"it is now believed that 1934 was probably the hottest year on record"
Factcheck required; I think this quote may well be misleading, though I am open to correction. I googled it and it appears that this statistic relates only to the weather in the 'lower 48' United States - not global average temperature and in particular not polar regions.
For a detailed critique of the abundant flaws in this movie and the above quote, this link is very interesting.Gore shows a chart purporting to be actual temperatures since the Civil War. (Note that the film doesn’t expose the dependent axis. If he did it would emphasize how small the changes in temperature were.) Gore states: “These are actual measurements of atmospheric temperature since our civil war. In any given year it might look like it’s going down, but the overall trend is extremely clear. In recent years it is uninterrupted and it is intensifying. In fact, if you look at the 10 hottest years ever measured in this atmospheric record, they have all occurred in the last 14 years. The hottest of all was 2005.“
He can be forgiven for having been misled by a close advisor, Dr. James Hansen who heads the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS). Hansen has recently been forced to admit that errors were made in correcting raw data and that the hottest year was 1934. Here is the new ranking: 1934, 1998, 1921, 2006, 1931, 1999, 1953, 1990, 1938, 1939.
I'm not a scientist and I cannot follow who has the strongest scientific argument. However if I look around at human's impact on the planet I don't really need much persuasion that we are changing the climate. We have altered the entire planet in an extreme way in a very short space of time. We are deforesting it and overfishing the oceans, burying our tons of rubbish, polluting the air, land, rivers, lakes and sea. We have majorly altered and often destroyed ecosystems nearly everywhere. It's not that much of a leap for me to believe that we are also changing the climate. To be honest I don't really care either, anything which would make us clean up a bit is a good thing in my book.
The "anything which would make us clean up a bit is a good thing" apologia for the global warming hysteria is all very well in itself until you remember that at least some "anti global warming" initiatives are themselves causing deforestation and other environmental damage. The ITV news on Monday night showed how farmers in Indonesia and other countries are clearfelling large areas of rainforest so that they can grow biofuels, in response to the West's demands for "ecofriendly" fuels. I could go on...
course pollution, overfishing and deforestation are to be condemned. However despite what you say, it is a massive (and imho unsustainable) leap of faith to conclude for example that overfishing or landfills are creating global warming
The "anything which would make us clean up a bit is a good thing" apologia for the global warming hysteria is all very well in itself until you remember that at least some "anti global warming" initiatives are themselves causing deforestation and other environmental damage. The ITV news on Monday night showed how farmers in Indonesia and other countries are clearfelling large areas of rainforest so that they can grow biofuels, in response to the West's demands for "ecofriendly" fuels. I could go on...
A lot of green policies seem to be based around a very idealistic notion of subsistence living. The reality is much different and the benefits that we in the West have enjoyed from industrialisation should not be denied to Asia and Africa.
Of course neither of those things by themselves would create global warming. But if you were to take the entire effect that humans have had on the planet since the industrial age, and the sheer scale of our continuing impact, I don't think it's such a big leap of faith for a non scientist like myself to make.
Planet earth is over 4.5 billion years old.
Do you really believe human activity over the past 100 years is having such a drastic effect. Are we conceited enough to believe we are this powerful.
Green house gases such as co2 amount to 0.038% of the earths atmosphere and this figure has been been much higher in the past ( as in pre history ) .
Yes I'm sure you could go on and cite all the reasons why we shouldn't be doing anything to clean up. You refer to apologia for the global warming hysteria. I view a lot of the cynicism as apologia for not bothering to do anything at all, as this is the only thing being proposed, which I don't agree with. Do you think we should do anything at all then, or just continue the way we are? Why is cleaning up after ourselves such an difficult notion for people to deal with?
Of course neither of those things by themselves would create global warming. But if you were to take the entire effect that humans have had on the planet since the industrial age, and the sheer scale of our continuing impact, I don't think it's such a big leap of faith for a non scientist like myself to make. Are you a scientist?
Yes I'm sure you could go on and cite all the reasons why we shouldn't be doing anything to clean up. You refer to apologia for the global warming hysteria. I view a lot of the cynicism as apologia for not bothering to do anything at all, as this is the only thing being proposed, which I don't agree with. Do you think we should do anything at all then, or just continue the way we are?
Just because I think we should try harder does not mean I think we should be living at subsistence level, that is putting words in my mouth. If more research instead of cynicism had been put into it in the first place, our green policies would probably be a lot more sophisticated by now. I also did not imply that economic progress should be denied to developing nations. Again if more effort had been put into all this before we would have also figured out long ago how both we and developing nations can prosper in a more environmentally friendly way.
Ok so the replies to my 'green' post talk about being emotional, well meaning but ultimately destructive, promoting subsistence living, and wanting to deny developing countries their progress. I suppose this thread was started by someone who thought green initiatives are completely pointless so I shouldn't be surprised at the tone of the rest of the discussion. Can I ask, are there any environmental scientists here or anyone with enough expertise to actually understand the evidence or lack thereof?
room305 said:I've only met one scientist working in the area of global warming and he was convinced that we are seeing a warming cycle beyond the usual fluctuations based on ice core data from the North pole.
room305 said:This is a fairly basic scientific error - secondary school level stuff. Yet worryingly it appears to be practically the basis of Gore's movie. Nor have I heard anything from anyone within the movement that would lead me to believe they have recognised the error, or why it might not be relevant in this instance.
Can we really dismiss the IPCC as a "politicised global warming movement"? The levels of consensus among scientists working in this area should be taken seriously surely? The oft-quoted argument that such scientists are afraid to "buck" the "establishment" is insulting to scientists everywhere, I would imagine.
Ultimately, non-scientists, including governments, other policy makers, and the general public, can either trust the science, and the bodies that collate and review scientific findings, or dismiss the whole thing as politicised conspiracy bunkum.
Does the ice core data not in fact show that increases in CO2 levels lag circa 400 years behind rises in temperature? Thus suggesting that it's temperature driving CO2 rather than the other way around.I've only met one scientist working in the area of global warming and he was convinced that we are seeing a warming cycle beyond the usual fluctuations based on ice core data from the North pole.
However, what alarms me about the theory is the most basic and fallacious of logical mistakes that seems to permeate it. Cum hoc, ergo prompter hoc - to assume that correlation implies causation. If a dataset shows that a rise in CO2 correlates with a rise in temperature, this in no way proves that the temperature rise was caused by the rise in CO2 or that a subsequent increase in CO2 will lead to an increase in temperature.
Does the ice core data not in fact show that increases in CO2 levels lag circa 400 years behind rises in temperature? Thus suggesting that it's temperature driving CO2 rather than the other way around.
And secondly of all the sceptics here, (who I assume are not climatologists, correct me if I am wrong) where or from whom are you taking you scientific view points?
Well to diagnose if one exists in a piece of software you do.Does one have to be an IT technologist to have an opinion on the Millennium Bug?
Out of curosity has anyone here read the [broken link removed]Third and Fourth Assessment Reports?
And secondly of all the sceptics here, (who I assume are not climatologists, correct me if I am wrong) where or from whom are you taking you scientific view points?
Well to diagnose if one exists in a piece of software you do.
You can say that you don't believe that one exists but your credibility might not be too high if you don't know jack about software
Since when is the global warming thesis the sole preserve of Al Gore? With respect, whether his movie is overly populist or logically flawed (and I've no idea whether it is or not) is irrelevant, surely?
Can we really dismiss the IPCC as a "politicised global warming movement"? The levels of consensus among scientists working in this area should be taken seriously surely? The oft-quoted argument that such scientists are afraid to "buck" the "establishment" is insulting to scientists everywhere, I would imagine.
Ultimately, non-scientists, including governments, other policy makers, and the general public, can either trust the science, and the bodies that collate and review scientific findings, or dismiss the whole thing as politicised conspiracy bunkum.
But I suspect that anthropogenic global warming theory can be more robustly defended than the widely believed but ultimately indefensible theories that have been foisted on us for countless generations by druids, creationists and other zealots, for instance.
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