Dawg
September 18, 2017 5:18 am

Everyone is missing the point. There are only two possible outcomes. Both huge wins for the skeptics.
1. Climate scientists will prove unwilling to gamble with their own money thus proving their theories are guesswork.
2. Climate scientists put up their predictions and demonstrate there is no consensus.
I fully expect some form of herd pronouncement that as persons of science they are above such activities.

crackers345
Reply to  Rob Dawg
September 18, 2017 5:19 pm

climate models
can’t make
predictions, only projections

Sixto
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 5:28 pm

Which is just one of innumerable reasons why they are not science, but politics and rent-seeking.

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
September 18, 2017 5:42 pm

sixto – why don’t you explain
how a climate model would make
an actual prediction. i’ll wait….

Sixto
Reply to  Rob Dawg
September 18, 2017 5:54 pm

No need to wait.
The whole point of scientific models is to make predictions. The heliocentric model of the solar system makes predictions, which were indeed found true, such as the phases of Venus.
A computer model of future climate, if it is to serve as a basis for public policy affecting billions of people direly, must show skill at forecasting at least one or two decades ahead, if its projections for AD 2100 are to be credited. But the models have failed miserably.

don rady
Reply to  Rob Dawg
September 23, 2017 7:56 pm

I am afraid of another option 3. There won’t be real money put up. Just used as a publicity scam to say “look the experts bet with their own money that the temperature is going up 4 degrees”, but in the fine print, no one will lose money.

September 18, 2017 7:44 am

Finally!
Might not be liquid enough to work very well, but still a great step in the right direction. If the models are ever actually right, climate science could eventually be self-funding.

September 18, 2017 11:36 am

The “temperature” will depend on who measures it.

crackers345
Reply to  Leo Goldstein
September 18, 2017 5:21 pm

you mean it depends on the model
used to calculate it.
that’s true. note, for example, how
low uah’s trends are cp rss’s.

Tracy
September 18, 2017 1:32 pm

I love this idea, put up or shut up. The problem is they will do neither, they can’t put up because they would loose their butts( bad models) and they won’t shut up or they would loose their grants.

texasjimbrock
September 18, 2017 2:36 pm

I wonder how it will work? The stock market is a reflection of the value that the traders themselves place on a particular stock. Is this how it will work? I presume the contracts will have a due date. If the contract misses the target, how will the pay-off be measured? Proportionally or all-in? Adjusted by the date of the buy/sell date?
Sounds complicated.

Roger Knights
Reply to  texasjimbrock
September 19, 2017 1:08 am

More details on this should be provided; perhaps the GWPF will do some digging. I like the idea of proportionate payments (less of a loss if a bettor just missed being right). But it would complicte things. Without that feature, it’s not too complicated—Intrade’s arrangement was popular & worked for years.