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Global Warming/Climate Change Super Thread

The start of a new "Little Ice Age" makes a lot more sense based on observational evidence. As well, the increasing failures of crops due to global cooling is thought to have been a factor in the falls of Empires in the past, global instability in our age is going to be much more severe. Stock up on blankets and firewood...

http://business.financialpost.com/fp-comment/lawrence-solomon-global-warming-doomsayers-take-note-earths-19th-little-ice-age-has-begun

Lawrence Solomon: Global warming doomsayers take note: Earth’s 19th Little Ice Age has begun
Lawrence Solomon | March 27, 2015 8:57 AM ET
More from Lawrence Solomon | @LSolomonTweets

Elise Amendola/AP PhotoEarth slipped into an ice age in the winter just concluded and will become progressively colder over the next 50 years, reaching its depth around 2060..

With a century of cold weather ahead, the public won’t buy that cold weather is caused by global warming

The news was all gloom for global warming doomsayers this week — a double whammy of (for them) incomprehensible findings that proves (to them) that the world is either mad or in denial.

The first whammy came via Gallup, in a comprehensive study of American attitudes to the environment in general and global warming in particular. Despite the obvious-as-the-nose-on-your-face (to them) environmental calamities that are at this very moment overwhelming the planet, only 9% of the public rate the overall quality of the environment as poor. Inexplicably, 50% rate the environment as excellent or good — the highest degree of satisfaction with the state of the environment that Gallup has recorded since it began asking this question in 2001.

But the gloom for the doomsayers was only beginning. When Americans do worry about the environment, they worry “a great deal” about the quality of their drinking water, followed by pollution of rivers and lakes. They don’t worry a great deal about global warming, which ranks dead last on Gallup’s list of worries. Fewer than one-third of Americans lose sleep over global warming, fewer than express concern over air pollution, fewer than get stressed over environmental issues that haven’t dominated the news in decades, such as the extinction of plants and animals and the loss of tropical rain forests.

Worse, despite everything President Obama has told them about the absolute imperative to stop global warming, despite all the warnings in the mainstream media about how we’re running out of time, Americans are less fussed over global warming today than they were when George Bush was president, when more than 40% were very worried. The urgency has since vanished into the ether. When asked “Do you think that global warming will pose a serious threat to you or your way of life in your lifetime?” Americans now overwhelmingly — 62% — respond “no.”

Fewer than one-third of Americans lose sleep over global warming

Gallup’s research discovered that about half the public associates warmer weather with global warming (the other half sees it as normal variation); fewer associate snow and cold weather with global warming because “the connection [is] less intuitive.” With 51% of Americans saying the weather in their area was colder than usual this winter, and only 18% saying it was warmer, it follows that this winter’s cold weather has had a chilling effect on potential converts to the cause of global warming.

It likewise follows that the failure of temperatures to rise for almost two decades now has dampened apprehension over global warming, and that the number of future converts will rise or fall with the thermometer.

Related
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Enter Habibullo Abdussamatov of the Pulkovo Observatory of the Russian Academy of Sciences, the scientist who heads Russia’s space research laboratory and its global warming research using data collected by the International Space Station. Unlike other scientists in the global warming field who have had to continually backtrack, sidestep and spin erroneous findings when their models proved embarrassingly wrong, Abdussamatov’s studies over the last decade have stayed on course, in keeping with the actual temperature readings that ultimately provide a true measure of climate change.

His latest study, published in Thermal Science, delivers this week’s second whammy. It continues the analysis he has long pursued, which consistently arrives at the same conclusion: Earth is now entering a new Little Ice Age, Earth’s 19th Little Ice Age, to be precise. Abdussamatov has been quite confident of his findings for what might strike some as odd reasons: His science is based on that of the giants in the field — astronomers like Milutin Milankovitch, who a century ago described how tilts in its axis and other changes in the Earth’s movements determine its climate, and William Herschel, who two centuries ago noticed an inverse correlation between wheat prices on Earth and the number of sunspots generated by the Sun’s cycles. (Hint: the more energy from the Sun that Earth gets, the more warmth Earth receives, the more abundant the wheat crops, the lower the price of wheat; the less energy from the Sun, the less warmth, the more wheat crop failures, the higher the wheat price.)

Greenhouse gases — CO2 and water vapour — play a role in this drama but the gases come not from SUVs and other man-made activities but from the oceans, which contain 50 times as much CO2 as the atmosphere. As the oceans warm or cool because of the Sun, they release or absorb these gases, whose greenhouse effect is secondary and relatively minor.

Abdussamatov’s model incorporates the Sun’s 200-year cycles and the feedback effects from greenhouse gases released by the oceans, and sees how they acted on Earth’s previous 18 Little Ice Ages. “All 18 periods of significant climate changes found during the last 7,500 years were entirely caused by corresponding quasi-bicentennial variations of [total solar irradiance] together with the subsequent feedback effects, which always control and totally determine cyclic mechanism of climatic changes from global warming to Little Ice Age.”

If the 19th Little Ice Age follows the pattern of the previous 18, Earth slipped into an ice age in the winter just concluded and will become progressively colder over the next 50 years, reaching its depth around 2060. Another half century, taking us to the 22nd century, and we’ll arrive back at today’s temperatures.

Through it all, Gallup will be describing the public’s opinion of global warming.

Lawrence Solomon is executive director of Energy Probe, a Toronto-based environmental group. LawrenceSolomon@nextcity.com
 
I was inspired to post this based on some of the ramblings on the Election 2015 thread. This article from Wired UK is an example of both how scientific research turns the "narrative" on its head and a hilarious example of how the "church of Global Warming" will try to ignore evidence standing squarly in its face. The prediction that the reduction of solar activity will trigger a "Little Ice Age" in the 2030's cannot be squared with the paragraph in the same article :

Such events are in no way linked to climate change, with fluctuations in solar activity having a far smaller impact than global warming.

Either the change in solar activity will cause a change in the global climate, or it will not. Saying it will cause a little ice age but is in no way linked to climate change is sucking and blowing at the same time in the worst way, and trying to do it in the same article is incredibly stupid as well:

http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2015-07/13/mini-ice-age-earth-sunspots

Mini ice age could bring freezing temperatures by 2030
13 July 15 /by James Temperton

A mini ice age could hit the Earth in the 2030s, the first such event to occur since the early 1700s. New mathematical models of the Sun's solar cycle developed at Northumbria University suggest solar activity will see a "significant" drop, causing temperatures on Earth to plummet.

The last mini ice age occurred between 1645 and 1715 and caused temperatures in northern Europe to fall dramatically, with London's River Thames freezing over during winter and sea ice extending for miles around the UK. The prolonged cold snap, known as the Maunder Minimum, has been linked to a reduction in the number of sunspots, as observed by scientists at the time.

Such periods were thought to be driven by convecting waves of fluids deep within the Sun, but new research suggests a second force -- or "wave" -- is at play. Two waves, operating at different layers in the Sun's interior, are now believed to drive solar activity. When these waves are desynchronised, temperatures on Earth fall.

Both waves work on 11 year cycles and fluctuate between the northern and southern hemispheres of the Sun. When the waves stay in phase we see high levels of solar activity such as sunspots, and when out of phase we see low activity.

Such events are in no way linked to climate change, with fluctuations in solar activity having a far smaller impact than global warming.

Valentina Zharkova, a mathematics professor at Northumbria University, who led the research, said comparing predictions to real data about current solar activity showed an accuracy of 97 percent. The findings were presented at the National Astronomy Meeting in Llandudno, Wales.

To test their theory Zharkova and her colleagues used solar activity data from 1976-2008. Once it was clear the theory matched they used their model to predict how the two separate waves would behave during the next solar cycles.

They found that by cycle 25, which peaks in 2022, the pair of waves would be increasingly offset. During cycle 26, covering the period 2030-2040, the two waves will be exactly out of synch, causing a "significant reduction" in solar activity.

"In cycle 26, the two waves exactly mirror each other – peaking at the same time but in opposite hemispheres of the Sun. Their interaction will be disruptive, or they will nearly cancel each other. We predict that this will lead to the properties of a 'Maunder minimum'," Zharkova said.

If correct -- further study is naturally required -- Zharkova's prediction would mean a return to freezing temperatures last seen 370 years ago. During that period the River Thames froze to such an extent that regular "frost fairs" were held during the winter, with market stalls and ice skating a common sight on the river.

During the winter of 1683-84 the river was frozen solid for two months at a thickness of 28cm, according to historical records. Solid ice was also reported extending for miles off the coasts around England, France, Belgium and the Netherlands.
 
Thucydides said:
I was inspired to post this based on some of the ramblings on the Election 2015 thread. This article from Wired UK is an example of both how scientific research turns the "narrative" on its head and a hilarious example of how the "church of Global Warming" will try to ignore evidence standing squarly in its face. The prediction that the reduction of solar activity will trigger a "Little Ice Age" in the 2030's cannot be squared with the paragraph in the same article :

Either the change in solar activity will cause a change in the global climate, or it will not. Saying it will cause a little ice age but is in no way linked to climate change is sucking and blowing at the same time in the worst way, and trying to do it in the same article is incredibly stupid as well:

http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2015-07/13/mini-ice-age-earth-sunspots

Lol.  and here is an update from the very same scientist they and you are quoting:

http://www.iflscience.com/environment/mini-ice-age-not-reason-ignore-global-warming

Specifically this:

Zharkova ends with a word of warning: not about the cold but about humanity's attitude toward the environment during the minimum. We must not ignore the effects of global warming and assume that it isn't happening. “The Sun buys us time to stop these carbon emissions,” Zharkova says. The next minimum might give the Earth a chance to reduce adverse effects from global warming.

Oh and this one too...


http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/07/16/scientists-dispute-ice-age-warnings/30257409/
 
Good to know. From the historic records it would appear that after the onset of a Little Ice Age the world will have between 3-500 years to decide "how to stop these carbon emissions".

Of course there is an element of sucking and blowing there as well. How many of these climate change alarmists are for reducing "carbon emissions" by ramping up nuclear power production?

And as for the "evidence" (graphs on link):

https://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2015/07/27/mind-blowing-temperature-fraud-at-noaa/

Mind-Blowing Temperature Fraud At NOAA
Posted on July 27, 2015 by stevengoddard

The measured US temperature data from USHCN shows that the US is on a long-term cooling trend. But the reported temperatures from NOAA show a strong warming trend.

ScreenHunter_10009 Jul. 27 12.16

Measured : ushcn.tavg.latest.raw.tar.gz
Reported : ushcn.tavg.latest.FLs.52j.tar.gz

They accomplish this through a spectacular hockey stick of data tampering, which corrupts the US temperature trend by almost two degrees.

ScreenHunter_10008 Jul. 27 12.08

The biggest component of this fraud is making up data. Almost half of all reported US temperature data is now fake. They fill in missing rural data with urban data to create the appearance of non-existent US warming.

ScreenHunter_10010 Jul. 27 12.20

The depths of this fraud is breathtaking, but completely consistent with the fraudulent profession which has become known as “climate science”

And a comment from another blog on this revelation:



It's been interesting. We've actually had a rather hot summer over here in Europe, and yet none of the usual suspects have tried to connect it to global warming. That tells me that they know the jig is up, and it's only a matter of time before even the die-hards like NOAA stop lying about it.

And presumably it won't be long after that before they'll be shrieking about the coming Ice Age and how that means we must accept global government. They're kind of one-trick ponies, aren't they.
 
My issue is climate change.  Not global warming.  I'm really not about trusting alarmists or environmentalists and all these end of the world scenarios but...

When a guy like Stephen Hawking declares that climate change is one of the single greatest threats to the planet, I listen.
 
Crantor said:
My issue is climate change.  Not global warming.  I'm really not about trusting alarmists or environmentalists and all these end of the world scenarios but...

When a guy like Stephen Hawking declares that climate change is one of the single greatest threats to the planet, I listen.

Only now, Mr. Hawking (whom I admire greatly) previously said that the biggest threat to humanity would be contacting ET.  He is now joining forces with others in the hunt for ET...  :alien: :eek:rly:
 
jollyjacktar said:
Only now, Mr. Hawking (whom I admire greatly) previously said that the biggest threat to humanity would be contacting ET.  He is now joining forces with others in the hunt for ET...  :alien: :eek:rly:

While it might sound crazy, they just recently discovered a planet similar to Earth.  ET might not be what we think it is but it likely does exist.

Again, when he says something, I listen.
 
Agreed.  Especially when you take into account the of the effort he must make to in order to say what he wants to say.
 
Again, I don't disagree that climate change occurs.  Nor that it poses a significant threat.

I only suggest that we can't predict climate change and therefore it is ludicrous/criminal to waste resources on courses of action that are not known to be effective.

I, like Bjorn Lomborg, believe it is best to husband what resources we have and apply them to best effect when we have a clearly identified crisis and a course of action that is tailored to meet the crisis.

I would hate to have spent trillions of dollars of wealth supporting bureaucrats and corrupt politicians only to discover bare cupboards when we needed to build levees or knock an incoming asteroid out of the sky.
 
Crantor said:
My issue is climate change.  Not global warming.  I'm really not about trusting alarmists or environmentalists and all these end of the world scenarios but...

When a guy like Stephen Hawking declares that climate change is one of the single greatest threats to the planet, I listen.

The climate is changing all the time. Humans evolved becasue the climate changed and our distant ancestors had attributes which allowed them to survive and thrive in the new environments. Vikings had croft farms in Greenland in the 1100's (we know this because retreating glaciers are revealing the farms) and the Scots were known for their wines until the 1400's.

The issue is how to address this natural cycle of changes. The Climate Change alarmists have an agenda that involves massive increases in bureaucracies, curtailing political and economic freedoms and unbridled State power as their means of addressing these cycles (the snark in my post upthread about how Climate Change alarmists will have the same "solutions" for the next Little Ice Age suggests their agenda isn't actually about climate at all). I happen to believe humans are pretty smart and adaptable creatures and given free reign could probably find solutions on their own. If tribes of Homo Sapiens could go from the burning deserts of Africa to the Ice Age Steppe of central Asia on foot and from there around the world armed with nothing much more advanced than pointed sticks and elegently flaked stone tools, I think we could probably figure things out the way the Ancestors did....
 
Thucydides said:
If tribes of Homo Sapiens could go from the burning deserts of Africa to the Ice Age Steppe of central Asia on foot and from there around the world armed with nothing much more advanced than pointed sticks and elegently flaked stone tools, I think we could probably figure things out the way the Ancestors did....
Pointed Sticks?

Self-defense-against-Fresh-Fruit-monty-python-10984452-456-263.jpg


Here's the real threat:

latest
 
That's why I always pack a 16 Ton weight. You just never know. ;D
 
Ah.  Now I understand the 16 ton LVM - Heavy requirement.
 
Kirkhill said:
Again, I don't disagree that climate change occurs.  Nor that it poses a significant threat.

I only suggest that we can't predict climate change and therefore it is ludicrous/criminal to waste resources on courses of action that are not known to be effective.

I, like Bjorn Lomborg, believe it is best to husband what resources we have and apply them to best effect when we have a clearly identified crisis and a course of action that is tailored to meet the crisis.

I would hate to have spent trillions of dollars of wealth supporting bureaucrats and corrupt politicians only to discover bare cupboards when we needed to build levees or knock an incoming asteroid out of the sky.

I would echo this perspective. Unfortunately, the climate change lobby only recognizes their point of view. Anything else warrants being labeled a "denier". Most reasonable men understand that in any discussion there is a middle ground. Alas, war is no place for reasonable men, and the climate change debate is nothing more than another front in the greater culture war.
 
ModlrMike said:
I would echo this perspective. Unfortunately, the climate change lobby only recognizes their point of view. Anything else warrants being labeled a "denier". Most reasonable men understand that in any discussion there is a middle ground. Alas, war is no place for reasonable men, and the climate change debate is nothing more than another front in the greater culture war.

That is because denier's are more often than not lobbyists for whomever will write the biggest cheque, rarely are they individuals coming from a respectable institution or established environmental research group. I think it would do many of you guys some good to watch the documentary Merchants of Doubt. It does an excellent job of showing the business that is professional denial "experts", and their role in using the media as an effective form of convincing the public of whatever they are being paid to downplay. I know I'm rather suspicious of any so called expert who's funding comes from some of the largest oil industrialists in the world, and whom a few decades ago told us that smoking had no adverse health effects.

Science is a method which we use to discern the world around us, and despite an individuals motive to use the findings of this for good or bad, the method works. If some individuals chose to use AGW research to further their own agendas then that is very unfortunate, it does not however make the findings of individuals who actually crunch the numbers any less factual. Science will carry on advancing the scope of mankind's knowledge, we'll adopt new theories from new pieces of information and we'll add to or discard that which does not fit with our updated findings. You can believe the entire scientific community is out to kill jobs or push green technology all you'd like, but those institutions are going to continue to function at the pinnacle of mankind's knowledge in all fields whether you support them or not.
 
I do so love an expert with a PhD.

A committee of PhDs is even better.  It guarantees a project will go long, over budget, and generate nothing.  A great vehicle for a consulting engineer.
 
Kirkhill said:
I do so love an expert with a PhD.

A committee of PhDs is even better.  It guarantees a project will go long, over budget, and generate nothing.  A great vehicle for a consulting engineer.

The alternative to educated professionals is what, laymans interpretations? PhD's got man to the moon, they created the foundations for the atom bomb, they sequenced the first human genome. That work would never have been accomplished by anyone other than those with significant educations to their respective subjects, it was not the work of undergrads, the sciences are not fields where the Pte/Cpl's win wars.
 
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