Sign up to Singletrack Premier

Singletrack Mountain Bike Magazine

  • Home
  • News
  • MagArchive
  • Forums
  • Reviews
  • Trail Guide
  • Blogs
  • Shop
  • Subscribe
  • Advanced Search
  • Overview
  • Bike Forum
  • Chat Forum
  • For Sale
  • Wanted
  • Forum Help
  • Classified Rules

Chat Forum

Global warming again...........

  • 230 posts & 31 voices | Started 7 months ago by kimbers | Latest reply from molgrips

Tags:

  • bitches
  • Church of IPCC
  • Come back when you have some evidence
  • Greenwashing
  • if clarckson says so it must be true
  • IPCC report written by trainee
  • Its all just a con
  • LeftyCackWorld
  • No proof
  • Religions Freaks
Pages: 12…7Next »
  1. kimbers - Member

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15373071

    foolish to cancel that carbon capture project?

    I know the usual haters (dacre and the daily mail, the torygraph, all those necon oil funded 'charities' eg atalantic bridge) will ignore/ denounce it
    but surely the evidence is enough now

    Posted 7 months ago #
  2. GrahamS - Member

    To be fair, this just confirms that climate change is happening, it doesn't make any statement about what proportion of it is man-made versus natural.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  3. LHS - Member

    To be fair, this just confirms that climate change is happening, it doesn't make any statement about what proportion of it is man-made versus natural.

    Spot on, i don't think anyone disagrees that it is happening, the question is what proportion is man-made and can the planet cope?

    Posted 7 months ago #
  4. GrahamS - Member

    Sadly, following the Climategate nonsense, the hardcore sceptics were denying that any climate change was happening at all, saying that the studies were all flawed due to badly placed weather stations and that all global warming stopped ten years ago.

    This study aimed to address some of that misdirection and regain some confidence after Climategate.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  5. Kit - Member

    So this gives the all-clear for proliferation of nuclear energy, yes?

    Posted 7 months ago #
  6. ransos - Member

    I don't think this study matters very much. There is nothing you can say to the deniers that will change their minds. That's why their deniers and not sceptics.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  7. don simon - Member

    Again?

    Posted 7 months ago #
  8. TurnerGuy - Member

    can the planet cope

    of course the planet can cope - it has been through much wider swings than this before.

    the question is how will it affect humans and how many will die as a result of the changing geomorphological landscapes and weather events that climate change will bring

    Posted 7 months ago #
  9. ooOOoo - Member

    There is nothing you can say to the deniers that will change their minds. That's why their deniers and not sceptics.

    Good point and so many of them can't even imagine that the way we live since the industrial revolution is anything other than the natural state of affairs.

    The planet will survive, and humans are the last species that needs to worry about being wiped out. It's every other poor bloody species that will have to deal with our unplanned side effects.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  10. LHS - Member

    The question that no one can answer is that if humans weren't here, would the planet be going through a natural cycle anyway? Based on the data we should, within the next few thousand years see a global reduction in temperatures in line with the natural cycles of the planet. The big question is, will this happen, or will mans impact upset this?

    Posted 7 months ago #
  11. bikebouy - Member

    Nope, just yet one more "truthful" report stating the same scaremongering tosh that's been dealt out and debunked year after year, after year.. ad nausium..

    "dozes off"

    Posted 7 months ago #
  12. Zulu-Eleven - Member

    The Berkeley team has chosen to release the findings initially on its own website.

    They are asking for comments and feedback before preparing the manuscripts for formal scientific publication.

    So, a non peer reviewed study, using essentially the same dataset, comes out with a result that supports the consensus... can you imagine how much credence it would be given if the result was otherwise?

    Just saying like

    Posted 7 months ago #
  13. kimbers - Member

    z11 youre taking the typical climate denier stance

    in an effort to please a main grumble of theirs theyve opened their data up to review before publication
    now they are getting flak for not having put it through the hated peer review process

    and yes i think it would have been reported in the bbc if theyd found a -ve change (unlike the torygraph which seems to have ignored the story)

    Posted 7 months ago #
  14. retro83 - Member

    Zulu-Eleven - Member
    So, a non peer reviewed study, using essentially the same dataset, comes out with a result that supports the consensus... can you imagine how much credence it would be given if the result was otherwise?

    Just saying like

    From what I gather it was rather carefully picked selection of data.

    Here's a graph showing data from a different selection of trees which as I understand it are from broadly the same area:

    Posted 7 months ago #
  15. GrahamS - Member

    Yep they specifically kept this report as open as possible to avoid the Climategate criticisms and now the sceptics are flaming them for that too.

    And they specifically tried to tackle the other main criticisms that the sceptics have made.

    That's not bias or "ad nausium"... that's science. Do work, have it criticised, do more work.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  16. epicyclo - Member

    ransos - Member
    I don't think this study matters very much. There is nothing you can say to the deniers that will change their minds. That's why their deniers and not sceptics.

    Yup, when you feed people enough lies they stop believing anything you say, and deny the truth of it.

    A lot of sceptics have been turned into deniers thanks to the climategate scandals.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  17. Lifer - Member

    Deniers share an opinion with James Delingpole.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  18. teamhurtmore - Member

    What is the big deal here? I have only read the BBC link but there really seems to be only one "new" point. Berkeley are presenting the same point but with an argument that rejects the link between urban heat and overall temperatures. Interesting but hardly devasting news, or am I missing something?

    I don't think this study matters very much. There is nothing you can say to the deniers that will change their minds. That's why their deniers and not sceptics.

    Ransos - agree with you first point but aren't the second and third sentences merely truisms?

    Posted 7 months ago #
  19. GrahamS - Member

    Yup, when you feed people enough lies they stop believing anything you say, and deny the truth of it.

    Yup. Interesting that this work was actually partly funded by deniers:

    "Funding came from a number of sources, including charitable foundations maintained by the Koch brothers, the billionaire US industrialists, who have also donated large sums to organisations lobbying against acceptance of man-made global warming."

    But now the deniers here want to dismiss it because it didn't produce the results they want.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  20. teamhurtmore - Member

    But it was all right, everything was all right, the struggle was finished. He had won the victory over himself. He loved Big Brother.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  21. The Flying Ox - Member

    This chart from TFA...

    ...stops sometime around 2004.

    Using the same method, I predict a golden age for the stockmarket and pension holders. One that will never end!

    Posted 7 months ago #
  22. Zulu-Eleven - Member

    z11 youre taking the typical climate denier stance

    You see - there you go, I point out a simple, unbiased, categorical fact, that its not a peer reviewed paper - which is a perfectly reasonable thing to point out, and suddenly I'm a "denier"

    and you wonder why people are unwilling to debate reasonably.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  23. Junkyard - Member

    I don't think this study matters very much. There is nothing you can say to the deniers that will change their minds. That's why their deniers and not sceptics

    This , it is like trying to use facts to defeat a conspiracy theorist..it is futile.

    They rarely understand science never mind the actual discipline.
    I like the way they massively cheery pick data whilst saying that is what the government funded cabal do in order to just tax us etc

    Z-11 you are on very shaky ground if you want to complain about debating reasonably. You accept many of your posts are just scribbling across the forum - did i get your phrase right?
    You just want a reaction you dont actually care about debate

    Posted 7 months ago #
  24. crankboy - Member

    "This , it is like trying to use facts to defeat a conspiracy theorist..it is futile"
    should read
    This , it is trying to use facts to defeat a conspiracy theorist..it is futile but funny

    Posted 7 months ago #
  25. GrahamS - Member

    Using the same method, I predict a golden age for the stockmarket and pension holders. One that will never end!

    You don't seem to have included 200 years worth of data there - so exactly the same method eh?

    Posted 7 months ago #
  26. Junkyard - Member

    aye you are right I like to just ask them how C02 works as a green house gas - most dont get that far as they fail to answer the starter for 10 of can you tell me the difference between weather and climate

    I like the its all natural we have had this before to which they seem to think that burning fossil fuels is somehow natural...it is funny but it often just mocking the stupid.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  27. The Flying Ox - Member

    You don't seem to have included 200 years worth of data there - so exactly the same method eh?

    Yes, but Google's FTSE data only goes back as far as about 1980, and the stuff between then and 2002 doesn't really tie in with the point I'm tying to make.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  28. GrahamS - Member

    stuff between then and 2002 doesn't really tie in with the point I'm tying to make.

    I like the its all natural we have had this before to which they seem to think that burning fossil fuels is somehow natural...it is funny but it often just mocking the stupid.

    Funny thing is that many sceptics I've talked to are quite happy with "natural cycles" and will readily agree that the earth's climate can be influenced by "natural" things like volcanoes.

    But for some reason they can't see the link when I point out that ALL the volcanoes in world, on land and in sea, produce around 200 million tonnes of CO2 a year. Which is a lot, but it's less than 1% of man-made CO2 emissions (26.8 billion tonnes a year).

    Posted 7 months ago #
  29. Junkyard - Member

    Yes good point but graham man made c02 is only a tiny fraction of al the C02 ther eis so we cant be making much difference
    I also like the way they tell us about the natural cycles - as if this knowledge does not come from the same government funded cabal of scientist who are lying to us.
    A little knowledge is a dangerous thing

    Posted 7 months ago #
  30. ooOOoo - Member

    The onus must surely now be on the deniers to prove that burning fossil fuels has no effect on climate.

    I'd like to think Brunel, Watt and Edison did this years ago before we started to fuel their developments by burning anything we could get our hands on, but I have this nagging feeling that they didn't.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  31. LHS - Member

    Now whilst I keep my eyes well and truelly open on this matter and don't lean towards any side, the whole shouting of denier thing is rather immature way of debating, its the whole calling someone a Daily Mail reader approach to constructive debate, to essentially try and make them come of as a lesser person.

    There is still just one fundamental thing for me that still requires attention:

    I have never seen any evidence that the current additional output of CO2 from man is going to have a drastic affect on climate change above that of a natural cycle.

    I have seen plenty of graphs and data manipulated by both sides trying to prove it one way or the other, but no one actually can prove anything.

    I for one am a strong advocate of reducing our dependence and use on fossil fuels, it goes without saying, but the worlds political believes, taxation and energy policies are being based currently, on nothing but an unproven theory.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  32. Kit - Member

    but the worlds political believes, taxation and energy policies are being based currently, on nothing but an unproven theory.

    Bit like religion then. Which doesn't influence any country's policies...

    Posted 7 months ago #
  33. teamhurtmore - Member

    The onus must surely now be on the deniers to prove that burning fossil fuels has no effect on climate.

    I think the onus is actually on science to have a true debate on the issue. I think terms like deniers are far too emotive and tend to be used to quash debate rather than further it. There are so many levels to the debate that it becomes almost too difficult to follow. Plus this is another area where the impact of lobbyists clouds the debate on both sides.

    Personally, I think that the sceptics are in the best position. The history of climate change is riddled with contradictory views (remember the 1970s and climate cooling or the greenhouse gas versus aersol (?) debate - one caused warming, the other cooling if I recall correctly.) and mis-information.

    I think there is a lot more work that is required on both sides before we can genuinely reach a conclusion on the magnitude of man-made activities on climate change. And that does not make me a denier BTW!!

    Posted 7 months ago #
  34. GrahamS - Member

    I have never seen any evidence that the current additional output of CO2 from man is going to have a drastic affect on climate change above that of a natural cycle.

    Two points: firstly, should we wait another couple of decades till we can be absolutely sure that it is definitely us altering the climate?

    Secondly, currently we see changes in global temperature, with a "steep" rise that doesn't fit the normal cycles we know about. And over the same period mankind has gone from the pre-industrial age with hardly any emissions, to a post-industrial age with a couple of billions of tonnes of CO2 being pumped out every month.

    That's not evidence and could well be coincidental, but I agree that it should really be up to the sceptics to show that there is no link, because on first glance it looks pretty damning.

    Posted 7 months ago #
  35. Zulu-Eleven - Member

    Junky - I've been more than consistent on this one whenever we've debated the issue, and I approach this from a fairly scientific background.

    I think that:

    i) the data set is garbage, and in any other field of science would be binned.

    ii) Man has, since time immemorial, looked for patterns in chaos.

    The latter has been evident throughout pretty much all forms of human society in the way that they have looked to analyse and and then sought to blame, predict and control the sources of nature, or used the threat of impending doom to impose fear and control on society - be that the treat of volcano gods punishing us for our behaviour, or the sacrifice of virgins on the altar to ensure the return of the sun and a good harvest.

    The two factors cause me to be skeptical of the reliability of the scientific data, and the morals of any group of scientists who seek to predict the future, whatever their aim.

    Posted 7 months ago #

RSS feed for this topic

Pages: 12…7Next »

Reply »

You must log in to post.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Don't miss…

  • News
  • Reviews
  • Blogs
  • It's the weekend
  • SRAM XX1
  • Fresh Goods Friday 168
  • Shimano Singletrack Classic Weekender Rider Profile: Singular Sam
  • Stolen: Continental Team Orange Alpine 160
  • Midweek Mini Movies 100!
  • Maxxis High Roller 2
  • Nukeproof/DT Swiss 29in custom wheel build
  • Cannondale Jekyll 3
  • Bionicon C-Guide V2
  • Review: Charge Bikes Sponge Grips
  • Review: Whyte 146 S
  • Diary of a Megavalanche Virgin Part 3: Win some, lose some...
  • County Contrast
  • Diary of a Megavalanche Virgin Part 2: Skills Time
  • Green's Gravity Enduro: An introduction
  • Diary of a Megavalanche Virgin Part 1: A hill in Wales
  • New Year - New Bike!

Advertisement

Advertisement

road.cc cycling website

Advertisement

Singletrack Magazine
  • Log In

Skip to top


Forgotten your password?

Not got an account?

Register now!

  • Singletrack

  • Magazine Stockists
  • Publication Dates
  • Premier Club
  • Contact Us
  • it’s not easy being green
  • Website & Forums

  • Forum Overview
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Classified Rules
  • Forum Help
  • Website Help
  • Exits

  • road.cc
  • ST on Twitter
  • ST on Facebook
  • ST on Vimeo
  • News Feeds
Issue 73