macdoc
Philosopher
Minor but serious due to S02 and carbon black.
They likely have a net cooling effect right now.
They likely have a net cooling effect right now.
The problem is not with them but with your expectations.What I was more interested in was the seeming contradiction between the perspective that predictions of effects are so uncertain as to be considered poor science and yet the various science organizations most directly oriented to studying climate change all devote a considerable effort toward providing (and explaining) predictions.
Minor but serious due to S02 and carbon black.
They likely have a net cooling effect right now.
The problem is not with them but with your expectations.
They don't predict - they cannot predict - as we are the major variable
The science bodies set ranges of outcomes and from that range....some will go further and say if the world climate hits x degrees due to AGW these are probable impacts in various areas.
http://www.globalwarmingisreal.com/...imate-change-is-going-to-be-twice-as-extreme/
Scenarios are not predictions - they are possible outcomes based on the known science.
So over time the signal appears from the noise. That makes sense.
That said, what about medium term variability like the PDO ( assuming it's a real effect)?
Only if you are computer illiterate do you think those projections even remotely match the biased GISS and CRU data.Your expectation of a model against real world is either flawed - or you don't perhaps realize that the IPCC range of outcomes have been matched in observation
Evaluations of the hindcast suggest that the RCM-generated regional-scale fields are reasonably accurate, and preserve the large-scale information of the driving coarse-resolution data well. This refined spatial variability is crucial for regional climate and climate impact assessment studies, especially in mountainous regions such as the western United States, where the spatial and temporal variations of the hydrologic cycle depend strongly on terrain height.
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P3-1325480521.htmlImproved Skill of Northern Hemisphere Winter Surface Temperature Predictions Based on Land-Atmosphere Fall Anomalies
Article from:
Journal of Climate
Article date:
August 15, 2007
Author:
Cohen, Judah; Fletcher,
A statistical forecast model, referred to as the snow-cast (sCast) model, has been developed using observed October mean snow cover and sea level pressure anomalies to predict upcoming winter land surface temperatures for the extratropical Northern Hemisphere. In operational forecasts since 1999, snow cover has been used for seven winters, and sea level pressure anomalies for three winters. Presented are skill scores for these seven real-time forecasts and also for 33 winter hindcasts (1972/73-2004/05). The model demonstrates positive skill over much of the eastern United States and northern Eurasia-regions that have eluded skillful predictions among the existing major seasonal ...

Even in 2003 regional hindcasting produced robust results.
So, you would rather a calamity occurs than to take heed of a scientific prediction.
TS - lose the verbosity - it's wearisome.
The "predictions" you refer to are based on models.
Your expectation of a model against real world is either flawed - or you don't perhaps realize that the IPCC range of outcomes have been matched in observation with the exception of Arctic ice which they acknowledged was poorly served in their report.
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2008/05/what-the-ipcc-models-really-say/
a model "prediction" is very different than a real world prediction.
Climate projections: Past performance no guarantee of future skill? (PDF)
(Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 36, Issue 13, July 2009)
- Catherine Reifen, Ralf Toumi
"In our analysis there is no evidence of future prediction skill delivered by past performance-based model selection."
We are not implying that comparisons against observations are not important in model validation. Good agreement with past climate builds confidence in the reliability of a model’s future projections. Our analysis only examines selection based on models’ ability to replicate a mean anomaly over a historic time period. There are other criteria that could be used and would be worth investigating.
Only if you are computer illiterate do you think those projections even remotely match the biased GISS and CRU data.
Keep in mind that in the case of climate the noise is a product of the chaotic nature of the system so it exists in all realizations, including the real world observations.
PDO is included in the models in two different ways, where it’s known empirically the observed PDO is entered as a parameter. Where it isn’t it’s modeled.
The modeled PDO shows the same general characteristics as the observed PDO but can differ significantly for any given year or decade.
Since it’s longer term characteristics are the same, however so the effects drop out of the result past about 20-30 years or so, but for shorter times then that it’s a major contributor to internal variation.
I would think the PDO has some significant regional impact even within the last 30 years but I know regional models are still "work in progress".
I supect the effect might also be global in that in different phases heat moves into and out of the deeper ocean

I'm not speaking to or about any differences due to changes in the human forcing factors, primarily because I've yet to see that there is or will be significant changes in human actions, at least within the next few decades.
I'm not looking for opinions considering all the potential variations of human action over the next few decades or even centuries. What I was more interested in was the seeming contradiction between the perspective that predictions of effects are so uncertain as to be considered poor science and yet the various science organizations most directly oriented to studying climate change all devote a considerable effort toward providing (and explaining) predictions. But as you say that seems to be an issue that is being left without resolution, so I shall let it lay.
Personally, my primary concerns are a bit closer to home.
Expanding desertification in the US southwest, storm force increases both coastal and inland, floods in the heartlands, long-term drought in the west. The migration of disease, decrease in viable croplands...the list is actually quite long, and this only goes to the natural impacts that will be being increasingly felt and amplified over the coming decades. Include in the economic and social impacts, and our children's children are inheriting a completely different (and molten) ball of wax.