There are credible scientists who are now predicting an ice-free (summer) arctic by as early as 2013. The implications are mind boggling. The impact on wildlife, humans and the rest of the world’s weather patterns is impossible to predict for specific areas and to exact detail.
Taking the effects of global warming seriously | Niagara Falls Review
Disrupting the Borg is expensive and time consuming!
Google Search
-
Recent Posts
- “the science is absolutely certain”
- Electricity Is Proportional To CO2
- AI Climate Math
- AI Math
- Al Gore’s Arctic Forecast
- Mann Says He Was Correct
- “under the Intermediate Scenario”
- “under the Intermediate Scenario”
- “carbon emissions may have now peaked”
- Record Arctic Sea Ice Growth
- “4th Hottest Summer”
- Killing Joshua Trees To Save Them
- NASA Sea Level
- “getting smaller”
- “Permanent Shift” In Antarctic Sea Ice
- Rapidly Accelerating Sea Level Rise
- Technology Advances
- “The Hour Of Decision”
- “fair & equitable”
- Michael Mann Continues His War
- Time Travelling Satellites
- Time Traveling Satellites
- Adult Content On X
- The Climate Of 1923
- Arctic Report Card
Recent Comments
- Peter Carroll on “the science is absolutely certain”
- Bob G on Electricity Is Proportional To CO2
- Bob G on “the science is absolutely certain”
- William on “the science is absolutely certain”
- conrad ziefle on “the science is absolutely certain”
- Christopher Witzel on “the science is absolutely certain”
- arn on “the science is absolutely certain”
- John Francis on Electricity Is Proportional To CO2
- John Francis on “the science is absolutely certain”
- arn on “the science is absolutely certain”
The catch phrase is “credible scientists”.
Up until now, the scientists haven’t had much credibility.
Come on guys! Have some faith! Maybe the summer ice won’t disappear until December 31st.
It will disappear on September 22nd, when it becomes Fall ice.
Reblogged this on Climate Ponderings.
They’ve proved that so-called lack of ice in the arctic affects weather elsewhere, or have they just assumed this?
We need to draw a distinction between “affects” and “measurably affects” or “predictably affects.” Sure it affects weather somehow… but how much, and in what way? We are dealing with a very complex and chaotic system. There is no clear way to either understand it or predict it — not large scale or long term.
The cynic “climate scientist” in me says, “The amount of ice in the Arctic will make the rest of the world either warmer or cooler. Regardless of which happens, THAT is the one which I predicted all along!”