Nope, as usual and as history told us, it is the denier media the ones that are misrepresenting the report and the ones accused by the same media of being alarmists continue to be the target of their misrepresentations.
Since the OP is about 5AR, I’ll refer to it, or for the time being, the leaked reports.
(underlined and boldened for my benefit)
What report? The one that hasn’t been released yet? That report? Are you verifying the results of the unreleased report?
I wonder what the IPCC will claim in the new-and-improved-yet-unreleased report? Will it explain why the previously expected “global” temps overshot the actual “global” temps? Will it explain how they got it wrong? Will it mention the volcanos on the Arctic seabed? Have they found more than four dead polar bears floating in the Arctic?
You did not read the posted cite, it is the leaked report and once again, the Daily Fail as usual misrepresents what the MET office reported and contributed to the IPCC.
Do you have anything else other that repeating the same wrong information from discredited sources like the Daily Mail?
Obviously not.
I wasn’t aware that the soon-to-be-released IPCC report had been officially vetted by anyone of importance yet. Isn’t it normal for scientific reports to have been vetted BEFORE the true-believers champion it’s unreleased findings?
Or is it now considered the “norm” to simply claim that since everyone but true-belivers are ignorant, it doesn’t really matter what their input might be?
The report hasn’t been released. The report hasn’t been peer reviewed by deniers and believers. It’s unknown if the IPCC will share ALL of it’s data and processes with ALL of the groups that would like to examine it. The suspense is killing me.
Mentioning items like the arctic undersea volcanoes that were already looked at, only showed that once again you are relying on sources of information that **never **go back to correct their misinformation. (Why is it that skeptics that get burned by those misinformers **never **complain to those sources for misguiding them?) It is only important to notice that it is then unlikely to be an important item in the IPCC report.
And you are only arguing from ignorance, you need to learn why it is a basic fallacy.
As pointed before, it is unlikely that the report will be different from what the scientists and organizations that are contributing to the IPCC will make the IPCC tell you a wildly different history regarding the arctic volcanoes.
I agree. If a system has been around for a long time, the default assumption should be that if you push on it, it will push back.
The warmists turn this assumption on its head by asserting that not only does the climate not push back against warming, it amplifies any warming.
And of course the main “evidence” for this claim is that there exist climate simulations which (1) assume great sensitivity to CO2; and (2) are consistent with past temperatures even if they are unable to predict future temperatures. If a predictor is great at predicting things after the fact, it should not instill much confidence.
There is no evidence for this item, negative feedback are also taken into account, the common denominator of contrarians, besides using the silly term “warmist”, is to always refuse to acknowledge that negative feedbacks are and were investigated and the positives are still there and more are added to the atmosphere.
And this only can be said by denying that there is empirical evidence of the positive feedbacks like water vapor, and paleoclimate gives scientists more confidence, it is not only models as the contrarians continue to repeat with no concept of how wrong they are in assuming only computer models are being used.
Is the climate sensitivity less than 2°C?
-Andrew Dessler from MIT and NASA explains the evidence and the reasons why it is unlikely that we will see the low end of the IPCC predictions.-
LOL. “It is UNLIKELY that the report will be different”. You’re a hoot. “Unlikely” as in - you don’t know but will continue to argue as if the unreleased report has already been verified - unlikely?
The IPCC and the MMCO2GW zealots have lost their momentum because they won’t/can’t answer why the IPCC claims failed to match actual global temps. And the admission of “losing” the man-made inputs and computer modeling software didn’t help. Oops - You can’t prove our “science” is wrong, so everyone must believe us. We wouldn’t get caught lying to the public again.
PUblic confidence in the IPCC’s version of science is lacking. This should be pretty simple, either the global temp is increasing/decreasing/plateaued. AND PROVIDE ACTUAL PROOF. Anyone can understand how a thermometer works. Hotter is up, colder is down. Collecting multiple temp readings from various sources and types of sources, creates a pattern. Extend the patterns back mutiple years/decades/millenium and you have a historic record. It’s not difficult to discover that in-between ice ages, there are periods of global warming.
It’s up to the IPCC to, hopefully, come up with a report that explains their past failures to accurately predict future tempuratures. If the IPCC can’t/won’t explain how they failed in the past or what they’ve done to correct their errors, why should the public change it’s mind about the IPCC.
That sort of logic and scientific thinking ignores the real issue, which is it has to be warming because the theory says it has to. Computers show it’s warming, models show it’s warming, analysis of temperatures show warming, so who are you going to trust? Experts or evidence?
If you just go with actual data and readings you miss the bigger picture, which is the planet will warm and the oceans will rise and billions will die.
You can’t let reality get in the way of the message.
That might be due to their lack of any real meteorological training, not looking at historic weather and climate, and being fed a stream of false data. If you believe the fake claims, you are operating on the Garbage in-Garbage out principle, and a narrow focus misses the larger issues, like how organisms respond to changes, how heat actually effects the planet, how climate has changed before, and how many factors are still almost complete unknowns.
There is a simple problem with the “oceans will rise” belief, because it doesn’t include how the atmospheric/oceanic systems work in the real world.
Warmer oceans will melt tidewater glaciers quickly, but at the same time dump larger amounts of snow each year in the high altitude mountains that create the glaciers. High altitude snow is pretty much immune to climate change, it’s the amount of snow, and the amount of soot that determine the accumulation.
The climate expert who just runs a computer model has no idea about how clouds and snow actually work, nor do we have good data on the actual ice mass in most of the worlds large reservoirs of fresh water.
Not that any of this will matter to the true believes.
The Earth IS warming. Even without human input, the Earth would probably be warming right now simply because of where it is in the interglacial cycle. That’s not particularly controversial.
And the ‘pause’ in warming is not unprecedented. For example, if you measure from peak values, temperature declined from 1942 until the late 1970’s (i.e. we didn’t hit the peak 1942 temperature again until the late 1970’s, and we went through a period of flat temperatures that lasted a couple of decades).
The climate change ‘signal’ is very small compared to annual fluctuations. That means it can be entirely possible for the earth to be warming in the longer term while short-term patterns can show cooling - even over a period of two or three decades.
This is an example of how the science can get twisted by both sides. A random fluctuation causing temporary cooling is seized on as a useful political argument, and then repeated by the anti-AGW side as if it’s incontrovertible science. And on the other side, if we get a year of higher than normal extreme weather events, this is seized upon by the pro-AGW side as a useful political argument and then repeated as if it’s scientific fact that the latest tornado or hurricane was caused by global warming.
The truth is that in the shorter term of months or years, the behavior of the climate system is hard to discern from random noise. Long term patterns can take decades to establish themselves. That doesn’t stop activists on both sides from exploiting the randomness when it happens to move in a direction favorable to their arguments.
Actually that is very controversial.
While I agree with the general thrust of what you’re saying, I want to point out that this argument kind of suggests that we can predict the climate so long as we figure out what the ‘unknowns’ are. This is the reductionist argument that climate is a machine, and once all the parts are figured out it can be predicted.
In complex systems, this is not true. Complex systems are not like machines that can be understood by reverse engineering them or breaking them down into their constituent parts. Complex systems are networks of interactions, and the behavior of the system emerges from those interactions. There is no component that is ‘responsible’ for some aspect of the system’s behavior - there’s only the system, and any part of it is just one of millions of inputs.
This is my problem with Gigobuster’s claim that we know about the positive and negative feedbacks, and that we know what role water vapor will play in the overall feedback of the system. In truth, all we can hope to know is how water vapor will interact with the next iteration of the system, and only its primary interaction mechanism. We don’t know how the system will adapt to it, and how the next iteration of the system will interact with the changes caused by this iteration.
For all we know, water vapor could have positive feedback now, but the changes it introduces to the climate system will result in even stronger negative feedbacks 50 years from now through some series of complicated second and third order interactions. Maybe water vapor causes more rain in some parts of the world, which changes the pattern of fresh water uptake into the ocean, which changes ocean currents. Or maybe it’s even more complicated than that, and changes to the climate system have bizarre effects that result in negative feedback in ways no one could possible figure out because the chain of interactions is so long and convoluted. And because the systems adapts, the next time the same thing happens the response may be totally different.
Our study of other complex systems should give us a lot of humility when it comes to claims of understanding of the climate system. Economics deals with complex systems, and although we’ve had hundreds of years of scientific study of economic behavior we still can’t predict what’s going to happen in the future - at all. Despite the huge financial incentives involved, we still haven’t figured out how to predict stock movements.
In biology, ecosystems are complex. And we know enough about the risks of predicting and trying to control those systems that we’ve learned some humility. We tried to stop forest fires until we realized that the ecosystem had already adapted to regular fires and stopping them is a bad idea. We’ve tried to control animal populations by injecting predators, only to find all sorts of unintended consequences through bizarre interactions. Hell, we can’t even explain how ant colonies behave. We can simulate them and do a damned fine job of making a simulated colony, just like we can simulate weather. But those simulations don’t help at all in terms of predicting the movements of an ant population.
And so it goes. Complexity science is a fairly new field and mathematically difficult, so lots of working scientists don’t quite have their heads aroundit . But a more fundamental problem is that complex systems are not amenable to manipulation, so people don’t want to believe them. Especially not the people who see it as their job to ‘scientifically manage’ the world. They want the world to be a machine they can understand, because they want to be the ones pulling on the levers to achieve the ‘right’ outcome.
I think it has more to do with wishful thinking. Why would someone want to believe so fervently in a doom and gloom scenario?
Well it seems like a pretty common human belief, from the peak oil guys, to survivalists, to a lot of fundamentalist religious types. People seem to derive a smug feeling of superiority from being aware of the true sh**storm to come when other people are not.
This is once again relying on an argument from ignorance, as pointed before, for all we know so far (as the research from Dressler and others point out) the water vapor feedback is not negative. After so many years those items causing the negative feedback you are assuming, with little to no evidence, should not be hard to come by, but they are.
I’m not suggesting that. As you point out, it’s huge and complex and we just don’t know.
Yeah, and it’s been that way for a long time.
And we hit once again the #1 Myth.
It is NOT an argument from ignorance. As I said, the first-order interaction of water vapor could certainly provide a positive feedback - it’s just that we don’t know what else it might do, and how the climate will respond after it mutates and changes in response to that change.
There are a lot of scientists resistant to the implications of complexity theory in their own domain, because it says that there are some things we can’t know through reductionism and experiment. That doesn’t make it any less true.
I suggest you read a bit about complexity theory. And not through the lens of ‘climate science’.