Month: May 2023

Press Bragging Again

Salon is bragging about their successful efforts to drive some children insane with climate propaganda. “Younger generations are bitterly denouncing their elders in climate protests and mental illnesses are spreading as people feel powerless to avert catastrophe.” This is what … Continue reading

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May 5, 2023 at 03:06PM

How seaweed has been misleading scientists about reef health


Coral reefs can have their ups and downs, due to various factors. Not for the first or last time, scientists have made the occupational hazard of erroneous assumptions.
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For decades, scientists have looked to seaweed as an indicator of the health of coral reefs lying underneath, says Phys.org.

But what if the seaweed was misleading them?

New UBC research reveals it was, and scientists need new ways to determine whether human activity is harming a particular reef.

“This is especially critical today, given that reefs globally are threatened by climate-driven stressors,” said Dr. Sara Cannon, a postdoctoral fellow at the UBC Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries and the study’s lead author.

Local species behave differently

Seaweed belongs to a group of organisms called macroalgae. Macroalgae at the ocean’s surface has long served as a proxy for reef health, because it is relatively quick and easy to measure.

Since the 1970s, scientists have assumed that local human impacts increase macroalgae while simultaneously damaging underlying reefs.

However, the study just published in Global Change Biology looked at data from over 1,200 sites in the Indian and Pacific Oceans over a 16-year period and revealed that this approach is misleading and may even have hidden signs of reef stress.

For example, macroalgae coverage depends heavily on the species growing in a particular area. Sargassum is less likely to grow in water contaminated by agricultural runoff, but Halimeda will thrive. In both cases, a reef will suffer.

The global research team concluded that using macroalgae coverage as an indicator of local human impacts can actually obscure how much [Talkshop comment – or how little?] our actions are harming reefs, and cause scientists to misidentify the reefs most in need of intervention.

Source here.

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May 5, 2023 at 01:46PM

April 2023 In Central Europe Cooler And Wetter Than Normal…Like The 1960s

Germany April 2023 was the wettest in 15 years, 1.5°C cooler than mean

Symbol photo by P. Gosselin

According to the preliminary data gathered from the German DWD National Weather Service’s 2000 surface stations, April ,2023, was the first to be wetter than normal in 15 years. Over the past decade and a half before 2023, April had been always too dry.

According to DWD spokesman Uwe Kirsche,  “For the first time in 15 years, an April in Germany was too wet again.” The rainy April helps to further relieve a drought situation that had plagued the country over the recent years.

1.5°C cooler than normal

The mean temperature in April, 2023, in Germany was  7.5 degrees Celsius. Compared to the current internationally valid 1991 to 2020 reference period, April thus ended up being 1.5 degrees Celsius too cool.

Cool phases dominated the first and last week of April at times – with icy nights at the beginning of the month. Carlsfeld in the Erzgebirge Mountains recorded the lowest temperature in Germany on the 5th with -8.8 °C. The temperature dropped to -4.8 °C from the 21st to the 23rd.

The temperature peaks were reported by Nienburg in Lower Saxony and Jena in Thuringia on the 22nd with 24.6 °C each. Thus, for the first time since 2008, there was not a single summer-like day with a reading of over 25 °C in Germany in April.

Wetter than normal

According to preliminary calculations by the DWD, 64 liters per square meter (l/m²) fell in April, thus making the month 40 percent wetter than the 1991 – 2020 reference period (45 l/m²). The highest monthly amounts (200 l/m²) were recorded in the Bavarian Alps, while the Baltic Sea region remained very dry with less than 20 l/m² in some areas.

Drought conditions subside

On the balance, the DWD noted a further recovery of soil moisture nationwide. Up to the 24th of April, it was within the range of the seasonal average values compared to the average of the period 1991-2020 in parts of the mountains and from the Baltic Sea to the northern center, otherwise it was widely above. See the current DWD report of May 2,, 2023.

With about 150 hours, sunshine in April was well below its mean value of 183 hours seen for the 1991 – 2020 reference period.

Like the 1960s

In terms of temperature and precipitation, April 2023 in Germany was similar to the Aprils of the older and colder 1961-1990 reference period, which saw a mean temperature of only 7.4°C and mean precipitation of 58 liters per square meter.

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May 5, 2023 at 12:34PM

Ice Cores, Temperatures, And CO2

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I got to thinking about the ice cores. It’s pretty amazing to realize that the air trapped in the tiny bubbles in the ice is the very air that was trapped there way back when the ice formed. And that air can be hundreds of thousands of years old. Not only that, but we can analyze the trapped air to see the changes in CO2 over time.

How accurate are the results? Well, different ice cores drilled and analyzed by different groups of scientists give very similar results. Here are some recent ice core CO2 measurements, along with the Mauna Loa measurements in orange.

Figure 1. CO2 measurements from a variety of ice cores, along with Mauna Loa measurements in orange.

As you can see, there’s very good agreement between all of the various ice cores, ice core analysis groups, and ice core CO2 measurement methods. And the ice core measurements agree with the Mauna Loa CO2 observations quite well.

Another thing that can be calculated from the isotopes in the air trapped in the ice-core bubbles are the temperatures back in the day. The Vostok ice core data, one of the longest datasets, recorded four glaciated intervals and five “interglacials” including our current interglacial, the Holocene.

Figure 2. Vostok global temperature reconstruction, along with modern (1850-2022) HadCRUT temperature measurements.

Now, there are several very interesting things about this graphic. First, people keep saying that a slight global warming is an “existential crisis”. But in both of the previous interglacials, temperatures were up to 2°C warmer than today. That’s 3.6°C warmer than the “preindustrial temperature”, far above the impending terror temperature of 1.5°C warmer than preindustrial that they keep scaring us with.

There were modern humans around for both of those hot spells, along with most modern life forms. It wasn’t an “existential crisis”. It wasn’t a crisis at all. It was a warm time.

And humans also existed through the glacial periods. In total, humans have seen a swing of +2°C warmer than today’s temperature to -9°C cooler than modern times … a very wide swing.

Next, the orange/black line at the right is the post-1850 warming. As you can see, the Vostok data indicates that the world has been warmer than today, both earlier during this interglacial as well as in every one of the previous interglacials in the record.

Call me crazy, but I’m not seeing any reason to panic or to demolish the fossil fuel economy in any of that …

Moving on, how about the Vostok CO2 data? Here’s a graph comparing the Vostok CO2 (right scale) and temperature (left scale) data.

Figure 3. Vostok Ice Core CO2 and Temperature.

So … is CO2 related to temperature? Is CO2 the secret temperature control?

The two are definitely related. And given the length of the dataset, almost half a million years, we can see that there is a clear physical relationship over the entire time. Either CO2 causes temperature changes, or temperature causes CO2 changes, or they both affect the other. As you might imagine, in nature the latter situation is the most common.

But regardless of the causation, clearly Figure 3 shows the long-term equilibrium relationship of the two. So we can investigate the various conditions.

First, let’s assume that CO2 is controlling the temperature. Analysis of the data in Figure 3 yields:

Change in temperature (∆T) = 13.4°C per doubling of CO2 (“climate sensitivity”)

Hmmm, sez I … the accepted value for climate sensitivity is not 13.4°C / 2xCO2. It’s somewhere around 2°C to 4°C / 2xCO2, far lower.

So let’s look at the opposite possibility, that temperature is changing the CO2. Analysis reveals the following relationship:

Change in CO2 (ppmv) = 9 ppmv per °C

Hmmm, sez I … seems possible. As the oceans warm, they outgas. However, that’s not enough to explain the modern CO2 increase.

Finally, it’s certainly possible that they are each affecting the other. CO2 might be adding a bit of warming or cooling to the changes of whatever’s driving the variations seen in Figure 2. Unfortunately, there’s no way to calculate that.

What else can we learn from the Vostok data? Folks keep talking about the speed of the current warming. Their claim is that the world can’t evolve or acclimatize fast enough to encomass the current rate of warming.

However, the Vostok data shows other times in the Holocene that it’s warmed (or cooled) that fast.

Figure 4. Warming rates in the Holocene, from the Vostok ice core data.

Finally, here’s a look at the ice core data overlaid with the modern changes in both CO2 and temperature.

Figure 5. Temperatures and CO2 levels. As in Figure 3, but with both ice core and modern observational data shown.

Hmmm, sez I, once again …

So that’s what I learned from the Vostok data—that humans have been through warmer periods many times in the past without them being an “existential crisis”, that oceanic outgassing isn’t the cause of the modern CO2 increase, and the speed of modern warming is far from unprecedented.

A rare day of soothing May rain here in California. At the end of last year, all the climate models and climatologists were predicting another very dry year … instead, it’s been one of the wetter years in history. The world’s best prognosticators were not just a little wrong. They were 100%, top to bottom and side to side wrong.

And these are the same models and folks who claim they can tell us what the average global temperature will be in 2100AD … yeah, that’s totally legit.

My best to all,

w.

PS—When you comment, please quote the exact words you’re referring to. This avoids many misunderstandings.

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May 5, 2023 at 12:24PM