Trakar
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2007
- Messages
- 12,637
LOL WingNutDaily's breathless exageration and feigned surprise over Imhofe's (grand poobah of wingnuttery) lies exagerations, now there's a hard sell!!
The Senate report says the EPA predicts $78 billion in annual costs. Over 100 years that is $7.8 trillion.
The blog compares that to the world's annual gross production which is really dumb.
The US 2010 GDP was 14,624,184 million, i.e. 14,624 billion. So the EPA are predicting a cost of 0.6% of the US GDP.
Really easy to sell that fix.![]()
The science is done, the overwhelming weight of evidence says yes we are screwing the planet via CO2, every month that ticks past gives the scientists even more weight to the arguments, and still people are in the arguing about stuff phase and not the doing things phase![]()
I am starting to think that even after we get to a summer Ice free Arctic there will still be people spouting Monkton claptrap, and holding up the doing phase...
"Greentech could be the largest economic opportunity of the 21st century," Doerr said in a February press release announcing that Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, the investment fund that helped underwrite many prominent tech start-ups,

No wonder the Venture Capitalists like John Doerr think the Green Energy boom will make all others pale by comparison.
http://www.earthlab.com/articles/greentechnologyboom.aspx
Lot of jobs in those numbers.![]()
The deadly Russian heat wave of 2010 was due to a natural atmospheric phenomenon often associated with weather extremes, according to a new NOAA study. And while the scientists could not attribute the intensity of this particular heat wave to climate change, they found that extreme heat waves are likely to become increasingly frequent in the region in coming decades.
The research team drew from scientific observations and computer climate models to evaluate the possible roles of natural and human-caused climate influences on the severity of the heat wave. The study was accepted for publication in Geophysical Research Letters, a publication of the American Geophysical Union.
“Knowledge of prior regional climate trends and current levels of greenhouse gas concentrations would not have helped us anticipate the 2010 summer heat wave in Russia,” said lead author Randall Dole, deputy director of research at NOAA’s Earth System Research Laboratory, Physical Science Division and a fellow of the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES). “Nor did ocean temperatures or sea ice status in early summer of 2010 suggest what was to come in Russia.”
... (rest at link at top of post)
The newest arrival in the climate science blogosphere is Isaac Held. This is notable in a number of respects. First, Isaac is a top-tier climate scientist who is hugely respected in the community. For him to decide that it is worth his time to blog on the science should be an important signal for other scientists. Secondly, Isaac is a federal NOAA employee at GFDL in Princeton, and the blog is on the official GFDL website.
http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2011/20110309_russianheatwave.html
Natural Variability Main Culprit of Deadly Russian Heat Wave That Killed Thousands
With the recent discussion of sensitivity issues looking at them in a little more detail is probably a good idea.
snip..
cited paper said:In contrast, we can observe the strength of atmospheric feedbacks, or the change in top-of-atmosphere energy flux in response to a surface temperature change, much more directly than climate sensitivity itself. The net strength of these feedbacks is directly related to the inverse of the climate sensitivity, or the range of stabilisation concentrations consistent with a target temperature rise.
I hope the members who were having trouble identifying the correlation between TOA flux and sensitivity took the time to read this. It might also be helpful in determining why estimates of flux in models are important, and why a value 400% below the actual is "significant".
Thanks for posting this.
Hmm not sure about that. they said a rare weather phenomenon was the cause, but other occurrences of this same phenomenon were nowhere near as extreme until recently.
Science daily reporting on this papers
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/early/2011/03/16/science.1201224
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/03/110318091141.htm
in particular this graphic from the science daily article is pretty telling.
http://images.sciencedaily.com/2011/03/110318091141-large.jpg
I hope the members who were having trouble identifying the correlation between TOA flux and sensitivity took the time to read this. It might also be helpful in determining why estimates of flux in models are important, and why a value 400% below the actual is "significant".
Thanks for posting this.
...The earth’s climate system is characterized by great irreversibility. An intrinsic
thermodynamic property of such a system and a measure of this irreversibility is the
entropy production associated with those processes occurring within it. This paper
introduces an approximate method for estimating this production by calculating the
global distributions of the entropy fluxes flowing through the upper boundary of the
climate system. These are the fluxes associated with the exchange of radiation between
the earth and space, and a specific method is described in this paper to derive these
entropy fluxes from already available measurements of the ERB...
He is discussing top of atmosphere energy flux, as you have been informed repeatedly this is different then top of atmosphere entropy flux.
I [Ken Caldeira] have seen a copy of the Berkeley group’s draft paper, which of course would be expected to be revised before submission.
Their preliminary results sit right within the results of NOAA, NASA, and HadCRU, confirming that prior analyses were correct in every way that matters. Their results confirm the reality of global warming and support in all essential respects the historical temperature analyses of the NOAA, NASA, and HadCRU.
http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.o.../1367.abstractThese results indicate that the overall strength of the atmospheric irreversible processes at all altitudes as determined by the corresponding atmospheric net entropy flux is closely related to the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
You are welcome, it looked like you needed a bit brushing up on some of the terms and basic understandings, I see you've still got some conflation and significance of values issues, I'm glad this helped, and if I get the time I'll try to find something that will help you with these other items that seem to still be giving you problems.
Early days yet, but it seems the BEST analysis has been sent out in first draft for review.
http://climateprogress.org/2011/03/20/berkeley-temperature-study-results-global-warming/#comments
Nothing to see here, move along ...
I doubt we'll hear much more about BEST in the weirdosphere. I don't monitor that reality closely, but the response to the initial announcement of the study did seem to be muted - I suspect that, deep down, they expected this.
Anyway, it's much easier to slander climate scientists and rage against massive conspiracies than it is to manipulate data when said data and the methodology used are transparent.
http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.o.../1367.abstract
posted that a while back but bears repeating....the structure proposed I believe allows easier incorporation into complex models allowing a vertical component to be introduced in a straightforward manner.