EvilYeti said:
Do you agree with that conclusion, based on the evidence presented?
Here is what I personally believe, but it's not based strictly on the article. I would appreciate very much if you would respond in kind with your personal view of Kyoto.
Since the basis for projections of AGW is founded on computer models, and the enormous costs associated with Kyoto, I would want a few questions answered before I could have confidence that we would be on the right track in implementing the treaty.
Models from circa 1990 were used to make projections. What is their observed error over the intervening time frame?
More recent models have been designed in an effort to better emulate the climate. What is their observed error to date?
Why many different models if the science is well settled concerning the mathematics of the climate?
It seems to me that is what models do. Quickly calculate repetitive formulas. If the formulas are correct only one standard model would be necessary.
Seems to me that a model with a repetitive error of only 1% per year from observations would be off by about +-270% over 100 years.(1.01^100). Why should I have confidence in long-range projections by climate models?
Since IPCC itself says Kyoto has enormous costs associated with it, is concerned only with CO2 emissions while neglecting the possibility of other factors, is based substantially on climate models, and admits it will only have a very limited effect on temperature, why should I buy into this program without much further research.
Humanity has been adapting to its environment for thousands of years, the money to be spent on Kyoto might well be put to better use advancing the technical ability of humanity to adapt if and when necessary.
The couching of terrible consequences in terms filled with such qualifying words such as (may, might, could, possibly etc.) simply doesn't wash with me.
This is of course my own personal opinion and it would take hard science and not computer models to change it. When someone gets the Nobel Prize for creating a computer climate model that is so good projecting over a century that no one thinks it's worth the effort to try to create a better one, they'll have my full attention. (doubt I'll be alive though)
Sincerely,
Bob