Climate Change Worsened Britain's Heat Wave, Scientists Find (nytimes.com) 155
The heat that demolished records in Britain last week, bringing temperatures as high as 104.5 degrees Fahrenheit to a country unaccustomed to scorching summers, would have been "extremely unlikely" without the influence of human-caused climate change, a new scientific report issued Thursday has found. From a report: Heat of last week's intensity is still highly unusual for Britain, even at current levels of global warming, said Mariam Zachariah, a research associate at Imperial College London and lead author of the new report. The chances of seeing the daytime highs that some parts of the country recorded last week were 1-in-1,000 in any given year, she and her colleagues found.
Still, Dr. Zachariah said, those temperatures were at least 10 times as likely as they would have been in a world without greenhouse-gas emissions, and at least 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit hotter. "It's still a rare event today," said Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at Imperial College London and another author of the report. "It would have been an extremely unlikely event without climate change." Severe heat has become more frequent and intense across most regions of the world, and scientists have little doubt that global warming is a key driver. As the burning of fossil fuels causes average global temperatures to rise, the range of possible temperatures shifts upward, too, making blistering highs more likely. This means every heat wave is now made worse, to some extent, by changes in planetary chemistry caused by greenhouse-gas emissions.
Still, Dr. Zachariah said, those temperatures were at least 10 times as likely as they would have been in a world without greenhouse-gas emissions, and at least 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit hotter. "It's still a rare event today," said Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at Imperial College London and another author of the report. "It would have been an extremely unlikely event without climate change." Severe heat has become more frequent and intense across most regions of the world, and scientists have little doubt that global warming is a key driver. As the burning of fossil fuels causes average global temperatures to rise, the range of possible temperatures shifts upward, too, making blistering highs more likely. This means every heat wave is now made worse, to some extent, by changes in planetary chemistry caused by greenhouse-gas emissions.
Scientists find what they already knew. (Score:5, Insightful)
Scientists find what they have been predicting for decades.
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It hasn't been a scientific problem for decades, it's been a political one.
In the case of the UK the main obstacle to tackling climate change is the Tory government. Unless something make them or their donors money, they aren't going to do it.
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Unless something make them or their donors money, they aren't going to do it.
Where's the contradiction between making money and lowering CO2 emissions? If lowering CO2 emissions costs money then we can't sustain lowering CO2 emissions for long, at some point we'd all run out of money. So, find a way to make money while lowering CO2 emissions and there's no reason anyone would oppose efforts to lower CO2 emissions.
This doesn't sound like a political problem to me, it sounds like an economic problem. People can't keep paying higher and higher energy costs to get to lower CO2 emissi
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Funny thing, there's always taxpayer money for bailouts and handouts to multi-billion dollar internantional companies. There's always money to give to the 1%.
Perhaps, instead of wasting money on these freeloaders, that money could be directed toward something useful such as reducing CO2 emissions.
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Funny thing, there's always taxpayer money for bailouts and handouts to multi-billion dollar internantional companies. There's always money to give to the 1%.
Perhaps, instead of wasting money on these freeloaders, that money could be directed toward something useful such as reducing CO2 emissions.
The politicians have a tendency to act on lowering CO2 emissions by giving money to the multi-billion dollar international corporations. We just saw US Congress debate a bill that would subsidize cars made by Tesla, Ford, Honda, GM, and so many other large international companies. This bill also includes money for oil and gas companies to drill in Alaska, and money for oil and gas pipelines to be built. But Congress likes to talk about the first part, where we bailout the 1% with government money to make
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No mod points, so I thought I'd add some thoughts here.
The good news for this situation is that the low CO2 options (renewables) are cheaper, even with storage factored in, and not costing in traditional generators carbon pollution. Even before the current spike in the price of hydrocarbons, renewables were crushing it on overnight cost alone. In the long run transitioning to renewables will improve our economies by making the cost of energy lower.
To show you what I mean, we can convert the sunlight that hi
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In a country with popular elections the only way to get lower CO2 emissions is with the free market. I'm being perhaps a bit liberal with the concept of a free market as I include the free market of ideas. Even if we don't put freedom of expression in the idea of a free market it is still the free market offering a "better" product that people are willing to buy. It's just that "better" has to include lower CO2 emissions with lower price, greater convenience, improved comfort, or whatever else sells a pr
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Hey, thanks for disagreeing without feeling the need to shout at me - that doesn't happen so much on /. these days.
I remember an energy ROI argument being touted about when everyone was concerned about peak oil, and the infamous 100 to 1 payoff (unit of energy in to get units of oil energy out). Always seems suspicious that it was such a round number, and certainly the price you pay for the energy (a litre of gasoline) doesn't seem to reflect that 100 to 1 story.
Seems current thinking is we are getting arou
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Have they really? I remember from the 80s-early 2000s climate forecasts strongly suggesting that Great Britain and Europe could become as cold as nothern Canada because global warming might shut down the Gulf Stream. Mabye I didn't read the right scientific perodicals or watch the correct science shows.
I'm sure every individual wacky climate event that has occured over the past ten years was predicted by some scientist decades ago. In retrospect, it's easy to find a prophet and his prophecy when hindsi
Re:Scientists find what they already knew. (Score:5, Insightful)
Or some scientists just keep telling the same thing to avoid losing face. Some other scientists are worrying about how much people will distrust science when all the lies the other so called scientists tell are uncovered.
This may shock you, but the fact that you get your 'science facts' at Trump rallies means that you full of shit.
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"Here I sit, at the peak of summer, in the desert of central Arizona, and it's only 87F outside at 8:30AM. Yesterday hit a high of only 96F. WTF?! Normally we'd be staying well above triple digits for this time of year (and in 1995, we hit a high of 121F)."
The Brits stole your heat.
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The Pacific NW stole your heat. It's the jet stream, moron.
Re:I love climate change! (Score:5, Informative)
Good illustration of the difference between climate and weather. Climate change makes the claim that the global average temperature will increase more rapidly in proportion to emitted carbon dioxide and methane. It does not claim that everywhere gets hotter or even at the same time. There's a lot more volatility in the weather than in the past, meaning more hurricanes, flooding this week in St. Louis despite rivers being low from drought. Lower than average temperatures in a desert is just another weather anomaly.
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I live nearby. This is exactly what happened. Just because the Mississippi is nearby doesn't mean that the city has the drainage capacity to handle 7+ inches of rain over the course of 6 hours. Especially since the ground was so parched it was not even particularly absorbent. Water just rolled down the dry hills without soaking in.
Re:I love climate change! (Score:4, Informative)
That's because people, often like you, confused climate with weather. So the messaging was adjusted to make clear the differences between climate and weather. Global average climate temps are going up, and it's documented.
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Well golly, if it is working for you, it must be working everywhere. Care to explain your good fortune to the relatives of the 16 dead in Kentucky's latest flash flood?
Maybe you could explain your good fortune to the midwestern farmers who are fighting armyworms (actually a caterpillar) which is the larva of a certain moth. Farmers used to be able to rely on winter killing off the moths. Not any longer. Gee, why is that? Have you asked God about this? What has he said? What has he said about squat the last
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More power to you!
I'm 50, have no kids and the place I am at will survive another 20ish years that it has to carry my ass. It's your kids that pay the price for that, I'm ok with that.
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You're one of the younger baby boomers I don't think you're getting out of this unsca
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Don't worry, I get out of this unscathed. I'm not in the US. Yeah, the US will crash and burn before that, so I get a show to my dinner before I croak, too.
You know, I used to care. I used to really give a fuck. I used to try to leave the world in a better state that I found it in. I just can't see anything in this humanity anymore that is worth saving. Quite seriously, the planet is better off without it, maybe the next species to achieve sentience is more intelligent.
You know we're an empire right? (Score:2)
Oh, and the German Rhine river is at such a low level that they've had to restrict shipping cargos on it (can't fill up the boat because it'll bottom out). And that's just one example. It's a global problem. So yeah, it's going to a
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It's more cynical resentment. I tried to "save" the world... 'til I realized that the world is fine, humanity is fucked.
Once I realized that, it was surprisingly easy to not give a fuck about it anymore. I mean, seriously, if people who do have kids and whose kids will have to live in a world that is fucked up, if even they can't be assed to give half a fuck, why should I continue to do so?
They do give a fuck (Score:2)
You're underestimating how much power the suits have, and how effective propaganda is. People care, but they're frightened and confused. Go look up YouTuber Beau Of The Fifth Column. He's got good videos on what to do. As the saying goes: Do as much as you can for as l
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I know how effective propaganda is. I had the questionable honor to play with it for a while.
It's rather frightening just how easily people are manipulated.
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Hey if they just defined 'run out of water' then at least it's a checkable hypothesis. That is way more articulate than these conversations usually devolve into.
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I can sacrifice everything and it won't make the tiniest bit of difference to anyone.
I'll do what I can but I'm not losing sleep over taking a few vacations while I'm still allowed to.
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Voting is the same deal. Individually it means nothing yet collectively it is everything, even though the collective is no more than the sum of the individuals.
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Voting means choosing the blue vase with the hole in the ground or the red vase with the hole in the ground. Of course you could order a differently colored vase but it won't ever be delivered.
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My goal is to be cremated and then surreptitiously placed in all the ashtrays in the US congress.
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I plan to be buried according to Ancient Egyptian rites. And if they don't let me build my pyramid after being embalmed for eternity (both not legal according to our laws here), I'll have them sued for religious discrimination.
Yes, I plan to be an asshole from beyond the grave.
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There's a German proverb, "Dumm fickt gut". I always have to remember that when wondering how the hell people like that propagate.
I leave the translation up to you.
*plugs ears* (Score:2)
Problem is the people you're trying to convince (Score:4, Informative)
What we really need to do is teach more critical thinking in schools so that folks stop falling for propaganda. But the folks spewing the propaganda know an educated population with critical thinking skills doesn't fall for it, so they branded it "woke" and went hard against it. Heck, in Texas a certain right wing political party that shall not be named put explicit opposition to critical thinking in it's party platform before they took it out because we're not quite that bad (yet)...
They though it was critical race. (Score:2, Funny)
Heck, in Texas a certain right wing political party that shall not be named put explicit opposition to critical thinking in it's party platform before they took it out because we're not quite that bad (yet)...
They though it was critical race. You can't expect these people to read all the words.
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Critical Race Theory is literally about critical thinking. Looking with fresh eyes at the world and trying to be objective rather than going along with centuries of tradition and history without question.
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Critical Race Theory is literally about critical thinking. Looking with fresh eyes at the world and trying to be objective rather than going along with centuries of tradition and history without question.
Well yes, to you, me and a lot of people it is.
But what are Republicans told to think it means?
Solving the problems caused by racism "is racist" to people like that.
The same way that fixing a flat tyre is "unfair" to all the tyres that aren't flat.
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It wasn't a definition. It was a comparison of the similar parts to critical thinking in general.
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A general case is a great way to get an overview of a specific case. One (critical theory) is a superset of the other.
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You disagree with me on that for some reason, but you're not making any case for it. Are you withholding some useful information here?
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And rest assured, the same assholes will then, when the shit hits their fan for a change, blame some "liberal" government for not warning them or doing anything about it.
The sooner they die of heat death, the better. Fortunately they're mostly sitting in those states that are hit the worst by the climate change, so... I can't say I have any sympathy.
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You might have noticed that people don't do things that restrict their comfort unless forced to do so.
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You can only control yourself. Stop worrying about me.
If some idiot like you keeps shitting in the pool. The rest of us will need to come together and work out a system to stop you. We call them rules, and when it gets big enough it's called a government.
Here we can just mod you down
We can't mod you down to make less CO2.
Governments can make you use less CO2.
If you didn't want to be modded down. Don't shit in the pool.
If you don't want the government telling you what to do. Don't be such a dick and it won't have to. But if it's clear there are too many pe
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What we really need to do is teach more critical thinking in schools so that folks stop falling for propaganda.
Public schools can't teach that because if they did then people would stop sending their kids to public schools to get their heads filled with propaganda.
In a modern history course while at university we were taught how before World War Two that the socialists in control of Germany at the time were filling the heads of children with propaganda. They'd get antisemitic lessons in history, and even math problems where they'd calculate how much it cost the government to feed and house the mentally ill. The pr
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If you want propaganda out of the schools then you need the government out of the schools. Public schools aren't going to teach critical thinking because if they did then these children will likely grow up into adults that don't like the idea of public schools. That university professor wanted to teach how public schools are good because he worked for a public university. It was in his interest to teach how public schools are good. He failed in this because to make public schools an unquestionable good means defending the actions of the government in Germany from the 1920s until the end of World War Two.
What nonsense.
If you teach kids critical thinking they can work out for themselves if public schools are good or not. They will understand the propaganda, whatever the source.
If they grow up and want religions propaganda schools for their kids instead of public critical thinking schools. Well the critical thinking didn't take. But at least they had the chance.
In your example (see bolded bit) he specifically wasn't teaching critical thinking but selfish propaganda. And would have done so in whatever system
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You did not explain how public schools are any better in teaching critical thinking than private schools. All you did was claim that private schools will teach a different kind of propaganda.
There is no guarantee that any school will teach critical thinking. There's a higher probability for this in private schools because a private school can only exist long term if they produce successful adults that can be convinced to send their children there generation after generation. Student lacking critical thin
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I guess you've never come across the term it's not what you know but who you know.
Private schools will do fine teaching exactly the same identical things as public schools. No need for them to teach better (It's nice if they do but not required). They provide advantages in other ways.
There is no guarantee that any school will teach critical thinking. There's a higher probability for this in private schools because a private school can only exist long term if they produce successful adults that can be convinced to send their children there generation after generation.
Already show above that's not necessarily true. Advertising, nostalgia and peer pressure can also sell a lot of things that have questionable or no benefits. You're assuming a lot without much evidence. Nothing about private sc
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There was going to be a heat wave anyway!
There would still have been a high pressure ridge and a south-west low, which would have brought hot air up from the Sahara.
Its a well known, infrequent, weather phenomenon, it has happened since forever and will continue to happen regardless if average global temps rise or fall by a couple of degrees. It causes most if not all of the UK summer heat waves.
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Critical thinking teaches you that weather is not climate and that you cannot prove that climate change affected any 2 week period, no matter how sciencey you make it sound. All of these climate change nonsense stories always are sure to mention the word scientists though. That way you know it is true. They are scientists! The climate change stories are coming thick and fast now because the Democrats are pushing for yet another trillion dollar spending plan. Critical thinking tells us this is predictable.
Fuck off you stupid cunt.
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Dont call him a cunt, cunts are useful, sockpuppet boy is a useless piece of shit far right liar.
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Fuck off you stupid cunt.
That's why I love Slashdot. Articulate, logical, courteous argument based on facts and figures.
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If climate change was real Obama would not have TWO vacation beach houses on TWO different islands.
Climate change is a bit unpredictable and won't be the same everywhere. He's rich enough, he should do 3 islands to increase his chances of picking a good one.
And you know if climate change destroys those he'll just just buy 2 more anyway right?
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There you go. I have offended the priesthood
No, you just talked shite. Now fuck off.
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You're easily the dumbest motherfucker on slash.
There's also "the polymath" [slashdot.org]
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Ok, so present your masterplan. What should we do? Up the setting on the AC, then burn more coal in power plants so we can cool our melting homes down? What's the great solution to the increasing heat?
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Me? Nah, I just want to live another 20-30 years on the planet and then it can blow up as far as I'm concerned. I have no kids and I'll be dead in 30 years.
And somehow that planet will last another 30 years. If everything fails I just need a better AC.
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May be true, may not be true (Score:2, Interesting)
"Extremely unlikely" events occur all the time.
If there were no agw, there would have still been a heat wave. Perhaps a few tenths of a degree cooler, perhaps a day or so shorter, but it would have still happened and it would have still been bad.
What I find absolutely astounding is the degree to which scientists who get quoted in the media are much more trigger-happy than they were 15 or 20 years ago to go along with the narrative that whenever bad weather happens, it is perfectly reasonable to not only bla
To criticize the politics don't attack the science (Score:5, Insightful)
"Extremely unlikely" events occur all the time.
If an extremely unlikely event occurs once, it's chance. When extremely unlikely events occur routinely, then they are part of a pattern.
What I find absolutely astounding is the degree to which scientists who get quoted in the media are much more trigger-happy than they were 15 or 20 years ago
They know a lot more than they did 15 or 20 years ago. They have 15 or 20 more years of measurements. And, we've had 15 or twenty years more greenhouse-effect induced warming.
to go along with the narrative that whenever bad weather happens, it is perfectly reasonable to not only blame it on agw,
Occasional extreme events here or there are random. Routine extreme events at multiple locations around the globe are a pattern.
Is that actually hard to understand?
but to also imply that passing $climate_change_law will ameliorate or outright prevent the next one.
A non-sequitur and a change of subject. What we choose to do about climate change has no bearing whatsoever on the question of whether climate change is causing extreme weather events. The argument "I disagree about the proposed solutions so I'll attack the science," is actually saying "I don't know or care anything about the science."
Back in the day, people were much more careful in issuing prognostications and prescriptions about chaotic systems whose behavior could rightly be analyzed in stochastic terms.
"Back in the day" people knew less than they knew now, the models were less well verified, and the global warming was less.
But I guess that caution is out the window and it's okay to put the scientific stamp of approval on (objectively absurd) statements like there won't be anymore blizzards or hurricanes or wildfires or heatwaves if we all start driving teslas and put solar panels on our roofs tomorrow.
NOBODY SAID ANY OF THESE THINGS.
Read the damn article [nytimes.com] we're discussing.
Re: To criticize the politics don't attack the sci (Score:1)
Oh bullshit. I turn on npr or open up nyt and that's all they're saying.
They're being somewhat cagey about it in that what they're literally doing is prefacing stories about "climate change" legislation with factoids about heatwaves and prefacing stories about heatwaves with factoids about the paris agreement, but the implication is being made that if you vote for their guys the heatwaves will disappear.
Don't piss on my leg and tell me it's raining
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Oh bullshit. I turn on npr or open up nyt and that's all they're saying. They're being somewhat cagey about it
Wait a second... what does that mean, "they're being somewhat cagey about it"?? Are they saying it, or not saying it?
What you just told me is "well, that's not what they actually said, but I can use my right-wing nut job power to interpret what they said and decode it to say something else entirely.
No. Here's the article we're discussing. [nytimes.com] Show me where it says, hints, or implies "if you vote for their guys the heatwaves will disappear."
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You can't be a right wing nut job without completely making up grievances so cut parent some slack!
It doesn't matter that the legislation just takes the foot off the accelerator, in their mind it has to bring the whole thing to a stop or you might as well keep accelerating towards the cliff.
Re:May be true, may not be true (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, yes, strange how 15 to 20 years of correct predictions makes people more confident in their predictions.
Must seem weird to someone like you, who always has 100% confidence in any bullshit you spew out. No matter how many times it's proven to be wrong.
Blame China and its new coal plants (Score:2)
China speeding up approvals for new coal plants: Greenpeace [phys.org]
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Re: Blame China and its new coal plants (Score:2)
Here's an English language version of the same thing. https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/china-solar-installations-more-than-double-first-half-assn-2022-07-21/ [reuters.com]
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other sources give other numbers, wikipedia isn't exactly golden standard
https://www.wilsoncenter.org/b... [wilsoncenter.org]
China talk is one thing, the walk another
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going up since then, that 57 percent actually a mid 2019 number.
https://e360.yale.edu/features... [yale.edu]
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So kind... (Score:2)
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The centigrade scale is just as arbitrary as the Fahrenheit scale, and there are good arguments why Fahrenheit is better.
What really deserves criticism is the ".5" in "104.5". That is the stupidity of converting a rounded Centigrade number like 40C, into a meaninglessly precise Fahrenheit number. Right in that category is the standard conversion of 37C to 98.6F. .6? Idiocy. Centigrade degrees are big.
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Both are not arbitrary.
Centigrade is based on: freezing point of water = 0C, boiling point of water is 100C
Fahrenheit is based on: 0F is the lowest temperature you can fabricate in a water-ice-salt solution, and 100F is "normal" human body temperature.
Fahrenheit is completely meaningless for an ordinary human, and celsius makes sense, unless you are an idiot.
On the other hand: you are accustomed to the "numbers" you grow up with. Hence American idiots think Fahrenheit is a superior measurement - while they
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It's quite easy for someone used to the Fahrenheit scale to convert 0-100 degrees Celsius to the Fahrenheit scale: it's simply the percentage between the water freezing point and boiling point range for Fahrenheit. Also, -40 degrees is the same in both Fahrenheit and Celsius.
Scientists (Score:2)
Some scientists, anyway.
Newspapers by Yoda written, scientists find (Score:2)
I understand that kind of mangled English had some value, back when headlines were written on printed paper. It is far past time to abandon it as an obsolete grotesquery.
UK Heat Waves (Score:2)
They happen, always have, and the phenomenon itself has nothing to do with global warming, its a common and well known weather phenomenon.
What happens is a blocking high develops (in this case a high pressure ridge), and at the same time there is a strong south west low.
This low brings hot air up from the Sahara. How hot it gets depends on how warm the UK was immediately before the phenomenon developed, how hot it is in the Sahara at the time, how strong the low is, and how long the high and the low remain
Incidentally, Net Zero (Score:2)
Incidentally you will find the usual suspects in the UK claiming that the heat wave shows there is an ongoing climate emergency and that the thing the UK must immediately do is get to Net Zero.
A bit like Tuvalu saying there is a climate emergency, its causing sea level rises, so Tuvalu must immediately ban fossil fuel use and eliminate its emissions to save itself from going under water.
Could they have found anything else? (Score:2)
Seriously. The _only_ finding can be one the emphasizes that climate change is a) real and b) making life worse.
Anything else, including 'no appreciable effect', would have been dismissed summarily. That's just the way it is.
when is it weather, then? (Score:2)
I thought 'short term' events were weather, not climate?
At least, that's what I'm told every time it's colder than usual.
I think it's amusing that UK's meteorologists complained about the social media abuse they have been taking, and 'somehow noticed' it always happened to coincide with when they linked the weather to climate change.(https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-62323048)
Yes, you're a weatherman, report the weather. The moment you start linking it to climate change, you're not reporting the weather anymore,
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I see that climate science deniers have had to change their tactics. Since people now just laugh when they claim "it's all a fraud!", they now just babble nonsense.
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And I don't deny the climate changes. There were human societies during the last ice age, and we are still here better than ever.
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Weather is not climate.
Changes of weather is, however, an effect of changes of climate.
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Any troll who doesn't go along with the reality is ridiculed and his trolling days are basically over.
This should tell you a lot.
Even the regular people have woken up to your idiocy
Re:Climate change! (Score:5, Insightful)
I see that climate science deniers have had to change their tactics. Since people now just laugh when they claim "it's all a fraud!", they now just babble nonsense.
Any climate scientist who doesn't go along with the program is ridiculed and his career is basically over.
Any scientist who could find and document a major flaw in the current models of climate would be the most famous atmospheric scientist of their generation.
Scientists don't become famous by "going along with the program". Scientists become famous by finding and rigorously documenting something that nobody else has found.
But the problem is... that flaw in the current understanding can't be just made-up nonsense; it has to fit the data.
And we have a lot of data.
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Any scientist who could find and document a major flaw in the current models of climate would be the most famous atmospheric scientist of their generation.
There are literally hundreds of climate models. Some of them are right some of the time, as would be expected with the shotgun approach. I would not bet money on any of them though.
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Science is not done by consensus, it is done by investigation. You had a good start with your argument and then you fell into the trap of science by consensus.
When Albert Einstein was asked on why he held so many beliefs that contradicted the consensus he pointed out it doesn't take a thousand scientists with opinions to prove he's wrong, just one scientist with data.
Einstein was believed to be a "crackpot" for much of his life. Many of his theories were not proven correct until many years after he died.
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A lot of assertions without a single link to support them.
There is no IPCC report that will be "published next week", by the way. The IPCC reports can be found on the IPCC website: https://www.ipcc.ch/ [www.ipcc.ch]
Plonk.
Old news [Re: When they had to...] (Score:2)
Your "old news" cites the IPCC report as the source. Why don't you just read the IPCC report? I cited it, but in case you missed it: https://www.ipcc.ch/ [www.ipcc.ch]