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Dan wrote in
: On Mar 10, 10:32 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Dan wrote innews:bfb1179b-5270-447c-b02c-0f3dbb245e66@ m3g2000hsc.googlegroups.com: On Mar 10, 7:32 pm, "Dan Luke" wrote: "Dan" wrote: You've made a number of assertions in this thread, but you haven't made a single substantive criticism of AGW science that you would have to defend on the merits. Why is that? I think I know, but perhaps you have an excuse to offer. Since your the expert and I am apparently the dullard, please help me reach your loft perch by answering this very simple question: Will there be a 20' rise in sea level in the next 100 (or 200 years), or will there not? Which is it? Still nothing? Thought not. But I'll hold up my side of the conversation, at least. The answer to your question is "I don't know." How's that? Now, I've got a question for you: What convinces you there definitely will not be? I'm glad we're having a conversation (Life sometimes impairs my usenet access, so you may have to wait for my replies). I appreciate your candor. This may help to explain the reluctance of apparently reasonable people to jump on the GW bandwagon. The science -- while compelling -- is still less than conclusive. The IPCC is peppered with terms such as "likely" -- which while understood in the scientific community, is not the the type language required to move millions to action. Hmm, you dont like science speak and you don;'t like hyperbole. Waht about just looking at the data for yourself. Bertie I Did. See previous post. That's not data, that's an opinion. But I left out this part: "For the next two decades, a warming of about 0.2°C per decade is projected for a range of SRES emission scenarios. --- Even if the concentrations of all greenhouse gases and aerosols had been kept constant at year 2000 levels, a further warming of about 0.1°C per decade would be expected. ---- {10.3, 10.7}" Even if it's that little , that is a lot of energy. In an essay supporting the consensus view, we find this gem, "The scientific consensus might, of course, be wrong. If the history of science teaches anything, it is humility, and no one can be faulted for failing to act on what is not known." I think I said something similar several posts ago, And the scientific community would agree. To which the answer is -- Yes we can be faulted for "acting on what is not known." Especially since "acting" will have measurably harmful as well as a host of unintended impacts. You are acting, that is the problem. So am I I do it for a living and I do it fo rfun. Continued use of fossil fuels is action. As far as sea level rise, consider "The widely quoted altimetric global average values may well be correct, but the accuracies being inferred in the literature are not testable by existing in situ observations. Useful estimation of the global averages is extremely difficult given the realities of space-time sampling and model approximations. Systematic errors are likely to dominate most estimates of global average change: published values and error bars should be used very cautiously." [http://ocean.mit.edu/~cwunsch/papersonline/ Wunschetal_jclimate_2007_published.pdf] I think I also said it maters not if sea levels rise or not. We've been doing this for tooo long and there is no good reason for it except that it appears to be cheaper to the short sighted. Also consider: "Changes in the Earth's radiation budget are driven by changes in the balance between the thermal emission from the top of the atmosphere and the net sunlight absorbed. The shortwave radiation entering the climate system depends on the Sun's irradiance and the Earth's reflectance. Often, studies replace the net sunlight by proxy measures of solar irradiance, which is an oversimplification used in efforts to probe the Sun's role in past climate change. With new helioseismic data and new measures of the Earth's reflectance, we can usefully separate and constrain the relative roles of the net sunlight's two components, while probing the degree of their linkage. First, this is possible because helioseismic data provide the most precise measure ever of the solar cycle, which ultimately yields more profound physical limits on past irradiance variations. Since irradiance variations are apparently minimal, changes in the Earth's climate that seem to be associated with changes in the level of solar activity--the Maunder Minimum and the Little Ice age for example--would then seem to be due to terrestrial responses to more subtle changes in the Sun's spectrum of radiative output. This leads naturally to a linkage with terrestrial reflectance, the second component of the net sunlight, as the carrier of the terrestrial amplification of the Sun's varying output. Much progress has also been made in determining this difficult to measure, and not-so-well-known quantity. We review our understanding of these two closely linked, fundamental drivers of climate." [http://solar.njit.edu/preprints/goode1349.pdf] I've heard this argument before. It's chery picked and doesnt fly. Threats to the planet are multiple and varied. Why haven't we empowered an intergovernmental panel to combat tsunamis? Volcanoes? Meteorites? Mudslides? Earthquakes? Because we can;t do anything about them. We can do something about this. But we won't. There is no sin, no evil. Only stupidity. Bertie |
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