How Bad Is Global Warming?

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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Aug 20, 2013 9:48 pm

see link for full story
http://desmogblog.com/2013/08/20/great-maysdorf-ii-scam


Tue, 2013-08-20 14:02Ben Jervey
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Maysdorf II By the Numbers: BLM's Big Coal Giveaway Tomorrow


Tomorrow, the Bureau of Land Management will sell off roughly 148 million tons of coal. The BLM is opening the sealed bids for the so-called "Maysdorf II" tract in the heart of the Powder River Basin in Wyoming. The coal will likely be sold to Cloud Peak Energy, which operates the adjacent Cordero Rojo mine, one of the nation's largest strip mine operations.

Cloud Peak Energy's Tesoro Rojo mine, soon to be expanded. Video by Greenpeace.



According to Joe Smyth of Greenpeace, who penned a great post putting this sale (and another, even larger coal lease scheduled for next month) in the context of President Obama's recent climate announcements, the coal will be sold for roughly $1-per-ton. That represents a deep discount below market rates, which is what you'd expect from a lease auction with only one bidder.



The environmental groups aren't the only ones raising the red flags about this controversial auction process. The Interior Department's own Inspector General issued a report earlier this summer that criticized the agency for failing to consider the exports of Powder River Basin coal, and that Americans were losing hundreds of millions of dollars in these closed-bid (frequently single-bidder) auctions.

The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) carried the numbers out further, finding that Americans have been shortchanged nearly $30 billion for all of the existing leases in the Powder River Basin over the past three decades, because the BLM failed to set a fair value for the price of the coal to be mined. (It should be noted that the calculation of "fair market value" by the BLM is notoriously arcane and complicated. That IEEFA report does some incredible work explaining it. You can dig in for yourself if you'd like. Jump ahead to page 26.)

Seeing as the bidding will be opened tomorrow, let's piggy-back on Smyth's post and crunch some more numbers about this particular lease.

Maysdorf II, by the numbers

1,338 acres: Size of the "Maysdorf II" coal tract to be leased
148,565,000 tons: Mineable coal in the "Maysdorf II" tract
$163 million: Potential revenue generated by the lease (estimating price from last auction in the region)
$1.5 billion: Value of mined "Maysdorf II" coal on the open market
241 million metric tons: Carbon dioxide to be released by mined coal*
50 million cars: Equivalent emissions of "Maysdorf II" coal in American passenger car annual emissions
12.6 days: How long it would take China to burn through all of the "Maysdorf II" coal.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Ben D » Tue Aug 20, 2013 11:30 pm

Iamwhomiam » Wed Aug 21, 2013 3:21 am wrote:
Ben, how about you explain for us "the global warming anomaly" that began in 1880 and lasted until 1998? We were then supposed to be entering a time of planetary cooling, but yet the earth's warmed 0.8C over that time, so whats caused those 13 decades of warming?

You seem to want us to ignore this astounding anomaly that we and thousands of scientists agree was caused certainly in part by man's unnatural input over 130 years. If you're about to blame the warming on the Sun, you also cannot blame the maunder minimum, a 75 year long period, for momentary pause in warming over 16 years. You'll have to await 59 more years to determine if cooling continued that long.

But I would say from all the research I've read that it is extremely unlikely a true reversal in warming will continue much longer before spiking upwards once again.

Iam, I never meant that the temperature anomaly of + 0.8C from 1880 stopped at 1998, it just hasn't increased since then. We agree on the warming over 13 decades, what we don't agree on at this stage is how much of that can be attributed to human cause.

I am only repeating myself to point out that the 16/17 year pause poses a question about the extent of anthropogenic contribution factored into the AGW GCMs as the variance between actual temperatures in the 21st century and IPCC AGW GCM projections grows wider as the years go by.

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Postby wintler2 » Wed Aug 21, 2013 1:09 am

No pause in artic ice melt, quite the opposite.

Image
http://psc.apl.washington.edu/wordpress ... e-anomaly/
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby wintler2 » Wed Aug 21, 2013 1:17 am

No pause in extreme weather events.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Rory » Wed Aug 21, 2013 1:50 am

Ben - how come you're posting shite from whattsupwithhisoilcompanypaycheque.com?

You cry foul when anyone dares to post anything from skeptical science, yet, they're ok somehow?
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Ben D » Wed Aug 21, 2013 2:30 am

Rory, if you can find any misinformation wrt the graphic, please point it out, that's what determines what I post.

Besides, it is available here if you would prefer...http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ipcc-ar5draft-fig-1-4.gif?
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Rory » Wed Aug 21, 2013 3:24 am

It's by a famously disingenuous systems engineer, Ira Glickstein. I defer to him when it comes to discussions of electrical enginerering, six sigma, or lean processing, but his approach and half baked conclusions regarding climate science are notoriously risible.

And he did produce that gif for whattsupwithhissuckingbigoil'smoneyteat.com So, getting a wikicommons link doesn't get around the fact that the source is a bag of shite.

He sticks a 'Dr.' before his name, as if that imbues him with authority in a subject he is no more qualified to discuss than any dog on the street.

His students don't think very much of him by the way http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRat ... tid=530927
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Iamwhomiam » Wed Aug 21, 2013 4:08 am

BenD wrote,
Iam, I never meant that the temperature anomaly of + 0.8C from 1880 stopped at 1998, it just hasn't increased since then.
Hmm... is that some kind Zen thing you're doing there?

It's was a simple question, Ben, while we were supposed to be cooling, entering a mini-ice age around about 1880 I think, though it could have been a decade or so earlier or later, and continuing throughout the 20th C, coincidentally, a time machinery was beginning to be developed to run on fossil fuels, we've warmed as you note 0.8C, So what caused the anomalous warming?

The Sun? Its UV and Infra-red radiation? Has either form of radiation been monitored and measured regularly enogh to draw any conclusions from? And modeling done with regard the these energy forms potentials?

If it was the Sun, why did it suddenly cool off? Are we entering a Maunder Minimum? Wouldn't we need to wait nearly 60 years for confirmation?

Oh, and Ben did you notice the angle of your actual line. That's called an incline. It shows warming is continuing. Care to explain?
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Ben D » Wed Aug 21, 2013 4:12 am

Rory, your opinion of Dr Glickstein aside, I gather you couldn't find anything wrong with his annotation to the IPCC graphic.
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Ben D » Wed Aug 21, 2013 4:55 am

Iamwhomiam » Wed Aug 21, 2013 6:08 pm wrote:
BenD wrote,
Iam, I never meant that the temperature anomaly of + 0.8C from 1880 stopped at 1998, it just hasn't increased since then.
Hmm... is that some kind Zen thing you're doing there?

It's was a simple question, Ben, while we were supposed to be cooling, entering a mini-ice age around about 1880 I think, though it could have been a decade or so earlier or later, and continuing throughout the 20th C, coincidentally, a time machinery was beginning to be developed to run on fossil fuels, we've warmed as you note 0.8C, So what caused the anomalous warming?

The Sun? Its UV and Infra-red radiation? Has either form of radiation been monitored and measured regularly enogh to draw any conclusions from? And modeling done with regard the these energy forms potentials?

If it was the Sun, why did it suddenly cool off? Are we entering a Maunder Minimum? Wouldn't we need to wait nearly 60 years for confirmation?

Oh, and Ben did you notice the angle of your actual line. That's called an incline. It shows warming is continuing. Care to explain?

Iam, climate change global cooling expectations were in the 1970's, here is a compilation of news articles on the global cooling scare of the period...

Iam, global climate change is the norm, there is no such thing as steady state climate where the temperature stays the same. The earth is in an interglacial period which resulted in warming. The precise forcings that cause the warming are many, solar, GHG, etc., and are factored into the climate science GCMs. The IPCC AGW GCM projections do not match the real climate data to date, and therefore are presently inadequate to accurately predict future climate change, further refinements are called for.

The trend line incline you refer to has a start date of 1990, the pause didn't start until around 1997.
There is That which was not born, nor created, nor evolved. If it were not so, there would never be any refuge from being born, or created, or evolving. That is the end of suffering. That is God**.

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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby wintler2 » Wed Aug 21, 2013 9:31 am

BenDs fuzzy graph from unpublished data: climate still warming, but its complex, and models aren't perfect.
Sounds like most every climate paper published in last forty years.


I'm thrilled for Bendy, its a big scary step into the real world, i think we should all give him a big hug.
[and nobody tease him about those green communist lizards]
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Rory » Wed Aug 21, 2013 11:29 am

Ben, you're asking if I have a problem with a graph animation, produced by an unqualified layman, sourced from unfinished and unpublished data that was obtained fraudulently and in deliberate bad faith, and that still demonstrates the clear upwards warming trend..
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Aug 21, 2013 12:14 pm

21/8 - Survey Confirms Americans Want Climate Action

http://climateark.org/
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby stillrobertpaulsen » Thu Aug 22, 2013 2:53 pm

Experts even surer now: Humans are cause of global warming
Alister Doyle Reuters

Aug. 20, 2013 at 6:51 PM ET

OSLO, Norway —- Climate scientists are surer than ever that human activity is causing global warming, according to leaked drafts of a major U.N. report, but they are finding it harder than expected to predict the impact in specific regions in coming decades.

The uncertainty is frustrating for government planners: the report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is the main guide for states weighing multibillion-dollar shifts to renewable energy from fossil fuels, for coastal regions considering extra sea defenses or crop breeders developing heat-resistant strains.

Drafts seen by Reuters of the study by the U.N. panel of experts, due to be published next month, say it is at least 95 percent likely that human activities — chiefly the burning of fossil fuels — are the main cause of warming since the 1950s.

That is up from at least 90 percent in the last report in 2007, 66 percent in 2001, and just over 50 percent in 1995, steadily squeezing out the arguments by a small minority of scientists that natural variations in the climate might be to blame.

That shifts the debate to the extent of temperature rises and the likely impacts, from manageable to catastrophic. Governments have agreed to work out an international deal by the end of 2015 to rein in rising emissions.

"We have got quite a bit more certain that climate change ... is largely man-made," said Reto Knutti, a professor at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. "We're less certain than many would hope about the local impacts."

And gauging how warming would affect nature, from crops to fish stocks, was also proving hard, since it goes far beyond physics. "You can't write an equation for a tree," he said.

The IPCC report, the first of three to be released in 2013 and 2014, will face intense scrutiny, particularly after the panel admitted a mistake in the 2007 study that wrongly predicted all Himalayan glaciers could melt by 2035. Experts say the error far overestimated the melt and might have been based on a misreading of the year 2350.

Image
Konrad Steffen / University of Colorado handout via Reuters file
An iceberg floats in the Jacobshavn Fjord in southwest Greenland in 2006.

The new study will state with greater confidence than in 2007 that rising man-made greenhouse gas emissions have already meant more heat waves. But it is likely to play down some tentative findings from 2007, such as that human activities have contributed to more droughts.

Almost 200 governments have agreed to try to limit global warming to below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times, seen as a threshold for dangerous changes including more droughts, extinctions, floods and rising seas that could swamp coastal regions and entire island nations.

The report will flag a high risk that global temperatures will increase this century by more than that level, and will say that evidence of rising sea levels is now "unequivocal."

For all that, scientists say it is proving harder to pinpoint local impacts in coming decades in a way that would help planners.

Drew Shindell, a NASA climate scientist, said the relative lack of progress in regional predictions was the main disappointment of climate science since 2007.

"I talk to people in regional power planning. They ask: 'What's the temperature going to be in this region in the next 20 to 30 years, because that's where our power grid is?'" he said.

"We can't really tell. It's a shame," said Shindell. Like the other scientists interviewed, he was speaking about climate science in general since the last IPCC report, not about the details of the latest drafts.

Warming slowing
The panel will try to explain why global temperatures, while still increasing, have risen more slowly since about 1998 even though greenhouse gas concentrations have hit repeated record highs in that time, led by industrial emissions by China and other emerging nations.

An IPCC draft says there is "medium confidence" that the slowing of the rise is "due in roughly equal measure" to natural variations in the weather and to other factors affecting energy reaching the Earth's surface.

Scientists believe causes could include: greater-than-expected quantities of ash from volcanoes, which dims sunlight; a decline in heat from the sun during a current 11-year solar cycle; more heat being absorbed by the deep oceans; or the possibility that the climate may be less sensitive than expected to a build-up of carbon dioxide.

"It might be down to minor contributions that all add up," said Gabriele Hegerl, a professor at Edinburgh University. Or maybe, scientists say, the latest decade is just a blip.

The main scenarios in the draft, using more complex computer models than in 2007 and taking account of more factors, show that temperatures could rise anywhere from a fraction of 1 degree C (1.8 degree F) to almost 5 degrees C (9 degrees F) this century, a wider range at both ends than in 2007.

The low end, however, is because the IPCC has added what diplomats say is an improbable scenario for radical government action — not considered in 2007 — that would require cuts in global greenhouse gases to zero by about 2070.

Temperatures have already risen by 0.8 degrees C (1.4 degrees F) since the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century.

Experts say that the big advance in the report, due for a final edit by governments and scientists in Stockholm from Sept. 23 to 26, is simply greater confidence about the science of global warming, rather than revolutionary new findings.

Sea levels
"Overall our understanding has strengthened," said Michael Oppenheimer, a professor at Princeton University, pointing to areas including sea level rise.

An IPCC draft projects seas will rise by between 29 and 82 centimeters (11.4 to 32.3 inches) by the late 21st century — above the estimates of 18 to 59 centimeters in the last report, which did not fully account for changes in Antarctica and Greenland.

The report slightly tones down past tentative findings that more intense tropical cyclones are linked to human activities. Warmer air can contain more moisture, however, making downpours more likely in future.

"There is widespread agreement among hurricane scientists that rainfall associated with hurricanes will increase noticeably with global warming," said Kerry Emanuel, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

"But measuring rainfall is very tricky," he said.


Only 95%? Well, shoot, guess we have to wait for a full 100% consensus before we, like, attempt any human activity to try to, like, stop it! Might be a false alarm designed to upset the economy! :moresarcasm :moresarcasm :moresarcasm :moresarcasm
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Re: How Bad Is Global Warming?

Postby Iamwhomiam » Sat Aug 24, 2013 7:19 pm

I see we've entered another brief cooling-of period.
We should be used to this by now.
Hard to time them though, due to their irregular occurrence.
A momentary respite from the incredible and irrepressible heated onslaught...
Ben-o-pause.
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