Name me a country where hydrology does not matter.
The UK. And there are, of course,
degrees of importance. There's a clue in the "olive trees and goats" reference.
Nope. He uses Greece as an example of why climate models fail on regional projections of precipitation.
Climate models don't claim to make specific projections, and Greece is
very specific. The Arctic is far less so - the last I heard Greek seasons don't involve the Sun setting for months at a time, and then rising for months at a time.
love this. A religious belief couched in pseudo-scientific language. I can predict a warming or cooling of a particular area at a specific time and then when it happens claim that "the timescale was off".
Go ahead. Predict a warming or cooling at a specific place and time. Base it on religion if you like.
The Arctic is a very
peculiar place that cannot be compared to Greece. Amplified warming in the Arctic was predicted, and has happened. The timescale was off regarding the physical effects of warming - the melt-rate - but that is not what climate models involve, any more than they involve precipitation in Greece in a warmer world.
The current melting of the Arctic has happened many times before. Even in the 1920s newspapers reported big ice melts and a reduction in the ice pack with ships going to latitudes comparable with today.
The NW and NE passages weren't open at the same time in those days. There is no precedent for what's happened in the Arctic short of the last inter-glacial, and what's more there's no sign of it stopping.
Climate models have not predicted the expansion of the Antarctic ice pack, which continues to grow.
That is
so last year.
Ignoring the failures of climate models and excusing their clear problems is rather like watching believers in Sylvia Browne or John Edward counting the hits and failing to register their misses.
Failed on Greek rainfall, got it right on Arctic warming (and warming generally, it just shows up more in the Arctic). If I was to cite last year's summer forest-fires in Greece as evidence of global warming I would be at fault. So I don't.
All you have is one big miss : "It Won't Happen".
Well with 3000 years of experience of climate change, I think the Greeks are better placed than many idiots would think, especially serial idiots who are pre-disposed to believe climate scare stories concocted in a computer.
The Arctic and sub-Arctic don't exist in a computer. They exist in the real-world, aka the big bad analogue model.
So now you're basing your argument on Greek experience. Climate change has been the least of their worries. Philosophy they're good on, olive trees and goats they're good on, but keeping people at bay after the Persians? Not so much. First the Macedonians, then the Romans, and then the Turks. Meanwhile it was olive-trees and goats all the way. No significant climate change is evident.
In the normal run of things the Mediterranean has a dampening effect on climate change. Try picking out the MWP and LIA from Greek-specific data.