Crosswords1 min ago
I Wonder Why The Eco Scientists Won't Accept This?
19 Answers
Maybe because their budgets will get cut ?
http:// www.the registe r.co.uk /2015/0 7/21/ar ctic_bo unces_b ack_wor ld_retu rns_to_ sea_ice _levels _seen_i n_1980s /
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Possibly, but then there is also the entirely valid point about long-term trends vs. short-term fluctuations. If sea ice continues to recover and indeed increase in size over the long-term, then there will be some level of head-scratching, to see the least, among climate scientists. I know it will look like a denial of the facts but one has to be careful before jumping to conclusions like "it's all false" (or vice versa) based on a comparatively short-term pattern. We'll see what happens to the sea ice around the poles in the next decade or so.
Ouch...
It's a mistake to take extreme predictions in any field too seriously. Sadly in climate science it's the more extreme results that also tend to attract the most attention. And then when they don't come true it just looks bad (because, well, it is).
Climate science is too tied-up in politics, and that's a shame, because the central message -- that we need to be bloody careful before severely disrupting various natural systems -- gets lost in the noise of predictions that don't come true, fluctuations that go against the expected (observed) trends, accusations of figure-fiddling, etc etc.
It's a mistake to take extreme predictions in any field too seriously. Sadly in climate science it's the more extreme results that also tend to attract the most attention. And then when they don't come true it just looks bad (because, well, it is).
Climate science is too tied-up in politics, and that's a shame, because the central message -- that we need to be bloody careful before severely disrupting various natural systems -- gets lost in the noise of predictions that don't come true, fluctuations that go against the expected (observed) trends, accusations of figure-fiddling, etc etc.
What Jim says in his first post is bang on. don't take a short term fluctuation as a sign of a long term gain, crunch is though that this does have scientists scratching head... none of the models reflect this in any way and don't actually predict slowing of any sort,the rate of ice decrease should be accelerating.
just goes to show never trust mother earth to follow what politcians and that shower of political yes men and women at IPCC tell it to.... thank your favourite deity for Nature!!
just goes to show never trust mother earth to follow what politcians and that shower of political yes men and women at IPCC tell it to.... thank your favourite deity for Nature!!
Scientists often making U-turns, that's not always a bad thing, in fact I wish a few would do it more often. Take Stephen Hawking, I quoted him not long ago saying 'If there is life out there, we should keep well away', and now this week he is endorsing a £100 million plan to search for it.
I wonder if this too contains an element of self-interest?
I wonder if this too contains an element of self-interest?
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