Natural Variability, Not CO2, Accounts for Late 20th Century Warming
In considering the latter portion of the record (1946-2008), results indicated that the internal variability component of climate change (the IMP) operated in a cooling mode between 1946 and 1977, but switched to a warming mode thereafter (between 1977 and 2008), suggesting that the IMP is strong enough to overwhelm any anthropogenic signal. Of this the authors state: "Specifically, the trend due to only the forced component is statistically the same in the two 32-year periods and in the 63-year period. That is, the forced part is not accelerating. Taken together, these results imply that the observed trend differs between the periods 1946-1977 and 1977-2008 not because the forced response accelerated, but because internal variability lead to relative cooling in the earlier period and relative warming in the later period" [italics added].Guest Post By Madhav Khandekar From India | Climate Science: Roger Pielke Sr.
“For last two weeks or about most of north and central India are witnessing cold wintry weather; some places in Kashmir and the Himalayan foothills have low temperatures at -5C to -20C! This is cold for India, since most houses are not insulated, not heated (except some small room heaters in north India) so most people, especially elderly people feel cold all day long and become sick with a cold, cough, flu etc. In Mumbai it is reported that about 40% of the sick children had contacted pneumonia, due to low temperatures in Mumbai ( at 15C or below). Mumbai is the largest Indian city with a population of over 25 million and many people live in poorly built houses and are feeling the impact of this cold winter. In north India, many large cities reported temperatures as low as 3c to 5C and TV footage show people huddled around roadside campfires to keep themselves warm.Met confirms secret Gov forecast of Brass Monkey winter • The Register
IPCC science did NOT adequately analyze the impact of cold events on world humanity.
Didn't share it with us, though
No comments:
Post a Comment