Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

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_DoubtingThomas
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Re: Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

Post by _DoubtingThomas »

Doctor CamNC4Me wrote: 1) What exactly is going to happen that will kill off our species and here's the science that proves it.


Nobody is saying that climate change is going to kill humanity. It will take many centuries to make the Earth uninhabitable.


Doctor CamNC4Me wrote: When people of import suggest we're past the point of no return, which I've read a handful of times, or that we only have x-amount of time to solve this thing they fail to consistently and concretely tell us:


In reality there are many points of no return.

Doctor CamNC4Me wrote: 2) What can we do exactly to prevent the doomsday scenario, and here's the science that proves it.


Doomsday is not the concern!

Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:). So, the question is, how do we communicate "key anthropogenic drivers of climate change" in a way to rally support from the masses


We can't! People are stupid. It is a well known fact.
_Chap
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Re: Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

Post by _Chap »

DoubtingThomas wrote:We can't! People are stupid. It is a well known fact.


Some people are stupid. Most people with sigh-provoking views have simply been misled by others in whose interests it is that they should not see things the way they really are.

If our ancestors had just sat still and waited for the sabre-toothed tigers to eat them (I mean, what can we do? They're so big and scary and well, sabre-toothed?), we wouldn't be here today. We owe them a duty of solidarity in the struggle for human survival, which they waged once and which is now up to us.

Oh yes, and where is the 'think of the children' meme when you need it? It has a point. Do you have kids? Are you willing to give up on their behalf?
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_DarkHelmet
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Re: Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

Post by _DarkHelmet »

DoubtingThomas wrote:We can't! People are stupid. It is a well known fact.


Before Nov. 8, 2016, I would have vehemently argued against this. Even after the election I could have argued that people were driven by their emotions, primarily their hatred of Hillary, Obama, and libtards in general. But being surrounded by Trump apologists the past 2 years has changed my opinion on this.
"We have taken up arms in defense of our liberty, our property, our wives, and our children; we are determined to preserve them, or die."
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_Res Ipsa
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Re: Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

Post by _Res Ipsa »

Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:
The sense I get is we all know global warming is occurring, but there's really no sort of understanding or consensus that is being effectively discussed in a manner that's accessible to people who're buys living their lives on a day to day basis. Trusting the government to fix anything that won't have a desultory effect on your average Joe is, well, a very faithful position to have. And the fact of the matter is politicians really aren't our best, brightest, most competent, or otherwise preferred people to be in a position to understand and direct us on this issue. They just believe, too. And that's a problem when you're talking economics.

- Doc


And that's the practical problem. Those in the U.S. who are trying to rally the masses are flying in the face of 30 years of non-stop propaganda telling them that government is evil and incompetent and global warming is a hoax. There is no non-governmental solution to the problem. The market can only make decisions based on things that have a price, and we don't put a price on the air or the climate. Everybody gets to put as much CO2 in the air as she wants for free. Efforts to harness market forces to reduce carbon never get off the ground because they require taxes or subsidies, both of which are nonstarters here because of the propaganda.

This graph illustrates the magnitude of what has to be done to stop warming at 1.5C: https://cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/ ... ge-169.jpg

When folks say we have 10 years or 20 years to act, they mean we have to change that upward sloping emissions line into a steeply downward sloping emissions line NOW, and then invent technology we don't have to suck CO2 out of the atmosphere and store it somewhere.

Which means that 1.5C limit is just wishful thinking.

But, to stop the warming, we do have to get to zero carbon emissions at some point. And the longer that takes, the higher the temperature will go. How high? Well, what happens if we burn all the oil, gas and coal?

Regardless of the ultimate cause for the observed relative stability in ΔFCO2,sol over the last 420 million years, business-as-usual emission scenarios (for example, representative concentration pathway RCP8.5)39 for fossil fuel emissions suggest that atmospheric CO2 could peak in 2,250 AD at ∼2,000 p.p.m. CO2 values as high as this were last seen in the Triassic around 220–200 Myrs ago (Figs 3 and 4). However, because of the steady increase in solar output over time, in terms of radiative forcing by the end of this century RCP8.5 is similar to the early Eocene, and by 2,250 AD exceeds what is recorded in the geological record for at least 99.9% of the last 420 Myrs (Figs 3 and 4). A recent study suggested that if both conventional and non-conventional fossil fuel reserves (amounting to ∼12,000 Pg C; ref. 40) were exhausted in such a business-as-usual scenario, atmospheric CO2 could rise to ∼5,000 p.p.m. by 2,400 AD (refs 41, 42), which is clearly higher, in terms of both forcing and absolute CO2, than at any time captured by our compilation (Figs 3 and 4, Wink12K scenario). Such a scenario therefore risks subjecting the Earth to a climate forcing that has no apparent geological precedent, for at least the last 420 Myrs.


And the early Eocene? Pretty warm...

The Early Eocene period is one period in the geologic past that stands out as distinctly warmer than today, particularly at high latitudes. During the Early Eocene Period, 54–48 million years ago, fossil remains of plants and animals believed to inhabit warm environments were found at much higher latitudes and the poles had little or no ice. The Eocene period occurred far enough in the past that continents were in slightly different positions, with different mountain chains and shallow seas in some places that do not exist today.

The Early Eocene was characterized by high carbon dioxide levels, inferred to be between 1,000 and 2,000 parts per million. Scientists think that increased volcanic activity was an important cause of these high levels of carbon dioxide. Temperatures during the Eocene can be reconstructed from geochemical measurements of ocean sediments and from vegetation types preserved on land. The reconstructed global mean surface temperature for the Early Eocene is 9 to 14°C higher than today. As seen by proxy evidence and model simulations, this warming was widespread across the globe. There is good agreement between model simulations incorporating high CO2 concentrations and proxy evidence, providing strong support for the role of CO2 in maintaining the high temperatures of the Early Eocene.


https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms14845

Scientists have been communicating the "key anthropogenic drivers of climate change" for 20 years. It's burning of fossil fuels. (Land use has some impact as well.) Half of the U.S. simply refuses to believe it.

As to your numbered items, science doesn't "prove" anything. No one can predict "exactly" what is going to happen. If that's what it takes to get action, don't have kids because the "proof" will be the actual extinction.

As for number 3, lots of folks have been putting that out as well. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him read. Something like that.
Last edited by Guest on Thu Oct 18, 2018 9:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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_DarkHelmet
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Re: Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

Post by _DarkHelmet »

Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:The sense I get is we all know global warming is occurring


I don't know. I still hear a lot of people say that global temperatures have been flat since 1998, and therefore global warming is a hoax. That's one talking point. I see a lot of graphs on right-wing websites showing flat global temperatures. So while most experts agree that (regardless of the cause) global warming is occurring, they are fighting against a right-wing media machine that won't even admit that. And for many people, right-wing media is their only source of information.
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_Res Ipsa
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Re: Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

Post by _Res Ipsa »

I should add, the solution that involves the least amount of government intervention is taxing carbon at the source. You can even rebate the tax on a per-capita basis. The object is to price the damage caused by carbon emissions into the price of fossil fuels, making non-fossil fuels relatively cheaper to use. This approach delegates exactly how the reduction works to the market, so no one can precisely predict specific changes in day-to-day life.
​“The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists.”

― Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 1951
_canpakes
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Re: Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

Post by _canpakes »

Water Dog wrote:
canpakes wrote:Well, he’s currently a member of the school of thought that relies on being pompous enough to believe that mankind ‘cannot’ affect climate by any means. Because, you know, God will just not let that happen.

And he prattles on about how other folks are following a ‘religion’. ; )

First, is it pompous to think that a human can't or can affect the climate? Which of those two is the "pompous" position? The position of claiming to possess profound power over nature, this is the humble position, in your view? Second, can you show me were I have ever expressed such a view, that humans cannot affect the climate?

Well, now. So far, the simpler activities of man have already been able to (1) visibly pollute huge swaths of air to the point of being able to see this from space, (2) alter or poison whole water tables for hundreds of square miles, (3) deforest whole areas equivalent to thousands of square miles, (4) drain lakes dry, and pollute rivers to the point of being flammable, and (5) pump enough of some types of substances into the air to the point that we can affect even the amount of ozone in the atmosphere. At this point I’d say that the obviously more pompous position is to look at those realities and state that humans cannot affect their larger environment in general, or the atmosphere and then climate specifically, especially given the 5th item. And that doesn’t consider that the other 4 also generate surface effects that can tie into and affect climate trends.

None of this stuff is hysterical assumptions. This is just what we have done, and continue to do, as lowly little homosapien critters. And this isn’t a demonstration of any so-called “profound control over nature”, as you put it. These are only little added bits of influence that can produce changes when compounded over time. Adding change and energy to any system demands that the output changes, and if you’re the scientifically-minded engineer-type that you claim to be, you know that this is how things work. Because, physics, right?

Mother Nature, or Elohim, or what-have-you, is not going to wag their finger at us and our ways, magically absorb the differences caused by what we do and then pat us on the back and tuck our sorry asses into bed with a hot chocolate. That would be the far more pompous position to take, that Nature or God is going to fix what we screwed up, as if it’s owed to us to do so. You can tell me who you think believes in that kind of childish and physics-defying crap. It generally isn’t the scientists.
_EAllusion
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Re: Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

Post by _EAllusion »

Look at timelapse satellite photos of the Amazon rainforest or the Congo Basin or Lake Chad or the Aral Sea and scoff at the idea that humans can have massive effects on global systems.
_DarkHelmet
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Re: Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

Post by _DarkHelmet »

I would have thought Water Dog was a Boy Scout as a kid. I guess not. Too bad. He could have learned a little bit about conservation, and how human activities impact nature.
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_Water Dog
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Re: Lindzen got his @$$ kicked!

Post by _Water Dog »

canpakes wrote:Well, now.

[WALL OF TEXT]

DarkHelmet wrote:I would have thought Water Dog was a Boy Scout as a kid. I guess not. Too bad. He could have learned a little bit about conservation, and how human activities impact nature.


It's funny how a little pushback against rhetoric like "pompous" evolves into this whole other thing.

Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:The sense I get is we all know global warming is occurring, but there's really no sort of understanding or consensus that is being effectively discussed in a manner that's accessible to people who're buys living their lives on a day to day basis. Trusting the government to fix anything that won't have a desultory effect on your average Joe is, well, a very faithful position to have. And the fact of the matter is politicians really aren't our best, brightest, most competent, or otherwise preferred people to be in a position to understand and direct us on this issue. They just believe, too. And that's a problem when you're talking economics.


It would be nice to discuss whether warming is in fact occurring or not, and what that actually means, but alas, RI doesn't want to discuss that. [SEE HIS THOUSAND PAGE REPORT FROM HIS "ONE TRUE" AUTHORITAY] RI doesn't want to get into this because I'm sure he appreciates how complex even this starting question is. It's not like you can just go out and take the temperature of the planet. Doesn't work like that. I mean record cold and snow are hitting the country right now, record low temps being recorded in half the country. Oh, but, something something, that's proof of climate change! Ree, climate vs. weather you dummy, reeeeee. (by the way, since people are insufferable, I will state FTR that the last sentences are meant to have a little fun with people. I just love talking about global warming when my balls are freezing.)

RI talks about Working Group 1.

Here's a fun quote from WG1, from the executive summary.

IPCC, AR5/WG1 wrote:Improve methods to quantify uncertainties of climate projections and scenarios, including development and exploration of long-term ensemble simulations using complex models. The climate system is a coupled non-linear chaotic system, and therefore the long-term prediction of future climate states is not possible. Rather the focus must be upon the prediction of the probability distribution of the system's future possible states by the generation of ensembles of model solutions. Addressing adequately the statistical nature of climate is computationally intensive and requires the application of new methods of model diagnosis, but such statistical information is essential.

They admit, right in their own report, that it could all be wrong. Let that sink in. It's like a terms of use agreement for a software application. If you've ever read that gibberish, they all say basically the same thing, "we make no guarantees whatsoever, the software almost certainly will crash, consider yourself lucky if it doesn't, don't say you weren't warned."

WG1's forecasts have been proven to be wrong. Grossly wrong. In 2015, as part of some court testimony, Lindzen addressed this, saying,

Richard Lindzen wrote:The current federal SCC is based on the IPCC’s 2007 projected range of 2°C to 4.5°C, with a “best estimate” of 3.0°C. In 2010, the IWG assumed that the IPCC’s range was accurate, in 2013 the IWG declined to revisit the issue, and in July 2015 the IWG made only a technical adjustment in the way the probability distribution of the climate sensitivity value was presented. Yet today the best evidence indicates that the IWG’s assumptions are wrong, that a much lower climate sensitivity value of 1°C or 1.5°C is correct, and that a climate sensitivity of more than 2.0C is extremely unlikely. Accordingly, the assumptions of Hanemann, Polasky, and Martin are invalid.


Many other sources, but I keep citing Lindzen cause I know it gets under RI's skin. But notice what he said, "a much lower climate sensitivity value of 1°C or 1.5°C is correct." What is the latest report that the IPCC just released. SR15. In a nutshell what is the difference between SR15 and AR5 (the one RI is referring to)? Well, it dials up the doom rhetoric, and quietly walks back the actual numerical projections. Down to 1.5C specifically, hence the name, SR15. Lindzen must be a prophet, cause they went with his suggested number.

Lindzen addresses some other interesting points as well.

Richard Lindzen wrote:This rebuttal report also addresses the issue of the temperature record and a recent paper by Karl et al (2015) that has been described in the press as “disproving” the hiatus in discernible warming for almost the past two decades, which until now has been widely accepted by climate researchers. The temperature record is a source of considerable confusion. The record generally presented is one of the global mean temperature anomaly. That is to say, one is not averaging the temperature itself, but rather the temperature deviation from a thirty year mean at each station. Figure 10 of my testimony displays the main indisputable fact about this quantity: namely, it is very small compared to other changes at any given location. Given that the observations were never designed for climate purposes, it is not surprising that there is uncertainty on the order of tenths of a degree in addition to problems of systematic error (such as the effect of urbanization). This means that ‘adjustments’ of a few tenths of a degree are always possible. However, as Michaels (2008) noted, the large majority of such adjustments lead to conclusions like ‘it is worse than was thought’ or ‘the data is closer to models than initially thought.’ Given that errors are generally assumed to be random, this would suppose that there was an initial bias against global warming and against models; this is implausible to say the least. In other words, it is highly suspicious that “adjustments” almost invariably produce results that favor advocates of a certain camp. That suggests that “adjustments” do not necessarily reflect impartial science.

Under these circumstances, the recent attempt by Karl et al (2015) to adjust data so as to eliminate the so-called ‘pause’ of the last 18 years is suspect ab initio. Indeed, as Michaels et al (2015) and numerous others have pointed out, there are many bases for such suspicion. For example, the paper made an upward adjustment of 0.12°C in measurements from surface buoys, supposedly to make them “homogeneous” with measurements taken by engine intake channels in marine vessels, even though temperature readings from ship engine intakes are clearly contaminated by heat conduction from the engine itself and are therefore less appropriate for scientific use. The Karl paper also cherry picks certain start dates and end dates to create intervals yielding equal trends.

However, there is a larger point to be made: namely, all these adjustments act to disguise the fact that we are dealing with small quantities. By emphasizing the question of whether it is warming or not, they deflect attention from the only important question of ‘how much.’ As Spencer and Christy (2015) note, the adjusted temperature record of Karl et al (2015) still leaves their warming rate much smaller than IPCC models project (viz Figure 1). Note also that the apparent agreement between the models and temperature record before 1998 is largely due to the use aerosol adjustments by models. As I explained in my testimony, recent work by Stevens (2015) shows that the adjustments required by the more sensitive models exceeds what now appears possible. This would substantially increase the apparent discrepancy between the models and observational data.

Image

Groups active in promoting climate concern have recently published papers showing that models with high sensitivity are markedly incompatible with observations. These results are too recent to have been included in the latest IPCC reports which are now out of date. This is especially the case for the reports of Working Groups II and III (dealing with impacts and mitigation respectively, but not with the scientific underpinnings). Working Groups II and III generally use the worst case scenarios from WG I, and these no longer are viable scenarios. Testimonies that rely on these sources (i.e., the testimony of Hanemann, Polasky, and Martin) are flawed to the extent that they rely on these sources.


The projections are all BS. Worse, BS is at least good for fertilizer. There are more questions than there are answers.

You say, "The sense I get is we all know global warming is occurring, but there's really no sort of understanding or consensus..."

Sort of. The way I would phrase it is that we all mostly agree on the facts. We could get into all that, because some think certain things are facts which aren't actually facts. But, when there is an actual fact, nobody disagrees. We agree on the facts, however we disagree strongly on the interpretation of those facts. Like, how do modern climate observations relate to the natural variability? What is the sensitivity of the climate system to increasing concentrations of CO2 and other greenhouse gases? To what degree does human activities affect the climate? Do the negatives outweigh the benefits? And so on. There is no consensus about any of it.

If there was an asteroid headed for the planet, do you think the public would "deny" it? No. You show them the radar tracking, you show them the images, you show them the video of it approaching, you show them the track and it's headed right for the earth, you show them the simulation that reasonably predicts we're screwed if this thing hits. People are NOT stupid, despite the pompous grumblings that take place around here. If there was solid credible evidence for CAGW, people would come together and listen.
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