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extreme weather

Discussion in 'Environmental Discussion' started by austingreen, Jul 11, 2012.

  1. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    The topic is extreme weather and ghg based climate change.

    If you don't like the topic that's fine. But I would take that "Perception of Climate Change" paper with the grain of skepticism the title alone should warn you to have.

    Is it proper that you call the NOAA climate scientist that uses real science to try to do attribution studies, a denialist because he does not believe the wildest of the unscientific claims. I guess if we were in Galileo's time you would have called him a heretic since he did not believe everything the church told him about science.
     
  2. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    The Hansen et al in PNAS

    doi/10.1073/pnas.1205276109

    Is under discussion here. The authors provide their own justification for starting in 1951. I don't defend or dispute it.

    But as the available global data set is much longer, and I'd rather see this type of 'data distibution' technique appled to that. I would have been more compelled by a justification for an 1850 start date, along the lines of 'spatial coverage of thermometers was quite poor before then'.

    The instrumental records are surely available (except Poland and some Carib. island I'm forgetting). Computers are cheap. R statistics is free. So the thing I'd rather discuss seems entirely doable. Perhaps it will get done.

    The Rowe and Derry (I mentioned before) started in 1931, so it covers AustinG's objection, but it is only US48 states.

    To perform attribution in an (even somewhat) satisfying way, these longer looks also seem essential. Only then can one detect the regional signals of ENSO, PDO, AMO in some index period. Then compare it to your recent decades, and see what's 'left over'.

    I think Muller's attribution, as far as volcanic cooling was OK. I know that not all share that opinion. But to find the natural temperature signals of ENSO, etc. one must divide land into regions and work at a subdecadal scale. Again I don't see why could not be done.

    If anyone has a better way to do attribution, please describe.
     
  3. wxman

    wxman Active Member

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    As a former NOAA (NWS) employee, I'm glad that Mr. Karl stopped short of linking extreme severe weather events (e.g., tornado outbreaks, derechos, severe MCSs) with AGW. As was discussed here last year, these events are not a "symptom" of AGW in my opinion, at least not with the polar amplification premise that IPCC concludes.
     
  4. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    My main problem with the paper is the same as Hoerling. It is labeling things as extreme, but ignoring the precipitation that makes them extreme. This removes things like ENSO and AO from attribution for the heat, which seems extremely poor modeling. I guess the authors want to black box things, so that we perceive only part of the data. If you do an experment that doesn't test the hypothesis, you really can not claim you proved it.

    Once we get rid of that idea in the paper, there really is not much there. We have the old stuff, that statistically we are warming, so if we do not have a proper trend line the statistics will be skewed in the direction of error. This is the old standby in a warming world there will be more high records than low records. That is widely accepted, statistically correct. The short time period will over state the effect, if you are trying to alter perception, I guess you use the statistics that will make your point look better. As I said I can pick other periods before industrialization and show exactly the same effect, when I choose equally short time periods.


    For the Hansen paper, it really doesn't matter about coverage, all you need is local temperatures. If you are trying to look at real statistics for global temperature skew and changes of variances 1850 seems appropriate. There will be measurement errors at that early date, but these errors should be smaller than errors from a smaller sample set. There was wide coverage of thermometers by then.

    For the NOAA attribution studies you do need the ocean oscilations. My only objection to the NOAA attribution study is a longer time period might change the statistics to be more accurate. They did these quite quickly. I hope someone picks up on it and extends the period back.


    We are at that level of beginning to model the ocean oscillations and regional climate. There will always be disputes on if it is the appropriate model, but that is where we need to begin. These models need to include things like volcanic eruptions to handle real variation.
     
  5. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    I think the volcanic aerosols are better modeled than any other aerosols. ;) A defined source, a chemical signature that the satellites (like TOMS but now there are newer ones) can handle, and the washout is slow or fast depending on stratospheric injection.

    All other aerosols are more difficult but there has been recent progress. Example Penner et al in Geophysical Research Letters
    doi:10.1029/2012GL051870

    Decadal T averages make sense (to me) for long term trends, because you are trying to get the ENSO. PDO AMO (and any other O's) to average out. That would be a bad plan if the O's were getting stronger or weaker, but there isn't evidence for that. The O's themselves are not strictly decadal, so other intervals or 'calming statistics' should be considered.

    AustinG suggests treating precip and T extremes together, not separately. This seems reasonable to me but I'm not sure how to do it.

    For attribution, I think it is necessary to use regions and short time windows. Necessary to know 'where you are' in terms of forcing by the O's. Helpful to include aerosols and solar cycle. The former must be much larger than the latter, but if they are not explicitly included, somebody is going to squawk.

    All that was done in IPCC AR4 and refs cited, but on the global scale. Needs to be regional or subregional. Clearly there are computational and data limitations on 'downscaling' climate models but that seems to be a very active area now. Surely they can come up with something.

    In this sense I am exactly like climate sceptics (or substitute a term you prefer). I poke holes in current attribution studies, but make no personal effort to improve them. Me bad.

    ++
    Spaghetti diagrams probably deserve the criticisms received but I hope you'll take a look at this one
    http://www1.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/cmb/images/us/2012/jul/YTD_allyears_Jul2012.png

    US desparately needs a cool down to 1934 levels.
     
  6. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    Back to US ongoing drought and suppressed corn crop.

    UNFAO asks US to not follow the rule that 40% must be converted to ethanol

    BBC News - US biofuel production should be suspended, UN says

    There are other ag export countries now looking at shortfalls - you can find them. For me it is down to recognizing that if extremes (from whatever cause) are interefering with what people need, more agility may be required at the govt-policy level.

    In a complacent world where each year resembles the previous, we might not need better science and responsive governments. Earth is not that world. Maybe it never has been.
     
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  7. icarus

    icarus Senior Member

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    Don't burn food to fuel vehicles!

    Icarus
     
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  8. dbcassidy

    dbcassidy Toyota Hybrid Nation, 8 Million Strong

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    I agree, grain could be used to support the food supply, or at least, used for livestock feed. Unfortunately, the strong ethanol lobbyist in Washington are intent to keeping the status quo. It will be interesting to see how the above turns out.

    DBCassidy
     
  9. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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  10. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    I posted that just before Hansen's publicity. Now, Mass is getting even more annoyed with Hansen and the mass media:
    Read the rest at: Climate Distortion
     
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  11. roflwaffle

    roflwaffle Member

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    This is accurate, however, the limited time frame to observe changes needs to be taken into account. As of right now it seems that climate change is mostly driving changes in precipitation, eg a 100-year drought/flood every 20-years or whatever the specifics are, but that could change with more data and time, especially since many of the studies looking at GHG induced weather event changes are years old.
     
  12. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    although our weather is not making the news, it is still near several records. we had our "100 year" heatwave in 2009 which realistically took our highs into the same level as most of the country when before our records were pretty mundane.

    things like 3 consecutive days of 90º or more, high temp of 100, etc. all those were smashed in 2009 making any record attempts unlikely but for the first 16 days of August we have had 4 days at or below normal, 12 days over including 8 days that were more than 10º above normal. this realistically marks the beginning of Summer for us since there were only a few days in July that got more than 2º higher than the expected

    but with all that, we were the only area of the country to not see record summer temps. but i guess, summer aint over yet
     
  13. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    lol. A record high on a day or two is not extreme weather. It just is statistics.

    When the drought is bad enough, that there are water restrictions for more than one year, things start getting extreme.
     
  14. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    FYI, the weather has been extremely nice in Huntsville the past week. Temperatures in the low 90s with low humidity and passing rain showers. Yeap, extremely nice ... for Alabama in mid-August.

    Bob Wilson
     
  15. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    that is right; it is just a statistic. but the real question is how much statistics do we need to make a larger judgment?
    a 6 to 1 ratio of record highs verses record lows (2 years ago the ratio was only 4 to 1) do we need it to be 10 to 1? 20 to 1?

    the problem with weather and climate on such a far reaching scale like the massiveness of the continental US is there is still singular events that can cause HUGE changes like El ninos and so on. so now we look at these and how they occur and we find that it reads like Genesis in the Bible. one begats the other

    we look at El ninos that come around on average once every 5 years and last 5-8 months but all of a sudden, they are coming around every 3 years and lasting for two years... can we still continue to call it el nino?

    its like doubling the size of a Focus and continuing to call it a compact.
     
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  16. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    no ratio of highs to lows is going to say anything about extremes. When global warming is x, and local extreme is 3sigma +x, either sigma is wrong, or something not just climate change is happening. In washington state, your sigma and base temperature just isn't going to go extreme.

    And here is the theory of the texas heat wave, the la nina that is unrelated to global warming caused a drought, as it often does. The drought leads to higher temperatures, but evaporation from farming + heat, causes even less water. Its the extra evaporation that is likely related to climate change. We had extremes in the 30s and 50s in my part of texas.

    So far they have not related ENSO to climate change, but have related it to solar cycles. I hope that better models will help predict the droughts. If the farmers don't plant, and don't irrigate on bad years like 2011, there is more water left in the aquifers, rivers, and lakes. The lakes here are still very low from last years drought, even with normal rains. That makes another drought year more likely if we get la nina conditions.
     
  17. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    I saw an article about the current drought suggesting the current corn strains are more tolerant of drought. About the same time there was a story about raising sorgum as a second 'insurance' crop. Perhaps not as profitable as corn, having a sorgum crop if the corn fails is a sensible alternative.

    Bob Wilson
     
  18. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    From sites like

    Genetic Families Key

    One gets the impression that there are corn varieties very good at a, b, c, d, e, f, or g, etc. But you don't get to choose them all at once. Similar to your engineering three-way, but with more ways.

    AustinG, months before planting, I am going to consult a climate-prediction model and from that, chose a crop, variety, or even to go fallow. Is this the future you forsee? There may be no fundamental reason why models cannot do that, but it does not describe current batch.

    Also it may not be enough for the farmer to be convinced. A banker holds the land mortage, maybe a different one is going to loan for this year's action. If both of them get their science smarts from 'Watt's up with that'? Man o man.
     
  19. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Yes, I hope prediction gets better. Maybe there is a web service where you enter your address, and it gives you crop yield predictions for different items for the next season. The climate also may dictate pests. Somehow last years drought, and this years rains made us susceptible to birds and mosquitos carrying west Nile virus. Luckily I live near the bats that eat the mosquito, but its one thing after anouther.

    Unfortunately the government is deeply involved with this one. Farmers have their water rights, but populations of non-farmers has grown a great deal in Texas. The feds pay disaster relief, but can we accurately predict when it will be a major crop disaster like last year.. Will the federal government pay farmers if they don't plant? I think the state would kick in money to save the water, saving the federal government money. My little part of the world is controled by the state agency LCRA. If farmers didn't need the water, more could be kept here. Last year we needed to truck water to areas whose creaks ran dry. Not to mention the low lakes mean less recreation dollars. Lots of folks would pay to keep the water. In the 50s we had 10 years of drought.
     
  20. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    Mario Molina (most famous for ozone-hole chemistry) gave the keynote at American Chemical Society meeting. I suppose he could have talked about several things, but he talked about extreme events

    Nobel prize-winning scientist cites evidence of link between extreme weather, global warming

    It may be possible to find more about that online, and see if he is referring to the recent Mann and Meehl papers, or something else.

    ...

    I don't find anything at the ACS website beyond the presentation title "Chemistry and Climate"

    BTW this is not to be confused with the American Chemistry Council.