Climate Change News 4

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I mentioned about needing to reboost the International Space Station because of orbital decay owing atmospheric drag.

Here are more Youtubes


click here google youtube reboost
 
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LeafByNiggle:
There are other ways in which the theory has been confirmed.
Yes, because science, at least climate science, is no longer dependent on data.
Assertion without evidence.
 
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niceatheist:
Well, we know where the extra heat has gone. It’s gone into the oceans, because we’ve been measuring oceanic temperatures.
Let’s start with this assertion. The question of where the heat went became a concern only in the last 20 years when global warming…paused. The issue then became one of finding where the “extra” heat went, because it had to go somewhere since everyone knew there must be extra heat. The only reasonable explanation was the ocean, therefore it was decided the heat went there, so that’s what was claimed even though the data were inadequate to confirm the claim (a common situation in the field of climate science).
You continue to put this question of “where the heat went” front and center, despite the fact that answering that question, while it would be nice, is not necessary to confirm heat gain.
While it is surely true that the ocean soaks up a lot of atmospheric heat there really is no convincing explanation for why it suddenly began taking it up aggressively only 20 years ago.
Again, the lack of reason for an observed event in a system that we know is chaotic is not the huge problem you make it out to be. Suppose the answer is “we don’t know.” How would that contradict climate change theory?
A question that completely bypasses the issue of whether it is even possible to measure the heat content of the ocean, a topic incidentally touched on in a study just released this January:

Little is known about the ocean temperature’s long-term response to climate perturbations owing to limited observations and a lack of robust reconstructions." “A lack of robust reconstructions” has long been the single best description of climate science.
You are cherry-picking from the abstract. The article is about some newer and more precise measurements. The comment you quoted is only to contrast with the method described.
 
You continue to put this question of “where the heat went” front and center, despite the fact that answering that question, while it would be nice, is not necessary to confirm heat gain.
Skeptics don’t dispute there is heat gain, stop pretending that they do.

Skeptics dispute the amount of heat gain

Alarmists are the ones working without supporting data, they claim the missing gain is hiding.
 
You continue to put this question of “where the heat went” front and center, despite the fact that answering that question, while it would be nice, is not necessary to confirm heat gain.
If we don’t know where it went, can’t find it, and can’t measure it, how do we know it exists? Saying “It’s got to be somewhere” is not all that scientific a response.
You are cherry-picking from the abstract. The article is about some newer and more precise measurements. The comment you quoted is only to contrast with the method described.
Actually I was citing the specific comment that supported my contention: the current system of measuring the heat of the ocean is woefully inadequate to support the claims being made. This is precisely what is meant by “limited observations and a lack of robust reconstructions.” If by “cherry-picking” you mean citing the relevant comment then I plead guilty.
 
That quote was Ender’s quote, not mine. I disputed it.
True. Your comment was “There are other ways in which the theory has been confirmed.” The “other ways” you referred to being ones independent of data…which is pretty much what Monte was objecting to.
 
Another assertion by you without evidence.
OK, fine. How about these:

niceatheist: “Well, we know where the extra heat has gone.” (#38)
Leaf: “There are other ways in which the theory has been confirmed.” (#37)
niceatheist: “Whether that energy is thermal (heating up the atmosphere and water) or kinetic, leading to stronger weather effects like tornadoes and hurricanes…” (#21)

This is what climate science has been reduced to: unsubstantiated assertions endlessly repeated.
 
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LeafByNiggle:
You continue to put this question of “where the heat went” front and center, despite the fact that answering that question, while it would be nice, is not necessary to confirm heat gain.
If we don’t know where it went, can’t find it, and can’t measure it, how do we know it exists? Saying “It’s got to be somewhere” is not all that scientific a response.
It is if measurements of (name removed by moderator)ut energy and output energy imply it exists. It is quite scientific to say “it’s got to be somewhere.” You keep trying to make this a “must answer” question when it just isn’t.
You are cherry-picking from the abstract. The article is about some newer and more precise measurements. The comment you quoted is only to contrast with the method described.
Actually I was citing the specific comment that supported my contention: the current system of measuring the heat of the ocean is woefully inadequate to support the claims being made. This is precisely what is meant by “limited observations and a lack of robust reconstructions.” If by “cherry-picking” you mean citing the relevant comment then I plead guilty.
I should have called it quote mining, since you are stating it without its context. The author was not making the same point you are trying to make from his quote.
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LeafByNiggle:
Another assertion by you without evidence.
OK, fine. How about these:

niceatheist: “Well, we know where the extra heat has gone.” (#38)
The evidence for this statement has already been provided by mainstream scientists.
Leaf: “There are other ways in which the theory has been confirmed.” (#37)
…ditto…
niceatheist: “Whether that energy is thermal (heating up the atmosphere and water) or kinetic, leading to stronger weather effects like tornadoes and hurricanes…” (#21)
…not a statement.
 
I should have called it quote mining, since you are stating it without its context. The author was not making the same point you are trying to make from his quote.
You can call it figgy-pudding but the fact remains that the statement is either true or false. That it was presented merely as an observation regarding the current state of the science can hardly falsify it.
niceatheist: “Well, we know where the extra heat has gone.” (#38)
The evidence for this statement has already been provided by mainstream scientists.
In this post you argue both (statement one) that it doesn’t matter that scientists don’t know where the heat has gone as well as (statement two) that they do know where it has gone. I shouldn’t be surprised at this - this position is not uncommon in climate science circles.
…not a statement.
Your response is an evasion. The claim is that increased energy in the climate has led to “stronger weather effects like tornadoes and hurricanes”. That claim is false, and completely unsupported by the data.
 
You’re accepting the claim that the AGW theory is true
I have a B.Sc. majoring in chemistry. I’m quite aware of how the theory works. My view is shared by many chemists who work in the oil industry. We’re not going to pretend the theory isn’t robust simply because jobs are at risk. However, that also doesn’t mean we will endorse many of the policies proposed, almost all forget there’s a large proportion of workers relying on the energy industry exist and have no plans for us. The science is not what bothers me, it’s the policy aspect.
 
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I have a B.Sc. majoring in chemistry. I’m quite aware of how the theory works…The science is not what bothers me
I have a BS in chemistry as well, which doesn’t qualify me to interpret the data, but does mean I can at least follow the arguments, and it is precisely the unscientific claims behind the theory that bother me.
 
it is precisely the unscientific claims behind the theory that bother me.
Like what? We know CO2 (and other gases) are IR active and radiate IR wavelengths back down. We know that the concentrations of GHGs have rapidly increased and yes, it’s a correlation but we can give explanations on causation, just as much as we can demonstrate cigarettes cause cancer. We have evidence that show shifts in climate patterns.
Honestly, like other issues on CAF, we aren’t going to convince each other and the discussions become circular.
 
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Like what? We know CO2 (and other gases) are IR active and radiate IR wavelengths back down. We know that the concentrations of GHGs have rapidly increased…
Yes, CO2 concentrations have increased rapidly…and temperatures have not. Even though the temperature record has been and continues to be “adjusted” the data still do not align with the theory. A significant unanswered question for me is: if the science so overwhelmingly supports the theory, why has there been so much dishonesty involved in demonstrating the facts? Why do we repeatedly hear that hurricanes are more frequent/stronger because of global warming when the facts are otherwise? Why did that entire episode exposed by the hacked emails occur? Why does the IPCC allow the “Summary for policy makers” portion of their reports to be written with a disregard for what the scientists themselves have said in the body of the report? Claim after unsupported claim is made. Why is any of this necessary if the theory is so solidly demonstrated?

No, we’re not going to change the others position, but you can surely understand the difference between proof and conjecture, and what passes for proof on this topic would never survive scrutiny in your industry.
 
Even though the temperature record has been and continues to be “adjusted” the data still do not align with the theory.
I don’t know what that’s supposed to mean but the global average has been increasing ‘adjusted’ or not.
why has there been so much dishonesty involved in demonstrating the facts?
If you refer to political commentators, then ask them. I don’t refer to them for anything science related. I base things on what scientists have said and what my professors have taught me.
Why do we repeatedly hear that hurricanes are more frequent/stronger because of global warming when the facts are otherwise?
They have been getting stronger but not frequent.
Why did that entire episode exposed by the hacked emails occur?
That involved about 4 researchers. Regardless of what they did, there are hundreds who aren’t them, independent and not part of any planned conspiracy.
Why does the IPCC allow the “Summary for policy makers” portion of their reports to be written with a disregard for what the scientists themselves have said in the body of the report?
The UN is not my source either. It’s a corrupt organization. Textbooks and academic journals are better. The UN is redundant. And whatever their motives are, just because some individuals behave that way doesn’t negate the actual science out there.
Claim after unsupported claim is made.
And there are claims that are turning out to be true. Forest fires are getting worse in Western Canada and even though I live quite a distance away, we’re choking on the smoke for nearly a week, which is rare according to those who are much older than me and not this bad when it occurs occasionally. And they’re getting more frequent too. Then there are the drought problems in Australia.
 
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ATraveller:
Like what? We know CO2 (and other gases) are IR active and radiate IR wavelengths back down. We know that the concentrations of GHGs have rapidly increased…
Yes, CO2 concentrations have increased rapidly…and temperatures have not.
This has been explained already. If you have a problem with the explanation, please get straight to it instead of pretending this is the first time this point has been made.
A significant unanswered question for me is: if the science so overwhelmingly supports the theory, why has there been so much dishonesty involved in demonstrating the facts?
A. There are going to be a lot of questions that you ask that will be unanswered.
B. There has not been “so much dishonesty.” There has been a little, and it was inconsequential.
Why do we repeatedly hear that hurricanes are more frequent/stronger because of global warming when the facts are otherwise?
The people who make that combo claim definitively are claiming more than is supportable.
Why did that entire episode exposed by the hacked emails occur?
ATraveller answered this well.
Why does the IPCC allow the “Summary for policy makers” portion of their reports to be written with a disregard for what the scientists themselves have said in the body of the report? Claim after unsupported claim is made. Why is any of this necessary if the theory is so solidly demonstrated?
Theory is solidly demonstrated. Correct policy response is not.
 
You are cherry-picking from the abstract. The article is about some newer and more precise measurements. The comment you quoted is only to contrast with the method described.
I don’t trust abstracts …

… because I have found too many of the abstracts are purposely written to appear to be politically correct because the reviewers often do not read the whole study. If the report and more important, the abstract, is not politically correct often/sometimes the report will not get published. That’s why they call it “pal reviewed” instead of “peer reviewed”.

[This was particularly obvious when I was interested in looking at volcanic emissions analyses and certain chemicals from naturally occurring sources were politically incorrect. In fact, there is now a HUGE volume of study on Naturally Occurring Sources of Organohalogens … However, the politically correct forces denied that they existed. The political correct orthodoxy is that there are no natural sources but that they are all man-made. But, in fact, over time, we found that there are more than 5,000 Naturally Occurring Organohalogens. VERY POLITICALLY INCORRECT. The main researcher nowadays is Dr. Gordon Gribble at Dartmouth. Gribble not only publishes a LOT but also somebody hosts a periodic world convention to discuss. Worth looking up. A lot of researchers did a lot of work and then found that they were denied publication. Gribble is not the guy who faked abstracts; it was someone else and a lot of people have published on these issues and since I have more than 90* boxes of studies and reports, and we have moved and everything is in disarray, there is no way to find them easily. But you need to read the full reports and not be limited to the abstracts.]

*more than 97 boxes of studies and papers … and then we found more boxes.

[At the time, I was very interested in Mount Erebus which is the only continuous caldera volcano and it is at some very high altitude. Worth checking out. It is so difficult to visit that a lot of false claims are made about it so it is difficult to collect data and difficult to verify data. You can die visiting it if you get hit with ejecta. ]

[A lot of recent volcanic emissions now provide a tremendous amount of recent data.]

However, I have also found that college reference librarians have a policy … they don’t charge … and they have a policy whereby they can get full papers for free … and they request research papers from issuers and other institutions on the same basis.

I have been able to get many dozens of papers this way; the librarians enjoy it because the stuff I request is so different from what they normally are asked for.

I moved away, so my college connection has been lost.

But it’s all for free. They were alarmed because I used to pay my own cash for the papers and they said payment was unnecessary and they could get the papers for me for free.

So, if any of you all are interested in looking at the full report instead of the abstract, please consider visiting or calling a nearby college or university.
 
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