Hallo Alfie
Banned
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Yawn
Is it that late in Australia? I suggest that you get to bed before you fall asleep at the keyboardYawn
Is it that late in Australia? I suggest that you get to bed before you fall asleep at the keyboard.
I'll answer both questions since you haven't been back around to this yet.
The graph from the OP of this thread is degrees C deviation from a baseline (which itself is an average value.)
The little ascending sine wave under that is CO2 as recorded at Mauna Loa and has been scaled to match the graph to show that CO2 keeps rising, so I am unsure of the scaling here.
The ice anomaly is in millions of square kilometers deviation from the baseline value which was the mean of 1979-2000. It shows how much less or more ice there is in the same month (january) year to year. January is not usually the peak month for polar ice, that is usually in early March, and then the melt begins.
The ice area graph, or the one with the temperature plots?
Thanks, the bolded part answers my question.
(I've not been online 'cos it was night time for me, Your post quoted above was at 2:12am my time)
Dave
That was not my point. My point was that IPCC reports have been referenced by numerous AGW proponents. The IPCC's influence is huge. That a hugely influential organization is capable of making such basic errors calls other claims they've made into question..... Now I'm beginning to wonder. What else has been exaggerated? Just these few things? ...
The Himalayan glacial melt and African crop production shortfall projections don't seem trivial to me. Ban Ki-moon has used the latter in speeches.
Shock! Horror! The likelihood is "very high"!!! Oh boy, if that unbelievably precise and explicit claim is incorrect, the whole AGW edifice sure comes tumbling down, doesn't it?Glaciers in the Himalaya are receding faster than in any other part of the world (see Table 10.9) and, if the present rate continues, the likelihood of them disappearing by the year 2035 and perhaps sooner is very high if the Earth keeps warming at the current rate.
Actually I do not wear suits muchComedy really isn't your strong suit, is it?
Actually I do not wear suits much![]()
Up to here you and ClimateAudit are right.Okay, let's look at one of the issues, the Himilayan glacier error/lie/gross exaggeration.
Reference: Climateaudit
Dr Murari Lal (IPCC Coordinating Lead Author) also said he was well aware the statement,.....did not rest on peer-reviewed scientific research......‘It had importance for the region, so we thought we should put it in.’The IPCC chapters were written, then were supposed to be reviewed by the reviewers who had signed on to do so. The reviewers comments would be incorporated, then the revised document sent to the resident politicians for another round of review.
But the IPCC ignored review comments on the glaciers. Specific comments on this issue were ignored-
1. Hayley Fowler reviewed it, and commented:
"Himalayan glaciers in the Karakoram range are growing rapidly, citing a paper published in the influential journal Nature."2. The Japanese government requested:
"clarify what it meant by stating that the likelihood of the glaciers disappearing by 2035 was ‘very high’. ‘What is the confidence level?’ "
This though is an unsupported assertion. You need to tell us what "prevalent" means in this context.The final version from Lai was identical to the draft. This sort of brushing aside of comments and critiques of the pre existing bias in the IPCC report is prevalent throughout the review process.
That these are no isolated instances is probable.Isolated instances? Does not look that way.
Now we have some of the lies/exaggerations coming out in the press. Seems really like they should have done a proper review, doesn't it? But they didn't.
Up to here you and ClimateAudit are right.
However the section you highlighted may indicate a gap in your knowledge of the AR reports. Working Group II reported on the impacts of GW. They are not held to the scientific standards of Working Group I (the physical basis of the assessment). They can and did cite non-peer reviewed sources. As an example: WG I did not cite the WWF at all. WG II (and the other reports) cited them many times.....
if we look at reviewer comments on WG1, the same pattern is found.
What is it with you warmers and your sneaky tricks? Hiding the decline, eh? <hops onto perch to eat cracker>Oh, and if you DO find absolute (anhydrous) ethanol somewhere, do not drink it. The tricks used to take out the water often leave traces of things you do not want to consume!!! Stick to Vodka.
Oh, and if you DO find absolute (anhydrous) ethanol somewhere, do not drink it. The tricks used to take out the water often leave traces of things you do not want to consume!!! Stick to Vodka.
But what if it is labeled KOSHER
Examples? And, once again, why not start off with what you consider the single most damning example--one that really seriously compromises the entire case being made in the report overall.
Why? All you've done is rigged an argument as follows:
Proposed: Find me the one thing that seriously compromises...I'd complement you on your attempt but it wouldn't be deserved. Sure, there were a lot of disregarded reviewer comments to the tech section. I suspect that RC is right, though, that there were no un peer reviewed references to the WWF propaganda therein. That'd truly be laughable. Maybe I'll check a bit later.
Response: Blah blah blah
Assertion: But no one thing can seriously compromise....
Now now.
Calm down there.
The takedown of the pseudo prestige of the IPCC and it's authority is being done by what, largely print newspapers now.
None of the lies you make up and post will make any difference. None of your little denier games and baiting will do any good.