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The Science is Settled: GW is Conspiracy/Fraud (1 Viewer)

The Z Machine said:
Phurfur said:
How much of a carbon foot print will this conference have on our environment? Even pro GW demonstrators are flying in.

I will take GW seriously after the people pushing GW start leading by example.
What do you want them to do? Take a row boat across the Atlantic?
this would be much preferable, no?
I bet not, because you'd need an awful lot of calories to row across the Atlantic. The carbon footprint of transporting the food to you is probably more than the carbon footprint of transporting you when you consider the efficiency of the plane vs your body. :thumbdown: On the other hand, wind power is the way of the future. They should probably use sailboats.

 
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Phurfur said:
How much of a carbon foot print will this conference have on our environment? Even pro GW demonstrators are flying in. I will take GW seriously after the people pushing GW start leading by example.
:)Swim #####es.
 
China has massive coal reserves. They aren't going to windmill for some time.
Really?
Jonessed is correct in stating that China has massive coal reserves. So does the US (but try to open a coal mine here and we get Escalane Staircase).Having said that, China's reserves are not developed to the point where they are self-sufficient. The Australian export numbers I saw recently showed that coking coal exports to China in November were 2.9 million metric tons, while thermal coal exports to China totaled 1.15 million metric tons.

That's a lot of carbon. China has 4 times our population, and they need modernization now, not at some time in the future when alternative energy is economic compared to fossil fuels. Their population cannot afford carbon taxes - ain't gonna happen there. The proposal that we tax carbon emissions in order to make alternative energy economic is really foolhardy, when you consider that the rapidly industrialing nations of China and India have eight times our population. The odds on them developing alternative energy in the near future, if at all (with thepossible exception of nuclear) are slim to none.

 
Not really, because you disregard the possibility that some scientific questions we've considered as settled may need another look because of the credibility and legitimacy of certain quarters of climate science.
Nope. I've stated repeatedly that if the scientific questions are being answered wrong that it will be discovered by doing science, not by opinion of who can find the best "aha moment" in a popular debate. That doesn't say anything about what is settled and what isn't, and what merits additional research and what doesn't. I'll leave those question to those qualified to answer them - real scientists.
But in the meantime, while scientists are doing science, what should the politicians do? What this entire scandal has shown to me is that nothing is settled, and until the science is done over, nothing is really known to any degree of certainty.
 
Not really, because you disregard the possibility that some scientific questions we've considered as settled may need another look because of the credibility and legitimacy of certain quarters of climate science.
The black boxes you are alluding too would have no direct ramifications on the question of global warming per se, only how it is determined as such.
And also whether it's actually historically significant. There's reason to believe that somewhere around 1000-1300 are the warmest years, much warmer than what we are currently experiencing, and that they deliberately attempted to hide that via questionable methods that gave them the results they were looking for.
This is perhaps the most misunderstood aspect of the debate. No one is arguing the earth has not been warmer in the past, in fact, we all know for certain that it was much warmer way back in the day. The argument is whether or not the current rise in temp is due to human influence. On that there appears to be more than enough evidence to suggest that things are no longer functioning, "naturally," and that ocean temps in particular appear to be changing at rates much different to how they changed in the past.
I have to quibble with this statement. If the science is unsettled as the skeptics believe, then then the evidence that things are no longer functioning "naturally" just isn't there. Things may be functioning perfectly naturally, and we may be in a warming trend. Or not. When a model is built that returns the same results no matter what the input, it's a self-fullfilling prophesy, not a scientific experiment. The model builders should have tested his possibility. That they didn't is in itself bad science.
 
... There's reason to believe that somewhere around 1000-1300 are the warmest years, much warmer than what we are currently experiencing, ...
Then have someone use real data to present a real scientific hypothesis that can be tested and verified. You know, use science to test science.
or, actually test and verify the scientific hypotheses that have already been presented. Same difference, no?
They are constantly being tested. No one is stopping anyone from repeating the tests and verifying the results. The anti-AGW crowd that has been highlighted in this thread don't want to actually test any hypothesis but challenge every detail of every test that others have performed in a belief that something must be wrong for that test to reach a conclusion different from their preconceived beliefs. This challenge of every detail is not to further science but to thwart it, to keep the science on the constant defensive.
I am sure that if grants were offered for this, that some people would be.One of the problems with science and the peer-review process is that repeating tests and verifying results, especially when said repetition is expensive and as time-consuming as this would be (man-decades of work), is that no one wants to pay for it, and no scientist wants to spend that kind of time just to say "yeah, my results agree with Mann's."The process just isn't as simple as you'd like to think. A little thing called hman nature alwas gets in the way.
 
The sharp uptrend in the late 20th century came from cores of 10 living trees alive as of 1990, and five living trees alive as of 1995. Based on scientific standards, this is too small a sample on which to produce a publication-grade proxy composite. The 18th and 19th century portion of the sample, for instance, contains at least 30 trees per year. But that portion doesn’t show a warming spike. The only segment that does is the late 20th century, where the sample size collapses. Once again a dramatic hockey stick shape turns out to depend on the least reliable portion of a dataset.
Taken from J's post.I hope that was not the support you were claiming??
You don't think it's damaging that they used 30 living trees per year for the 18th and 19th centuries (which were flat), but used only 15 trees total for the 20th century? Or that they actually had other data available to them that could have been applied to those periods, but they chose not to, and when the data is applied it shows nothing out of the ordinary? Seriously?
It says nothing about whether or not human influence in the 20th century has caused a shift in the natural cycle, which is the argument. So yes, seriously.ETA:
A new poll among 3,146 earth scientists found that 90 percent believe global warming is real, while 82 percent agree that human activity been a significant factor in changing mean global temperatures.The survey, conducted among researchers listed in the American Geological Institute's Directory of Geoscience Departments*, "found that climatologists who are active in research showed the strongest consensus on the causes of global warming, with 97 percent agreeing humans play a role". The biggest doubters were petroleum geologists (47 percent) and meteorologists (64 percent). A recent poll suggests that 58 percent of Americans believe that human activity contributes to climate change.
This has been cited many times here already, but never hurts as a reminder.
I'm sorry, cherry-picking data is very damaging. Opinion polls aren't proof of concept.
 
This post needs to be paid more attention to (I'm a geologist not an English teacher). It really shows how figures may not lie, but liars can figure.
 
If you spent 20 years building a model, why wouldn't you want to just give all of your work product to everyone who asked for it? Because it's yours. If the other guy is too damned lazy to go, get the data, and make it himself, that's his problem.As I've said at least ten times in this thread, if there's a real fire here, the scientific opinion will shift. But if it's just smoke then the tin hat people is as far as it is going to get.
Herein lies the problem. Of what value is this "intellectual property" and can we really wait another 20 years for someone to build another model? How does releasing his "intellectual property" damage him?The problem with the model is not only that it does not appear to accurately predict climate over a period of a decade. There are deeper problems:1. It produces the same results no matter what the input.2. It is being used by people with much shorter time frames (i.e. the election cycle) to detrmine economic and environmental policy.I find this situation unacceptable.
 
You know, I've noticed a trend. It seems that quote a few of the "skeptic" scientists are geologists. The AGW fans will typically automatically discount them because, well, geologists are often employed as mineral explorers, and quite often searching for fossil fuels.

I think there may be something different though. I think geologists and climatologists may simply have radically different views of how natural phenomena work and interact. Geologists look at rocks and consider how the environment went through radical changes over millions of years - sedimentary rocks with fish fossils on top of mountains, fossils of lush vegetation in deserts, etc. The very nature of geology forces one to think about time-scales of millions of years.

Climatologists, on the other hand, only have instrumental record dating back 150 years, and proxy data going back a thousand years - a fraction of what geologists think about. Moreso, climatologists are concerned about a temp change rate of roughly 1.5 deg C/century - again, a very small fraction of what geologists have observed.

I don't think either set is necessarily wrong, but I think that both sides maybe see what they want to see and think the way they are trained to think, and that is a large source of disagreement on the issue. Bottom line though - when you read that McIntyre has a geology background, that shouldn't automatically mean his perspective is tainted.

Bueno - I know you are a geologist. Is this fairly accurate?

 
You know, I've noticed a trend. It seems that quote a few of the "skeptic" scientists are geologists. The AGW fans will typically automatically discount them because, well, geologists are often employed as mineral explorers, and quite often searching for fossil fuels.I think there may be something different though. I think geologists and climatologists may simply have radically different views of how natural phenomena work and interact. Geologists look at rocks and consider how the environment went through radical changes over millions of years - sedimentary rocks with fish fossils on top of mountains, fossils of lush vegetation in deserts, etc. The very nature of geology forces one to think about time-scales of millions of years.Climatologists, on the other hand, only have instrumental record dating back 150 years, and proxy data going back a thousand years - a fraction of what geologists think about. Moreso, climatologists are concerned about a temp change rate of roughly 1.5 deg C/century - again, a very small fraction of what geologists have observed.I don't think either set is necessarily wrong, but I think that both sides maybe see what they want to see and think the way they are trained to think, and that is a large source of disagreement on the issue. Bottom line though - when you read that McIntyre has a geology background, that shouldn't automatically mean his perspective is tainted.Bueno - I know you are a geologist. Is this fairly accurate?
...and a majority of meterologists (who think in very short ime frames) are also skeptics. I'd love to see the data on archeologists, as they too have a perspective on climate change. astronomers too.I am using AGW to mean anthropomorhic global warming, not anti-global warming, so don't get confused.There is overlap between geologists and climatologists. If you look at ice cores (see the Hockey Stick over Time Youtube video), you'll see that even in a historic sense, the latest increase in global temperature is noise compared to the overall signal. Ice cores (which the GW crowd uses when it suits them and ignores when it doesn't) show remarkable short-term variations in temperature not only in geologic, but in a historic timeframe. Is that honest science, to only use the data when it supports your theory? Perhaps not, but you would be surprised how prevalent that is.The ice cores bring up an interesting point about the politics of the scientists involved in investigating GW. Several months ago NCCommish posted a reference to a paper discounting the Medieval Maximum. The conclusions of that paper were pretty damn weak, and, IMO, that paper should not have been published. But anything can get published these days, even in peer-reviewed liteature. Hell, I have a peer-reviewed paper published in the Biological Society of Washington's publication (it was about geologic controls of hot springs off of San Pedro, in LA county. Biologists were interested because there are megabacterial growths associated with the springs). and it was co-authored with a scuba diver, because I don't dive and frankly, it wasn't my best work. (I did it on a bet that I could do it.) I've also reviewed and rejected papers for Economic Geology that have ended up appearing elsewhere. Bottom line is how and where many papers get published depends on politics and friendships almost more so than on quality of the science. Ouch - I digressed. Sorry. Back to ice cores. Ice cores and ancedotal history say the Medieval Maximum was real. The paper NCC cited examined trees (I think it was) in the southern hemisphere and concluded there was no evidence of climate change during the Medieval Maximumand therefore it didn't happen. Well if the northern hemisphere got warmer and the southern hemisphere stayed the same, I guess the planet on average must have gotten warmer right? But that simple logic seems to escape the pro-AGW crowd. Ice cores were ignored, I guess.Now it is human nature to see what one wants to see, and I think we are seeing that with a lot of the AGW crowd. But it is bad science. The argument that the hockey stick is unprecedented is also dishonest in a historic as well as geologic sense. There were obviously some pretty steep warming periods, even in the historic period. Lots steeper than the hockey stick. You can see it in the ice core graphs.If you look at the first hockey stick graph on that YouTube piece, you'll see a warming trend centered about 1700. In the 1600s, a missionary wrote that the forests were so dense between San Luis Potosi and Zacatecas in Mexico that they blotted out the sun. You could ride between the two cities and not see the sun for days at a time. Now I think that is probably an exaggeration, but I don't doubt that there were huge forests in Mexico during that period. The timber frames in the old mines thaat I have reopened - the 400 year old wood doors on the older building in those two cities, had to come from somewhere nearby. But there is archeological evidence too. In Zacatecas, the Spaniards built Roman-style aquaducts to transport water from a river to the city. They built covered aquaducts to divert perennial streams around mine openings so they wouldn't flood. Along one river, they built patios where they amalgamated silver using mercury, then dumped the processed material into the river. The river washed the mercury-laden material into a nearby lake, and then from the lake downstream where rivers deposited this contaminated material onto the flood plain in deposits up to two meters thick. This created one of the largest mercury-contaminated areas in the entire world.Then between 1680 and 1720, the climate changed. The rivers dried up and the forests died. There are people, aurprisingly, that blame deforestation on the Spaniards, as wood was used to support bad areas in the mines and for cooking and heating. The argument just doesn't hold water though - too many trees and not enough Spaniards. Today, the river is gone, and is barely a trickle in the rainy season, even after a heavy thunderstorm. The lake dried up. There is actually a company that processes the downstream contaminated deposits to recover more silver (and mercury), charging the farmers a fee to remove contaminated soil and also selling the silver and mercury recovered. The climate change lowered the hydrologic baseline and now arroyos cut into the areas that were once lush flood plains. The trees are gone and we have deserts filled with various species of creosote, succulents, cactus and and other desert species instead.Climate change - global warming. Obvious in the historic/archeological record and detectable in ice cores. And a geologist can think about it, and consider the evidence. Carbon dioxide increase from AGW in 1680-1720? I think not. Again, this popular foundation (CO2) that AGW proponents cite doesn't hold up to closer scrutiny.The solar cycle has been mentioned before in these threads. It has been noted that GW corresponds very closely to the solar cycle, more so that to variations in CO2 does. It has also been noted that increases in CO2 in the atmosphere tend to happen after warming begins rather than preceeding it. The AGW crowd tends to discount the solar cycle by saying that the change in energy incident on the planet cannot acount for the increase in observed temperature. In this case they have a point, but they may also be missing a very important point too. What changes would an increase in solar radiation have on the planet that might trigger a response. Obviously, looking at the data, the increae in solar radiation may explain atmospheric CO2 variation. So what causes that? We don't know. We know the earth as many buffering systems, some that we don't quite understand. For example, why has ocean salinity remained constant over geologic time while rivers are constantly and naturally) pumpng more salts into the ocean, substantial amounts of water are removed from the ocean basins during glacial periods, etc.? The answer is there for those who look for it. But you never hear the AGW crowd talk about how the earth may have natural buffering systems that may actually reduce or correct variations in greenhouse gases. You do hear them talk about how long CO2 stays in the atmosphere compared to that other greenhouse gas (dihydrogen oxide). This might be a difference between the way geologists and climatologists think - I don't know. I do knbow that climatologists like to talk more about theoretical "tipping points" than they do about buffer systems.Basically, IMO the AGW crowd looks for AGW and doesn't consider the big picture. They also tend to try to discount or discredit data that doesn't agree with their hypotheses. Again, this is human nature and we all do it. Those who expect scientists not to do so hold scientists in higher esteem than what is deserved.Damn, I wrote a book and only part of it deals with our question. The short answer to your question, I think is that geologic training does not prohibit a person from thinking in shorter time frames. There may be a problem for people trained to think in shorter time frames to think in the other direction. Ten million years is a hard thing to comprehand, even for a lot of geologists. 100 million years even more so. I don't know how climatologists tend to think with regard to large time frames.What I do know is that we have seen periods in the historic past where we have had climate change. It sometimes has happened very quickly and it sometimes has changed ecosystems. But life on earth adapted, and the human species survived (though maybe certain tribes had to invade other homelands in order to do so - why did the Cimbri migrate from Jutland (probably) into Roman territory looking for a new place to live? Is coastal flooding caused by "global warming" the reason?) Given what I can see in geologic and historic (or archeologic if you prefer) records, I think that even if there is AGW contributing somewhat to climate change, we are getting far too upset by it.This doesn't mean we shouldn't plan for a post-fossil fuel world. Someday, fossil fuels will be exhausted. I happen to think that day is still a long ways away, while others, IMO, discount how effective geologist can and will be in the discovery procress. Somewhere on my bookshelf I have a pamphlet written by credible sources back in 1975ish about the mineral position of the United States. That pamphet predicted we would be out of most commodities, and raised a big red flag on some of them. One of the comoidities that would presumably be exhausted was molybdenum. We are swimming in molybdenum. So I've seen the alarm bells before. Again, I think it is all part of human nature. As if we don't have enough to worry about or fight over.It also doesn't mean we shouldn't be good stewarts of our planets. I doubt anyone today would condone a company doing what the Spaniards did in Zacatecas. Cutting down on pollutants, where we can is a good thing.I do think though, that we should be putting more emphasis on basic research into the geology and geochemistry of things like neodynium and tellurium, so we have some science behind the process of exploring for those minerals. We can't have wind or solar someday without abundant supplies of both those metals. (See, where you stand does depends on where you sit!) :thumbup:
 
How much of a carbon foot print will this conference have on our environment? Even pro GW demonstrators are flying in. I will take GW seriously after the people pushing GW start leading by example.
What do you want them to do? Take a row boat across the Atlantic?
I don't really see the need for private jets and limos. Of course, heads of state need security so that will have to be accomodated, but others can take more efficient means of transportation. There are trains that go to Stockholm from all over Europe
Why would they go to Stockholm?Also the limos and such weren't ordered by the protesters, but rather the heads of state and their entourages.
 
I'm sorry, cherry-picking data is very damaging. Opinion polls aren't proof of concept.
I actually agree. As a scientist, I'm going to fall back to a position of agnosticism regarding the anthropogenic nature of climate change. However, I think that the world should limit CO2 emissions for other reasons, namely lessening the dependence upon non-renewable resources and increasing the power of authoritarian regimes that control access to fossil fuels.I cannot abide cherry picking data and obfuscating the scientific process.
 
I'm sorry, cherry-picking data is very damaging. Opinion polls aren't proof of concept.
I actually agree. As a scientist, I'm going to fall back to a position of agnosticism regarding the anthropogenic nature of climate change. However, I think that the world should limit CO2 emissions for other reasons, namely lessening the dependence upon non-renewable resources and increasing the power of authoritarian regimes that control access to fossil fuels.I cannot abide cherry picking data and obfuscating the scientific process.
This has been my position all along. However, the world was being force-fed AGW and radical solutions. Carbon taxes and cap and trade are not reasonable nor workable solutions. I've always been in favor of incentivizing development of new energy technologies and take advantage of greater efficiencies. I am opposed to dis-incentives.
 
I'm sorry, cherry-picking data is very damaging. Opinion polls aren't proof of concept.
I actually agree. As a scientist, I'm going to fall back to a position of agnosticism regarding the anthropogenic nature of climate change. However, I think that the world should limit CO2 emissions for other reasons, namely lessening the dependence upon non-renewable resources and increasing the power of authoritarian regimes that control access to fossil fuels.I cannot abide cherry picking data and obfuscating the scientific process.
That's a fair statement and actually not that different from my position, thouh I would state it differently.To wit: The world needs to start thinking about the post-fossil fuel era and how we are going to keep our civilizations from crumbling without a reliable energy source for transportation.The reason for the change is that advocating lowering CO2 emissions isn't really consistent with agnosticism regard AGW. To be truly agnostic would mean you would be neutral about the amount to CO2 in the air. It shouldn't be an issue for you. Don't you think?
 
Not really, because you disregard the possibility that some scientific questions we've considered as settled may need another look because of the credibility and legitimacy of certain quarters of climate science.
The black boxes you are alluding too would have no direct ramifications on the question of global warming per se, only how it is determined as such.
And also whether it's actually historically significant. There's reason to believe that somewhere around 1000-1300 are the warmest years, much warmer than what we are currently experiencing, and that they deliberately attempted to hide that via questionable methods that gave them the results they were looking for.
This is perhaps the most misunderstood aspect of the debate. No one is arguing the earth has not been warmer in the past, in fact, we all know for certain that it was much warmer way back in the day. The argument is whether or not the current rise in temp is due to human influence. On that there appears to be more than enough evidence to suggest that things are no longer functioning, "naturally," and that ocean temps in particular appear to be changing at rates much different to how they changed in the past.
I have to quibble with this statement. If the science is unsettled as the skeptics believe, then then the evidence that things are no longer functioning "naturally" just isn't there. Things may be functioning perfectly naturally, and we may be in a warming trend. Or not. When a model is built that returns the same results no matter what the input, it's a self-fullfilling prophesy, not a scientific experiment. The model builders should have tested his possibility. That they didn't is in itself bad science.
To me the evidence suggests they actually did. They've seen the criticisms of their work for some time and fought to get it censored as best as possible. They were aware that their science was designed to produce the results that it did - there's no other explanation for why they felt it was rational to mix proxy values and real temperatues on the same graph when the proxy values deviated from what they wanted them to say.
 
The black boxes you are alluding too would have no direct ramifications on the question of global warming per se, only how it is determined as such.
And also whether it's actually historically significant. There's reason to believe that somewhere around 1000-1300 are the warmest years, much warmer than what we are currently experiencing, and that they deliberately attempted to hide that via questionable methods that gave them the results they were looking for.
This is perhaps the most misunderstood aspect of the debate. No one is arguing the earth has not been warmer in the past, in fact, we all know for certain that it was much warmer way back in the day. The argument is whether or not the current rise in temp is due to human influence. On that there appears to be more than enough evidence to suggest that things are no longer functioning, "naturally," and that ocean temps in particular appear to be changing at rates much different to how they changed in the past.
I have to quibble with this statement. If the science is unsettled as the skeptics believe, then then the evidence that things are no longer functioning "naturally" just isn't there. Things may be functioning perfectly naturally, and we may be in a warming trend. Or not. When a model is built that returns the same results no matter what the input, it's a self-fullfilling prophesy, not a scientific experiment. The model builders should have tested his possibility. That they didn't is in itself bad science.
To me the evidence suggests they actually did. They've seen the criticisms of their work for some time and fought to get it censored as best as possible. They were aware that their science was designed to produce the results that it did - there's no other explanation for why they felt it was rational to mix proxy values and real temperatues on the same graph when the proxy values deviated from what they wanted them to say.
But if red noise returns the same results, they couldn't have tested it very well. Unless you are implying that they did and knew it didn't work, but published anyway.
 
But if red noise returns the same results, they couldn't have tested it very well. Unless you are implying that they did and knew it didn't work, but published anyway.
That's exactly what I'm implying. These guys were fully aware their work was going to produce dramatic results no matter the input. It was done by design. And then they tried to block out anyone that said differently.
 
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I'm sorry, cherry-picking data is very damaging. Opinion polls aren't proof of concept.
I actually agree. As a scientist, I'm going to fall back to a position of agnosticism regarding the anthropogenic nature of climate change. However, I think that the world should limit CO2 emissions for other reasons, namely lessening the dependence upon non-renewable resources and increasing the power of authoritarian regimes that control access to fossil fuels.I cannot abide cherry picking data and obfuscating the scientific process.
This has been my position all along. However, the world was being force-fed AGW and radical solutions. Carbon taxes and cap and trade are not reasonable nor workable solutions. I've always been in favor of incentivizing development of new energy technologies and take advantage of greater efficiencies. I am opposed to dis-incentives.
...and this is the problem with you and others of your ilk. You immediately associate the science with the politics. To make a comparison: denying AGW is relative to denying evolution, while implying that belief in AGW demands immediate and dramatic economic changes is relative to suggesting that belief in evolution demands a dismisal of God. Neither are good positions to hold.
 
I'm sorry, cherry-picking data is very damaging. Opinion polls aren't proof of concept.
I actually agree. As a scientist, I'm going to fall back to a position of agnosticism regarding the anthropogenic nature of climate change. However, I think that the world should limit CO2 emissions for other reasons, namely lessening the dependence upon non-renewable resources and increasing the power of authoritarian regimes that control access to fossil fuels.I cannot abide cherry picking data and obfuscating the scientific process.
This has been my position all along. However, the world was being force-fed AGW and radical solutions. Carbon taxes and cap and trade are not reasonable nor workable solutions. I've always been in favor of incentivizing development of new energy technologies and take advantage of greater efficiencies. I am opposed to dis-incentives.
...and this is the problem with you and others of your ilk. You immediately associate the science with the politics. To make a comparison: denying AGW is relative to denying evolution, while implying that belief in AGW demands immediate and dramatic economic changes is relative to suggesting that belief in evolution demands a dismisal of God. Neither are good positions to hold.
Dude! Do you watch TV? That's EXACTLY what the "libruls" are trying to do. You can't separate the two because the "libruls" have intertwined them so much.
 
Bonzai said:
I'm sorry, cherry-picking data is very damaging. Opinion polls aren't proof of concept.
I actually agree. As a scientist, I'm going to fall back to a position of agnosticism regarding the anthropogenic nature of climate change. However, I think that the world should limit CO2 emissions for other reasons, namely lessening the dependence upon non-renewable resources and increasing the power of authoritarian regimes that control access to fossil fuels.I cannot abide cherry picking data and obfuscating the scientific process.
This has been my position all along. However, the world was being force-fed AGW and radical solutions. Carbon taxes and cap and trade are not reasonable nor workable solutions. I've always been in favor of incentivizing development of new energy technologies and take advantage of greater efficiencies. I am opposed to dis-incentives.
...and this is the problem with you and others of your ilk. You immediately associate the science with the politics. To make a comparison: denying AGW is relative to denying evolution, while implying that belief in AGW demands immediate and dramatic economic changes is relative to suggesting that belief in evolution demands a dismisal of God. Neither are good positions to hold.
No one is suggesting the beliefs have to go hand in hand, quite the contrary. But to deny that it's been used for these political purposes is pretty naive.
 
Bonzai said:
I'm sorry, cherry-picking data is very damaging. Opinion polls aren't proof of concept.
I actually agree. As a scientist, I'm going to fall back to a position of agnosticism regarding the anthropogenic nature of climate change. However, I think that the world should limit CO2 emissions for other reasons, namely lessening the dependence upon non-renewable resources and increasing the power of authoritarian regimes that control access to fossil fuels.I cannot abide cherry picking data and obfuscating the scientific process.
This has been my position all along. However, the world was being force-fed AGW and radical solutions. Carbon taxes and cap and trade are not reasonable nor workable solutions. I've always been in favor of incentivizing development of new energy technologies and take advantage of greater efficiencies. I am opposed to dis-incentives.
...and this is the problem with you and others of your ilk. You immediately associate the science with the politics. To make a comparison: denying AGW is relative to denying evolution, while implying that belief in AGW demands immediate and dramatic economic changes is relative to suggesting that belief in evolution demands a dismisal of God. Neither are good positions to hold.
No one is suggesting the beliefs have to go hand in hand, quite the contrary. But to deny that it's been used for these political purposes is pretty naive.
When did I ever deny that? All I'm saying is that scientitsts, politicians, activists, Al Gore, etc., they're all different people with different interests on this issue. You've got them all lumped together conspiring to take over the world or whatever. That's just not the case.
 
When did I ever deny that? All I'm saying is that scientitsts, politicians, activists, Al Gore, etc., they're all different people with different interests on this issue. You've got them all lumped together conspiring to take over the world or whatever. That's just not the case.
There's little doubt at this point that the group of scientists responsible for creating this historical temperature data had an agenda. That agenda happened to align with the agenda of many of these politicians. This is less open to debate than the AGW theory is at this point.
 
Bonzai said:
I'm sorry, cherry-picking data is very damaging. Opinion polls aren't proof of concept.
I actually agree. As a scientist, I'm going to fall back to a position of agnosticism regarding the anthropogenic nature of climate change. However, I think that the world should limit CO2 emissions for other reasons, namely lessening the dependence upon non-renewable resources and increasing the power of authoritarian regimes that control access to fossil fuels.I cannot abide cherry picking data and obfuscating the scientific process.
This has been my position all along. However, the world was being force-fed AGW and radical solutions. Carbon taxes and cap and trade are not reasonable nor workable solutions. I've always been in favor of incentivizing development of new energy technologies and take advantage of greater efficiencies. I am opposed to dis-incentives.
...and this is the problem with you and others of your ilk. You immediately associate the science with the politics. To make a comparison: denying AGW is relative to denying evolution, while implying that belief in AGW demands immediate and dramatic economic changes is relative to suggesting that belief in evolution demands a dismisal of God. Neither are good positions to hold.
Since the money to study the science comes from politicians it's impossible to disconnect the two.
 
Gotta love this one:

Instead, the band members turned to their friends in the media and to the blogosphere, creating a website called RealClimate.org. “The idea is that we working climate scientists should have a place where we can mount a rapid response to supposedly ‘bombshell’ papers that are doing the rounds” in aid of “combating dis-information,” one email explained, referring to criticisms of the hockey stick and anything else suggesting that temperatures today were not the hottest in recorded time. One person in the nine-member Realclimate.org team — U.K. scientist and Green Party activist William Connolley — would take on particularly crucial duties.

Connolley took control of all things climate in the most used information source the world has ever known – Wikipedia. Starting in February 2003, just when opposition to the claims of the band members were beginning to gel, Connolley set to work on the Wikipedia site. He rewrote Wikipedia’s articles on global warming, on the greenhouse effect, on the instrumental temperature record, on the urban heat island, on climate models, on global cooling. On Feb. 14, he began to erase the Little Ice Age; on Aug.11, the Medieval Warm Period. In October, he turned his attention to the hockey stick graph. He rewrote articles on the politics of global warming and on the scientists who were skeptical of the band. Richard Lindzen and Fred Singer, two of the world’s most distinguished climate scientists, were among his early targets, followed by others that the band especially hated, such as Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, authorities on the Medieval Warm Period.

All told, Connolley created or rewrote 5,428 unique Wikipedia articles. His control over Wikipedia was greater still, however, through the role he obtained at Wikipedia as a website administrator, which allowed him to act with virtual impunity. When Connolley didn’t like the subject of a certain article, he removed it — more than 500 articles of various descriptions disappeared at his hand. When he disapproved of the arguments that others were making, he often had them barred — over 2,000 Wikipedia contributors who ran afoul of him found themselves blocked from making further contributions. Acolytes whose writing conformed to Connolley’s global warming views, in contrast, were rewarded with Wikipedia’s blessings. In these ways, Connolley turned Wikipedia into the missionary wing of the global warming movement.
http://www.nationalpost.com/m/blog.html?b=...r&s=OpinionThere was another one a couple days ago where McIntyre was showing some of the climategate emails that indicated Jones was acting as reviewer for some of the submissions critical of their work to some of these magazines. He fought to get papers kept out of the IPCC review process, stating he'd do everything in his power including changing what is considered peer review literature.

Have to give these guys credit though. Outside of all of their emails getting leaked, they were pretty danged successful in pulling this all off. They make Karl Rove look like an amateur.

 
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Bonzai said:
I'm sorry, cherry-picking data is very damaging. Opinion polls aren't proof of concept.
I actually agree. As a scientist, I'm going to fall back to a position of agnosticism regarding the anthropogenic nature of climate change. However, I think that the world should limit CO2 emissions for other reasons, namely lessening the dependence upon non-renewable resources and increasing the power of authoritarian regimes that control access to fossil fuels.I cannot abide cherry picking data and obfuscating the scientific process.
This has been my position all along. However, the world was being force-fed AGW and radical solutions. Carbon taxes and cap and trade are not reasonable nor workable solutions. I've always been in favor of incentivizing development of new energy technologies and take advantage of greater efficiencies. I am opposed to dis-incentives.
...and this is the problem with you and others of your ilk. You immediately associate the science with the politics. To make a comparison: denying AGW is relative to denying evolution, while implying that belief in AGW demands immediate and dramatic economic changes is relative to suggesting that belief in evolution demands a dismisal of God. Neither are good positions to hold.
Since the money to study the science comes from politicians it's impossible to disconnect the two.
It makes it even harder when what these "scientists" were engaging in would be far better described as politics than science.
 
Gotta love this one:

Instead, the band members turned to their friends in the media and to the blogosphere, creating a website called RealClimate.org. "The idea is that we working climate scientists should have a place where we can mount a rapid response to supposedly 'bombshell' papers that are doing the rounds" in aid of "combating dis-information," one email explained, referring to criticisms of the hockey stick and anything else suggesting that temperatures today were not the hottest in recorded time. One person in the nine-member Realclimate.org team — U.K. scientist and Green Party activist William Connolley — would take on particularly crucial duties.

Connolley took control of all things climate in the most used information source the world has ever known – Wikipedia. Starting in February 2003, just when opposition to the claims of the band members were beginning to gel, Connolley set to work on the Wikipedia site. He rewrote Wikipedia's articles on global warming, on the greenhouse effect, on the instrumental temperature record, on the urban heat island, on climate models, on global cooling. On Feb. 14, he began to erase the Little Ice Age; on Aug.11, the Medieval Warm Period. In October, he turned his attention to the hockey stick graph. He rewrote articles on the politics of global warming and on the scientists who were skeptical of the band. Richard Lindzen and Fred Singer, two of the world's most distinguished climate scientists, were among his early targets, followed by others that the band especially hated, such as Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, authorities on the Medieval Warm Period.

All told, Connolley created or rewrote 5,428 unique Wikipedia articles. His control over Wikipedia was greater still, however, through the role he obtained at Wikipedia as a website administrator, which allowed him to act with virtual impunity. When Connolley didn't like the subject of a certain article, he removed it — more than 500 articles of various descriptions disappeared at his hand. When he disapproved of the arguments that others were making, he often had them barred — over 2,000 Wikipedia contributors who ran afoul of him found themselves blocked from making further contributions. Acolytes whose writing conformed to Connolley's global warming views, in contrast, were rewarded with Wikipedia's blessings. In these ways, Connolley turned Wikipedia into the missionary wing of the global warming movement.
http://www.nationalpost.com/m/blog.html?b=...r&s=OpinionThere was another one a couple days ago where McIntyre was showing some of the climategate emails that indicated Jones was acting as reviewer for some of the submissions critical of their work to some of these magazines. He fought to get papers kept out of the IPCC review process, stating he'd do everything in his power including changing what is considered peer review literature.

Have to give these guys credit though. Outside of all of their emails getting leaked, they were pretty danged successful in pulling this all off. They make Karl Rove look like an amateur.
jeebus that's horrid. if I were a liberal that leaned toward global warming/climate change alarmism i'd be ####### pissed off right now. This is the kind of stuff that completely undermines your basic belief system. "oh by the way, we lied to you and covered up dissenting opinions so you couldn't be influenced".

 
Gotta love this one:

Instead, the band members turned to their friends in the media and to the blogosphere, creating a website called RealClimate.org. "The idea is that we working climate scientists should have a place where we can mount a rapid response to supposedly 'bombshell' papers that are doing the rounds" in aid of "combating dis-information," one email explained, referring to criticisms of the hockey stick and anything else suggesting that temperatures today were not the hottest in recorded time. One person in the nine-member Realclimate.org team — U.K. scientist and Green Party activist William Connolley — would take on particularly crucial duties.

Connolley took control of all things climate in the most used information source the world has ever known – Wikipedia. Starting in February 2003, just when opposition to the claims of the band members were beginning to gel, Connolley set to work on the Wikipedia site. He rewrote Wikipedia's articles on global warming, on the greenhouse effect, on the instrumental temperature record, on the urban heat island, on climate models, on global cooling. On Feb. 14, he began to erase the Little Ice Age; on Aug.11, the Medieval Warm Period. In October, he turned his attention to the hockey stick graph. He rewrote articles on the politics of global warming and on the scientists who were skeptical of the band. Richard Lindzen and Fred Singer, two of the world's most distinguished climate scientists, were among his early targets, followed by others that the band especially hated, such as Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, authorities on the Medieval Warm Period.

All told, Connolley created or rewrote 5,428 unique Wikipedia articles. His control over Wikipedia was greater still, however, through the role he obtained at Wikipedia as a website administrator, which allowed him to act with virtual impunity. When Connolley didn't like the subject of a certain article, he removed it — more than 500 articles of various descriptions disappeared at his hand. When he disapproved of the arguments that others were making, he often had them barred — over 2,000 Wikipedia contributors who ran afoul of him found themselves blocked from making further contributions. Acolytes whose writing conformed to Connolley's global warming views, in contrast, were rewarded with Wikipedia's blessings. In these ways, Connolley turned Wikipedia into the missionary wing of the global warming movement.
http://www.nationalpost.com/m/blog.html?b=...r&s=OpinionThere was another one a couple days ago where McIntyre was showing some of the climategate emails that indicated Jones was acting as reviewer for some of the submissions critical of their work to some of these magazines. He fought to get papers kept out of the IPCC review process, stating he'd do everything in his power including changing what is considered peer review literature.

Have to give these guys credit though. Outside of all of their emails getting leaked, they were pretty danged successful in pulling this all off. They make Karl Rove look like an amateur.
jeebus that's horrid. if I were a liberal that leaned toward global warming/climate change alarmism i'd be ####### pissed off right now. This is the kind of stuff that completely undermines your basic belief system. "oh by the way, we lied to you and covered up dissenting opinions so you couldn't be influenced".
Yes, you would think a clear-thinking liberal would step back and re-asses their belief. But, of course, you know that will never happen because there is no such think as a clear-thinking liberal. They've all taken the bait; hook, line and sinker.
 
Gotta love this one:

Instead, the band members turned to their friends in the media and to the blogosphere, creating a website called RealClimate.org. “The idea is that we working climate scientists should have a place where we can mount a rapid response to supposedly ‘bombshell’ papers that are doing the rounds” in aid of “combating dis-information,” one email explained, referring to criticisms of the hockey stick and anything else suggesting that temperatures today were not the hottest in recorded time. One person in the nine-member Realclimate.org team — U.K. scientist and Green Party activist William Connolley — would take on particularly crucial duties.

Connolley took control of all things climate in the most used information source the world has ever known – Wikipedia. Starting in February 2003, just when opposition to the claims of the band members were beginning to gel, Connolley set to work on the Wikipedia site. He rewrote Wikipedia’s articles on global warming, on the greenhouse effect, on the instrumental temperature record, on the urban heat island, on climate models, on global cooling. On Feb. 14, he began to erase the Little Ice Age; on Aug.11, the Medieval Warm Period. In October, he turned his attention to the hockey stick graph. He rewrote articles on the politics of global warming and on the scientists who were skeptical of the band. Richard Lindzen and Fred Singer, two of the world’s most distinguished climate scientists, were among his early targets, followed by others that the band especially hated, such as Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, authorities on the Medieval Warm Period.

All told, Connolley created or rewrote 5,428 unique Wikipedia articles. His control over Wikipedia was greater still, however, through the role he obtained at Wikipedia as a website administrator, which allowed him to act with virtual impunity. When Connolley didn’t like the subject of a certain article, he removed it — more than 500 articles of various descriptions disappeared at his hand. When he disapproved of the arguments that others were making, he often had them barred — over 2,000 Wikipedia contributors who ran afoul of him found themselves blocked from making further contributions. Acolytes whose writing conformed to Connolley’s global warming views, in contrast, were rewarded with Wikipedia’s blessings. In these ways, Connolley turned Wikipedia into the missionary wing of the global warming movement.
http://www.nationalpost.com/m/blog.html?b=...r&s=OpinionThere was another one a couple days ago where McIntyre was showing some of the climategate emails that indicated Jones was acting as reviewer for some of the submissions critical of their work to some of these magazines. He fought to get papers kept out of the IPCC review process, stating he'd do everything in his power including changing what is considered peer review literature.

Have to give these guys credit though. Outside of all of their emails getting leaked, they were pretty danged successful in pulling this all off. They make Karl Rove look like an amateur.
Wow. That's almost unreal. Wrote or re-wrote 5000 articles!? Banned contributors that he disagreed with? Talk about a total indictment of Wikipedia at large. Of course, they did exactly the same thing everywhere else as well. I just didn't expect them to actually have authority at Wikipedia like that.
 
Scientists or Snake Oil Salesmen?

Questions over business deals of UN climate change guru Dr Rajendra Pachauri

The head of the UN's climate change panel - Dr Rajendra Pachauri - is accused of making a fortune from his links with 'carbon trading' companies, Christopher Booker and Richard North write.

The head of the UN's climate change panel - Dr Rajendra Pachauri - is accused of making a fortune from his links with 'carbon trading' companies. Photo: EPA

No one in the world exercised more influence on the events leading up to the Copenhagen conference on global warming than Dr Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and mastermind of its latest report in 2007.

Although Dr Pachauri is often presented as a scientist (he was even once described by the BBC as “the world’s top climate scientist”), as a former railway engineer with a PhD in economics he has no qualifications in climate science at all.

These outfits include banks, oil and energy companies and investment funds heavily involved in ‘carbon trading’ and ‘sustainable technologies’, which together make up the fastest-growing commodity market in the world, estimated soon to be worth trillions of dollars a year.........
 
Scientists or Snake Oil Salesmen?

Questions over business deals of UN climate change guru Dr Rajendra Pachauri

The head of the UN's climate change panel - Dr Rajendra Pachauri - is accused of making a fortune from his links with 'carbon trading' companies, Christopher Booker and Richard North write.

The head of the UN's climate change panel - Dr Rajendra Pachauri - is accused of making a fortune from his links with 'carbon trading' companies. Photo: EPA

No one in the world exercised more influence on the events leading up to the Copenhagen conference on global warming than Dr Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and mastermind of its latest report in 2007.

Although Dr Pachauri is often presented as a scientist (he was even once described by the BBC as “the world’s top climate scientist”), as a former railway engineer with a PhD in economics he has no qualifications in climate science at all.

These outfits include banks, oil and energy companies and investment funds heavily involved in ‘carbon trading’ and ‘sustainable technologies’, which together make up the fastest-growing commodity market in the world, estimated soon to be worth trillions of dollars a year.........
Top ALL of that off with the huge amount of money Gore is making off of this scam. Of course, the GW crowd will continue to say "nothing to see here" and deny all evidence to the contrary.
 
You should all look at population dynamics and what it says about population growth. Cyclical, or exponential. Then tell me what path human population growth is following and what the expected out come is. This is not rocket science, it's not psuedo science, it's not something based on ice core samples. It's been studied over a broad range of organisms, in real time. It's happening now, for many species. It will happen for us. When? Does it matter when?

 
An article at realclimate from yesterday. This is pretty funny.

Please, show us your code

Filed under: Climate ScienceRC Forumskeptics— rasmus @ 17 December 2009

The 1991 Science paper by Friis-Christensen & Lassen, work by Henrik Svensmark (Physical Review Letters), and calculations done by Scafetta & West (in the journals Geophysical Research Letters, Journal of Geophysical Research, and Physics Today) have inspired the idea that the recent warming is due to changes in the sun, rather than greenhouse gases.

We have discussed these papers before here on RealClimate (here, here, and here), and I think it’s fair to say that these studies have been fairly influential one way or the other. But has anybody ever seen the details of the methods used, or the data? I believe that a full disclosure of their codes and data would really boost the confidence in their work, if they were sound. So if they believe so strongly that their work is solid, why not more transparency?

There is a recent story in the British paper The Independent, where Friis-Christensen and Svensmark responded to the criticism forwarded by Peter Laut (here). All this would perhaps be unnecessary if they had disclosed their codes and data.

Gavin and I published a paper in Journal of Geophysical Research, where we tested the general approach used by Scafetta & West, and tried to repeat their analysis. We were up-front about our lack of success in a 100% replication of their work, but we argue that the any pronounced effect – as claimed by Scafetta & West – should be detectable even if the set-up is not 100% identical.

However, Scafetta does not accept our analysis and has criticized me for lacking knowledge about wavelet analysis – he tells me to read the text books. So I asked him to post his code openly on the Internet so that others could repeat our test with their code. That should settle our controversy.

After repeated requests, he told me that he doesn’t really understand why I’m not able to write my own program to reproduce the calculations (actually, I did in the paper together with Gavin, but Scafetta wouldn’t accept our analysis), and keeps insulting me by telling me to take a course on wavelet analysis. Furthermore, he stated that there “are several other and even more serious problems” in our work. I figure then that the easiest way to get to the bottom of this issue it to repeat our tests with his code.

A replication in general doesn’t require full disclosure of source code because the description in the paper should be sufficient, though in this case it clearly wasn’t. So to both save having us do it again and perhaps miss some other little detail – in addition to using an algorithm that Scafetta is happy with – it’s worth getting the code with which to validate our efforts.

It should be a common courtesy to provide methods requested by other scientists in order to speedily get to the essence of the issue, and not to waste time with the minutiae of which year is picked to end the analysis.

The reason why Gavin and I were not able to repeat Scafetta’s analysis in exact details is that his papers didn’t disclose all the necessary details. The first point he raised was that we used periodic instead of reflection boundaries. The fact that the paper referred to the expression ‘1/2 A sin (2 pi t)’ to describe the temperatures or solar forcing would normally suggest that they used periodic rather than reflection boundaries. There was no information in the paper about reflection boundary. But this is no big deal, as we have subsequently repeated the analysis with reflection boundary, and that doesn’t alter our conclusions.

After further communication, we found out that Scafetta re-sampled the data in such a way that the center of the wavelet band pass filter was located exactly on the 11 and 22 year solar cycles, which were the frequencies of interest. He also informed me that a reasonable choice of the year when the reflection boudary was made should be the year 2002-3 when the sun experienced a maximum for both the 11 and 22 year cycles. This information was not provided in the papers.

I’m no psychic, so I couldn’t have guessed that all this was needed to reproduce his result. But since Scafetta has lost faith in my ability to repeat his work, I think it’s even a greater reason to disclose his code so that others can have a go.

For the record, we did not just use wavelets to filter the data – we obtained the same conclusion with an ordinary band-pass filter.
This is hilarious. Way to write an article illustrating how you've been screwing with the process for years.Some of the comments are pretty great too.

Their code was designed by 10 separate programmers who are bound by property rights issues…… and the various offices required the signing of confidentially agreements……. Plus they lost it.
 
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You should all look at population dynamics and what it says about population growth. Cyclical, or exponential. Then tell me what path human population growth is following and what the expected out come is. This is not rocket science, it's not psuedo science, it's not something based on ice core samples. It's been studied over a broad range of organisms, in real time. It's happening now, for many species. It will happen for us. When? Does it matter when?
So is this global warming just a sham to cover up the real arguement for population control? I am not sure what the angle is with this point. Sure population grows exponentially for a while, but now it seems to be leveling off and is expected to peak. Population growth is not really exponential in that the rate of growth changes and can not just keep growing to inifinity.
 
You should all look at population dynamics and what it says about population growth. Cyclical, or exponential. Then tell me what path human population growth is following and what the expected out come is. This is not rocket science, it's not psuedo science, it's not something based on ice core samples. It's been studied over a broad range of organisms, in real time. It's happening now, for many species. It will happen for us. When? Does it matter when?
So is this global warming just a sham to cover up the real arguement for population control? I am not sure what the angle is with this point. Sure population grows exponentially for a while, but now it seems to be leveling off and is expected to peak. Population growth is not really exponential in that the rate of growth changes and can not just keep growing to inifinity.
There is a point here, it just wasn't made very well. Natural resource depletion and fossil fuel burning is a function of population, You would agree with that observation, I would think.
 
No Rise of Airborne Fraction of Carbon Dioxide in Past 150 Years, New Research Finds

Most of the carbon dioxide emitted by human activity does not remain in the atmosphere, but is instead absorbed by the oceans and terrestrial ecosystems. In fact, only about 45 percent of emitted carbon dioxide stays in the atmosphere. …

To assess whether the airborne fraction is indeed increasing, Wolfgang Knorr of the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol reanalyzed available atmospheric carbon dioxide and emissions data since 1850 and considers the uncertainties in the data.

In contradiction to some recent studies, he finds that the airborne fraction of carbon dioxide has not increased either during the past 150 years or during the most recent five decades.
 
Their models have always been held relatively secret (it took a Freedom iof Information suit to even get them to release the data, much less the models). They are releasing them now for the first time because of all of the scrutiny they are under. This shouldn't be proprietary information. It's built off of the public dime with data centers funded by public monies. If they want to be held up as scientists they need to subject their work to the scientific process. That means skeptics and those with differing opinions on what is causing Global Warming need to have access to the studies.
Again, the CRU's research is available to the scientific community and is heavily peer reviewed.
The results have always been available, but no, the code has never been made publicly available. It's not really peer review to have people that agree with you rubber stamp the process. If you want to claim you are peer reviewed then it all of it needs to be available to all of your peers. You don't get to pick and choose.
Please. Their research is made available to the vast majority of the scientific community. There's no secret club. To paint them as "picking and choosing" is misleading. There's really only two that I'm aware of that the CRU has issue with. One is with the journal Climate Research. In 2003, the credibility of the journal took a dive when editor Chris de Freitas accepted an article funded by the American Petroleum Institute. Much of the staff left after that, and De Freitas went on to advise the Competitive Enterprise Institute, which is partly funded by Exxon Mobil. Not exactly a conspiracy to have issue with these guys. The other is with Stephen McIntyre, the guy who runs ClimateAudit.org. This is the guy that's really gotten under their skin and that they probably just should've gone along with. He's not in the scientific community; he was in the mineral biz and was a strategic advisor for the oil and gas exploration company CGX Energy Inc. from 2000 through 2003. He's been riding a wave of credibility since he got NASA to adjust their temperature records in 2007. The changes were small, but give the guy credit. I'm not aware of any other beefs. If you have any, link them up.
No, the data and the code were never made available outside of a select group of people. Their results and methodology were made available but there is no way to review that. Why do you think it's now just coming to light that the raw data has been lost for decades? How did it go through peer review without the original data?They also have a beef with Willie Soon, an astrophysicist from Harvard University-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, who happens to believe Global Warming has more to do with solar activity. Why would the idea that the sun has more to do with climate change than man-made CO2 be so far fetched as to deny him access to data/models?
Old thread, but Wei-Hock 'Willie' Soon was being funded by fossil fuel companies all along.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/22/us/ties-to-corporate-cash-for-climate-change-researcher-Wei-Hock-Soon.html?_r=0

He has accepted more than $1.2 million in money from the fossil-fuel industry over the last decade while failing to disclose that conflict of interest in most of his scientific papers. At least 11 papers he has published since 2008 omitted such a disclosure, and in at least eight of those cases, he appears to have violated ethical guidelines of the journals that published his work.

 
Their models have always been held relatively secret (it took a Freedom iof Information suit to even get them to release the data, much less the models). They are releasing them now for the first time because of all of the scrutiny they are under. This shouldn't be proprietary information. It's built off of the public dime with data centers funded by public monies. If they want to be held up as scientists they need to subject their work to the scientific process. That means skeptics and those with differing opinions on what is causing Global Warming need to have access to the studies.
Again, the CRU's research is available to the scientific community and is heavily peer reviewed.
The results have always been available, but no, the code has never been made publicly available. It's not really peer review to have people that agree with you rubber stamp the process. If you want to claim you are peer reviewed then it all of it needs to be available to all of your peers. You don't get to pick and choose.
Please. Their research is made available to the vast majority of the scientific community. There's no secret club. To paint them as "picking and choosing" is misleading. There's really only two that I'm aware of that the CRU has issue with. One is with the journal Climate Research. In 2003, the credibility of the journal took a dive when editor Chris de Freitas accepted an article funded by the American Petroleum Institute. Much of the staff left after that, and De Freitas went on to advise the Competitive Enterprise Institute, which is partly funded by Exxon Mobil. Not exactly a conspiracy to have issue with these guys. The other is with Stephen McIntyre, the guy who runs ClimateAudit.org. This is the guy that's really gotten under their skin and that they probably just should've gone along with. He's not in the scientific community; he was in the mineral biz and was a strategic advisor for the oil and gas exploration company CGX Energy Inc. from 2000 through 2003. He's been riding a wave of credibility since he got NASA to adjust their temperature records in 2007. The changes were small, but give the guy credit. I'm not aware of any other beefs. If you have any, link them up.
No, the data and the code were never made available outside of a select group of people. Their results and methodology were made available but there is no way to review that. Why do you think it's now just coming to light that the raw data has been lost for decades? How did it go through peer review without the original data?They also have a beef with Willie Soon, an astrophysicist from Harvard University-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, who happens to believe Global Warming has more to do with solar activity. Why would the idea that the sun has more to do with climate change than man-made CO2 be so far fetched as to deny him access to data/models?
Old thread, but Wei-Hock 'Willie' Soon was being funded by fossil fuel companies all along.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/22/us/ties-to-corporate-cash-for-climate-change-researcher-Wei-Hock-Soon.html?_r=0

He has accepted more than $1.2 million in money from the fossil-fuel industry over the last decade while failing to disclose that conflict of interest in most of his scientific papers. At least 11 papers he has published since 2008 omitted such a disclosure, and in at least eight of those cases, he appears to have violated ethical guidelines of the journals that published his work.
I'm shocked, shocked I tell you.

Almost as shocked as the local politicians who neglected to mention the same while promising us that our worst in the US air quality along the Wasatch Front has absolutely nothing to do with the giant oil refineries putting out so much pollution you can almost choke on it when you're near them.

Almost as shocked as the two guys who neglected to mention that each of their largest campaign contributors was Comcast when they proposed that bill against net neutrality.

Shocked.

 
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Do the global warming scientist disclose that their funding is from government and that their future funding is dependent upon being on the pro side of the theory? Or is this type of disclosure only for those who disagree with the theory?

 
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I am shocked that there is still a debate about global warming. The earth heats up. Then it cools down. Humans affect the earth with their careless and selfish lifestyles. The sun affects the earth because of nature and science and stuff. Arguing about this makes as much sense as arguing about religion or politics.

 
Do the global warming scientist disclose that their funding is from government and that their future funding is dependent upon being on the pro side of the theory? Or is this type of disclosure only for those who disagree with the theory?
Peer review in the academic community requires funding disclosure and a conflict statement.

 
Do the global warming scientist disclose that their funding is from government and that their future funding is dependent upon being on the pro side of the theory? Or is this type of disclosure only for those who disagree with the theory?
Peer review in the academic community requires funding disclosure and a conflict statement.
Never knew who this guy was or ever quoted any of his work. But I really don't see how private-sector money is that much more tainted than government money. Those doling out government money have an agenda too unfortunately and it influences what gets funded and what doesn't.

 
Do the global warming scientist disclose that their funding is from government and that their future funding is dependent upon being on the pro side of the theory? Or is this type of disclosure only for those who disagree with the theory?
Peer review in the academic community requires funding disclosure and a conflict statement.
Never knew who this guy was or ever quoted any of his work. But I really don't see how private-sector money is that much more tainted than government money. Those doling out government money have an agenda too unfortunately and it influences what gets funded and what doesn't.
There's a difference between the government choosing what gets funded and the private sector telling the people they funded what the results need to be.

 
Do the global warming scientist disclose that their funding is from government and that their future funding is dependent upon being on the pro side of the theory? Or is this type of disclosure only for those who disagree with the theory?
If government-paid scientists are faking the numbers, then where are the opposing peer-reviewed studies that easily and conclusively disprove them? Every attempt at a peer-reviewed challenge of GW has been a total failure.

Also, if fake science is such a cottage industry, why don't the southern states offer their own research grants devoted to proving that GW doesn't exist, or that cigarettes are healthy, or that black people have inferior genes, etc.? And why didn't the Republicans put a stop to all GW research when they had control of Congress and the White House in the 2000s?

 

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