• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

You are not logged in or you do not have permission to access this page. This could be due to one of several reasons:

  • You are not logged in. If you are already registered, fill in the form below to log in, or follow the "Sign Up" link to register a new account.
  • You may not have sufficient privileges to access this page. Are you trying to edit someone else's post, access administrative features or some other privileged system?
  • If you are trying to post, the administrator may have disabled your account, or it may be awaiting activation.

Previously on "Black Wednesday at the Telegraph"

Collapse

  • EternalOptimist
    replied
    Ho ho.

    so all these great mechanisms that will lead to to the end of the world, somehow get overridden by natural variations.
    All the scary predictions fail. due to some other factor that they forgot about.
    All the computer models fail. But if we send more money they will get it right. one day

    ho ho.

    Leave a comment:


  • pjclarke
    replied
    Yeah, me and Dr James Hansen, we've both got it completely wrong. Or just maybe the ice albedo feedback is not the only factor acting on a planetary climate system ...

    This ice albedo feedback is not a runaway effect. As insolation (or other)
    forcing increases, the area of ice vulnerable to melting increases. Ice sheet demise
    may occur in pulses as additional ice sheets or portions of ice sheets (e.g. West
    Antarctica or the South Dome of Greenland) become vulnerable. As long as there
    is ice on the planet, the response time to insolation forcings can be no shorter
    than the shortest insolation period (ca 6 kyr half-width of precession anomalies),
    even if ice sheets have no inertia (instantaneous response).
    Hansen et al 2007.

    http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/docs/2007/...sen_etal_2.pdf

    James Hansen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Leave a comment:


  • EternalOptimist
    replied
    If ice cover worked the way pj suggests, once it started getting less it would continue to get less would never recover. So by now, we should have been ice free for millions of years
    Sceptics spotted this right away and just cannot understand the lack of logic in the zealots thinking.

    staggering really, when tou think about it

    Leave a comment:


  • DodgyAgent
    replied
    Originally posted by pjclarke View Post
    Its not all bad, it will open up shipping lanes and give the navies of the world more places to play with their submarines... but probably bad news if you're an Intuit subsistence hunter, or a polar bear. And bad news for the rest of us because of something called the ice albedo flip, sea ice reflects about 90% of incoming solar radiation, open water absorbs about the same fraction, so less ice means warmer water means less ice means .....
    So all the more reason to use my Ocean Geoengineering product

    Leave a comment:


  • pjclarke
    replied
    Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
    It is irrelevant to the agenda of zealots like you. As I have said you exploit information to push an agenda that has nothing to do with "caring". so again I ask how does the decline of sea ice fit with the last 10,000 years and beyond? And why is it such a bad thing that ice disappears?
    Its not all bad, it will open up shipping lanes and give the navies of the world more places to play with their submarines... but probably bad news if you're an Intuit subsistence hunter, or a polar bear. And bad news for the rest of us because of something called the ice albedo flip, sea ice reflects about 90% of incoming solar radiation, open water absorbs about the same fraction, so less ice means warmer water means less ice means .....

    Leave a comment:


  • DodgyAgent
    replied
    Originally posted by pjclarke View Post
    We don't seem to have reliable proxies that far back, and I'm not sure of the relevance if we did, however Kinnard et al 2010 went back before the so-called 'Medieval warm Period"





    But the science is irrelevant, right?
    It is irrelevant to the agenda of zealots like you. As I have said you exploit information to push an agenda that has nothing to do with "caring". so again I ask how does the decline of sea ice fit with the last 10,000 years and beyond? And why is it such a bad thing that ice disappears?

    Leave a comment:


  • pjclarke
    replied
    Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
    How does that fit into the context of say the last 10,000 years?
    We don't seem to have reliable proxies that far back, and I'm not sure of the relevance if we did, however Kinnard et al 2011 went back before the so-called 'Medieval warm Period"



    Arctic sea ice extent is now more than two million square kilometres less than it was in the late twentieth century, with important consequences for the climate, the ocean and traditional lifestyles in the Arctic. Although observations show a more or less continuous decline for the past four or five decades, there are few long-term records with which to assess natural sea ice variability. Until now, the question of whether or not current trends are potentially anomalous has therefore remained unanswerable. Here we use a network of high-resolution terrestrial proxies from the circum-Arctic region to reconstruct past extents of summer sea ice, and show that—although extensive uncertainties remain, especially before the sixteenth century—both the duration and magnitude of the current decline in sea ice seem to be unprecedented for the past 1,450 years. Enhanced advection of warm Atlantic water to the Arctic6 seems to be the main factor driving the decline of sea ice extent on multidecadal timescales, and may result from nonlinear feedbacks between sea ice and the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation. These results reinforce the assertion that sea ice is an active component of Arctic climate variability and that the recent decrease in summer Arctic sea ice is consistent with anthropogenically forced warming
    But the science is irrelevant, right?

    Leave a comment:


  • EternalOptimist
    replied
    One of these days, the climate doomsayers will make a prediction so ludicrous that even pj will shout 'Baloney'

    at that point, he might be worth listening to.


    In the meantime, the climate geniuses said all the ice would be gone this year, and pj went along with it like a nodding dog

    Leave a comment:


  • DodgyAgent
    replied
    Originally posted by pjclarke View Post
    Up compared to what? This time last year? Woop-de-do.

    Hmmm...



    How does that fit into the context of say the last 10,000 years?

    Leave a comment:


  • pjclarke
    replied
    Up compared to what? This time last year? Woop-de-do.

    Hmmm...



    Leave a comment:


  • EternalOptimist
    replied
    For those interested in some science, arctic sea ice is up.
    we are 11 days into the summer melt and temperatures are still below freezing. That only leave 60 days or so for all the ice in the north to completely melt away, as predicted by the climate geniuses

    Leave a comment:


  • DodgyAgent
    replied
    Originally posted by pjclarke View Post
    Oh dear.

    Well I guess that asserting that you know what would have been in my head in an alternate universe when I was alive in Sandwich, 1906 is a small step in the right direction compared with musing publicly about my mastabatory habits (perhaps you need to get out more?). But really, just making your opponents arguments up so you can ridicule them (Straw Man) is not going to convince anyone sensible.

    Same goes for Dodgy with his ' Spare us the "I care" bo**ocks'. Here's a hint: read what was actually said and engage with that. I never used the words you decry as bollocks. Again, you'll be be more persuasive if you don't make stuff up.

    Debating trick No. 2, reframe the debate



    Really? The science is irrelevant? The science dates back to the work of John Tyndall and later Svante Arrenhuis who in 1896 came up with the first and surprisingly accurate estimates of the greenhouse effect and how it could warm the world if 'carbonic acid' accumulated in the atmosphere...

    Svante Arrhenius - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Was he motivated by a desire to enable George Osbourne to impose green taxes? Seems implausible. What I do find interesting is the well-documented willingness of those on the right to dismiss and deny the science if the policy implications are that some kind of collective action for the common good may be required, to the extent that they will embrace the blatent lies and demonstrably false output of intellectual minnows like Delingpole and Booker (Watts, Goddard) because it suits their ideology even though it stands in implacable opposition to the conclusions of the vast majority of studies, scientists and the position statements of virtually 100% of scientific associations.

    Scientific opinion on climate change - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Science, at its best, is an attempt to discover the truth about our universe, as Wittgenstein proposed to describe: 'everything that is the case.'. It is an imperfect enterprise, constantly self-correcting and self-improving. But to dismiss it as 'irrelevant' and to embrace instead pundits who are quite happy to promulgate stuff that they know, and we know, is not the case... well blow me, that's zealotry.
    The science is irrelevant to the debate. Both sides of the argument select whichever bits of science they wish to support whatever their standpoint may be. It is not the science it is the prognosis that is the cause of the debate. The science is twisted and exploited to support whatever agenda is behind the person making it. that is why it is irrelevant.

    As I have said the existence of the "problem" of climate change suits so many people that there is little or no impetus to "cure it". this is why people who say they "care" are lying.

    Leave a comment:


  • pjclarke
    replied
    In reality, for a more accurate indiciaiton of the "debate", you should get Delingpole up against the 11,000 scientists and experts with experience and knowledge of their subject and see if he can justify himself.
    Or a single bona fide scientist ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuQLvK6kxeU

    Leave a comment:


  • Snake Plissken
    replied
    The problem you have is that the media insist on putting an expert with experience and knowledge of their subject over many years up against a media troll like Delingpole and calling it a debate. In reality, for a more accurate indiciaiton of the "debate", you should get Delingpole up against the 11,000 scientists and experts with experience and knowledge of their subject and see if he can justify himself.

    (Actually, just give Delingpole a big bag of cash. He doesn't believe what he says,he just knows he can make money from it as a professional troll. If you gave him a couple of million quid and said write articles for the other side he would make Greenpeace look like Big Tobacco.)

    Leave a comment:


  • pjclarke
    replied
    Oh dear.

    Well I guess that asserting that you know what would have been in my head in an alternate universe when I was alive in Sandwich, 1906 is a small step in the right direction compared with musing publicly about my mastabatory habits (perhaps you need to get out more?). But really, just making your opponents arguments up so you can ridicule them (Straw Man) is not going to convince anyone sensible.

    Same goes for Dodgy with his ' Spare us the "I care" bo**ocks'. Here's a hint: read what was actually said and engage with that. I never used the words you decry as bollocks. Again, you'll be be more persuasive if you don't make stuff up.

    Debating trick No. 2, reframe the debate

    The science is irrelevant as it just contributes to the arguments on both sides according to how it is interpreted.
    Really? The science is irrelevant? The science dates back to the work of John Tyndall and later Svante Arrenhuis who in 1896 came up with the first and surprisingly accurate estimates of the greenhouse effect and how it could warm the world if 'carbonic acid' accumulated in the atmosphere...

    Svante Arrhenius - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Was he motivated by a desire to enable George Osbourne to impose green taxes? Seems implausible. What I do find interesting is the well-documented willingness of those on the right to dismiss and deny the science if the policy implications are that some kind of collective action for the common good may be required, to the extent that they will embrace the blatent lies and demonstrably false output of intellectual minnows like Delingpole and Booker (Watts, Goddard) because it suits their ideology even though it stands in implacable opposition to the conclusions of the vast majority of studies, scientists and the position statements of virtually 100% of scientific associations.

    Scientific opinion on climate change - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Science, at its best, is an attempt to discover the truth about our universe, as Wittgenstein proposed to describe: 'everything that is the case.'. It is an imperfect enterprise, constantly self-correcting and self-improving. But to dismiss it as 'irrelevant' and to embrace instead pundits who are quite happy to promulgate stuff that they know, and we know, is not the case... well blow me, that's zealotry.
    Last edited by pjclarke; 19 June 2014, 23:54.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X