Author Archives: curryja

Science without method

by Judith Curry

Since people are clamoring for a new thread, lets talk about this article in the the Australian Quadrant entitled “Science without method,”  subtitled “Global warming research: whatever happened to the scientific method?”  To review previous Climate Etc. posts on the Scientific  Method, click here.

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Overstretching Attribution

by Judith Curry

Attribution of climate change and its impacts has been a recurring theme at Climate Etc.  The first issue of Nature Climate Change  has a provocative article entitled “Overstretching Attribution.

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Polyclimate

by Judith Curry

I am trying to germinate an idea on how to move forward on the climate debate.  Bear with me through this argument, and let me know what you think.

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Hidden knowledge

by Judith Curry

I stumbled across this essay by Michael Nielsen entitled “Science Beyond Individual Understanding,” which I think is very relevant to the climate problem.

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Climate Shift

by Judith Curry

Matt Nisbet has published a new report entitled “Climate Shift: Clear Vision for the Next Decade of Public Debate,” that is generating substantial controversy in the blogosphere.

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Earth’s Energy Imbalance

by Judith Curry

Jim Hansen has just posted his latest draft paper, entitled “Earth’s Energy Imbalance and Implications.”    This is quite a meaty paper, and will be of particular interest to those of you wondering “where’s the missing heat?

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Climate refugees

by Judith Curry

This post is motivated by the article in the Asian Correspondent by Gavin Atkins entitled “What happened to the climate refugees?”

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Climate Capitalism

by Judith Curry

There is a new book out entitled “Climate Capitalism: Capitalism in the Age of Climate Change,” by  Hunter Lovins and Boyd Cohen, authors of an earlier book entitled “Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution“.

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Scafetta on climate oscillations

by Judith Curry

David Hagen wrote on the Dempster thread:

There appears need for much more effort on grappling with both with major statistical issues involved (as highlighted by Dempster and Scafetta) as well as identifying natural causes that can have strong impacts on climate far beyond what is currently included in climate models (per Scafetta, and Svensmark).

As a case in point, lets examine one of Nicola Scafetta’s papers, which ties in with our previous threads on attribution of decadal variability.

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Scientists Often Pigeonholed by Political Debates

by Judith Curry

This post takes its title from the NPR interview with Richard Muller, Director of the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project.

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Axing NOAA’s Climate Service

by Judith Curry

I have been intending to write a post on NOAA’s proposed Climate Service, but hadn’t gotten around to it.   The announcement today regarding the  final FY 2011 Appropriations deal includes language stating that none of the funds appropriated to NOAA may be used to “implement, establish, or create a NOAA Climate Service.”

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Dempster on climate prediction

by Judith Curry

I spotted this presentation by Arthur Dempster, Harvard statistician, in the Series on Mathematical and Statistical Approaches to Climate Modeling hosted by the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences.

Dempster is widely known as the co-originator of Dempster-Shafer Evidence Theory (see the Wikipedia for an overview).  Elements of evidence theory have been discussed on several previous threads (see Italian Flag, reasoning about floods).

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Hartwell Paper: Game Changer?

by Judith Curry

Motivated by an exchange by Chief Hydrologist and Max on the David Montgomery thread, lets a take a look at the Hartwell paper.   Almost one year after its publication, has this paper been a game changer?

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Lawyering up

by Judith Curry

Climate scientists, bloggers, and journalists are increasingly providing business for lawyers.  What’s going on here?

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Montgomery’s testimony on climate economics

by Judith Curry

David Montgomery has testified twice in the past few weeks on the economics of climate change.  Lets take a closer look at his testimony, and at some of the critiques of his testimony.

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Separating natural and anthropogenically-forced decadal climate variability

by Judith Curry

The issue of separating natural from anthropogenically forced variability, particularly in context of the attribution of 20th century climate change, has been a topic of several previous threads at Climate Etc.  The issue of natural vs anthropogenically forced climate variability/change has been a key issue of contention between the climate establishment and skeptics.  There are some encouraging signs that the climate establishment is maturing in their consideration of this issue.

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Scholars and Scandals

by Judith Curry

Well I thought it was probably impossible at this point for someone to come up with a fresh perspective on Climategate.  A new article in Inside Higher Ed entitled “Scholars and Scandals” arguably fits the bill.  The article tackles the broader questions of:

What is the best course of action when scholars’ motives and research are attacked? How quickly should they respond? Who should vet such allegations — universities, disciplinary societies, or some other entity? If scholars move too hastily, do the risks of getting it wrong (or of being later disproven) outweigh the damage of letting allegations fester without rebuttal?

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Reactions to Muller’s Testimony

by Judith Curry

Last week, Richard Muller testified at the U.S. House of Representatives Hearing on Climate Change: Examining the Processes Used to Create Science and Policy [see here].

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Congressional Hearing on Climate Change: Part II

by Judith Curry

The U.S. House of Representatives Hearing on Climate Change: Examining the Processes Used to Create Science and Policy has commenced.  The House website for the hearing is here.

Live blogging:  Gavin Schmidt, Eli Kintisch, Jay Gulledge

Real time rebuttal (password required): Kevin Trenberth, Andrew Dessler, Gary Yohe.

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Water vapor mischief: Part II

by Douglas Sheil

JC note: this post is a follow on to the Water Vapor Mischief thread that discussed a paper by Makarieva et al. entitled ” Where do winds come from? A new theory on how water vapor condensation influences atmospheric pressure and dynamics.”  Douglass Shiell is coauthor on the paper.

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Communicating Uncertain Climate Risks

by Judith Curry

NSF has a press release on a perspective published in Nature Climate Change, by Baruch Fischoff, which I reproduce here in full.  The full perspective can be found online here.

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An essay on the current state of the climate change debate

by Don Aitkin

JC note:  this essay was prepared for a recent address at given at the Manning House, in Australia.

The debate tonight is about ‘anthropogenic global warming’, and it is a debate, not a one-sided exposition. The debate exists because many people say the matter is important, and it is plainly also most contentious. To understand why our government is going down the path that it has chosen, a carbon tax, while the USA is not doing so, we need to know more than simply the local  and American political contexts. What is ‘climate change’ all about? Why is there any debate at all? Why are people so divided about it? The answers to these questions involve different elements of history, politics, ideology, narrative, science, mathematics and statistics. You can get some handle on it by recognising that if the matter were quite straightforward we would be doing something else tonight. In my judgment it is not at all straightforward, and it is hardly getting any more so.

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Congressional Hearing on Climate Change

by Judith Curry

There is a forthcoming Hearing of the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology entitled “Climate Change: Examining the Processes Used to Create Science and Policy.”

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Reasoning About Climate Uncertainty – Draft

by Judith Curry

Here is a complete (albeit rough) draft of my paper for the special issue in the journal Climatic Change (founding editor Steve Schneider) entitled Framing and Communicating Uncertainty and Confidence Judgments by the IPCC.

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Inconvenient truths about energy policy

by Judith Curry

This post is stimulated by an email I received from Georgia Tech alum Rutt Bridges, who asked for feedback on a recent article he published in First Break entitled “Economic Challenges for Carbon Capture-Storage and the Role of Natural Gas.

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