Monday, April 09, 2012

After the IPCC admits "there is no simple answer to question of whether the climate, in general, has become more or less extreme", warmist Chris Field tries to tell us that the IPCC said something else

Chris Field reports extreme weather on rise from climate change | Earth | EarthSky
Weather extremes worldwide, such as droughts, floods, and heat waves, are on the rise over the past 50 years. What’s more, they’re linked to climate change. That’s according to a special report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released in March 2012 and authored by 220 scientists and experts from 62 countries. EarthSky spoke with ecologist and lead author Chris Field of the Carnegie Institution for Science at Stanford University....When we looked at the scientific literature on climate extremes and disasters, one of the things that jumps out most prominently is that essentially, every part of the world is subject to some kind of climate-related risk.
UN CLIMATE PANEL AND “EXTREME WEATHER | The SPPI Blog
[Dennis Avery] The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change admitted last week it had no evidence to support the various claims that the planet’s weather is becoming “more extreme.” The new IPCC report on weather extremes reads: “While there is evidence that increases in greenhouse gases have likely caused changes in some types of extremes, there is no simple answer to question of whether the climate, in general, has become more or less extreme.”
Incredibly, even this non-confirmation is false. The more correct answer is “less extreme.”
2009: Chris Field to receive Heinz Award
Stanford researcher Chris Field to receive $100,000 Heinz Award for environmental science and leadership. 

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