Couple covering climategate:"I looked outside, and it was snowing, therefore, there is no climate change."
If that's what passes for rational thought in your social group, you owe it to yourself to watch this edition of Climate Denial Crock of the Week.
Tom, look more closely at the 'top 2500' that the IPCC keep stating they have in support of manmade global warming. The IPCC started all this 'all these scientists think it's true so you must'. I think the key point is imo (from endless research I have done which I realise i present from my side) most scientists are actually in the middle, (with a few who are totally one side or the other). The other point is a lot of scientists are saying hang on, it's not as bad as that. The ones we hear (from both sides) are the ones who like to shout the loudest and have to keep saying something a little more extreme each time to get the headlines.Purple-Days said:
He felt that the IPCC were grossly exagerating the effects of climate change and the predictions taken from the scienticifc evidence given to them. To this day Christy (who takes temperatures in the atmosphere), says that the atmosphere is not warming as it should to prove the global warming we are experiencing is caused by an increase in the greenhouse effect due to more greenhouse gasses. (The Troposphere should be warming at about 10km and it's still not).Christy was a lead author for the 2001 report by the IPCC[4] and the US CCSP report Temperature Trends in the Lower Atmosphere - Understanding and Reconciling Differences.[5] Christy helped draft and signed the American Geophysical Union statement on climate change.[6]
In an interview with National Public Radio about the new American Geophysical Union (AGU) statement, he said: "It is scientifically inconceivable that after changing forests into cities, turning millions of acres into irrigated farmland, putting massive quantities of soot and dust into the air, and putting extra greenhouse gases into the air, that the natural course of climate has not changed in some way."[6]
In October 2007 Christy gave a lecture at Auburn University in which he reviewed areas of the global warming debate that he deems most significant and offered his evaluation of them.[7] ((See the lecture here : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-WWpH0lmcxA really worth watching) Sound is a little low, better on headphones. I think is probably the most unbiased talk (from either side) and based on actual scientific facts that you are going to find on the internet.))
While he supports the AGU declaration and is convinced that human activities are one cause of the global warming that has been measured, Christy is "still a strong critic of scientists who make catastrophic predictions of huge increases in global temperatures and tremendous rises in sea levels
This is what the AGU currently say:Reiter says he was a contributor to the third IPCC Working Group II (Impacts, adaptation and vulnerability) report, but resigned because he "found [himself] at loggerheads with persons who insisted on making authoritative pronouncements, although they had little or no knowledge of [his] speciality". After ceasing to contribute he says he struggled to get his name removed from the Third report[2]
"After much effort and many fruitless discussions, I decided to concentrate on the USGCCRP and resigned from the IPCC project. My resignation was accepted, but in a first draft I found that my name was still listed. I requested its removal, but was told it would remain because "I had contributed". It was only after strong insistence that I succeeded in having it removed."
Reiter is sceptical about the IPCC process, as seen in his April 25, 2006 testimony to the United States Senate:
"A galling aspect of the debate is that this spurious 'science' is endorsed in the public forum by influential panels of 'experts.' I refer particularly to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Every five years, this UN-based organization publishes a 'consensus of the world's top scientists' on all aspects of climate change. Quite apart from the dubious process by which these scientists are selected, such consensus is the stuff of politics, not of science. Science proceeds by observation, hypothesis and experiment. The complexity of this process, and the uncertainties involved, are a major obstacle to a meaningful understanding of scientific issues by non-scientists. In reality, a genuine concern for mankind and the environment demands the inquiry, accuracy and scepticism that are intrinsic to authentic science. A public that is unaware of this is vulnerable to abuse." [3]
Paul Reiter presented Malaria in the debate on climate change and mosquito-borne disease[3] on April 25, 2006. The four primary points of his presentation here were:
Malaria is not an exclusively tropical disease
The transmission dynamics of the disease are complex; the interplay of climate, ecology, mosquito biology, mosquito behavior and many other factors defies simplistic analysis.
It is facile to attribute current resurgence of the disease to climate change, or to use models based on temperature to predict future prevalence.
Environmental activists use the big talk of science to create a simple but false paradigm. Malaria specialists who protest this are generally ignored, or labelled as sceptics.
In The Great Global Warming Swindle, Reiter says "this claim that the IPCC is the world's top 1500 or 2500 scientists, you look at the bibliographies of the people and its simply not true. There are quite a number of non-scientists."
Even though Christy backs this and was involved in making the statement, he is also currently saying man is one of the things that looks to be having an effect on climate change but it's not that bad. He has problems with the IPCC predictions for the rate that they say the temperature will climb. The graph he uses to show long term temperatures using the Ice core data show how the temperature has been much warmer in the past 10000 years. Obviously before a team of scientists have worked on it to 'flattern out' the warm periods.The AGU issued a position statement on climate change in December 2003 [1], and revised and reaffirmed the statement in 2007 [2]. The revised statement begins:
The Earth's climate is now clearly out of balance and is warming. Many components of the climate system--including the temperatures of the atmosphere, land and ocean, the extent of sea ice and mountain glaciers, the sea level, the distribution of precipitation, and the length of seasons--are now changing at rates and in patterns that are not natural and are best explained by the increased atmospheric abundances of greenhouse gases and aerosols generated by human activity during the 20th century.
The statement was drafted by Marvin Geller, John Christy and Ellen Druffel [3] and revised and reaffirmed[4] by the AGU Council
It's not about 'people caring' as to where the mainstream media goes. 'Record gains in Antartica Ice cap' simply while this obsession is gripping the planet do not make big headlines. (In the 70's when it was all about cooling it would have done). The media is not interested at the moment in showing the other side to the story. They want big dramatic 'poo your pants' type headlines.DevoTheStrange said:I think more people care about the north pole because of how near it is too those worried about it melting.
I don't know, but the NOAA chart showing the annual mean Arctic temperatures says your making stuff up:http://www.arctic.noaa.gov/reportcard/atmosphere.html.Happycamper said:Also what happened in the 1930's when the temperature in the Artic was hotter than today?
My conservative estimate is that
16 percent of the world?s food production is due
only to the enhanced carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere. That is to say, one out of every sixth
item of food exists because of the extra carbon
dioxide we put in the atmosphere. If you took
away one-sixth of the world?s food production
right now, you?d have a catastrophe
Cover an island nation with water and you'd take away all of their food production.Happycamper said:John Christy:
My conservative estimate is that
16 percent of the world?s food production is due
only to the enhanced carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere. That is to say, one out of every sixth
item of food exists because of the extra carbon
dioxide we put in the atmosphere. If you took
away one-sixth of the world?s food production
right now, you?d have a catastrophe
As to a global average that can be teased out of the data, it seems that overall, the ocean level may be rising about .1 inch per year or 1 inch per decade. This would give a 10 inch rise in 100 years. Others say increased rates may make this 18 inches by 2100. Predictions of dramatically greater rise than this (3 feet to 20 feet) are based on effects which have yet to be noted, such as the nearly complete melting of Greenland. If such changes are to take place any time soon, we should see a big increase in the RATE of rise very soon. If happening, this is very slight. Like the temperature, the seas have been rising slowly since long before humans began to put CO2 into the atmosphere. Ocean levels are constantly being monitored and any surge in the levels will be noticed many years before they pose a great threat to human life.
Yep, nothing bolsters credibility like comparing someone to Hitler.Happycamper said:Modern days Hitler Youth. I find it really disturbing how brainwashed these children are.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8b-vrBKMxy4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LPQrz6yACw
However when its the other way round and a reporter is asking a question that does not go down very well he gets an armed response.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jDVIk7E2zY
Yeah, you definitely have a point there.stickstones said:As I said before, it's easier to character assassinate and write someone off.
But that's not what Dr. Mojib Laiif says. From NPR:Happycamper said:Professor Bob Carter is another credible scientist saying that we may be heading for cooling.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FOLkze-9GcI
Bob Carter is not a climate expert. He's a geologist who gets money from the fossil fuel industry.RAZ: Just to clarify, you are not a climate change skeptic.
Dr. LATIF: If my name was not Mojib Latif, my name would be global warming. So I really believe in Global Warming. Okay. However, you know, we have to accept that there are these natural fluctuations, and therefore, the temperature may not show additional warming temporarily. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=120668812
Character Assassinations all round then.rayski said:Bob Carter is not a climate expert. He's a geologist who gets money from the fossil fuel industry.
If that is the connotation then it isn't ok. I have never thought of it that way, though. The word denier is certainly apt for some in the skeptic camp. Some deny there is climate change. Some deny that man has any effect on the environment (see some posts by the thread starter). In my mind, I have never associated opponents of climate change with holocaust deniers. I think it is a bit of a stretch to base this on the use of the word denier. It is debatable. However, I do not doubt there are some who do equate the two. They are wrong.Happycamper said:Reece It's seems ok to call sceptical people 'deniers', which has obvious Nazi Holocaust Denier connotations. I hear it all the time.
Just addressing his credibility not his character.Happycamper said:Character Assassinations all round then.rayski said:Bob Carter is not a climate expert. He's a geologist who gets money from the fossil fuel industry.
The fossil fuel industry's money has found it's way into the pockets of some of your experts. And the climate scientists, who are educators and researchers, really don't get paid like bankers.Who pays the people who are the climate scientists? It certainly pays big time to get on the 'prove global warming crisis' payroll. Billions and Trillions are been pumped into this.