Guest Opinion by Kip Hansen
Is it possible for a single newspaper article to be greater-than 100% wrong? I think that it is certainly possible that Henry Fountain, of the New York Times Climate team, has managed the near-impossible with his latest contribution to the NY Times’ Climate section titled: “Climate Change Is Accelerating: ‘Things Are Getting Worse’”. Accompanied by marvelous photographs — mostly stock images from other news agencies with only one being credited to a Times photographer — Mr. Fountain manages to get nearly every “fact” in his article factually wrong, which I consider a major [negative] accomplishment for a long-term science journalist.
The title and lede offered is this:
“Climate Change Is Accelerating: ‘Things Are Getting Worse’”.
“More devastating fires in California. Persistent drought in the Southwest. Record flooding in Europe and Africa. A heat wave, of all things, in Greenland.”
There have been devastating fires, and “more” would be correct, in California. And while weather does play a part in California wildfires, general dryness along with Diablo and Santa Ana winds, wildfire is part and parcel of the climate of California and both CalFire and the California Public Utilities Commission have freely admitted that most of the blame belongs to California’s electrical utilities for lack of maintenance of power transmission lines. [ examples: here , here , here ].
Stephen Pyne, a fire researcher at Arizona State University, is quoted explaining:
“California is built to burn, and it’s built to burn explosively. If people left tomorrow you’d still have fires that are going to blow to the Pacific Ocean. That’s just a reality.”
Climate change is not to blame for California’s wildfires — and there are other factors: besides bad utility powerline management: ”One is forest mismanagement—California simply hasn’t been clearing enough brush, which builds up year after year until it burns spectacularly. In recent decades, cities have been encroaching more onto the wilderness, putting them literally in the line of fire. This is particularly true in corridors where autumn winds accumulate, fanning flames.” [source] . California’s climate is a factor — it is a dry Mediterranean climate and subject to repeated, sometimes prolonged, droughts. California is currently “dry” again, but not in drought:

But the long term drought has been eliminated by adequate rains which have also filled California’s reservoirs. Drought and mega-droughts are the norm for the American Southwest:

As Woodhouse et al. documented in 2009, a 1,200-year perspective shows that streamflow has remain virtually flat, with excursions up and down while Area under Drought has been far worse, and for longer periods, in the past — drought is not a climate change for the American Southwest — it is just the climate.
I had to laugh when I went to fact-check this next line in the lede: “Record flooding in Europe and Africa.” The “flooding in Europe” link goes to this story:

Of course, we are all sorry that Venice is flooding again (and again, and again and again and again….”) but even the sub-headline makes it clear that the flooding is not due to climate, but to “acqua alta — an exceptionally high tide”. As for the claim “highest in 50 years”….well, maybe:

“The water reached 1.87 meters (6.14 feet) above average sea level Tuesday, the second-highest level ever recorded in the city and just 7 centimeters (2½ inches) lower than the historic 1966 flood.” [ source ] And there’s your hint — when a journalists claims something is “worst in 50 years” they are avoiding telling your that it was worse sometime more than 50 years ago — in this case, 1966, before there was much discernible effect of Anthropogenic Global Warming (according to the IPCC). It is always possible that the official 4 to 10 inches of sea level rise since the 1890s, if it had arrived in Venice, might have pushed this year’s tidal flooding over that of 1966…. Jim Steele covered the Venice story for this blog in “Venice and Unenlightened Climate Fear-mongering”.
And flooding in Africa? — Mr. Fountain makes the same sort of sorry error in reporting on the floods in Somalia — an ever-present focus on the present. There are floods in Somalia. It is a mostly dry country, usually suffering from drought. When it rains, it pours. The country is prone to flash floods during the Gu rains (Somalian monsoon).
The UN’s FAO reports: “Somalia experiences two types of flooding: river floods and flash floods. River floods occur along the Juba and Shabelle rivers in Southern Somalia, whereas flash floods are common along the intermittent streams in the northern part of the country. In the recent past, the country has experienced an increasing severity and frequency of floods. The historically most recent severe floods were those of the Deyr in 1961, 1977, 1997, and 2006, and the floods of the Gu in 1981 and 2005. These floods resulted in human casualties and major economic damage.” — with heavy flooding also in 2007, 2013.
As we see in this photo by Action Against Hunger, flooding is in low laying areas — in this area at least, there are no houses sticking up out of the water.
Flooding is nearly normal for Somalia — but so are droughts. “The 2011 drought was particularly bad. “In 2016 and 2017 the “long rains” in areas of East Africa failed and plunged parts of Kenya into a food crisis as cattle starved and crops withered.” [ source ] The Indian Ocean Dipole, a feature of the climate puzzle first identified in 1999, may be responsible for the shifts of rainfall in East Africa and droughts in Australia. Flooding in Somalia is part of its climate — it does not require climate change.
Greenland Heat Wave?
In support of his claim of a Greenland heatwave, Mr. Fountain links to himself — a story from 2 August 2019, “Europe’s Heat Wave, Fueled by Climate Change, Moves to Greenland”. There was a four-day heat wave in Europe at the end of July which contributed to loss of life. Many press outlets went on to tie the heat wave in Europe to reports of “record” surface ice melt in Greenland — none offering any weather data as to any hot days in Greenland. The reports seem to have been “heat wave mania” — each repeating the idea that “The hot air, which was trapped over Europe after traveling from northern Africa, lingered for about four days. It has since moved north over Greenland, causing the surface of the island’s vast ice sheet to melt at near-record levels.”
The last time I looked at a map of Europe, north from France and Belgium took one to the North Sea (between the UK and Scandinavia). Longitude of Belgium is about 4°E, UK is 0°, and Greenland at 42° West.
There is surface ice melt in Greenland every summer, without fail. There was a lot of surface ice melt in Greenland this last summer :

But not the most ever, for sure — we only have records back to 1978, the start of the satellite monitoring era for Greenland surface ice melt — early years in the data set are “spotty” at best.

The heavy red line is Surface Ice Melt Area for 2019. Orange is 2002. The shaded area is the Mean +/- 2SD (since 1978). There is a spike for the first part of August — but see NSIDC attribution below.
To what does the National Snow and Ice Data Center attribute this higher melt season?
“The summer months were only moderately warmer than average relative to 1981 to 2010, roughly 1 to 2 degrees Celsius (2 to 4 degrees Fahrenheit) higher along the western coast. This confirms that the main driver of surface melt in 2019 was above average cloud-free days, not warm air temperatures as in the 2012 summer melt. This also explains the exceptional dry and sunny conditions at the south.” … “The key factors for surface mass loss and melting for Greenland in 2019 included: 1) exceptional persistence of anticyclonic conditions (high pressure) during the 2019 summer, promoting dry and sunny weather that enhanced the surface melt thanks to the melt-albedo feedback, and 2) low snowfall in the preceding fall-winter-spring, particularly in the high-melt areas of western Greenland.” [ source — see section “Conditions in context” ]
Oh, and no mention of the “heat wave” traveling “north” from Europe — only the high pressure system which brought clear skies and sunny days (which was also partly responsible for Europe’s 4-day heat wave).
One more line from Mr. Fountain, then I literally give up:
“Climate change and its effects are accelerating, with climate related disasters piling up, season after season.”
Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) maintains the Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT) created in 1988. Here’s the view od the data for natural disasters usually presented — this one from OurWorldInData:

One can see immediately that as soon as Global Warming got a foothold in the 1970s, disasters really took off! Of did they? I queried Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT) on this very point, asking:
Question:
“The data shown does not align well with my understanding of Global Natural Disasters, in that it shows a HUGE increase from 1970 to about 1998. My guess would be that 1970 to 1998 represents an increase in REPORTING and not in actual Natural Disasters.
Can you confirm this please — or correct me if I am wrong.”
Answer:
Dear Mr Hansen,
Thank for your e-mail. You are right, it is an increase in the reporting. I share your e-mail with your director, Prof. D. Guha-Sapir, who may want to add her input.
Best regards,[source: personal communication — available on request. – kh ]
So, here’s the portion of the chart that is considered to accurately correspond to reality:

You can view this data for yourself on EM-DATs interactive database tool (albeit, not quite so pretty) available here.
It is simply not true that “Things Are Getting Worse” or that “climate related disasters piling up, season after season” — climate related disasters (erroneously considered to be almost everything on the chart) are not increasing — quite to the contrary, they are steadily decreasing.
So, having gotten nearly everything wrong in his title and lede, we might ask what has led him astray?
He is simply touting the IPCC-solution mandate as echoed by the WMO:
““Things are getting worse,” said Petteri Taalas, Secretary General of the World Meteorological Organization, which on Tuesday issued its annual state of the global climate report, concluding a decade of what it called exceptional global heat. “It’s more urgent than ever to proceed with mitigation.”
But reducing greenhouse gas emissions to fight climate change will require drastic measures, Dr. Taalas said. “The only solution is to get rid of fossil fuels in power production, industry and transportation,” he said. [ from the featured NY Times article ]
It is a mystery to me how anyone with any science background at all — above the miserable American high school level — can quote the line “The only solution is to get rid of fossil fuels in power production, industry and transportation” without commenting on how absurd such an idea is in today’s real world. “Getting rid of fossil fuels” would simply bring civilization to a near stand-still — no air transport, no oceanic shipping, no gasoline or diesel automobiles, no tractors (thus almost no food), no wind turbines, no solar panels, and, of course, almost no manufactured goods — none of the 6,000 product types directly manufactured from petroleum (unattributed list).
OK, just one more item: Mr. Fountain goes on to parrot the usual suspects of the Climate Alarm Cabal — particularly the latest single study fantasy on [shudder] Sea Level Rise. First into the breach in defense of scary sea level rise is Nerem et al. (2018) which manages to transmogrify satellite altimetry data from the TOPEX/Poseidon, Jason-1, Jason-2, and Jason-3 missions into a claimed annual SLR of “4.5 millimeters a year”. NOAA apparently failed to get the message:

Trend in Global Ocean Mean Sea Level? 2.9 (+/- 0.4) mm/year which they represent, quite correctly, as a perfectly straight line since 1993. If any readers are in doubt about this data, NOAA STAR NESDIS makes all the data available starting from this page. Note that 2.9 mm/yr is the same figure given in Oct 2015 — so much for acceleration. (The NOAA SLR trend figure does fluctuate between 2.8 and 2.9 mm/yr).
Doubling down on Sea Level Rise, Fountain quotes yet another of the NY Times’ most far-fetched stories “Rising Seas Will Erase More Cities by 2050, New Research Shows”. This article reports the wildly alarming study produced by the climate propaganda group Climate Central that projects the inundation of the entirety of South Viet Nam by 2050 among other unlikely disasters. Note that no cities have yet been “erased” as of today’s date — but we are assured that “more” will be erased by 2050.
Is this study based on new sea level rise data? No, they decided that the world’s databases on elevation of coastal areas is probably wrong by “3.7 m in the US and 2.5 m in Australia”. Note that an error of this magnitude, over 12 feet, would mean, if elevations are recorded as too positive — too high — that almost all of Miami, Florida would be under water today, in the present moment. Since I happen to know that Miami is NOT under water today, the error estimate must be wrong, at least there in southern Florida.
To be perfectly fair, the researchers, Scott A. Kulp & Benjamin H. Strauss, did include two caveats: 1) “Due to the error always present in wide-area elevation datasets, as well as the other limitations described here, this map should be regarded as a screening tool to identify places that may require deeper investigation of risk.” And 2) “Elevation data errors may lead to areas being misclassified as safe or at risk. As is generally best practice, local detail should be verified with a site visit and more precise elevation measurements.”
I suggest that our ever-striving NY Times journalist, Henry Fountain, might have been well-served by applying this little bit of critical thinking, this logic, to his paper’s hometown, NY City — if the NY City elevation data was off by 12 feet, mistakenly recorded as being “3.7 meters too high”, then the West Side Highway and most of Battery Park would be under water as I write — he could have ridden the subway down to the Battery and taken a look for himself. Here’s Climate Central’s Risk Zone Map for NY City with just 10 feet of water (not the full 3.7 meters):

Now, I sailed past lower Manhattan Island just three weeks ago, and I have my personal experience to share: Ellis Island, Statue of Liberty State Park, Battery Park and the West Side Highway, along with Hoboken, Weehawken and Jersey City: I can report all securely high and dry.
I think that something must be wrong with Climate Central’s error estimate of 3.7 meters, there in New York City too. And there is something wrong with uncritically reporting such nonsense.
I have exhausted my available time doing a simple fact-checking just a bit more than the title and lede of of Henry Fountain’s in-support-of-COP25 “mostly wrong” NY Times article. Being mostly wrong does not make it, in the Douglas Adams sense, “mostly harmless”. Spreading such false and misleading information is harmful to human society.
I invite readers to check the rest — against real data, any real original data, even against IPCC data in its latest massive report, it is not hard to do. News outlets are intentionally pumping out climate propaganda, climate porn, to boost the public acceptance of the flood of climate alarm from COP25 — at the NY Times by editorial decree and with the Columbia Journalism Review’s organized massive international effort.
There is real Climate Science News — you can find links to the best of it at Judith Curry’s site, Climate Etc in her Week in Review series.
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Author’s comment:
Every time a person takes in something that is not true and accepts it, they become effectively stupider. Promulgating false information, intentionally, through failure to thoroughly check its validity or through failure to label something properly as opinion, is a crime against the collective human mind.
My essay above is labeled, from the start, as OPINION. It is my personal opinion and does not necessarily represent the opinion of the owners and editors of this blog. However, the data presented as factual has been carefully sourced and linked to the original sources — these facts are NOT opinions. There can be differing opinions about the truth value of different facts — climate science is filled with differing data sets that disagree with one another and yet are each offered as fact. I try to use data sets that are considered acceptable to all sides of the Climate Wars.
Readers should feel free to disagree with me — I do not, however, argue in comments here. Address your comment to “Kip…” is speaking specifically to me.
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I predict that CBC will interview Mr. Fountain within a few days. It has been quite a while since CBC stopped interviewing actual experts and switched to interviewing like minded propagandists.
Great job countering the lie after lie in that NYT article!! One tiny typo in your first graph, near the bottom… should be manages instead of “managers.” Other than that… excellent!! Thanks!
Dave ==> Thanks — I love a careful reader! It’s that danged auto-spelling correction software that catches me out every time!
I suspect data for flooding (which is most of the increase in the graph) was only reporting Europe and NA in the 1970s. By the 2000s, reporting was mostly global. It wasn’t until the 2000 that any natural disasters were reported from outside of the ‘West’. Even disasters with massive casualties weren’t reported.
Jeff ==> The EM-DAT story is an important lesson. Data, even if from a well-recognized international organization may well be wrong, and for reasons as simple as in this example. Data that looks wrong or unlikely probably is wrong.
The second lesson is “If in doubt, ASK!” I have a pretty good record of getting responses from researchers and organizations.
CRED (EM-DAT) was very responsive — I am not sure why they have not added caveats to their database, especially in cases as obvious as the Natrual Disasters DB.
Kip, Great opinion and fact piece and thank you for getting a clarification on the Global Reported Natural Disasters by type. When I first saw this data on another site a few weeks back I immediately called BS on it and suspected the increase might have had something to do with an increase in reporting. I’m glad you took the time to find out what the reason was.
BTW, I wonder if you forwarded your essay to anyone on the NY Times Climate Team? I sure hope you did.
Kevin ==> Repeating my answer just above:
“The EM-DAT story is an important lesson. Data, even if from a well-recognized international organization may well be wrong, and for reasons as simple as in this example. Data that looks wrong or unlikely probably is wrong.
The second lesson is “If in doubt, ASK!” I have a pretty good record of getting responses from researchers and organizations.
CRED (EM-DAT) was very responsive — I am not sure why they have not added caveats to their database, especially in cases as obvious as the Natueal Disasters DB.”
Where are all the pictures of rising sea levels? It would seem to me there should thousands.
DRoberts ==> Nils-Alex Morner just published a paper full of photos showing lack of sea level rise — danged if I can find it.
Readers: can anyone point to the new Morner paper on SLR?
Kip, wechstaben verbuxelt:
“Kip Hansen December 6, 2019 at 2:24 pm
DRoberts ==> Nils-Alex Morner just published a paper full of photos showing lack of sea level rise.”
https://www.google.com/search?client=ms-android-huawei&sxsrf=ACYBGNQs2py_Awc41A2TSFDvrtKNzrxFjg%3A1576172236630&ei=zHryXbr5JfHHrgSk6YugDA&q=Nils-Alex+Morner+just+published+a+paper+full+of+photos+showing+lack+of+sea+level+rise&oq=Nils-Alex+Morner+just+published+a+paper+full+of+photos+showing+lack+of+sea+level+rise&gs_l=mobile-gws-wiz-serp.
Axel –> Alex,
wechstaben verbuxelt –> Buchstaben verwechselt: up-letter-mixed
Johann, I don’t see a recent paper in there. I do see “Skeptical” Science at the top of the list explaining why he’s wrong, though.
Re the Somali flooding:
The wife used to work in Saudi (Taif and sunny downtown Riyadh).
Death by drowning in the desert was not uncommon. There were infrequent intense rain storms followed by flash floods and those who sought shelter underneath highway overpasses got the wrong end of the stick. Including their camels…
Right. The phenomena is also why wadis are a common geologic feature in many desert environments.
Another meaning of “Somali flooding” / refugees:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/stomping-death-calgary-murder-trial-faud-yasir-ali-mustafe-hussein-coma-1.4970172
But reducing greenhouse gas emissions to fight climate change will require drastic measures, Dr. Taalas said. “The only solution is to get rid of fossil fuels in power production, industry and transportation.” It would do us well to paint all the climate doomers as sharing that view.
Politically, the question of climate change should be framed as, “Do we destroy our society, AND go to war with those countries who refuse to abandon fossil fuels, or do we research ways of adapting to a potentially warming climate? It would be difficult to argue that getting rid of fossil fuels would not have a serious deleterious effect on our society, and without China and India joining in the effort the whole thing is futile.
No sense getting into long science discussions with an uninterested population. Just presenting the solutions available if the problem were real will result in the same policies advocated by those of us who believe there is no problem. There is absolutely no reason to object to contingency planning should there be a climate change, whether that change is hotter or colder. Most of us believe such changes are inevitable.
If their hypothesis is correct climate change can not “accelerate.” Nonetheless, acceleration is required of the narrative they have created.
Unfortunately, uneducated and mis-educated people are quick to believe that the climate should be stable. Every weather event is now presented as evidence of climate change.
Excellent factual post.
Pseudo-scientific journalists as Henry Fountain (and many others) are destroying Science Journalism, scientific popularization and defiling Sciences in general, not only in the Climate ‘Science” field.
How could one believe anymore any of the self accounted “scientific” authors’ papers, in any scientific field, that are published in the MSM, when they turn out to be so wrong and based on such faked data ?
This is indeed as you say, a crime against human mind.
“I suggest that our ever-striving NY Times journalist, Henry Fountain, might have been well-served by applying this little bit of critical thinking…”
I suggest that Mr. Fountain’s critical thinking skills were learned while beta testing Cranky Uncle.
To a pedant like me, there’s a funny lyric that misunderstands a fundamental notion. In the famous song “Smooth” by Carlos Santana, Rob Thomas (from Matchbox Twenty) begins by singing “Man it’s a hot one, like seven inches from the midday sun.”
I mean, if you’re seven inches from the sun, “midday” has no coherent meaning, does it? At that location, temperature variations must be determined by totally different measures than the day/night variations due to the rotation of a planet orbiting approximately 93 million miles away. I like to think Santana and Thomas wrote that lyric for ironic purposes, but perhaps that’s just me wanting to think well of two of my favorite rock artists. Or else they learned their ideas about temperature variation from a climate modeler (ha ha that’s a little joke).
Either way, it’s a great song.
This article is a good example of WUWT at its best.
Albert ==> Thank you. Anthony Watts, owner and editor, has changes planned to be rolled out in January 2020. It will be interesting to see what they are.
Two new discoveries should fairly quickly lead to solar electricity at around 1/3rd the current cost of electricity if the government backs them with a couple of billion and a program like the Manhattan Project to build an Atomic bomb.
The average efficiency of a commercial solar panel is between 11 and 22 percent. One new device could boost that to 80 percent. That would make solar about one-third the cost of fossil fuels and the markets will switch to solar by themselves.
A new Device That Channels Heat Into Light Could Boost Solar Cell Efficiency to 80%
https://www.sciencealert.com/device-that-channels-heat-into-light-could-boost-solar-efficiency-to-80-percent
There is another lead that may produce 95% efficiency from solar.
Secrets of fluorescent microalgae could lead to super-efficient solar cells
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/05/190509112258.htm
Ralph ==> While improved solar cells would be a benefit to humanity — they will still only operate efficiently when the sun is shining for the middle part of any given day. That means they require massive energy storage to be of any real use — and we do not have a tech solution for that yet.
It is true that quadrupling the efficiency of solar paneks would be great — but it would not be magic. solar has its own other problems.
If you want to be the next billionaire, invent the next real massively scalable fast-in/fast-out lightweight battery.
ScienceDirect is the “Popular Science”/”Popular Mechanics” of our day — offering a lot of tantalizing stories about pie-in-the-sky technological breakthroughs, the vast majority of which will never make it out of the lab — and even fewer will be commercially viable. We would wish it to be otherwise — but there you have it.
Kip, you should read the article at the first link, it’s pure pie in the sky stuff.
Patrick ==> Did and you are absolutely right. I’d love to see real 80-90% efficient solar panels….great for remote locations and battery powered gear. But they will not run the world — or even an all electric home.
There are three kind of news in the papers.
1. Sports. These are always correct.
2. Weather. These are often nearly spot on.
3. The rest. Can eventually be approximately near the mark.
Bengt
I don’t know where you live, but I’d love it if the weather was “often nearly spot on.” I find that the different online weather forecasters usually differ, the 5-day forecasts are almost always different from the 24-hour forecast, and even the 24-hour forecasts have higher rates of error in the form of false-positives for precipitation, than they do false-negatives. However, false-negatives are not unknown. My sense is that places like Hawaii and Southern California have reliable forecasts, New England not so much.
“You can’t fix stupid” and it close cousin treachery. Both being very human.
One day it will collapse from the weight of the fabrications
Regarding the California wildfires, blamed on the Santa Ana and Diablo winds from the northeast, the last time those winds and wildfires made the news in late October, most of the northwestern US (Oregon, Washington state, Idaho, Utah, Montana) was experiencing record COLD temperatures for the date. How do serious scientists try to blame cold fronts on global warming?
Steve ==> Diablo and Santa Ana winds are two similar phenomena happening in different areas of California — often confused with one another.
Diablo winds usually refer to winds in the latitude of San Francisco — blowing downhil from the Northeast, across the Central and Diablo Valleys, towards San Francisco.
Santa Ana winds “are strong, extremely dry downslope winds that originate inland and affect coastal Southern California and northern Baja California. They originate from cool, dry high-pressure air masses in the Great Basin.”
Both of these are more localized, regional phenomena. And, you are correct, they are part of the California climate– and do not require the invocation of climate change to occur — they happen quite regularly and have always, at least during my lifetime (I grew up in Los Angeles).
I don’t think the satellite altimetry results for sea level are credible. Measuring within a millimeter from over 100 miles up, with all the variations in satellite orbit, just makes no sense at all. And, tide gauges show far less sea level rise.
The satellites have never been calibrated. This is not scientific data just because NASA says it is. And, as usual, no error bars. These people are activists, not scientists…
Michael ==> You are right — the latest Jason 3 satellite hopes to achieve a measurement accurate to +/- 2.5 cm — about an inch.
see my Sea Level Rise series here at WUWT (you can use this Google link to find them)
Michael
You complained that “The satellites have never been calibrated.” That is not true. They can be and are calibrated with laser range finders over land. The problem is that over the oceans and Greenland they have to rely on gravity models to calculate the distance. The models are not perfect, and they can change over time. Even so, it is enlightening to read the engineering specifications for the uncertainty of the various components of the systems.
When I see a climate related article in the NYT- I then read the comments, if they are allowed. Almost all are of the hysteric variety. Maybe it’s something in the water they drink- or the air pollution over the city.
From the article: “Flooding is nearly normal for Somalia — but so are droughts. “The 2011 drought was particularly bad.”
I remember 2011. The drought was particularly bad in Oklahoma and Texas at that time, along with a tremedous heatwave, the worst I’ve ever experienced.
Then it rained like in the time of Noah, and washed all our drought troubles away!
“The town [Santa Barbara] is finely situated, with a bay in front, and an amphitheatre of hills behind. The only thing which diminishes its beauty is, that the hills have no large trees upon them, they having been all burnt by a great fire which swept them off about a dozen years ago, [the fire would have been in the early 1820s] and they had not yet grown again. The fire was described to me by an inhabitant, as having been a very terrible and magnificent sight. The air of the whole valley was so heated that the people were obliged to leave the town and take up their quarters for several days upon the beach.”
Richard Henry Dana “Two Years Before The Mast”
Wildfires in California are indeed nothing new.
Don K ==> I went to uni in Santa Barbara — the hills behind SB are chaparral — brush mostly, and have always been — that’s the type of vegetation there. The USGS says:”85. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA/NORTHERN BAJA COAST
This ecoregion includes coastal and alluvial plains, marine terraces, and some low hills in the coastal
area of Southern California, and it extends over 200 miles south into Baja California. Coastal sage
scrub and chaparral vegetation communities with many endemic species once were widespread
before overgrazing, clearance for agriculture, and massive urbanization occurred. Coastal sage scrub
includes chamise, white sage, black sage, California buckwheat, golden yarrow, and coastal cholla.
Small stands of the unique Torrey pine occur near San Diego and on one of the Channel Islands. The
chaparral-covered hills include ceanothus, manzanita, scrub oak, and mountain-mahogany. Coast
live oak, canyon live oak, poison oak, and California black walnut also occur.” [ source ]
The trees are mostly confined to well-watered creek bottoms.
Ive got one more for you: the term ‘ever accelerating’ is physically impossible. It only ever appears when written by people who dont understand it.
“California is built to burn, and it’s built to burn explosively. If people left tomorrow you’d still have fires that are going to blow to the Pacific Ocean. That’s just a reality”
The spanish had found california to be a desert and had little interest in the region but the later gold rush northern european settlers had turned it agricultural with irrigation. That didn’t change its desert climate however.
https://tambonthongchai.com/2019/11/12/climate-change-wildfires/
Nice work Kip. Regarding sea level, as you know what really matters is coastal sea level. What happens in the middle of the oceans is all highly theoretical and subject to large errors that are rarely discussed in news media articles. So I decided to take a look at measured coastal sea levels at long-term sites in conjunction with collocated or nearby continuous GPS vertical land motion monitors. Most of the long-term sites had significant vertical land motion in recent years, making it more difficult to assess the absolute coastal sea level change. However there were a couple of sites with minimal ground motion in recent years and one, at Honolulu HI, has a collocated CGPS which shows minimal vertical motion in recent years. This site should provide a good estimate of absolute coastal sea level rise around the globe and it only shows a rise rate of 1.49 +/- 0.21 mm/year since 1905 with no acceleration. That corresponds to only 15 cm (6 inches) over 100 years. If accelerating CO2 levels were having an impact on absolute coastal sea level rise, we should expect to see at least a little noticeable acceleration in the last few decades. The implication is that the absolute coastal sea level rise has not been affected by rising CO2 so far and the present rise rate is not at all alarming.
More info here:
https://oz4caster.wordpress.com/2019/11/28/sea-level-rise-catastrophe/
Bryan ==> The PSMSL and other ocean groups are pushing heavily on the CGPS@TG program — with the ideal being a CGPS on the SAME STRUCTURE as the Tide Gauge — that is the Gold Standard for using the tide gauge data for anything other thsan local Relative Sea Level (which is important — but not useful for any other place or even regional sea level). Dave Burton’s site is a good resource.
Global Sea Level is a very difficult thing to measure — and current “measurements” are still along the lines of “educated guesses”.
Never let the facts get in the way of a story you’re trying to promote.
Every time I’ve been involved in a news “story” the media has reported it wrong.
None of these stories involved any political leanings…they were stories where science and life intersected.
The stories were wrong because of the stupidity and incompetence of the reporters and editors. Newsmen cannot report on science.
Doc ==> Science journalism is HARD — but it can be done right if the journalist himself is well trained both as a journalist and as a scientist. — there are a lot of famous Science Communicators — Asimov, etc.
Science itself is also HARD, very, very hard, as well as usually counterintuitive. For this reason, it is completely beyond the vast majority of journalists.
Did you actually examine the data at NOAA? The SLR graph that you reproduced simply has the best straight line fit to all the data, it says nothing about how that long term trend has changed over time (and that straight line is not likely to change much over the last few years). So it’s odd that you’d invoke the graph as though it endorses your belief. It does nothing of the sort.
Mike ==> The NOAA graph includes what they consider the long term trend. The NOAA trend has not changed in many years. The satellite SLR trend according to NOAA used to be 3.2. But has been lowered to 2.8/2.9 in recent years.
But the graph has a simple best line fit. It doesn’t give any information on how that trend has changed over time or whether there has been recent acceleration but your opinion piece seemed to suggest that the graph supports your belief. The graph doesn’t do that which is why I wondered if you’d actually looked at the data and done any calculations to support your theory.
Regarding the change in long term trend numbers from NOAA, do you have a link to that, since that seems surprising, given that the graph appears to show a distinct uptick in recent years (yes, I know that doesn’t prove anything but it would suggest deeper investigation is needed).
Mike ==> I’ll do some searching back into the past — NOAA used to list long-term SLR as 3.2 mm/yr. As of 2015, it was 2.8/2.9 mm yr.
Note that NOAA’s trend line is the LONG TERM trend. That is the most appropriate way to look at global sea level.
In 2006, Nerem et al. replied to Morner in a comment in Global and Planetary Change [ see http://www.aari.ru/docs/pub/070119/ner07.pdf ] in which they state: “The consensus of all
other researchers looking at the T/P and Jason data is that GMSL has been rising at a rate of 3.0 mm/year (Fig. 1) over the last 13 years (3.3 mm/year when corrected for the effects of glacial isostatic adjustment.” That’s 2006, 13 years before would be 1993, the start of the satellite sea level era.
In 2018, NOAA had long-term SLR at 2.8 mm/yr [ https://wattsupwiththat.com/2018/04/02/errorless-global-mean-sea-level-rise/ ]
In 2015, the NY Times gives the 3.2 mm/yr figure (unattributed to anyone, unfortunately) [ https://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/01/science/3-2-millimeters-a-troubling-rise-in-sea-level.html ]
YaleEnvironment360 published in 2013 the 3.2 mm/yr figure [ https://e360.yale.edu/features/rising_waters_how_fast_and_how_far_will_sea_levels_rise ].
The “doubling” from the tide gauge data to the satellite data is just a difference in measurement methods.
Mike ==> I wrote a rather long and complete answer to your question — but it seems to have vanished into the ether.
I’m going to wait to see if it shows up before re-doing it.
If you have a specific question or data you’d like me to point you to, email me at my first name at the domain i4.net
Mike ==> If you are still following this thread, see Judith Curry’s very detailed dive into all this, particularly “Sea level rise acceleration (or not): Part IV – Satellite era record“.
For even more, see her whole completed Special Report on Sea Level [ pdf ]