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Hehe. This suits me too well to not annoy people with.

On the credibility of climate predictions / De la credibilite des previsions climatiques

Geographically distributed predictions of future climate, obtained through climate models, are widely used in hydrology and many other disciplines, typically without assessing their reliability. Here we compare the output of various models to temperature and precipitation observations from eight stations with long (over 100 years) records from around the globe. The results show that models perform poorly, even at a climatic (30-year) scale. Thus local model projections cannot be credible, whereas a common argument that models can perform better at larger spatial scales is unsupported.

Bold mine. Hattip: Climate Audit

by Nomad on Wed Jul 30th, 2008 at 05:03:06 AM EST
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Make a diary. Draw conclusions. Then you can really annoy them.
by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Wed Jul 30th, 2008 at 05:04:37 AM EST
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Done.
by Nomad on Wed Jul 30th, 2008 at 06:44:57 AM EST
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No, actually, there is a recent NYT article on the public debate over climate science that is (gasp!) good.

News Analysis - Climate Experts Tussle Over Details. Public Gets Whiplash. - News Analysis - NYTimes.com
By ANDREW C. REVKIN

When science is testing new ideas, the result is often a two-papers-forward-one-paper-back intellectual tussle among competing research teams.

When the work touches on issues that worry the public, affect the economy or polarize politics, the news media and advocates of all stripes dive in. Under nonstop scrutiny, conflicting findings can make news coverage veer from one extreme to another, resulting in a kind of journalistic whiplash for the public.

This has been true for decades in health coverage. But lately the phenomenon has been glaringly apparent on the global warming beat.

Discordant findings have come in quick succession. How fast is Greenland shedding ice? Did human-caused warming wipe out frogs in the American tropics? Has warming strengthened hurricanes? Have the oceans stopped warming? These questions endure even as the basic theory of a rising human influence on climate has steadily solidified: accumulating greenhouse gases will warm the world, erode ice sheets, raise seas and have big impacts on biology and human affairs.

by nanne (zwaerdenmaecker@gmail.com) on Wed Jul 30th, 2008 at 06:00:20 AM EST
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