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|title3=Topics that spark Misplaced Pages 'edit wars' revealed
== Cite doi finally ==
|org3=]
{{archive top}}
|url3=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-23354613
Discussion migrated to ]
|date3=July 18, 2013
----
Keep making proposals and forgetting to follow up. In June, ] about switching to article to {{tl|Cite doi}} since the sorter format is easier to read in the edit window. In August, ] about switching, but got sidetracked. You guys mind if I make the switch today? ] (]) 02:39, 14 December 2009 (UTC)
:Go for it.--] (]) 08:21, 14 December 2009 (UTC)
:You may also want to consider the method used on ], where the references are separated from the text like this:
:: <nowiki>{{Reflist|2|refs= ....(references with names here)....}}</nowiki>
:it would require a good naming system ("author(year)"?), and some maintainence - but it does make the text alot easier to edit. --] (]) 08:59, 14 December 2009 (UTC)
::Yeah, I saw Dragon's flight make the proposal to integrate this feature into WP in ]. It's done here, but to a lesser extent. Thanks though. I'll have it taken care of by weekend's end, busier than expected this week. ] (]) 22:21, 15 December 2009 (UTC)
:::Seconding (or thirding?) Kim's suggestion. I agree that ] improves the readability of the editable article. I've used it a fair bit; I haven't been rigorous about choosing a reference naming convention, but I agree with Kim, especially in the case of scientific articles. I've generally ordered my references in the same order they appear in the article, but if we adopt a reference naming system as Kim suggests, perhaps the references should be alpha sorted.--<font style="font-family:Monotype Corsiva; font-size:15px;">]]</font> 13:34, 17 December 2009 (UTC)
:I dislike {{tl|cite doi}} as it allows an easy way for vandals to modify highly visible pages by making edits to templates that are not watched by many people. It also makes updating the references more difficult. -] (]) 22:50, 15 December 2009 (UTC)
::It's a system:<ol><li>'''Plan.''' Most references, especially the generic style of scientific journals, do not need to be modified; when it does need to be modified, the edit button may be easier to use than the code window (especially since the refs here are tightly compacted).</li><li>'''Protect.''' When the ref is stable, and the edit button removed (by passing "noedit" into the second parameter) a bot regularly maintains the ref accordingly. Without the edit button, it's much harder for vandals to find the page. There are other templates that are not protected but used (e.g. {{tl|Cnote2}}, {{tl|Chem}}), and they are not vandalized despite their greater danger.</li><li>'''Preserve.''' For us, there's plans to create an anti-vandal bot to watch these pages and notify a notice board. We could ask for cascade semi-protect if things get bad.</li></ol>] (]) 04:04, 17 December 2009 (UTC)
:::I dislike the closed cite-doi's, there are reasons for changing references, and this makes it rather hard to find out where to edit (imho). There are pro's and con's to this. Frankly i think that ] with regular references (or doi's), and a good naming system makes more sense than exchanging everything inline with cite-doi's. --] (]) 00:21, 19 December 2009 (UTC)
::::I'm sure there are reasons for and against, but it helps to actually say what they are. However, it seems that the trolls are too taxing on time. Your time is important, I'll bring this up when things cool down, but I do expect a good reply. ] (]) 19:02, 19 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::Regardless, something has to be done to bring consistency to the reference format. Having a jumbled style of referencing could lead to a FAR/featured article review. ] (]) 21:51, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::Wait until the rest has cooled down, it'll get fixed. What plans do you have in mind? Any specific methods or goals? We can start there while we wait. ] (]) 21:13, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}


|date4=August 15, 2015
== no discussion of controversy ==
|url4=http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/08/150814145711.htm
|title4=On Misplaced Pages, politically controversial science topics vulnerable to information sabotage
|org4='']''
|author4=]
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|date5=November 11, 2020
About a year ago on the discussion for some article about global warming I said that it was necessary to discuss details that could refute people that I know who think the data is faked, as opposed to having different interpretations for valid data. Now the wheel has turned and such a controversy has hit the press. Somebody needs to cover it. I would think the thermodynamics of arctic ice shrinkage would be a good issue to argue. Failing to talk about the controversy with the emails may represent a neutrality issue.
|url5= https://mashable.com/feature/climate-change-wikipedia/
] (]) 15:46, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
|title5 = The guardians of Misplaced Pages's climate page: An intensely devoted core keeps a bastion of climate science honest
: We discuss the ] in an article of its own. We aren't a website for debunking myths but there are plenty of such websites out there and they do a good job. --] 15:52, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
|org5 = ]


|date6=November 18, 2021
:I think you'll find that the mainstream media has moved on already. The current global warming news is all about the Copenhagen conference and opinions about the ]. There was no new GW science revealed by those emails. The story, the misunderstandings and the counter-arguments have not changed as a result of them. --] (]) 15:56, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
|url6= https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-59325128
|title6 = Climate change: Conspiracy theories found on foreign-language Misplaced Pages
|org6=]


|author7=Marco Silva
::Well, the mainstream media have never tried to clarify what all the dirty science that the emails really expose. What you would seem with some exceptions, was an apologetic trash trying to dismiss the case as nothing, without ever showing the text of the emails. But we have loads of articles from reliable sources, as for example the british telegraph (see , for example), that shows exactly what this emails and computer code really mean. On another thread we have seem how the wikipedia has been manipulated by a few of administrator to push the alarmist view of global warming. It is a joke that in any place of the global warming article we have any citation of the ] article. Seem taxpayer funded "researchers" have been working around the clock to stop any credible information to appear on this article. ] (]) 16:06, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
|date7=December 24, 2021
::: You've just referred to an opinion piece by ], who as well as having no scientific qualifications also has an appalling record of spreading his misconceptions as critiques of science, as a "reliable source". That isn't up to our sourcing standards. --] 16:11, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
|url7=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-59452614
::::I think this is a legitimate concern... this article should at least mention the e-mail incident and its impact in passing, as it goes to the very heart of the skepticism that exists. Should there be more than a sentence and a link? Probably not... but it should be mentioned. ] (]) 15:17, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
|title7=Climate change: Small army of volunteers keeping deniers off Misplaced Pages
I strongly disagree with Blueboar. The e-mail incident has been assessed by independent parties who demonstrated that although some of the authors were petty there was '''no indication of falsified data'''. It's a tempest in a tea pot that only extended beyond a criminal investigation for invasion of privacy because global warming pseudo-skeptics believed it was <sarcasm>''fodder to stop the Evil World Government from taking away their coal burning SUVs.''</sarcasm> ] (]) 15:22, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
|org7=]
:Then say that. The scandal had an impact beyond just the skeptics. It has had an impact on how the general population views Global Warming preditions and the science behind them. It may have been a tempest in a tea-pot to scientists... it may have been nothing but media hype... but it had a significant impact on how the general population views the issue. It is going to take years for the scientific community to regain the trust of the general population. The email scandal has had an impact, and we can not and should not simply ignore it. ] (]) 15:05, 24 December 2009 (UTC)


|author8=Olivia Steiert
::I don't think Misplaced Pages should be a party to the continued attempts to vilify the victims of a crime. Giving attention to the issue does just that. ] (]) 15:13, 24 December 2009 (UTC)
|date8=September 9, 2024
:::But if you point out what you say above... ie that the e-mail incident has been assessed by independent parties who demonstrated that there was '''no indication of falsified data''', you are not vilifying the victims of a crime. You are in fact ''supporting'' them by refuting the allegation. The incident occured, and it has had an impact on how the general public undertands the issue of global warming... All I am suggesting is that we don't stick our heads in the sand and ignore it. ] (]) 22:28, 24 December 2009 (UTC)
|url8=https://doi-org.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/10.1177/09636625241268890open_in_newPublisher
::::The problem with that is that we would, sort of, attempt to bring in the "latest news" in this article. In such cases you typically have a lot of junk reported in otherwise reliable sources and you only have at most a few correct assesments in peer reviewed journals. I think in this case there only has been one Nature editorial about this incident that would qualify as a publication in a relveant peer reviewed source (relevant because Nature publishes a lot of climate science articles). Editors who do believe that the hacking incident points to something sinister going on can then attempt to bring in their favorite sources that prove them correct. So, the discussion will then degenerate into a discussion about the reliability of sources. E.g. an argument could be: "why would a Nature editorial be more reliable than a Wall Street Journal editorial, surely the former is not independent?". Any arguments presented here explaining why the Nature editorial is releally more reliable and why many of the newspapers articles are wrong can be shot down on the basis of OR.
|title8=Declaring crisis? Temporal constructions of climate change on Misplaced Pages
::::So, we should not attempt to bring the latest news as the wiki-policies are not really designed to deal with that in articles of a scientific nature. ] (]) 23:39, 24 December 2009 (UTC)
|org8=]
:::::The point is that no ''science'' was revealed by the e-mail/source code/document hack at CRU. The science hasn't changed, and this article is about the science. Actually, global warming hasn't changed and this article is about global warming - the glaciers are still melting, the insects are still doing whatever they do weeks earlier in the year, etc. If a massive cock-up were to be revealed (which it hasn't) then new scientific papers would be published and we would eagerly report the changes here. That would take a few months (this isn't a 'daily news' article), but that process isn't even in motion over the CRU e-mails. It's just irrelevant. Except in the minds of the most extreme, big-oil-funded, nutters. There are other articles about the hack (which is up to date) and about ] that may reflect all this, when it has been measured and written up in ]. --] (]) 00:01, 25 December 2009 (UTC)


== RfC: Oppressive editing and page ownership ==


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{{hat|You are looking for ], the ], or the ]. This unfocused discussion is only further embittering the participants and is unlikely to lead to improvements to the article.}}
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Have a number of editors here been ruthelessly suppressing any views or opinions that do not conform to their own by using improper tactics, such as: summary removal opposing opinions from the talk page, reverting good faith edits that express an opposing views as vandalism, immediately deleting comments on this behaviour from the talk page? ] (]) 21:01, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
{{tmbox
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| text = This page has ]. Please follow those standards when adding sources. Ask on the talk page if you need help or have questions.
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{{external peer review|date=April 30, 2007|org=The Denver Post|comment="a great primer on the subject", "Following the links takes the interested reader into greater and greater depth, probably further than any traditional encyclopedia I've seen", pleasantly surprised how the main articles "stick to the science and avoid confusing the reader with political controversy.", wishes Misplaced Pages offered better links to basic weather science. Please ].}}
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{{old move|date=3 August 2020|from=Global warming|destination=Climate change|result=moved|link=Special:Permalink/974145018#Requested_move_3_August_2020}}
'''Please do not archive this RfC. The purpose of an RfC is to get comment from outside editors who may have an independent view in the subject, they cannot contribute if the RfC is archived'''. Whether the regular editors are bored or not is irrelevant, we must wait and see what others think. ] (]) 12:47, 24 December 2009 (UTC)
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== Carbon capture rates for CCS ==


Hi everyone. I have a few proposals regarding statements on ] in this article. Here's my first proposal. We have an unsourced sentence that says:
: Where energy production or {{CO2}}-intensive ] continue to produce waste {{CO2}}, the gas can be captured and stored instead of released to the atmosphere.
I propose changing it to:
: Where energy production or {{CO2}}-intensive ] continue to produce waste {{CO2}}, technology can sometimes be used to capture and store most of the gas instead of releasing it to the atmosphere.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |last1=Lebling |first1=Katie |last2=Gangotra |first2=Ankita |last3=Hausker |first3=Karl |last4=Byrum |first4=Zachary |date=2023-11-13 |title=7 Things to Know About Carbon Capture, Utilization and Sequestration |url=https://www.wri.org/insights/carbon-capture-technology |publisher=] |language=en}}</ref>


As explained in the World Resources Institute source, "today’s carbon capture systems do not capture 100% of emissions. Most are designed to capture 90%, but reported capture rates are lower in some cases." Additionally, it is not economically or geologically feasible to deploy CCS at all or even most facilities. There are 2,400 coal power plants in the world and thus far we have managed to add CCS to four of them. ] (] <nowiki>&#124;</nowiki> ]) 21:41, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
'''This is the problem that caused me to raise this RfC''' (nb: this diff was added after I complained it was absent - ] (]) 16:33, 23 December 2009 (UTC)) I tried to raise the issue here and my comments were immediately deleted, note the edit summary. I then restored my section with a comment at the bottom that if it was removed I would raise an RfC, see this diff. I do not see what other option I had. ] (]) 16:07, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
The edit that I originally complained about was this]. You may not like it but it is not vandalism. ] (]) 17:36, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


:Done. ] (] <nowiki>&#124;</nowiki> ]) 20:30, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
Here is another diff of a deletion that occurred after I started this RfC ] I have never seen a talk page before where so much is removed so quickly. ] (]) 23:26, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


{{reflist-section}}
I have just added this diff ] which is a deletion from the talk page. This made me first think that some editors were being heavy handed in their deletions. ] (]) 12:47, 24 December 2009 (UTC)


== Carbon sequestration section ==
::Your links are broken. I think I fixed them.] (]) 16:11, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
===Replies compiled for easier tabulation===
''Users may voluntarily choose to move their official replies here if they wish, in order to more easily tabulate them. I will not move replies here. --] (]) 05:05, 24 December 2009 (UTC)''


The ''Carbon sequestration'' section has contents that describe ] and ]. These three concepts are often confused. The vast majority of carbon sequestration happens through spontaneous, non-anthropogenic processes that have been going on for hundreds of millions of years and will continue if we just leave the forests alone. Most of the content in this section is about human activity that aims to increase the amount of carbon that is sequestered, i.e. ]. There is also some content on ], which technically involves sequestration but is usually deployed in processes that desequester more carbon than they sequester.
:No. --] (]) 21:19, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
: ]. --] 21:22, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
:The edit in question was clearly vandalism. Thus it was appropriately deleted, as vandalism. ] (]) 21:27, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
::Agreed the latest vandalism was by an account which is clearly a sock and will be indef blocked when we've worked out which sock, and then got reinstated by Martin who presumably didn't read it carefully. But I assume his question was more general since he raised talk page deletion above when he first came to the page earlier today--] ] 21:38, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
:::I was not aware that the account was a suspected sock but regardless of that I have now read what was written and it is not vandalism. It may have been unencyclopedic and poorly worded and sourced but that is a different thing. As a newcomer here I am completely staggered by the oppressiveness of editors here who seem to delete any expression of opinion or view that does not agree with their own. I appreciate that this page is a FA and that the regulars wish to maintain that standard but describing any opposing view as vandalism is not the way to do that. All it needed was an appropriate edit summary. ] (]) 21:46, 22 December 2009 (UTC)


I propose 1) Retitling this section as "Carbon dioxide removal" and 2) Moving the two sentences on CCS to the end of the first paragraph in the "Clean energy" section. ] (] <nowiki>&#124;</nowiki> ]) 20:11, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
:No. There are issues with the conduct of this talk page but the one you mention is missing pretty completely. --] ] 21:27, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::This is a bit amazing. Martin's comment is a perfectly legitimate one. can we at least make an effort to respond to the concerns which he raises, rather than treating this as some kind of violation of ], etc?


:Done. ] (] <nowiki>&#124;</nowiki> ]) 20:36, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::Martin, some editors here are so used to quickly deleting some edits due to continuing controversy, that sometimes comments which deserve a hearing can sometimes get dismissed or overlooked a bit too quickly. I hope people will try to actually discuss your rightful concerns, but it may not happen. --] (])
::::::I agree but in this case my attempts to discuss the matter here were also immediately deleted deleted with the comment 'take your whining elsewhere'. My original objection was not just that the material was instantly removed but that the edit summary described this as a minor edit and the removal of vandalism. It was clearly neither of these. ] (]) 15:15, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:I agree with Tony<s>, but will chime in anyway. I know it was an issue a year or two ago. Back then, people were selective using certain blogs but refuting others. Even though people consider this an evolving topic using up-to-the-minute information, the use of blogs at all leaves a bad taste in many editor's mouths because blogs are generally not considered primary sources. It would probably be smarter not to use blogs at all, which would eliminate some of the past bad feelings prospective editors have had with this article.</s> A cursory glance of the article's reference section shows that the article's biggest current problem is the lack of a consistent reference format. This kind of issue has led to FARs in the past. ] (]) 21:40, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
:I think more of the off-topic chatter needs to be removed, not less. (This RfC included.) -] (]) 21:43, 22 December 2009 (UTC)


== Paper about our work & suggestions ==
:'''Yes.''' Clean and crisp but oppressive is right. (I'm having a little trouble understanding the meaning of ChyranandChloe's comment in the section below.) --] (]) 13:03, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


A came out on the work we do here, analysing how our group dynamics and our interpretation of policies and guidelines resulted in the current article.
===Discussion===
::What you're doing is appreciable. Usually if the discussion is ], ], or ]—you're suppose to put it in a collapsible box, {{tl|hat}} and {{tl|hab}}, and save the reverts for vandalism or ''really'' meaningless discussion. You're leading this RfC Martin, is this something you would recommend? Ignore the comments above, they lack the courtesy of the question. ] (]) 04:45, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:::Not sure if "you're" is plural, singular, or perhaps indented wrongly. Please clarify. Also, the talk page guidelines clearly state that "Deleting material not relevant to improving the article" is an appropriate use of editing the comments of others. -] (]) 06:37, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
::Atmoz, "you're" is Martin. Deleting it is appropriate, but collapsing it seems like something we could look at, and that's what I'm asking. ] (]) 07:06, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


The paper analyses whether we consider climate change as an event (vs process), and if we call it a crisis. It's somewhat critical of us doing neither sufficiently clearly. The paper doesn't give that many pointers how we could achieve this however. We've made progress over the last 6 years in changing the article to be more about climate change now, rather than climate change in the future, but I wonder if there is more to do here. (changing the crisis framing is a discussion I won't reopen). If there are no objections, I might send Steiert an email asking her to join us. In the meantime, I'm suggesting two changes in the lead
: Not obviously. And per Atmoz, we need more not less (indeed, MH himself has suggested trying to move chatter off this page). Do you regard it as so obvious that you don't need to produce any diffs? ] (]) 10:39, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


The current rise in ] is ] burning ] <s>since the ]</s> -->
This is the problem ] I tried to raise the issue here and my comments were immediately deleted, note the edit summary. ] (]) 15:55, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


] has contributed to thawing ], ] and ] --> something in the present tense. I'd suggest leaving out polar amplification too. The quote doesn't fully capture this sentence anyway, and the source doesn't make the connection between polar amplification and these specific impacts. ] (]) 19:44, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
:Martin, I'm sure you remember your good old friend Brews Ohare. You could not edit the speed of light page with him, right? Then imagine a situation that is a 1000 times worse. That was the situation on the global warming related pages until about two years ago. We found a solution that works well here without having had to go through Arbcom proceedings. None of the problematic editors had to be banned, this page is not on some form of probation. We could, of course, always start some Arbcom proceedings but that will undoubtedly lead to indefinite topic bans for Sm8900, GoRight, Mytwocents, Dikstra, and the other sceptical editors who tendentionally edit this page. ] (]) 13:46, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


:Thanks for sharing this, interesting article. The study uses the May 2022 version of this article, I wonder what she'd think of the current version.
::Count Iblis, your remarks are completely discourteous. you have absolutely no right to address fellow editors that way, none whatsoever. --] (]) 13:50, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:::Why not? Like it or not, this is how Misplaced Pages works. In the speed of light Arbcom case, I was strongly opposed to Brew's topic ban, despite the fact that i did not agree with what he was trying to edit in the article. I prefer the current situation over some Arbcom imposed solution. ] (]) 14:07, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


::::Please do not say that I would receive a topic ban. I find that to be extremely discourteous. --] (]) 14:20, 23 December 2009 (UTC) :As for the sentence, {{tq|The current rise in...}}, I believe we had added "since the ]" to clarify what is meant by current. ] (]) 17:50, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
::Upon reflection, I'd like to keep {{tq|since the Industrial Revolution}}. One of the criticism in the article is that we are vague in terms of our tenses. When things happened, are happening, or will happen. ({{tq|Why is it so hard to arrive at a clear understanding of when climate change is happening and why do temporal constructions of this event vary so broadly}})
::{{tq|since the Industrial Revolution}} gives precision and clarity to that sentence. I think it accurately describes rough timescale of human-induced climate change.
::Other overview sources might say things like {{tq|The industrial activities that our modern civilization depends upon have raised atmospheric carbon dioxide levels by nearly 50% since 1750}}
::If you click ], it largely matches with above: {{tq|Beginning in Great Britain, the Industrial Revolution spread to continental Europe and the United States, from around 1760 to about 1820–1840.}} ] (]) 14:44, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
:::My thinking here is that "since the industrial revolution" may be a bit misleading, in the sense that most warming really happened in the last 50 years, rather than over such a long period of time. I'm also appreciating the simplicity of the POTD description below, and would like to move away from a ] in terms of number of links. ] (]) 17:13, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
{{od}}That's a very good point, but I think we should add that (in the last 50 years part) into the lead, instead of removing "since the ]" part. I know you value conciseness but I think this time precision beats conciseness.
Again, the study was up to May 2022 version of this article. . I think the current version of the lead is much more precise, as we define since when the current climate change has been happening.
Industrial activities (NASA source) started with industrial revolution. Of course it was limited in 18th century. In 19th century it was few countries (UK etc), with coal etc. With technology (oil etc) and more countries industrializing, warming increased in 20th century, which is your point.


:::::If it came to an Arbcom case, it would evolve in that direction. And I would then likely defend you against that impending topic ban. ] (]) 15:43, 23 December 2009 (UTC) Also note that many cumulative emissions graphs go back to 1750 . I'll check few more sources tomorrow, including ] sources, to see how they cover it. ] (]) 17:38, 2 November 2024 (UTC)


:The prose quality of the first paragraph was definitely better in that version at least. I don't think "adding to greenhouse gases" is correct English. If I can find time, I might suggest a new version of our opening in a separate discussion section.
:::::: OK, so now we have a diff for the problem . But that doesn't help much, because it refers back to a previous incident, which doesn't have a diff either. As I recall (from your talk page?) you've already been told that prior revert was of a scibaby sock - if that is so, it seems highly relevant, and I'm surprised that you haven't mentioned it. Either way please make clear what was the original revert ] (]) 16:33, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:My guess is that many sources don't talk about "industrial revolution" in their first paragraph, instead only use that when they go into the weeds of the topic.
:* NASA describes it as happening from the mid-20th century in their first paras (https://science.nasa.gov/climate-change/what-is-climate-change/)
:* Met Office describes it similar to us (https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/climate-change/what-is-climate-change), from the mid-1850s we started polluting.
:* WMO doesn't describe the time period, except by refering to a pre-industrial baseline (https://wmo.int/topics/climate-change)
:] (]) 18:03, 2 November 2024 (UTC)


{{od}}{{ping|Femke}} here are some ] sources I found with database through .
:::::: Also - inserting diffs into the original without making it clear you've modified your comment is Bad - it makes subsequent discussion unintelligible ] (]) 16:33, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


There are lots of results. Only some of them are below:
< '''Yes''' We can use tags in the article and discuss keeping content, parapharising text, and refs on the talk page. Deleting text and forking any mention of certain topics, for the past 2 years(at least) has made for an oppressive atmosphere. ] is a policy too. We need to give latitude to editors that want to add content to the article. ] (]) 16:25, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


The first two have detailed entries. I'd recommend you to check them:
* '''No''', although I would ''strongly'' advocate less bluster and more polite discourse from all involved.
** Why I say "no": This article summarizes the science, which seems by far the most useful endeavor for this page. I would rather not ''confirm'' peoples' views, but rather present to them the facts gathered by the experts, whatever they may be.
** Why I say "less bluster": the mainstay of the editors here are jaded by the constant trolls. We (the main editors here) have to remain dispassionate in the face of provocation.
** Addendum: The edit that Martin restored was clear vandalism. I'm taking this to be an honest mistake on his part, per ] because he is not a vandal.
: ] (]) 16:59, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
::Yes please to polite discourse, but how is this to be achieved when the entire section is deleted. ] (]) 17:19, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
::: A hint - '''not''' accusing other editors of '''ruthless suppression''' would be a good first step. Such ] and ] comments make other editors assume ]. ] (]) 17:23, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
::: I'm sorry to say this, but I'm not surprised that the section debating your re-addition of vandalism was deleted. But if your issue is that you think that the material you restored was not vandalism, we may need to back up, as that needs to be clarified first. ] (]) 17:29, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:::: That's the difference link for the vandalism that this is all over. As you can see it is '''evidently''' a '''clear''' case fo vandalism. ] (]) 17:34, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:::: Well, this is what I think as well, but I want to give Martin a chance to explain... as I have trouble seeing why he is so upset about this. ] (]) 17:40, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::I am upset because, when I tried to have this discussion on this talk page, the section was deleted with an instruction to, 'take my whining elsewhere'. ] (]) 18:23, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
Instead of arguing over deletions on talk page I suggest people spend more time organizing the rational data about5 all types of pollution not just global warming. As the old saying goes "Never argue with a fool, when you can spend your time doing something productive no one will know which is which." ] (]) 17:07, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:But this article is about global warming] (]) 17:19, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


*Encyclopedia of Climate and Weather (2 ed.) {{doi|10.1093/acref/9780199765324.001.0001}}. Global Warming entry. Notes both pre-industrial increase and increase since 1970.
=== Hold on ===
::{{tq2|The term global warming has become synonymous in the press with human-induced climate change. ... Carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere have increased such that 2009 values of about 385 ppmv are over 36 percent higher than preindustrial values of 280 ppmv and over half that increase has occurred since 1970 (Figure 1).}}
* Encyclopedia of Global Change {{doi|10.1093/acref/9780195108255.001.0001}}.
::Climate Change entry:
::{{tq2|An Overview<br/>... During the past two centuries, anthropogenic activity has resulted in large increases in the atmospheric greenhouse gas content, which has caused a detectable increase in global temperatures and are predicted to continue to increase for many decades before the climate system reaches a new equilibrium. ...}}
::Global warming entry:
::{{tq2|..Levels rose to 275 ppmv during the warm interglacial phases, and that level is also considered representative of the preindustrial era of the nineteenth century...}}


The two below have shorter entries:
Is anyone asserting that is really a sensible edit? It clearly re-introduces obvious vandalism ] (]) 18:00, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
*A Dictionary of Weather (3 ed.) {{doi|10.1093/acref/9780191988356.001.0001}}. Separate entries for global warming and climate change (climatic change). Not mentioned there.
*A Dictionary of Human Geography {{doi|10.1093/acref/9780199599868.001.0001}}. Climate change entry. Not mentioned there, but source mentions Anthropocene.
:By the way, there is an entire encyclopedia on climate change communication, The Oxford Encyclopedia of Climate Change Communication.


I think we should mention something like pre-industrial in the first paragraph. But we can shift things around. For example, the last sentence in first paragraph cites IPCC AR6 WG1 Technical Summary 2021, p. 67. That page mentions:
:Not quite, I reverted the original removal of this text because it was wrongly claimed as vandalism, this was explained in the deleted talk section. It may need to be removed because it is unencyclopedic or the sources are not reliable but it is not vandalism. The WP policy states: ''Any good-faith effort to improve the encyclopedia, even if misguided or ill-considered, is not vandalism. Even harmful edits that are not explicitly made in bad faith are not vandalism. For example, adding a controversial personal opinion to an article once is not vandalism; reinserting it despite multiple warnings is (however, edits/reverts over a content dispute are never vandalism, see WP:EW)''.
{{tq2|'''Since 1750''', changes in the drivers of the climate system are dominated by the warming influence of increases in atmospheric GHG concentrations and a cooling influence from aerosols, both resulting from human activities}}
p.4:
{{tq2|Observed increases in well-mixed greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations since around 1750 are unequivocally caused
by human activities}}


: Whoever added this clearly believes, rightly or wrongly, that there is a scientific case in their favour. ] (]) 18:09, 23 December 2009 (UTC) I'll make my proposal below in a new section ] (]) 19:02, 3 November 2024 (UTC)


== Article housekeeping ==
:: I don't think this will do. Even a trivial scan of that diff shows it to be obviously unacceptable. Look at it: ''List of scientists opposing the discredited scientific assessment of global warming''? Come on. And the rest is worse. When you were reverted you should have looked at the text, realised it was junk, realised you'd made an error, possibly apologised, and gone on your way. You have no case at all for "ruthless" suppression of dissent. You were, earlier, trying to make a case for cleaner and more focussed discussion on this talk page - but all you've done is created a pointless dramah ] (]) 18:14, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


Thanks {{u|Femke}} for removing unused references and other tidying. I could pitch in to help with that kind of thing for an hour or two this week. What else needs to be done? ] (] <nowiki>&#124;</nowiki> ]) 02:26, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
:I clearly believe that all religions are a form of collective psychosis and should be ended for the good of the species. But if I go to ] and write that it is a form of collective psychosis, citing an Athiest blog as a source, it's still vandalism. ] (]) 18:15, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:::William; I really do not feel it is appropriate for you to be engaging in a characterization of MArtin's or any editor's personal behavior, if they did it in obvious good faith. There is nothing which is pointless drama about an editor's sincere comments. --] (]) 18:17, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
::::I don't see what you're trying to accomplish here, Steve. This is completely pointless IMO and I see nothing wrong about William's comments. As a matter of fact, I don't see where he even characterizes Martin's behavior. Whether Martin re-added vandalism or POV-pushing is beside the point. All I see is routine removal of junk from the article turning into a long talk page discussion: this is the very definition of pointless drama. And if this is where this RfC has gone, I am going to request that it be closed. ] (]) 18:38, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


::Anyway, you have both missed the point, it would have been much better for everyone if we had been able to have this discussion in the talk page in the section that I added. That was deleted. ] (]) 18:18, 23 December 2009 (UTC) :Just to let you know, I intend to clean up after myself, but got sidetracked. For the areas I edited, some of the citations aren't to chapters but to overall IPCC reports. I'll be fixing those. ] (]) 16:54, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
::Thanks Bogazicili!
::In terms of housekeeping, I try to do the following every one/two years:
::* See if overcitation has slipped in, which is often a red flag for text-source integrity issues. One example is overcitation after "Smaller contributions come from ], organic carbon from combustion of fossil fuels and biofuels, and from anthropogenic dust", which has 6 sources. (I you could help here!)
::* Check if jargon such as anthropogenic has slipped back in, and reword using plain English
::* Reread the article, and check if there is text-source integrity for surprising statements
::* Reread the article, and update numbers which need updating.
::] (]) 17:19, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
:Not that big of an issue, but the source formatting is also slightly messy and inconsistent in places (e.g. Harvnb is used for most things but not all, some things are missing various fields, etc). ] (]) 19:17, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
:Wow, that's a lot of work that you've been doing regularly! I'll take on the overcitation thing. Will indicate here when I've finished checking. ] (] <nowiki>&#124;</nowiki> ]) 19:42, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
::I'll have much more time to work on this tomorrow (Sunday). I think I added most of the AR6 citations. I'll be fixing those tomorrow. And then I can also pitch in with the rest of the housekeeping. ] (]) 17:18, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
:::I think I fixed the parts I had added. ] (]) 20:31, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
== Featured picture scheduled for POTD ==


Hello! This is to let editors know that ], a ] used in this article, has been selected as the English Misplaced Pages's ] (POTD) for November 12, 2024. A preview of the POTD is displayed below and can be edited at ]. For the greater benefit of readers, any potential improvements or maintenance that could benefit the quality of this article should be done before its scheduled appearance on the ]. If you have any concerns, please place a message at ]. Thank you! &nbsp;&mdash;&nbsp;] (]) 10:18, 1 November 2024 (UTC) <!-- Template:UpcomingPOTD -->
:::I'm sorry but did you just say that I would not be vandalizing Roman Catholicism to say negative things about it based on an unreliable source? ] (]) 18:20, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
<div style="margin-top:4px; border:1px solid #ddcef2; background:#faf5ff; overflow:auto;"><div style="margin:0.6em 0.4em 0.1em;">{{POTD/Day|2024-11-12|excludeheader=yes}}</div></div>


== Suggestions for the first sentence ==
::::I did say it would not be vandalism but withdrew that remark when there was an edit conflict. It is not a good analogy but it is quite interesting that you chose to compare this article with one on a religious faith. ] (]) 18:29, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


The first sentence is awkward, and I'd love to craft a new first sentence before we get to be on the main page. The "in common usage" is especially jarring, and may fall slightly foul of ]. I have two suggestions:
:::::I'm sorry, but I see no reason to have a discussion about the removal of material that is either vandalism or POV-pushing. We all agree that it is unacceptable, now can we just get on with it and do something productive? Please? ] (]) 18:38, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
# '''Climate change''' encompasses '''global warming'''—Earth’s ongoing temperature increase—and its wider effects on Earth's climate.
# '''Current climate change''' is the ongoing rise in global average temperatures and the resulting effects on Earth's climate.


It's a common thing that more text gets bolded than the title alone, to clarify immediately to the reader what the topic is where there is some need for disambiguation. I think this may release us from the need to be a bit pedantic in the introduction. ] (]) 19:26, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::: Agreed. Bowing out ] (]) 18:46, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


: The preamble "In common usage" distinguishes current CC from "Climate change in a broader sense" that's in the second sentence. The distinction is important since we should (must?) quickly define the article title, focus attention on what ''this'' article is about, and link to the other article (Climate variability and change). I remember the community grappling with how to achieve these goals; the current text was the result. "In common usage" isn't jarring, though some might call it a bit formal. "Current climate change" (suggestion 2) isn't a much-used term. —21:10 The current wording tells the reader immediately that common-use "CC" is not the academically correct use. Of Suggestion 1 and 2, though, I definitely prefer Suggestion 1. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 22:23, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::I think I'm done too. ] (]) 19:01, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


:: The distinction is not between "academic usage" and "common usage". Academics use the terms like everybody else in their papers. IPCC has it in their name, WMO classifies their reporting under climate change. The difference is between definitionally and non-definitionally. If you have a sentence with ''is'', you imply a definition, so we need to make clear in some way that we're talking about "Contemporary", "Present-day", "Current" climate change. What we can do as well is 2b:
::::Sigh. Let me break this down for you. The statement that was posted was 1) a negative comment regarding the quality of scientific research on global warming 2) referenced from a "skeptical" blog.
:: 2b. Current/present-day/contemporary '''Climate change''' ...
] (]) 09:00, 3 November 2024 (UTC)


:I prefer 'Contemporary' to 'Current', but I like the wording in Suggestion 1 more. My suggestion would be something like:
::::As an ''actual rational skeptic'' I selected an area where there are real ''skeptical blogs'' which would not be seen as reliable sources by Misplaced Pages. I had religion on my mind because I have been debating a couple of AfDs related to non-notable 19th century utopian religious movements today... you know... because unlike the vandal you were protecting I am not an SPA.
::Contemporary '''climate change''' encompasses '''global warming'''—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its wider effects on ].
:Also, if the first sentence changes, the next two will probably need tweaking too. ] (]) 12:20, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
::I wonder what percentage of the population knows what "contemporary" means. I'd estimate less than 80/90%, hence my suggestions for slightly less elegant wording. Two difficult words close to each other (contemporary/encompasses), makes it more difficult to guess the word meaning for those unaware. ] (]) 12:23, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
:::In that case, I would propose: "Present-day '''climate change''' includes both '''global warming'''—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its wider effects on ]." ] (]) 12:52, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
::::I like that variation. Present-day may prevent some knee-jerk reactions of Wikipedians trained to remove the word '']'' from articles. ] (]) 12:58, 3 November 2024 (UTC)


Pinging all those with recent talk page activity: {{ping|Clayoquot|Amakuru|Bogazicili|Chipmunkdavis|Sunrise|Alaexis}}. ] (]) 09:31, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
:::: So to summarize, the analogy was cogent and the comparison to religion was the ''least important'' part of it. But, hey, with global warming going the way it is perhaps the climate change deniers should ask santa claus for stable weather patterns. After all, refusal to see that human derived greenhouse gas emissions have had a negative impact on the environment is an act of approximately equal naivety. ] (]) 18:42, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


:I prefer the first one because it includes the other common term, global warming. Global warming also redirects to this page, as it should. ] (]) 14:28, 3 November 2024 (UTC)


: I concede Femke's point (09:00) re academics/definitions. My concern is to explicitly convey that there are two definitions of CC. This distinction parallels the fact that today's CC is different from historical/generic CC. Detail: reviewing https://www.thesaurus.com/browse/contemporary, I'm OK with "current" or "present" or "present-day" or "recent" or "ongoing" or "newfangled" (well, maybe not "newfangled :-) :-). —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 17:03, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
::: How despicable. This article is completely "owned" by a cabal of editors. I want to tag it as NPOV-contested, which is certainly obvious from this talk page. I also want to add a paragraph on the impact of the CRU theft/leak, and want a source for the claim that the academies of science of all G-8 countries support the AGW hypothesis.
::I think it's more elegant to do it implicitly (present-day climate change), rather than explicitly. We want people to read about the topic of climate change, rather than about the intricacies of how terms are used in the first paragraph. ] (]) 17:06, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
But, instead of getting into crazy-making fights with you people, I am closing my account. For those of you who care about Misplaced Pages, look at my edit summaries. I have done well over 1000, and 99% of them are copy edits and research improvements to articles.
::: By "explicitly" I didn't mean super-ultra-formally. I think the distinction of definitions is accomplished by the second sentence, "Climate change in a broader sense...". That's all I meant. I'm OK with most of the smaller-change proposal I've read in this discussion. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 17:11, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
So, so long. Find other suckers, Misplaced Pages.] (]) 21:11, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:I have a slight preference for Sgubaldo's proposal. All of them sound fine to me though. ] (] <nowiki>&#124;</nowiki> ]) 17:17, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
::Just to clarify, since there are multiple proposals. I'm ok with this latest one: "Present-day climate change includes both global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its wider effects on Earth's climate." ] (]) 17:43, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
:If no one objects, I'll wait until tomorrow to see if there's any more replies, and then I'll make the changes. ] (]) 19:12, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
::Changes made. ] (]) 12:43, 4 November 2024 (UTC)


== FYI: removed 'mainly' from lead ==
<big>'''Yes'''</big> - I have evidence of a self named "cabal" at work to define a POV in this issue with such negative tenacity as if they own the content boundaries. This is in conflict to wiki principles. With the level of evidence this Rfc has provided, it is "likely" that they are at work here too. No comment on the page content. ] (]) 21:24, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


I changed "The current rise in global average temperature is mainly driven by human activities, especially fossil fuel burning since the Industrial Revolution" to "The current rise in global average temperature is <s>mainly</s> driven by human activities, especially fossil fuel burning since the Industrial Revolution". The best guess is taht 100% of climate change is driven by human activities (per new source), so the old wording was misleading and the old source didn't talk about this. The word driven itself also doesn't require 100% causation (that would be is caused by), so even when the percentage of human-induced climate change deviates from observed climate change, this wording should remain correct.
<big>'''Oh, no fun'''</big> I keep trying to get into the ] but they keep leaving me off the evil cabal mailing list. For the record, oh apparently now-absent {{User|Spoonkymonkey}}, Misplaced Pages doesn't have a left wing bias; reality does. Live with it.] (]) 21:30, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


I did this boldly, as the old text was not really supported and misleading. Hope that's okay. ] (]) 10:20, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
:So, you hate religion, but you fervently believe in man-made global warming..... I think you've found ''your'' religion. That explains to me the passion and dogmatic position you and others have displayed on GW and this talk page. ] (]) 05:44, 24 December 2009 (UTC)


:::No, see if the weight of evidence legitimately shifted, based on principles of logic and resason rather than the invective of my idiot bretheren in the conservative end of the journalistic profession I would be willing to change my position. Until then I will defend wikipedia against stupidity. ] (]) 15:02, 24 December 2009 (UTC) * '''Agree'''. As Earth was on a very slight cooling trend for ~10,000 years, I remember reading that humans cause ''"more than"'' 100% of global warming, though it would be confusing to say that literally. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 17:07, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
*:The idea of a ] some 8,000 years ago is a . Regional climate proxies say there was one, but globally it's a more complex picture, and models think there's been continuous warming / stable temperatures.
*:The more than 100% since pre-industrial also isn't true anymore as I understand it, as the last couple of years have seen very rapid warming. The source I cited is also the one used by the IPCC, and they say the best guess is exactly 100% caused by humans with some uncertainty. ] (]) 17:17, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
*::{{ping|Femke}} do you still want to remove "since the Industrial Revolution" part? That can be reworded and moved to the last sentence. Proposal below. ] (]) 20:30, 3 November 2024 (UTC)


== The lead, first paragraph ==
::It's almost midnight here. It's my turn to light the black candles around our new Nehalem cluster. ] (]) 05:55, 24 December 2009 (UTC)
This is what the first paragraph of the lead would look like, after recent changes and suggestions in ] and ] and above section.


Didn't include the sources in the article, and some of the new sources are above. For the "accelerating in the past 50 years", I will use .
::: I'll say their is a leaderless religion forming around how editors seek to control a POV in these articles. And it seems to place itself above wiki principles in being for negative annihilation. A strange absence of balance and space for new views is disturbing peaceful resolutions. ] (]) 06:09, 24 December 2009 (UTC)


{| style="background:silver; color: black"
{{hab}}
|-
|
<s>In common usage, '''climate change''' describes '''global warming'''—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its wider effects on ]. ] also includes previous long-term changes to Earth's climate.</s> Present-day '''climate change''' includes both '''global warming'''—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its wider effects on ]. ] also includes previous long-term changes to Earth's climate. <s>The current</s> Present-day rise in ] is ], especially burning ]s. <s>especially ] burning since the ]</s> Fossil fuel use, ], and some ] and ] practices release ]es.<ref name="Our World in Data-2020">{{harvnb|Our World in Data, 18 September|2020}}</ref> These gases ] that the Earth ] after it warms from ], warming the lower atmosphere. <s>], the primary greenhouse gas driving global warming, ] and is at levels unseen for millions of years.</s> ] and accelerating in the past 50 years, greenhouse gas concentrations have been increasing. ], the primary greenhouse gas driving global warming, ]
|}
] (]) 19:31, 3 November 2024 (UTC)


:I think the the new text is not great for flow. Most of the sentences are roughly the same lenght, with makes for slightly uncomfortable reading. I don't feel strongly about removing "industrial revolution", but I don't think moving it to later is that much of a change? ] (]) 21:52, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
== Removal of material section ==
::I suggested the changes with this criticism in mind. {{tq|Why is it so hard to arrive at a clear understanding of when climate change is happening and why do temporal constructions of this event vary so broadly}}
::Now we have two clear dates (since 1750 and accelerating in the past 50 years). ] (]) 22:02, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
:::@] "accelerating in the last 50 years" suggests to me the rate of warming is increasing across that time period. i think you mean that the last 50 years has exhibited a higher rate of warming that the precedding period.
:::you may also like to add to that, during this 50 year period, attribution studies are able to clearly discern human driven change from natural forcing -- this relates to the time series figure on the page. ] (]) 13:14, 16 December 2024 (UTC)


{{talkref}}
{{hat|reason=Ditto. Take it to ] if you would like to explain how this section ] ]. - ] <small>(])</small> 18:29, 26 December 2009 (UTC)}}
Please don't squabble about the removal of off-topic material from this very important page. This page is solely for discussion of the article.


== Proposed replacement of graphic in "Impacts" section ==
::what makes this section "squabbling"? merely because you don't like it? if you see there are some editors here who wish to discus this, just leave it be. I do not see the logic of an involved editor deciding unilaterally that a topic is closed for discussion. --] (]) 21:17, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
----
Why was the section ] archived? who made the decision to close discussion. I agree 100% with the points made by Martin Hogbin. I would like to see a fairer edit discussion process begin to occur here. --] (]) 02:40, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:Because it doesn't follow ]. (strangely enough this is also given as the rationale) We discuss improvements of the article here - not whether general discussions on the topic should be allowed. If you want that discussion - take it up in the appropriate places (which in this case would be the talk page of TPG i guess) --] (]) 11:12, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
::Many editors feel that the article would be improved if it presented a more balanced view of the subject. Better to discus opposing views here than edit war in the article. ] (]) 16:00, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:::The majority of editors here believes that the article in the current state is balanced. '''<span style="color:#104E8B;font-size:80%;text-shadow:#BBBBBB 0.2em 0.2em 0.1em;">]</span>&#32;:]'''&#32;<sup>]</sup> 16:31, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:::(E/C) So should we be aiming for a "balanced" view of what the general public thinks, or to present a scientific/expert view? I vote for the latter... I trust more the scientists doing the science the the newspapers paraphrasing the science, often poorly. ] (]) 16:42, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
::::We should cleave to reliable sources. An encyclopedia is not a compendium of what an idiot in the national post thinks about an issue in which he has no formal education. Rather it is a compendium of knowledge. That means that for issues of the ''facts'' of the issue we must depend on reliable (and thus, in this case, scientific) sources. ] (]) 17:04, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::Sure, so why not ask the person who added the section, '100 reasons why global warming is not man-made' to give some supporting sources rather than just deleting the section. ] (]) 17:22, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::::Simonm223; ''This'' encyclopedia is the result of many people's efforts. you're right that we do not need to include the opinions of a single "idiot" in the National post. however, if there is a credible set of views emerging, which several editors here would like to include, based on credible material appearing in reliable sources, we should be ready to make a compromise which somehow incorporates the work of various editors with a variety of different ideas. --] (]) 18:07, 23 December 2009 (UTC)


{{ multiple image |total_width=650
{undent} That is not the case here so I have to ask: so what? ] (]) 18:17, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
|image1= Soil moisture and climate change.svg |caption1= '''A. Existing graphic:''' The sixth IPCC Assessment Report projects changes in average soil moisture at 2.0&nbsp;°C of warming, as measured in ]s from the 1850 to 1900 baseline.
: Indeed, "so what?" The material is (was) badly sourced, from unreliable sources. Keeping such 'superficially qualified material' damages both the reputation of the project and makes the article look questionable. If there are good, indepedent, scientific sources which support the statements, ''leaving the statements there'' until they are found is the wrong thing to do, removing them then replacing the statements once good sources are found is the right thing to do. That way the article retains NPOV. ] (]) 19:16, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
|image2= 2024 Climate change increasing Atlantic hurricane peak wind speeds.svg |caption2= '''B. Proposed replacement:''' Climate change's increase of water temperatures intensified peak wind speeds in all eleven 2024 Atlantic hurricanes.

|image3= 1980- Atlantic region category 4 and 5 hurricanes - NYTimes and NOAA.svg |caption3= '''C. Second proposed replacement:''' Times series of Category 4 and 5 Atlantic hurricanes
Please read the last few paragraphs. this section pertains directly to this entry.--] (]) 21:22, 23 December 2009 (UTC)
{{hab}} }}
I've long questioned the value of the "soil moisture" graphic in the short, crowded, under-emphasized "Impacts" section.

== Misplaced Pages:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidents ==

RE: ]

As I wrote at the ANI started by 2over0, I support global warming 100%, but I think it is a really bad idea to squelch dissent. Global warming editors have a good reason to complain, for years, one side has been unequally represented on the global warming pages, and editors have been unfairly blocked repeatedly. The behavior has been so bad that journalists have written negative articles about global warming editing on wikipedia.

2over0, let editors vent their frustration here, or it will only lead to bigger drama and frustration later.

Moderating conversations is harder in the short term, but squelching dissent always makes for much more drama and headache later. ] 18:49, 26 December 2009 (UTC)

: Airing grievances is fine - in fact, that is why we have ]. It is only that it is being done ''here'' and distracting from discussion of improvements to ]. The archived discussion remains available for anyone who would like to start a related thread at any of the several venues mentioned above, or anywhere else appropriate that I might have missed. Thank you, though, for your input - the possibility that it could in the long term be more productive to let the discussion play out here is why I asked. - ] <small>(])</small> 19:00, 26 December 2009 (UTC)

::I agree completely with Ikip, above. --] (]) 22:41, 26 December 2009 (UTC)

::Ikip's comment is based on a fundamental fallacy. S/he says, "one side has been unequally represented", but in the ''science'' of global warming, there is only one 'side': the science is now settled; those who try to dispute that are not working, published, practicing scientists, but bloggers, journalists, politicians, members of the public, and a very vocal minority paid to do so by Big Oil dollars. The place where there are two sides to the argument (those who get the science and those who don't) is in ]. This article is the parent article about the science. There are sub-articles for all the education, politics and discussion that is going on worldwide. --] (]) 22:49, 26 December 2009 (UTC)
:::That is your opinion. There really is no basis for excluding one entire side of an issue or debate. the fact that you would say that there is only one side, highlights the real issue at this entry. --] (]) 22:56, 26 December 2009 (UTC)
:::: Agree with Ikip and Sm8900, seems like some folks are working a POV with no conclusive source support, that's a serious issue with behavior reminiscent of owning the article. Particularly where scientific opinions are concerned. ] (]) 00:56, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::: I'm sorry, I think that Sm8900 and ZuluPapa5 have lost me in their "opinions" and "POV with no conclusive source support" statements. The article seems pretty well representative of the science behind the issue (which IMO is more useful than a summary of journalists' opinions), and being based on the scientific reports, it is certainly conclusively supported by its sources. Am I just misunderstanding what you are trying to say? ] (]) 03:09, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::: Awickert, that comment sounds a tiny bit disingenuous; is it possible that you already do know what we mean? anyway, we mean that a group of editors have prevented this entry from fairly presenting both sides of the debate on this. --] (]) 05:41, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::: OK, then I did understand what you said. But I don't agree. I see this article as fairly presenting all scientific sides to the debate (albeit very much simplified). I don't see it presenting all political sides. And I think that this is OK because the politicians aren't the experts and this covers the science. Is your point that this should cover public controversy in a broader way? (Note that outside the USA, I'm not even sure if I know what the public controversy is.) Anyway, I think that this is the root of the problem - you and ZP5 are saying that others are being biased, while we say that we are trying to be unbiased by including only science and none of the political mishmash. ] (]) 06:17, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::{{outdent|8|t=y}} @ Awickert: pardon me for arguing for a side of the debate that I happen to think is wrong, but you seem to be defending a content fork that is '''dangerously''' close to being a POV-fork. If this were my decision to make, the main article ''global warming'' would be a discussion of the political debate, and the scientific aspects of global warming would be shuffled off into a sub-section or a minor secondary article called, say, 'Global warming research'. That's because global warming (properly understood) is primarily a social/political issue: the science of global warming was around for a good decade or two before it got any public notice, most people today are not interested in the scientific aspects except to the extent that scientists give thumbs up or thumbs down to particular political points, and the problem itself is a political problem that requires political solutions - scientists' only business here is to confirm that the effect is real, and leave the solution to the effect to the rest of the world. Yet you seem to be arguing that the main article on global warming should be strictly about the science, with no reference to the political debates at all (except for what amounts to a cast-off in the last section). I cannot see any justification for that belief; please enlighten me if I am missing something.

::I think the approach best suited to wikipedia policy would be to move the current ] article to this page, and merge this page into ]. That would resolve the appearance that this is PoV-forking without doing anything to minimize the power of the scientific perspective. What problems would you have with that? --] 07:15, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:::I'm about to go to bed, so I hope that this is coherent. (Important to note: I am not one of the main contributors to this article.)

:::* This article has been strictly about the science for many years, and that since the subject is rooted in public interest in science, having the global warming article about science seems OK to me. But (2 paragraphs down), I do think that we can reach some agreement.

:::* "content fork that is dangerously close to being a POV-fork": I would disagree because citing a wide swath of scientific publications IMO satisfies ], but I believe that you disagree with me because you believe "global warming" to be more importantly a social phenomenon than a scientific conclusion.

:::The first bullet is legacy, let's forget that. The second is more important. I think it's better for Misplaced Pages to be an educational resource, showing people what the professional scientists are doing, than to simply cite newspapers (many of which bungle the facts) for information on an ongoing debate that they probably already know about and may already have an opinion about. I therefore feel that forking this whole article off to a research section would be an unfortunate, and could turn this article from a good, scientific one into a mass media extravaganza.

:::Here's my thought: In a heated issue, is is better to dispassionately present the facts as the experts best know them instead of reiterating the opinions of commentators (who have varying degrees of qualification to competently comment). So if anything, I would add more information on research to this article instead of less. But facts can also be about what politicians are going to do about the issue, and that is important as well. So I wouldn't mind reworking both the "Responses to global warming" and "Debate and skepticism" sections into a single section about response proposals and related political debate. But this would need to be discussed by everyone here, as it would be a non-minor change.

::: My view in short: ''In matters of science in an encyclopedia, science should not be subordinate to popular belief. In matters of politics, facts should be presented dispassionately.'' ] (]) 08:03, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
===Further discussion===

::::{{=)}} one of these days I'm going to have to put a ''"Warning! Political Scientist as Work!"'' sign on my sig. I don't disagree with anything you've said here, but from my perspective the observation that numbers of voices are loudly bungling the issue is an interesting and important fact - more important in some ways than the facts that are being bungled. the scientific debate over global warming is pretty much a done deal; to my knowledge there hasn't been a fully accreditable scientific statement against global warming since the mid-90s. The political and social debates over global warming, however, are just now getting their second wind, and you can expect them to continue for years yet. besides which, the only reason global warming is a public issue at all is because it pits the vested interests of corporate entities, nation/states, and the mass of humanity against each other in political spheres. scientists need to tell us whether global warming is real, yes, but how are scientists going to help us deal with the balance between (say) China's deep interest in industrial growth and the geometric increase in pollution that entails?

::::matters of science should not be subordinate to popular belief, sure; but the question is which science we are talking about. I'd say this problem falls squarely in poli sci territory, not climatology.

::::but you're right, it's way too late to debate these things effectively. pick it up again tomorrow. --] 08:30, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:::::Is Global warming primarily a political/social issue? If there were no science, then what would the politicians and political commentators be talking about? Scientists aren't giving the thumbs up and thumbs down, they're the ones going to the economist, who go up the politicians, and who ask whether they can get a thumbs up or down on a certain policy. It would be nice if it were the other way around, and the politicians and political commentators went up the scientists and asked: look at my news report or my slideshow, is it remotely accurate? From the news sources, even reporters reporting on "a recent study found such and such", seem to get the facts wrong or misrepresented. However, I think we could do a better job describing the politics of global warming, but I don't think it should be the main focus of this article.<p>Is having the science be the focus a PoV content fork? Everything is a PoV fork, and maybe it's just the epidemiology PoVed part of me that saying that this mentality is spreading like a disease. How often do we get a proposal to include, say Climategate, and that to oppose would eventually lead to a NPOV violation? Why can't the discussion's subject stick to relevance, or notability, and not move to embittered PoVed editors who warp and oppress and manipulate and lie? (We haven't got lies yet, have we? Ludwigs2, you lie that a resolve is to have politics at the forefront. !. ?. :P. ?.)<p>You're right, let's assume you're right. To resolve this PoV-fork we'll move ] here and move ] to GW research merged with ]. ] is over 120 KBs long with several PoV-forks that are now being proposed to be moved back (], ]). ], well we don't even have enough editors interested in objectively describing an un-objective issue to build it beyond the bare-bones. I think if we followed through, it wouldn't resolve a content PoV-fork, it'll do the opposite. Because then WMC will have a foundation to introduce green party rhetoric, Rush, Al Gore, and on. Look, there's a lot of interest in politics, but not in an neutral or objective manner. If there were, I wouldn't have to ask for the fourth time (see ]), that paragraph four could be improved in the section "Debate and skepticism", and from there we can improve our coverage of the politics of global warming. ] (]) 09:48, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::Ludwigs is right. there are major dimensions to this issue not discussed in this entry, due to the ongoing fixated view adopted by a group of editors. the entry should be more encyclopedic, and cover more societal aspects of this issue and topic. -] (]) 14:38, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

::::::hmmm... if there were no science around GW, then we'd all be blithely tumbling down the path to our own species' extinction. But we seem to be blithely tumbling down that path even with the science. Heaven knows I don't want to sell the scientists short, because without the scientists the activists wouldn't have a leg to stand on, and the environment would be largely uninhabitable by the end of this century. but it's the activists who are going to avert the disaster if the disaster is going to be averted, because averting the disaster means changing the way people ''think'' about their world.

::::::and me, I never lie; I am the soul of goodness and mercy. Also, I have this marvelous beachfront property in Florida for sale if you're interested... {{=)|biggrin}}

::::::I'm new to this page, so I can't speak to the troubles it has seen (though I can imagine them, given what I know about the real-world political tribulations). But I don't think that primary sources from advocates or critics who aren't scientists have much of a place in the article. as far as I can see it, the article ''should'' have this kind of a structure:
::::::*outline of the political debate
::::::*pro and con position statements from notable primary sources (brief and succinct, without much argumentation)
::::::*discussions of pro and con positions from secondary sources
::::::**scholarly viewpoints
::::::**notable advocacy position from both sides, clearly presented as advocacy
::::::*position of scientific perspectives in the political debate
::::::**scientific results, en claire
::::::**public and private sector politics surrounding the scientific results
::::::*real-world ramifications
::::::**political problems dealing with climate change (national and corporate counter-interests, mostly)
::::::**worst and best case environmental scenarios as presented by opposing sides
::::::I think that covers all of the relevant issues and includes all sides of the debate fairly, while controlling the spread of yakkity-yak (material that comes from relatively uniformed primary - e.g. pundit - sources, in all its endless glory). Might need to spawn content forks from some of these; just have to be careful not to let the content forks run way like rabid raccoons. --] 14:38, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::: This article is about the science. There are other articles about the politics. --] 14:43, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::::thanks Tony, but I've already addressed that particular point above. please don't make me repeat myself. --] 15:13, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::It's simpler than that: this article is about a globe that is warming. Global warming is the title and that is what it is about. The measurement and modelling of that warming. The only way to measure the warming of the earth is by scientific measurements and computer models. The warming of the earth is not something you can measure with opinion polls or focus groups. All of that comes under ''reactions'' to the warming of our globe. That's why all the subarticles are about the politics, economics, public opinion, crimes, conferences, etc. Read the words of the title. --] (]) 15:27, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::::: I had read your earlier comments, Ludwigs2. I'm just concerned that you seem to be persisting in redefining this well established article to be on relatively subsidiary subjects already covered by subsidiary articles. It's a bit like going to the ] article and proposing that we cover the subject, in that article, from the point of view of politics and religion rather than science. It isn't going to happen. --] 15:31, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

::::::::: I can imagine that a political scientist might sincerely think that more people come to Misplaced Pages looking for material on the politics bubbling around the topic, than for (scientific) information on global warming itself. But that is a matter of speculation, and the phrase "global warming" primarily denotes a physical phenomenon of climate, not a political phenomenon. If we really want to make it easier for readers to find the political material, we can put a "see also" at the top of this article. But even that seems wrong to me. ] (]) 15:54, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

::::::::::@ Tony: first off, it is not up to you to decide what is and isn't going to happen on this article; that should be a matter for debate and consensus. I understand the value of hyperbole like that, but please don't make the mistake of believing it's true.

::::::::::That being said, your analogy doesn't hold any water. Evolution is and always has been primarily a scientific issue; one with strong religious overtones, that unfortunately produce some nasty political conflicts, but the debates there have always centered on issues of pedagogy (the teaching of evolution) and so the entire discussion still falls within the realm of science (since science is one of the primary sources of knowledge for educational purposes). questions about global warming, however, ''invariably'' focus on political and social behaviors - it is not about teaching people the ''science'' of global warming except to the extent that science is useful to teach people about the ''ethics'' of global warming. This article as it stands is a very nice explanation of the ''science'' of global warming (and I wouldn't want to change that), but as such it is ''an entirely '''secondary''' point'' in the greater debate about global warming (which has to do with the questions about what, if any, social or political actions should be taken).

::::::::::and please, don't insult my intelligence with Sesame Street arguments (''Global warming is about a globe that is warming'' - yeeee...); If I want to play word games I'll do a crossword.

::::::::::@ Bertport: I believe people come to wikipedia looking for both kinds of information, and I believe wikipedia should provide both kinds of information, and I believe that it should be provided with an appropriate structure. I think it's safe to say that anyone who comes to wikipedia looking for scientific information on GW is doing that because they are curious about the political debates on GW and want information in that context; I sincerely doubt that many people come to wikipedia thinking about the science first with the politics a distant second. if you believe, however that a significant proportion of the 20k hits per day this page gets are from people whose main interest is in the details of of how climatology is done, well... you are free make that argument. --] 17:18, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:::::::::::I agree that it's likely that most of the reader traffic to this article now is sparked in some way by the political maelstrom. But that doesn't mean they come here looking primarily for description of the politics. I came here looking for authoritative information on global warming, which means scientific information on the physical phenomena. I am secondarily interested in what Misplaced Pages might have to say on the politics, and I can easily find that when I look at the table of contents for this article and see a section on "debate and skepticism", and if the summary there is not sufficient for me, then I can easily follow the "see also" links there. This article is about global warming, and the politics are a related topic. The science is, quite properly and obviously, the primary content for this physical phenomenon. Sorry if you think it's a Sesame Street argument. I'm sorry you seem to need this spelled out for you. ] (]) 17:48, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

::::::::::::well, since you haven't really responded to my argument, the best I can do is shrug. I think I've shown fairly effectively that the proper context of this issue is the political debate, and that the science of it is only one (albeit it interesting and important) move in that greater discussion. that's even implicit in what you said: looking for 'authoritative' information implies the presence of information which is not authoritative, which implies a enclosing, non-scientific environment... people can and will do what you've suggested regardless (scan through for the parts that interest them) whether the focus of the article is on the science or on the political debate, so to my mind that's a non-issue. The important issue is whether we have framed the article correctly with respect to its real-world manifestation, and it is pretty clear that this article fails to do that. Which is why I suggest that this article may suffer from PoV-fork issues, and why I recommend it be restructured as I suggest. Now, if you disagree that the science should be considered as a sub-facet of the political and social debates of global warming, please let me know what reasons you have for thinking that; I've already stated why I think it ''should'' be seen that way. let's put your reasons against mine so that we can make an effective comparison. --] 18:57, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:::::::::::::We have responded to your argument. It's very simple. This article is about global warming, as indicated by the title. You want the article to be about something else. Your interest belongs in another article with a title that matches your topic. ] (]) 22:54, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

::::::::::::::well, I can see that that is your belief. Unfortunately, your belief has no basis in reason (at least none that you've demonstrated), and so I'm afraid I'm going to have to dismiss it as an unfounded ideological claim. Your collective opinion is noted, and I will do my best to accommodate it when I discuss the issue with those who are interested in pursuing a rational analysis of the issue geared towards improving the article. thanks for your time. --] 23:28, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:::::::::::::::Ludwig2 is completely right. the way that articles at Misplaced Pages grow and develop is by editors being open to each other's differing ideas about what each article should contain. there really is no basis for any editor or any small group of editors deciding that only their subject matter is acceptable, and everyone else's ideas should be rejected immediately and categorically. --] (]) 01:43, 28 December 2009 (UTC)

:(outdent) Steve, "Ludwig2 is completely right" followed by paragraph written in such a manner that no one will disagree with, but does not address central point: science or politics or PoV-fork. Discussion is a covenant. Your objective isn't to ensure the comment makes you "right", your objective is to convince the other editors on a specific set of actions. That doesn't seem to be happening. And right now I'm not sure if you want me to address you, Steve, or Ludwig2. For the next 14 comments up there hasn't been a single question. No one is convinced, and no one is asking why. What do you think? ] (]) 08:06, 28 December 2009 (UTC)
::Well, I thought we were already having a specific disagreement about a specific set of proposals. so that's what my comment was meant to address. EOM. --] (]) 14:22, 28 December 2009 (UTC)

===Further discussion 2===
::::::::::::(E/C) As a reply to Ludwigs2's proposals (now far above), in my experience, a lot of people who I meet have vastly less knowledge about global warming than does the average Wikipedian here. Many people don't think that the science is anywhere near a done deal, and the overwhelming majority of these people have the news media as their primary source of information on the topic. My point is that a rehash of this article into what political commentators think, thereby making the science secondary, will remove a place that people can look for well-cited science behind global warming. I'm really afraid that this will instead turn into the exact same sorts of things that they get bombarded with every day by end-of-the-world-is-near radicals and the it's-no-big-deal or its-a-hoax crowds as well. People deserve to know about the details of the science, which is notably absent from a lot of public debates. That being said, this article should (and does) provide links to a number of articles that do cover the controversy, and I think that the coverage of political ramifications and controversy could be improved. '''Summary''': A ton of people are unfamiliar with why global warming is an issue, and we should present facts instead of repeating mass-media stories. ] (]) 19:07, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:::::::::::::I'm going to satisfy myself with a brief poke here. discussing GW in terms of its status as a political debate is not, ''not'', '''not''' equivalent to making a rehash of what political commentators think. that suggestion is hyperbolic to the point of farce, and it ticks me off a bit that you went there. what I am suggesting is framing the issue as a political discussion which has strong scientific elements (which is precisely what it is in the real world), not opening the page to bunches of mindless commentary that would violate numerous wikipedia guidelines and give everyone headaches. please try to keep the discussion on a realistic and productive tack, thank you. --] 19:26, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

::::::::::::::I think that the problem is that in my history on these talk pages, once the political debate is opened, all sorts of editors want to add all sorts of content - the slippery slope. I think that my other issue is that I don't in my mind disconnect political debate from advocacy. And I'm going to hop down from my polite high horse and ask you to ], because I really intended those comments to be a productive dissemination of my views. I try my very hardest to be polite, and I will not tolerate another attack on my character based on your assumptions. But thank you for further clarifying the political debate section that you suggest; I think I'm going to think about this for a little while and wait for the more primary editors of this page to weigh in. ] (]) 19:43, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:::::::::::::::My apologies. I needed a day-after-christmas nap (which I've now had) and was a bit more snappish than I intended to be. Of course you're right that once the political aspect is opened it needs to be monitored to keep it within reliable secondary sources (because people who don't get the sourcing distinction will try to insert all sorts of nonsense). I don't think that's a deal-breaker, though, since I'm sure there are a lot of reliable sources out there discussing the political debate from a nice, neutral distance. it's fairly easy to tell in this debate when a source is acting as a primary political voice and when it's taking a secondary or tertiary perspective. --] 23:18, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

If you want an article that states only one side of the story then the article title should make that clear as in, for example, 'The scientific case for AGW'. ] (]) 16:41, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:Well, in that case, let's change ] to "The scientific case for Earth history", as a large number of English speakers believe Archbishop Usher's calculations, and their side of the story certainly is being neglected. ] (]) 18:40, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

::That is the problem, some editors want to put AGW on a par with, say, evolution but the two are nothing like equivalent. There are no serious scientific doubters of evolution, these who question it come mainly from a specific religious background. On the other hand, there is a significant minority of scientists who do not accept AGW to various degrees. These are spread throughout the scientific community. ] (]) 18:51, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::: I absolutely agree with Martin. There are no serious doubters of evolution. There are many serious doubters of the Global Warming Hypothesis. It is on a par with the ] which most economists broadly accept, but which is also doubted by ]. (For that reason, even the firmest of believers in EMH insist it be called a 'hypothesis'). ] (]) 18:58, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

::::I'm afraid I have to disagree with the two of you. There is no serious ''scientific'' opposition to global warming, and GW shares that much in common with evolution. GW theory is the best scientific explanation available ''by far'' for the climate effects that we currently see in the world. That doesn't mean it's true, of course; it just means that there is no other theory available which has the same degree of explanatory power. all the opposition to GW theory comes from non-scientific venues, and it is all basically of the form "We have no other theory to offer in its place, but we object to the conclusions of this theory". nor do these non-scientific venues state precisely why they object to the conclusions of GW theory, though one gets the impression it is not on any particular methodological ground. --] 19:11, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:::: All right, I still disagree with "The scientific case for AGW" because that makes the science secondary. but I think we can come to terms about evenly presenting scientists' views. Yes, there is a very small minority of scientists who disagree with global warming being an issue, and an even smaller minority of climate scientists who do so. Their publications should be and (as far as I've seen) are presented here with appropriate weight to their significance in the scientific community. If you know of significant papers that are skeptical of global warming, please bring them up. ] (]) 19:13, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::There is more to the subject than scientific opinion/papers. This article is titled "global warming". It should therefore be a ] of all of the major issues involved: the science (which should be elucidated in a subarticle ]), the politics, the economics, the controversy, the effects, etc. We have subarticles for all of the rest, but I don't see how anyone can deny that there are significant political, economic, and other issues to discuss here. This is my objection to "this article is about the science". ] (]) 20:29, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

::::::I agree with ], that we should cover broader aspects of the subject, but it seems quite clear on the science that it is not in the same class as evolution and that there is another side to the argument that has not been properly represented here. We should, of course, retain a high standard of sourcing but there certainly is no case for deleting any dissenting opinion on the talk page.] (]) 21:13, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:::::::: OrenO has it right. There should be space and balance for all sub-topics. I suppect the main topic could benefit from a special wiki project task force. This might make for a good solution after the next RfC from an ANI result. The article is well written, how to expand it (to all realms of reliable sourced study) is what this discussion should focus on. ] (]) 04:05, 28 December 2009 (UTC)

::::::::: I am a bit puzzled returning after Christmas. So is this thread about conduct or about some people's feeling that their particular POV is underrepresented? Where we go next depends what the problem is. --] ] 08:02, 28 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::: You're on the right track BozMo, however in place of "conduct or POV" try "conduct '''and''' POV". ] (]) 16:04, 28 December 2009 (UTC)

== The Great Referencing Discussion ==

Somebody in the Super Secret Cabal RFC above mentioned that a big problem with this article is the uneven use of references. Well it strikes me that if there's so much cohesion that editors are accused of acting as a cabal, we ought to be able to reach an agreement on what referencing style to use.

I suggest that we might use ]. It's pretty compendious and is suitable for inline references or for references at the bottom of a page. Since this article refers to some sources again and again and the content of the article evolves quite slowly, perhaps the latter method could be adopted. --] 06:16, 24 December 2009 (UTC)
:Agree with TS on this. We should use this template and move all references down into the reflist template as done in the ]-article.] (]) 13:21, 24 December 2009 (UTC)
::Disagree.<ol><li>Wouldn't that make it easy to loose references? Change a section of text, but forget to remove the citation buried with 139 others.</li><li>If you look at the souce, {{tl|Citation}}, {{tl|Cite journal}}, {{tl|Cite web}}, and on are just special cases of {{tl|Citation/core}} or {{tl|Citation/patent}} where appropriate. Cite journal and such were created to make it easier to tell whether the citation is from a scientific journal or a web page. And in terms of consistency? They all use the same ''engine'' to produce text. So it makes no difference style-wise to use {{tl|Citation}} or {{tl|Cite journal}}.</li></ol>Fix the references that are just URLs, that should probably be our first priority. I believe we need consistency, but have something else in mind. ] (]) 10:39, 25 December 2009 (UTC)

== New study says CFCs and cosmic rays, not CO2, are main cause of global warming. ==

I think is worth citing in the article, but I want to see if there's a consensus for including it before I add it. If the consensus is against including it, then I won't add it. What do others here think of it? ] (]) 03:34, 25 December 2009 (UTC)

The actual scientific paper can be found . ] (]) 03:39, 25 December 2009 (UTC)

:The abstract isn't much to go on and our library doesn't have the full paper yet. Thus I don't yet have an opinion other than the standard advice to wait and see if it has an impact on the field. ] (]) 05:14, 25 December 2009 (UTC)
::Thank you for looking and commenting.] (]) 12:50, 25 December 2009 (UTC)

As far as I know the CO2 hypothesis is quite unproven (people need to understand the diff. between in vitro and in vivo). This article should include alternate hypotheses. On a related note, you may want to include links to the papers that make reference to the 5% decreased strength of the magnetosphere over the last 150 years - that would presumably allow cosmic rays to influence our atmosphere more (assuming they have an influence). Of course, I suggest the curious-minded look up youtube videos of Wilson chambers to see how clouds might be seeded in this manner. I'd think that this would promote cooling, but only if the influx of cosmic rays has remained constant. Cheers. ] (]) 02:28, 28 December 2009 (UTC)

==CO2 over 650ka==
This source () is referenced to source the following statement: "These levels are much higher than at any time during the last 650,000 years, the period for which reliable data has been extracted from ]s." This source, however, does not support that statement. The source discusses CO2 concentrations from about 1750. I inserted the dubious tag not because the statement itself is false, but because an inappropriate source is being used. I think the source wanting to be used is Spahni ''et al.'', 2005. (Keep in mind, though, Spanhi ''et al.'' dicuss CH4 and N2O. Petit ''et al.'', 1999, discuss CO2 as do Siegenthaler ''et al.'', 2005). Cheers. ~ ] (]) 19:03, 25 December 2009 (UTC)
:I've changed it, since no one else would. ~ ] (]) 20:04, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

== Radiative forcing ==

The section 'Radiative forcing' begins 'External forcing is...'. If the section is about radiative forcing, why does it begin like this? Also the definition of external forcing is weak: 'processes external to the climate system'. Any processes? Thought processes? Surely some qualification is needed. Processes which have some measurable effect on the climate system?] (]) 09:53, 26 December 2009 (UTC)

:I've rewritten some of that bit (and retitled the section) in an attempt to clarify. ] (]) 19:35, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
: Thank you. I made one important change . Surely processes (such as thought processes) that have no influence on the climate are do not fall under the definition? I'm not an expert, do revert if I am wrong. ] (]) 21:17, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::That's awkward wording. Why not "external influences"? ~ ] (]) 21:25, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:: Very good. Be my guest.] (]) 21:50, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

== Divergence problem==
Could someone explain why the ] is not mentioned in this important article? There is a lot about this in the evil capitalist right-wing press, and there is even material on it in Misplaced Pages.

:"While the thermometer records indicate a substantial warming trend, many tree rings do not display a corresponding change in their width. A temperature trend extracted from tree rings alone would not show any substantial warming. The temperature graphs calculated in these two ways thus "diverge" from one another since the 1950s, which is the origin of the term."

Why is this not mentioned in this article? The fact that it isn't surely gives credence to the evil right-wing view that Misplaced Pages is being manipulated. ] (]) 09:33, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

]

I uploaded the chart above as, surprisingly, it does not seem to have been included in Misplaced Pages anywhere. A question: in the many articles about 'scientific consensus' in Misplaced Pages, is there anything about the consensus on the ]? I have skimmed through the literature and the only consensus I could find was that the problem is itself caused by anthropogenic global warming. I.e. the failure of the tree ring evidence to support the global warming hypothesis is itself caused by anthropogenic global warming. ] (]) 10:46, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

:The divergence problem is a possible (not necessary, as the divergence can be explained by a number of other factors) problem for tree-ring based temperature reconstructions. It's not a problem for the basic theory of anthropogenic global warming, since the warming is well-attested in the instrumental record, and the basic mechanisms have been understood since long before we could measure the effect. --] (User talk:Stephan Schulz|talk]]) 11:16, 27 December 2009 (UTC)

::You say, the basic mechanisms have been understood since long before we could measure the effect. Pehaps you could tell me what these are. ] (]) 12:09, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::The enhanced greenhouse effect caused by anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, and the positive feedback of water vapor (note vapor, not clouds, which are made up of droplets or crystals, and are much less well understood). See ]. ----] (]) 18:37, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::: Is the positive feedback of water vapour ''that'' well understood? {{fact}}] (]) 19:02, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::Yes. --] (]) 22:13, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::: Thank you. But the article on ] says "Other important considerations involve water vapor being the only greenhouse gas whose concentration is highly variable in space and time in the atmosphere and the only one that also exists in both liquid and solid phases, frequently changing to and from each of the three phases or existing in mixes. Such considerations include clouds themselves, air and water vapor density interactions when they are the same or different temperatures, the absorption and release of kinetic energy as water evaporates and condenses to and from vapor, and behaviors related to vapor partial pressure. " Is this variability also well understood, and predictable? That was behind my question. ] (]) 22:18, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:: I don't doubt the divergence problem isn't a problem for the anthropogenic global warming hypothesis. My point was, why is this problem so little discussed in the main article? Indeed it's not mentioned at all. You have to hunt around Misplaced Pages to find it. Why isn't there a section saying e.g., that there is an apparent problem with the temperature record, but this is not a problem for the basic theory of anthropogenic global warming, since the warming is well-attested in the instrumental record? There could then be a discussion about the consensus among scientists about why the problem exists. Is there a consensus among scientists about why divergence exists, by the way? Also, is there any literature on why it is called 'divergence'? Presumably because there is evidence of correlation between instrumental record before 1950s? If so, what is the measure of correlation? What are the statistical tests used to distinguish such correlation from mere chance? It is quite easy to find apparent correlation in randomly generated data samples. And so on. ] (]) 13:28, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:: @ Martin - yes I would also like to know what basic mechanism has been 'understood'. Many of the papers I have looked at state categorically that the feedback mechanism (on which climate models depend) is not well understood at all. ] (]) 13:33, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:: E.g. here "Many facets of the earth's climatic system are poorly understood. A significant uncertainty associated with the modeling of future climatic changes is due to deficiencies in the understanding of, and in the incorporation into the climate models of, several interactive climate feedback mechanisms." So why is Schulz saying that it is well understood? ] (]) 13:34, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::It is understood well enough to make predictions for the temperature rise due to a doubling of CO2 concentrations within some reasonable interval of a few K. We don't understand the climate well enough to make a prediction without having to specify an uncertainty. ] (]) 13:46, 27 December 2009 (UTC)


:: The ] applies to some forests (and really, not all forests) in the extreme northern hemisphere. It does not seem to apply to southern forests, though this could be because of paucity of samples. It's a bit of a fringe subject and until recently didn't even have a Misplaced Pages article. I wouldn't expect to see it covered in this kind of article. It ''is'' covered in ]. --] 13:48, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::: I'm sorry why is it a 'fringe subject', given there is a considerable literature on it since the 1990's, and why does it not apply to this article, given that ] is one of the underpinnings of the anthropogenic global warming hypothesis? It is also essential to understanding ]. If the instrumental record, which is patchy in the early periods, is all we have to go by, it is difficult to distinguish the current warm period from noise. ] (]) 14:14, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::: We're not journalists and we don't put our opinions into the articles. We just report on the science. The divergence problem is not a major part of climatology; nor is it regarded as a major problem in climatology. The current warming trend would still be here even if we discarded all of dendroclimatology. Contrary to your claim, the current warming trend is clearly distinguishable from noise. --] 14:22, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::: I am not a journalist. Misplaced Pages is an important reference work. Given the considerable popular belief that the divergence problem ''is'' a problem, why can't that be in the article. If it really isn't a problem, why can't there be a short section saying so? If the current warming is distinguishable from noise, why not a simple explanation of why this is? All this denial and talking down to the plebs actually makes me more suspicious than ever. ] (]) 14:31, 27 December 2009 (UTC)


The existing graphic's content is not discussed in article text. Also, soil moisture's broader implication on the ''impacts'' affecting humans is speculative and indirect, perhaps even suggesting that things'll get better and better for sub-Saharan Africa. (Aside: I speak out against captions that merely repeat what's in the graphic's own legends/text.)
:::::: Ah, but you ''are'' asking for your own opinions to be put into the article. For instance you think there is "considerable popular belief that the divergence problem ''is'' a problem" (I doubt whether one person in 1000 has even heard of it, but my opinion on this is no better than yours).


Meanwhile, the ''impacts'' on humans of progressively more intense hurricanes is immediately and intuitively evident (see also ]). I realize Graphic B is not global and is only one year's hurricanes, but I think the graphic speaks to a more striking and immediate impact of climate change.
:::::: And you also seem to be mistaking this ''encyclopedia article'' on global warming for some kind of newspaper piece. You want us to address "popular belief". There are other articles about popular beliefs concerning climate change. This one is about the science. If you think talking about science in an article about the science is "denial and talking down to plebs", you should probably find an article about a non-science subject where this style of encyclopedic writing about science will not be a problem for you.


Please comment below, on your preference. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 23:19, 29 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::: And here I must stop encouraging further responses. Nothing in this discussion is about this article on the science of global warming at all. --] 14:41, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::: 1. Google 'divergence problem climategate' for evidence of the popular belief I referred to. 2. Please explain why the divergence problem is nothing to do with the science of global warming, given my arguments above (namely that there is a considerable literature on it) 3. Reasonable reply to my other argument above, namely that there should be a short section about the divergence 'problem' and why it isn't a problem. ] (]) 16:46, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::::: This article isn't about 'popular belief'; whatever can usefully be added to the science by dendroclimatology has been added by the scientists, and published and discussed in their peer-reviewed papers. The whole of the science of GW has been, in huge detail. Do you really think that you and a few bloggers have thought of something all the scientists, the peer reviewers, the publishers etc have missed? If there was anything like that that was missed, there would (or very soon will be) peer reviewed papers altering the established science. There is no such thing; if there is, let us know; if it's just the right-wing press, then forget it - grown-up science isn't so easy that everyone can just turn up and have a go any time they like. --] (]) 16:59, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::::: You entirely mistake my point. Where popular belief is widespread and mistaken, isn't it the job of a reference work to address that? By explaining carefully and clearly why the belief is wrong. I am simply asking that there be a short section about the ] and why it isn't a problem. ] (]) 17:04, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::::: @ Tony's claim that "The divergence problem is not a major part of climatology", see e.g. D'Arrigo 2008 : "... reconstructions based on northern tree-ring data impacted by divergence cannot be used to directly compare past natural warm periods (notably, the MWP) with recent 20th century warming, '''making it more difficult to state unequivocally that the recent warming is unprecedented'''." (p. 301 and ''passim''). That is the crux of the problem.] (]) 17:08, 27 December 2009 (UTC)


:While I'm open to replacing that graph, I'm not a fan of adding another US-focused one in its place. Is it possible to do something similar for tropical cyclones in general? ] (]) 08:21, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::I love SUV is totally right here. there is a consistent precedent at Misplaced Pages for articles to cover significant patterns in public opinion, public debate, etc etc. this encyclopedia has many entries on popular culture such as TV series episodes, etc. (before you all jump on my statement, I'm not saying the global warming article is like a tv series article.) nothing at Misplaced Pages precludes giving coverage on a global issue like this one as it relates to trends in public opinion and debate. --] (]) 17:20, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:: It's Atlantic focused, not "US" focused per se. I've searched for CC-intensified (Pacific) typhoons but references applying ] to specific hurricanes/cyclones/typhoons are nearly non-existent. This chart was a rare discovery in how it makes CC's effects be concretely evident. If anyone finds similar references for the Pacific, let me know.. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 17:51, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::: Actually that's not quite my point, Sm8900. My point is that a popular reference work like Misplaced Pages should be educational without treating people like morons. Thus, instead of given long lists of things that scientists think, it should also explain carefully, with appropriate citations, ''why'' scientists think it. I don't see any harm in a section on the divergence problem that clearly explains what the problem is, and then clearly explains why most scientists don't think it's a problem. See ]. ] (]) 17:28, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::: The article is already 99 kilobytes long just going through the established science: we can't go into every idea that is wrong as well, discussing what the idea is, as well as why it's wrong. --] (]) 17:12, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::::::: Yes but there is a lot of irrelevant material in there. The article should simply explain what the global warming hypothesis is (there is confusion in the introduction about that, too), what the scientific 'consensus' is (there is consensus about different things), and the basic reasons why scientists believe the hypothesis. These are: 1. radiative forcing 2. the feedback effect 3. the temperature record. It should record carefully any qualifications that scientists have. If you look at the literature, which I suspect you haven't, you will see that many scientists have reservations, and many express varying degrees of doubt and uncertainty. That is what a good article needs to do. ] (]) 17:16, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::::::: Also, some of the sections aren't really science at all. The section on the environmental impact is highly speculative, so also the section on the economic impact (economists can't even forecast what will happen next year). As for the sections on 'mitigation' and 'adaptation' ... The final section on debate and scepticism has nothing to do with debate and scepticism.] (]) 17:21, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::::::: See also the article ] which I quite like. It doesn't have long lists of academies and scientists who hold the consensus belief that the earth is spherical. By contrast, it explains exactly ''why'' scientists think it is spherical. Why can't this article do the same? ] (]) 17:34, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::::: ] exists as an answer to your main argument. If you have a case for removing some of the material from the article as irrelevant to the science, then make it. --] 17:39, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::::::I suggest you stop telling me what literature I haven't read, and go and read the archives of this Talk page, where all this has been discussed before. Then go and look at a few other scientific articles on WP (real ones, not 6th - 3rd century BCE science) then come back and tell us how to structure a scientific article. --] (]) 17:43, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::::::: I have looked back as far as the archive 48 and find only one fleeting reference to the divergence problem. ] (]) 17:56, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::::::::::::::: Shifting the goalposts back again? I was answering your points about making this article more like Spherical Earth, removing all the 'irrelevant' material and 'confusion', and restructuring it to explain 'why'. You hadn't mentioned divergence for the last third of this thread. --] (]) 18:10, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::: I'm afraid we haven't got off to a good start, have we? ] (]) 18:27, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::::: @tony My main point, expressed above, is that instead of given long lists of things that scientists think, a good article should also explain carefully, ''with appropriate citations'', why scientists think it. I have emphasised the bit that you may have missed. @Nigel - D'Arrigo 2008 is actually quite a recent paper. ] (]) 17:47, 27 December 2009 (UTC)


:The soil moisture graph ] three years ago. I think we could probably remove it (or move it?) but I am a bit concerned that we don't mention "soil moisture" content anywhere in the text (or is it mentioned under a different term?). I was going to suggest to move it to ] but I see it's already there. - I think my suggestion would be to remove it but to not replace it with another fairly complicated, wordy schematic (such as graph B.). Either remove it without replacement or replace it with something very visual (a photo?). In general, we do have a lot of graphs, schematics and images already in this article. Perhaps one less is actually a good thing. ] (]) 13:22, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
The DP is an interesting part of dendroclimatology but is of little improtance to GW overall. ''given that dendroclimatology is one of the underpinnings of the anthropogenic global warming hypothesis?'' is wrong, so the conclusions you draw from it are similarly wrong. See-also http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2005/01/what-if-the-hockey-stick-were-wrong/ ] (]) 21:34, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
::Droughts are mentioned. ] (]) 21:29, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
: Fine, in that case, as I have argued, there should be a section in the article that covers this important misconception. Plebs like me who read the ''Daily Express'' somehow got the idea that it was important. If that is wrong, and millions of people like me, it is important to correct such misconceptions in such an article. ] (]) 21:39, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:I'd rather have ] chosen for the replacement than the other file. I do not believe using an image for one season restricted in one basin would reflect climate change's general impact on tropical cyclones. I'm a bit cautious on replacing the existing image, but I want to see more people discussing before I issue my final verdict. <span style="font-family:Times New Roman;font-size:100%;color:#00008B;background-color:transparent;;CSS">]]</span> 18:21, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
:OK I have just read this on your recommendation. It is very long-winded, but the argument seems to be that even if one of the underpinnings of the GW hypothesis, namely that the current warm period is not just a fluke, we still have the 'forcing' arguments. And then it concludes that there is some uncertainty about how ''strong'' the effects of forcing are. ] (]) 21:46, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
* '''Keep'''. Temperature, soil, precipitation are the 3 graphs in B. Future Climate Change, Risks, and Long-Term Responses in AR6 SYR SPM (page 14). We already have temperature in the article. ] (]) 21:25, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
*:{{u|RCraig09}}, I'd recommend here for image B: ] ] (]) 21:32, 1 December 2024 (UTC)


===IPCC's AR6 Fig. TS-22 etc.===
:: Why don't you take a look at Britannica's article on global warming?
:@] have you considered these figures?
::: .
:https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1/figures/technical-summary/figure-ts-22 ] (]) 13:21, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
:: {{reply|DecFinney}} I think that Fig. TS-22 is far too complex and detailed for a layperson encyclopedia, especially in a high-level article such as this. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 15:10, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I wasnt imagining the whole thing. e.g. perhaps just the top right quarter. That seems like a really neat summary in lay terms of the kind of impacts different regions of the world could expect. It doesnt rely on the rest of the figure for understanding so I would assume its fine to crop it to make a new figure (but I am new-ish to wiki so am not sure of cropping policy).
:::Such a figure seems much more relevant to any person in the world. Meanwhile figures based on the atlantic seem more like a token representation of impact (i.e. just one example) as well as introducing a regional bias and thereby limiting the interest for the wider global population. I appreciate you will not being trying to illustrate all impacts. Nevertheless, the figure I propose does do a pretty job of covering bases in the a concise manner. ] (]) 15:29, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
:::: {{reply|DecFinney}} I appreciate that Fig. TS-22(b) has a lot of information, a huge amount in fact: five values for each of 35 categories. Especially for a high-level article such as this, this micro-categorization would be overwhelming for lay readers. FYI: Generally there is no general prohibition on cropping as such (every edit involves selection of material from a larger-content publication), but I seem to recall that some organization, not sure if it's the IPCC, licensed things only if presented in their entirety. I wish I had a hurricane-intensification reference for both Atlantic and Pacific, but since the main point of Graphic "B" is ''climate change's intensification'' of hurricanes rather than hurricanes themselves, I think "B" is more than adequate for purpose. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 18:57, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::@] ok. the only multi-basin figure i can find that seems relevant to your aim is fig5 in https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/bams/101/3/bams-d-18-0194.1.xml
:::::this shows the consistent projection of increased TC intensity (and rain rate) in every basin. ] (]) 07:34, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::: {{reply|DecFinney}} Thanks for the research. I like the global extent of the AMS datasets but the error ranges are, like, totally_outtasight_dude! I'll have to consider the various drawings in the AMS reference... I lean toward something like Figs. 3b and 4b more than the global map. A major advantage of ] is that it's not a long-term prediction (it's about climate change ''attribution''), and concrete values are provided in the context of peak winds and hurricane categories. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 21:28, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::@] i agree 3b and 4b are better multi-basin figs to consider.
:::::::there is a part 1 to that paper which is about attribution. when i glanced at it, i didnt spot any suitable figures. https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/bams/100/10/bams-d-18-0189.1.xml
:::::::attribution with TCs is still pretty statistically limited. i have to admit that fig1f probably justifies a focus on NAtlantic if you want to stick to an attribution based figure.
:::::::thats my last input. thanks for the discussion. im happy with whatever you decide. ] (]) 09:08, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::: Many thanks. I haven't been able to conjure a ] to represent multi-basin attribution/changes that's more elegant than separate bar charts with distracting and divergent error bars scattered around a world map. I think that ] already captures predicted impacts quite well, and that an example of ] (Graphic "B", above) deserves space in this article. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 17:36, 18 December 2024 (UTC)


===Underemphasis on extreme event attribution===
:: Now the Britannica is still the most respected encyclopedia on earth. How do you account for the fact that it doesn't pander to misconceptions? --] 22:50, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
]
The preceding discussion brings out the point that ] is not even mentioned in this article. I think it's very important because, more and more, the intensification of specific current events are being presented to the public as being caused by global warming. This attribution is distinct from projections of future intensification such as that shown in ]. Though attribution science is not yet fully developed, and is statistical in nature, I think that something should be added to the "Impacts" section. Agreement? Suggestions? —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 17:20, 23 December 2024 (UTC)


:@] sounds reasonable to me.
::: At first glance, I am a little put off by the Britannica entry for the use of "forecast' and 'prediction' terminology. I suspect the IPCC shuns this lexicon for "assessment" and "projection" or the like. It is good to see this wiki article seems to have better terminology congruence than Britannica. ] (]) 03:58, 28 December 2009 (UTC)
:i think most good science comms would say that the chance of event is made more likely by climate change. it may go as far as to say it was basically impossible before, i.e. 1 in a million year event or something but the message can get a bit lost in that. of course one can odten say there's no precident in the records.
:im not sure about the plot. its not obvious to me exactly what the x axis means or what information helps determine it. what is the source of the figure? ] (]) 21:35, 24 December 2024 (UTC)


:: {{reply|DecFinney}} Welcome to Misplaced Pages! Sources can usually be found on the Wikimedia Commons file description page (click through image itself), or in captions of charts placed in Misplaced Pages articles. Here the source is {{blue|{{cite web |last1=Lindsey |first1=Rebecca |title=Extreme event attribution: the climate versus weather blame game |url=https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/extreme-event-attribution-climate-versus-weather-blame-game |website=Climate.gov |publisher=National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240609120512/https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/extreme-event-attribution-climate-versus-weather-blame-game |archive-date=9 June 2024 |date=15 December 2016 |quote=Graphic adapted from Figure 4.7 in NAS 2016. |url-status=live}}.}} The x-axis means the degree to which models can accurately represent or predict real-world events. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 21:43, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
''Fine, in that case, as I have argued, there should be a section in the article that covers this important misconception'' - this is a problem we've struggled with wrt other issues. It is hard to have a section on problems that are not scientifically large, but which have been blown out of proportion in the popular media. Because it isn't too hard to find good scientific articles about the DP, or about aspects of it. But you won't (obviously) find scientific articles saying "the skeptics have got carried away about this" ] (]) 11:29, 28 December 2009 (UTC)
:::@] cheers, sorry. phone app doesnt let me follow an image link.
:::image is ok. I'd change caption "more generally" to "in addition" as this is listing the other two bullets from the article that gives the necessary conditions for confidence in attribution. they are not more general than the point the graph is illustrating. id actually suggest they are more specific.
:::i think youve edited the image a bit? it now looks like the colours have some meaning red/green/blue. but i dont think they did in the article, where each impact had a different colours? what do the colours mean here?
:::the image also has removed the word "extreme" from quite a few impacts compared to the article. i would consider this to be substantive change. "extreme rainfall" (if meaning e.g. 99th percentile, short timescales) is affected by climate change differently to longer timescale averaged rainfall, which is how i would interpret the term "rainfall" on its own. i would say that scientific understanding for extreme rainfall is possibly better than mean rainfall change, and therefore i think it might not be appropriate to change that terminology in the plot. ] (]) 15:22, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
:::: {{reply|DecFinney}} Thanks for the feedback. The colors merely categorize the events (blue for cold, green for water-related, red for heat-related) to make the graphic more intuitively meaningful for a lay reader. The graphic's title includes "...'''extreme''' events..." so that the graphic can avoid needless repetition in the various individual elements. I'm not quite following your suggestion re the caption, but editors can change textual captions through ordinary editing. is a link to the image description page. Separately: I'm hoping for more participation from others about adding new content to the article. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 15:39, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::@] I see you're points regarding the image edits. regarding caption, i will make edits when the image is in the article then, if it still seems appropriate. ] (]) 15:53, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::@] I see you're points regarding the image edits. regarding caption, i will make edits when the image is in the article then, if it still seems appropriate. ] (]) 15:54, 30 December 2024 (UTC)


== Mentioning SRM under "Reducing and recapturing emissions" ==
==Irelevant stuff==
Most of the sections at the end are nothing to do with the science of GW. Namely


Hello! I am new to this talk page. I have been working on the ] and noticed that SRM is mentioned in the Climate Change article. '''I have some questions about how SRM is mentioned in this article.'''
* Mitigation - suggest removing most of this, particularly material like
** "Many environmental groups encourage individual action against global warming, as well as community and regional actions. " This is activism, not science.
** More activism: "Some indigenous rights organizations, such as Survival International, Amazon Watch, and Cultural Survival, have raised concerns over the fact that not only climate change affects the tribal people most of all, as some measures to mitigate the problem are equally harmful for them. Survival international came to public with the report, The most inconvenient truth of all, which documents the impact of the biofuels industry, hydro-electric power, carbon-offsetting and forest conservation schemes on indigenous communities worldwide. The organization argues that some climate change mitigation measures have led to exploitation, violation and in some cases destruction of land recognized as belonging to indigenous communities. The International Forum of Indigenous Peoples on Climate Change has expressed similar concerns. Stephen Corry, director of Survival International, explains that “projects that victimise the people and harm the environment cannot be promoted or marketed as green projects”."
* Adaptation - perhaps mention the sub-article, but again, this more science fiction than science - 'even colonization of Mars been suggested'.
] (]) 18:02, 27 December 2009 (UTC)


Should SRM really be mentioned under the heading "Reducing and recapturing emissions"?
It does rather look like there are double standards being applied here, with a strict science only policy being applied just to sceptics. ] (]) 18:18, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
:Actually I am all for science. Science is not about ], but rather about ]. Mostly the former in the Misplaced Pages articles about GW, plus a sizeable amount of ranting. ] is particularly bad. ] (]) 18:25, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
: Could you explain what explanation you think is missing from this article? There are extensive wikilinks to articles on the details of the science, as you know. --] 20:36, 27 December 2009 (UTC)


Given that SRM would only ‘mask’ climate change instead of addressing the cause, greenhouse gas emissions. "SRM contrasts with climate change mitigation activities, such as emission reductions and carbon dioxide removal (CDR), as it introduces a ‘mask’ to the climate change problem by altering the Earth’s radiation budget, rather than attempting to address the root cause of the problem, which is the increase in greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere" ().
@Tony: Links are generally bad when it is possible to give an explanation in the body of the article. Any science article should give a clear and coherent and succinct explanation of why scientists believe ''x''. In this case (correct me if I'm wrong), the reasons why scientists believe the global warming hypothesis (namely the hypothesis that the earth is ''continuing'' to warm, and that the increase in temperature in the last 100 years is not merely a random accident) are


I suggest either deleting the two sentences on SRM altogether or clearly explaining to the readers that SRM is somewhat related but is not a mitigation option in the pure sense. ] (]) 12:00, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
* Empirical evidence: The temperature record, which suggests that the increase is not merely a random accident.
* Theoretical model: Radiative forcing by anthropogenically introduced factors (CO2, mainly)
* Theoretical model: Feedback


:I agree with 1HumbleB's concerns (disclosure: we have worked together on the ] article; that's how I got interested in this). For comparison, in the article ] we have quite a good description of what SRM has to do with mitigation (or doesn't have to do with it). I have just moved that section further down in the article; it was under "definition" there until now which I don't think was ideal. It reads like this at the ] article:
As to what is missing. There is no explanation in the article about the statistics of temperature records, nor about the need (very important in science) to distinguish random fluctuations from changes caused by an underlying process. For example, current economic theory, the ] holds that there are no such things as trends in stock markets - the 'trends' you see are just the result of humans trying to see patterns in events that are essentially random. A lot of that theory involves careful definition of randomness, and types of randomness. I don't see an equivalent section in this article.
:== Related approaches ==
:=== Relationship with solar radiation modification (SRM) ===
:While ] (SRM) could reduce surface temperatures, it temporarily masks climate change rather than addressing the root cause, which is greenhouse gases.<ref name="AR6 WGIII Ch 14">IPCC (2022) in , Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, United States]</ref>{{rp|14–56}} SRM would work by altering how much solar radiation the Earth absorbs.<ref name="AR6 WGIII Ch 14" />{{rp|14–56}} Examples include reducing the amount of sunlight reaching the surface, reducing the optical thickness and lifetime of clouds, and changing the ability of the surface to reflect radiation.<ref>{{Cite book |last=National Academies of Sciences |first=Engineering |url=https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/25762/reflecting-sunlight-recommendations-for-solar-geoengineering-research-and-research-governance |title=Reflecting Sunlight: Recommendations for Solar Geoengineering Research and Research Governance |date=25 March 2021 |isbn=978-0-309-67605-2 |language=en |doi=10.17226/25762 |s2cid=234327299}}</ref> The ] describes SRM as a climate risk reduction strategy or supplementary option rather than a climate mitigation option.<ref name="AR6 WGIII Ch 14" />
:The terminology in this area is still evolving. Experts sometimes use the term ''geoengineering'' or ] in the scientific literature for both CDR or SRM, if the techniques are used at a global scale.<ref name="AR6 WGIII Ch 1">IPCC (2022) in , Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, United States</ref>{{rp|6–11}} IPCC reports no longer use the terms ''geoengineering'' or ''climate engineering''.<ref name="IPCC AR6 WGI Glossary">IPCC, 2021: . In . Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA, pp. 2215–2256, doi:10.1017/9781009157896.022.</ref> ] (]) 10:15, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
:: To simplify things: I'd like to propose to '''delete these two sentences''' (for the reasons given above): {{tq|] (SRM) is also a possible supplement to deep reductions in emissions. However, SRM raises significant ethical and legal concerns, and the risks are imperfectly understood.<ref>{{harvnb|IPCC SR15 Ch4|2018|pp=347–352}}</ref>}}. Especially the first out of these two sentences is problematic in my opinion. The phrasing reads as if there is a relationship between SRM and deep emission reductions; and it lacks nuance. Also, the topic of SRM opens a can of worms and would require more space than what can be given in this high level article. Therefore, I think it's better not to mention it here at all. Readers can easily find it in the ] article instead. ] (]) 21:42, 10 December 2024 (UTC)
:::So I went ahead and deleted the two sentences in question (as there was no disagreement voiced on the talk page). Subsequently, User:RCraig09 re-instated the two sentences with the edit summary comment: "The content was in the section, ]: and there was no implication that SRM is mitigation. You can distinguish mitigation from SRM if you think it's important."
:::My response: this section is all about climate change mitigation. Directly under the section heading it says "'''Main''': Climate change mitigation". Therefore, why do we talk about SRM in this section, which is <u>not</u> about climate change mitigation? It is also <u>not</u> about "reducing and recapturing emissions". Rather, it's about ''masking the warming effects'', i.e. actively attempting to achieve global cooling.
:::So I still think that those two sentences have no place here. If others say SRM must be mentioned in this section (why?), then the two sentences ought to be changed (as per my earlier comments) and it should be made clear that SRM is neither about mitigation nor about "reducing and recapturing emissions". Otherwise we'll just create confusion. ] (]) 13:03, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
::::I agree with @]'s points. The fact that the content was previously included under this heading and that there is NO implication that SRM is mitigation, IMO does not justify keeping it here. SRM is unrelated to climate change mitigation. It should not be listed under this heading because its inclusion implies a connection to reducing or recapturing emissions, which is not accurate. Even if we revise the sentences to clarify that SRM is neither mitigation nor about "reducing and recapturing emissions," it would still be misplaced under this heading.
::::I suggest we delete the sentences all together. ] (]) 11:58, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
::::: Through its reduction of permafrost melt and other positive-feedback global warming processes, SRM has the ''indirect effect'' of "Reducing ...emissions" that is a section title. SRM thus helps impede the climate change that is the subject of this article. SRM therefore has a place in this article, and I'm certainly not opposed to editors pointing out the distinction between SRM and more direct mitigation techniques. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 17:07, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::SRM does not "reduce emissions", so I don't know what you mean with "indirect effect of reducing emissions". For comparison, in the climate change mitigation article, SRM is mentioned at the end under "related approaches". I don't know if SRM is all that important that it needs to be included in this high level article (?). People can easily find it through the sub-articles. But if several editors think it ought to be mentioned then I would either mention it elsewhere in the article, or change the section heading or make it very explicit that SRM is not climate change mitigation and does not reduce emissions. - Does anyone else have an opinion about this? ] (]) 22:07, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::For now, I've changed the wording of the two sentences to this (the bolding is used to show the changes): {{tq|] (SRM) is '''under discussion as a possible supplement''' to reductions in emissions. However, SRM raises significant ethical and '''] concerns''', and its risks are '''not well understood'''.}} The old version was {{tq|] (SRM) is also a possible supplement to deep reductions in emissions. However, SRM raises significant ethical and legal concerns, and the risks are imperfectly understood.}}. (I am not sure if the wording "supplement" is sufficiently clear, and not overly optimistic.) ] (]) 22:17, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::: At 17:07 I explained how SRM would inhibit permafrost melt—it would thus inhibit release of methane that was previously embedded in the permafrost. That is the indirect effect of SRM. Yes, it is a widely reported "related approach" that should be mentioned here. Re wording: closely follow source descriptions. —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;color:dark blue;">] (])</span> 22:32, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
{{reflist-talk}}


== Copernicus: 2024 above +1.5°C ==
The explanation in the article of radiative forcing is somewhat better, but goes into unnecessary detail - the section on Greenhouse gases can't decide whether it is about the increase in CO2, or the ''effect'' of that increase. The stuff on aerosols and soot tends to confuse the whole thing - that should be left to a sub-article.


https://climate.copernicus.eu/2024-track-be-first-year-exceed-15oc-above-pre-industrial-average
The role of feedback is hardly explained at all. That (I believe) is an important part of the hypothesis, yet the section discussing it is a strange list of things with no obvious purpose. There is no heading section that ties the three parts of the hypothesis together.


Yes, I know
The section 'climate models' is all rather uncertain. It needs a summary at the beginning to explain what scientists conclude from their use of models, and perhaps some material on the uncertainty that is attached to models.
* ].
] (]) 21:36, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
* We'll have to wait another 10 years for the 20 year average.


Still ] could mention 2024 as the first year above +1.5 C. ] (]) 12:38, 10 December 2024 (UTC)
: I think you'd be best off dealing with the "more activism" section first. Doing even one thing is hard; trying to deal with multiple problems at once is impossible. As to the stats: you may want to head over to the attribution article in the end. There is an answer for your stats, which is that people agree the rise is unusual / unprecedented; but following that leads you to attribution. Not that its well covered there, either ] (]) 11:10, 28 December 2009 (UTC)
::The multiple problems are due to ownership, pure and simple. I've added some observations based on my attempts to improve things many months ago at the AN/I . Only after commenting did I realise the thread had already been marked "Nothing for admins to do" - when what it should have said was "Misplaced Pages is censored and there's damn all anyone is going to be allowed to do about it". ] (]) 15:47, 28 December 2009 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 15:54, 30 December 2024

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? faq page Frequently asked questions

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Q1: Is there really a scientific consensus on climate change? A1: Yes. The IPCC findings of recent warming as a result of human influence are explicitly recognized as the "consensus" scientific view by the science academies of all the major industrialized countries. No scientific body of national or international standing presently rejects the basic findings of human influence on recent climate. This scientific consensus is supported by over 99% of publishing climate scientists. See also: Scientific consensus on climate change Q2: How can we say climate change is real when it's been so cold in such-and-such a place? A2: This is why it is termed "global warming", not "(such-and-such a place) warming". Even then, what rises is the average temperature over time – that is, the temperature will fluctuate up and down within the overall rising trend. To give an idea of the relevant time scales, the standard averaging period specified by the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) is 30 years. Accordingly, the WMO defines climate change as "a statistically significant variation in either the mean state of the climate or in its variability, persisting for an extended period (typically decades or longer)." Q3: Can't the increase of CO2 be from natural sources, like volcanoes or the oceans? A3: While these claims are popular among global warming skeptics, including academically trained ones, they are incorrect. This is known from any of several perspectives:
  • Current human emissions of CO2 are at least 100 times larger than volcanic emissions. Measurements of CO2 levels over the past 50 years do not show any significant rises after eruptions. This is easily seen in a graph of CO2 concentrations over the past 50 years: the strongest eruption during the period, that of Mount Pinatubo in 1991, produced no increase in the trend.
  • Isotopic analysis of atmospheric carbon dioxide shows the observed change in the ratio of carbon isotopes reflects the isotopic ratios in fossil fuels.
  • Atmospheric oxygen content is decreasing at a rate that agrees with the amount of oxygen being used to burn fossil fuels.
  • If the oceans were giving up some of their carbon dioxide, their carbon dioxide concentration would have to decrease. But instead we are measuring an increase in the oceans' carbon dioxide concentration, resulting in the oceans becoming more acidic (or in other words, less basic).
Q4: I think the article is missing some things, or has some things wrong. Can I change it? A4: Yes. Keep in mind that your points need to be based on documented evidence from the peer-reviewed literature, or other information that meets standards of verifiability, reliability, and no original research. If you do not have such evidence, more experienced editors may be able to help you find it (or confirm that such evidence does not exist). You are welcome to make such queries on the article's talk page but please keep in mind that the talk page is for discussing improvements to the article, not discussing the topic. There are many forums that welcome general discussions of global warming, but the article talk page is not such a forum. Q5: Why haven't the graphs been updated? A5: Two reasons:
  • There are many images used in the articles related to global warming, and there are many reasons why they may not be updated with the latest data. Some of the figures, like the Global Warming Map, are static, meaning that they are intended to show a particular phenomenon and are not meant to be updated frequently or at all. Others, like the Instrumental Temperature Record and Northern Hemisphere Sea Ice Extent Anomalies, use yearly data and thus are updated once per year—usually in mid- to late-January, depending upon when the data is publicly released, and when a volunteer creates the image. Still others, like Mauna Loa Carbon Dioxide, use monthly data. These are updated semi-regularly.
  • However, just because an image is 6 months or a year old does not mean it is useless. Robert A. Heinlein is credited with saying, "Climate is what you expect, weather is what you get", meaning that climate is defined as a long-term average of weather, usually about 30 years. This length was chosen to eliminate the year-to-year variations. Thus, in terms of climate change, any given year's data is of little import.
Q6: Isn't climate change "just a theory"? A6: People who say this are abusing the word "theory" by conflating its common meaning with its scientific meaning. In common usage, "theory" can mean a hunch or guess, but a scientific theory, roughly speaking, means a coherent set of explanations that is compatible with observations and that allows predictions to be made. That the temperature is rising is an observation. An explanation for this (also known as a hypothesis) is that the warming is primarily driven by greenhouse gases (such as CO2 and methane) released into the atmosphere by human activity. Scientific models have been built that predict the rise in temperature and these predictions have matched observations. When scientists gain confidence in a hypothesis because it matches observation and has survived intense scrutiny, the hypothesis may be called a "theory". Strictly speaking, scientific theories are never proven, but the degree of confidence in a theory can be discussed. The scientific models now suggest that it is "extremely likely" (>95%) to "virtually certain" (>99%) that the increases in temperature have been caused by human activity as discussed in the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report. Global warming via greenhouse gases by human activity is a theory (in the scientific sense), but it is most definitely not just a hunch or guess. Q7: Does methane cause more warming than CO2? A7: It's true that methane is more potent molecule for molecule. But there's far less of it in the atmosphere, so the total effect is smaller. The atmospheric lifetime of methane (about 10 years) is a lot shorter than that of CO2 (hundreds to thousands of years), so when methane emissions are reduced the concentration in the atmosphere soon falls, whereas CO2 accumulates in the atmosphere over long periods. For details see the greenhouse gas and global warming potential articles. See also: Clathrate gun hypothesis and Arctic methane release Q8: How can you say there's a consensus when lists of "skeptical scientists" have been compiled? A8: Consensus is not the same as unanimity, the latter of which is impractical for large groups. Over 99% of publishing climate scientists agree on anthropogenic climate change. This is an extremely high percentage well past any reasonable threshold for consensus. Any list of "skeptical scientists" would be dwarfed by a comparably compiled list of scientists accepting anthropogenic climate change. Q9: Did climate change end in 1998? A9: One of the strongest El Niño events in the instrumental record occurred during late 1997 through 1998, causing a spike in global temperature for 1998. Through the mid-late 2000s this abnormally warm year could be chosen as the starting point for comparisons with later years in order to produce a cooling trend; choosing any other year in the 20th century produced a warming trend. This no longer holds since the mean global temperatures in 2005, 2010, 2014, 2015 and 2016 have all been warmer than 1998. More importantly, scientists do not define a "trend" by looking at the difference between two given years. Instead they use methods such as linear regression that take into account all the values in a series of data. The World Meteorological Organisation specifies 30 years as the standard averaging period for climate statistics so that year-to-year fluctuations are averaged out; thus, 10 years isn't long enough to detect a climate trend. Q10: Wasn't Greenland much warmer during the period of Norse settlement? A10: Some people assume this because of the island's name. In fact the Saga of Erik the Red tells us Erik named the new colony Greenland because "men will desire much the more to go there if the land has a good name." Advertising hype was alive and well in 985 AD.

While much of Greenland was and remains under a large ice sheet, the areas of Greenland that were settled by the Norse were coastal areas with fjords that, to this day, remain quite green. You can see the following images for reference:

Q11: Are the IPCC reports prepared by biased UN scientists? A11: The IPCC reports are not produced by "UN scientists". The IPCC does not employ the scientists who generate the reports, and it has no control over them. The scientists are internationally recognized experts, most with a long history of successful research in the field. They are employed by various organizations including scientific research institutes, agencies like NASA and NOAA, and universities. They receive no extra pay for their participation in the IPCC process, which is considered a normal part of their academic duties. Q12: Hasn't global sea ice increased over the last 30 years? A12: Measurements show that it has not. Claims that global sea ice amounts have stayed the same or increased are a result of cherry picking two data points to compare, while ignoring the real (strongly statistically significant) downward trend in measurements of global sea ice amounts.

Arctic sea ice cover is declining strongly; Antarctic sea ice cover has had some much smaller increases, though it may or may not be thinning, and the Southern Ocean is warming. The net global ice-cover trend is clearly downwards.

See also: Arctic sea ice decline See also: Antarctic sea ice § Recent trends and climate change Q13: Weren't scientists telling us in the 1970s that the Earth was cooling instead of warming? A13: They weren't – see the article on global cooling. An article in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society has reviewed the scientific literature at that time and found that even during the 1970s the prevailing scientific concern was over warming. The common misperception that cooling was the main concern during the 1970s arose from a few studies that were sensationalized in the popular press, such as a short nine-paragraph article that appeared in Newsweek in 1975. (Newsweek eventually apologized for having misrepresented the state of the science in the 1970s.) The author of that article has repudiated the idea that it should be used to deny global warming. Q14: Doesn't water vapour cause 98% of the greenhouse effect? A14: Water vapour is indeed a major greenhouse gas, contributing about 36% to 70% (not 98%) of the total greenhouse effect. But water vapour has a very short atmospheric lifetime (about 10 days), compared with decades to centuries for greenhouse gases like CO2 or nitrous oxide. As a result it is very nearly in a dynamic equilibrium in the atmosphere, which globally maintains a nearly constant relative humidity. In simpler terms, any excess water vapour is removed by rainfall, and any deficit of water vapour is replenished by evaporation from the Earth's surface, which literally has oceans of water. Thus water vapour cannot act as a driver of climate change.

Rising temperatures caused by the long-lived greenhouse gases will however allow the atmosphere to hold more vapour. This will lead to an increase in the absolute amount of water vapour in the atmosphere. Since water vapour is itself a greenhouse gas, this is an example of a positive feedback. Thus, whereas water vapour is not a driver of climate change, it amplifies existing trends.

See also: Greenhouse gas and Greenhouse effect Q15: Is the fact that other solar system bodies are warming evidence for a common cause (i.e. the sun)? A15: While some solar system bodies show evidence of local or global climate change, there is no evidence for a common cause of warming.
  • A 2007 National Geographic article described the views of Khabibullo Abdusamatov, who claims that the sun is responsible for global warming on both Earth and Mars. Abdussamatov's views have no support in the scientific community, as the second page of the National Geographic article makes clear: "'His views are completely at odds with the mainstream scientific opinion,' said Colin Wilson, a planetary physicist at England's Oxford University. Amato Evan, a climate scientist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, added that 'the idea just isn't supported by the theory or by the observations.'"
  • There is no reliable source claiming that Jupiter is warming. However, observations of the Red Spot Jr. storm suggest Jupiter could be in a period of global climate change. This is hypothesized to be part of an approximately 70 year global climate cycle, characterized by the relatively rapid forming and subsequent slow erosion and merging of cyclonic and anticyclonic vortices that help transfer heat between Jupiter's poles and equator. The cycle works like this: As the vortices erode, heat exchange is reduced; this makes the poles cool down and the equatorial region heat up; the resulting temperature difference destabilizes the atmosphere, leading to the creation of new vortices.
  • Pluto has an extremely elliptical orbit with a period of about 248 years. Data are sparse, but two data points from 1988 and 2002 indirectly suggest that Pluto warmed between those two dates. Pluto's temperature is heavily influenced by its elliptical orbit – it was closest to the sun in 1989 and has slowly receded since. Because of thermal inertia, it is expected to warm for a while after it passes perihelion (similar to how a sunny day's warmest temperatures happen during the afternoon instead of right at noon). No other mechanism has so far been seriously suggested. Here is a reasonable summary, and this paper discusses how the thermal inertia is provided by sublimation and evaporation of parts of Pluto's atmosphere. A more popular account is here and in Misplaced Pages's own article.
See also: Climate of Mars and Extraterrestrial atmosphere Q16: Do scientists support climate change just to get more money? A16: No,
  • Scientists participate in international organizations like the IPCC as part of their normal academic duties. They do not receive any extra compensation beyond possibly for direct expenses.
  • Scientific grants do not usually award any money to a scientist personally, only towards the cost of his or her scientific work.
  • There is not a shortage of useful things that scientists could study if they were not studying global warming.
    • Understanding our climate system better brings benefits independent of global warming. For instance, more accurate weather predictions save a lot of money (on the order of billions of dollars a year), and everyone from insurance agents to farmers wants climate data. Scientists could get paid to study climate even if global warming did not exist.
Q17: Doesn't the climate vary even without human activity? A17: It does, but the fact that natural variation occurs does not mean that human-induced change cannot also occur. Climate scientists have extensively studied natural causes of climate change (such as orbital changes, volcanism, and solar variation) and have ruled them out as an explanation for the current temperature increase. Human activity is the cause at the 95 to 99 percent confidence level (see the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report for details). The high level of certainty in this is important to keep in mind to spot mention of natural variation functioning as a distraction. Q18: Should we include the view that climate change will lead to planetary doom or catastrophe? A18: This page is about the science of climate change. It doesn't talk about planetary doom or catastrophe. For a technical explanation, see catastrophic climate change, and for paleoclimatic examples see PETM and great dying. Q19: Is an increase in global temperature of, say, 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) important? A19: Though it may not sound like much, a global temperature rise of 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) is huge in climate terms. For example, the sea level rise it would produce would flood coastal cities around the world, which include most large cities.
  • Earth's climate has varied significantly over geological ages. The question of an "optimal temperature" makes no sense without a clear optimality criterion. Over geological time spans, ecosystems adapt to climate variations. But global climate variations during the development of human civilization (i.e. the past 12,000 years) have been remarkably small. Human civilization is highly adapted to the current stable climate. Agricultural production depends on the proper combination of soil, climate, methods, and seeds. Most large cities are located on the coast, and any significant change in sea level would strongly affect them. Migration of humans and ecosystems is limited by political borders and existing land use. In short, the main problem is not the higher absolute temperature but the massive and unprecedentedly fast change in climate and the related effects on human societies. The IPCC AR6 WG2 report has a detailed discussion of the effects of rapid climate change.
Q20: Why are certain proposals to change the article discarded, deleted, or ignored? Who is/was Scibaby? A20: Scibaby is/was a long term abusive sock-master (or coordinated group of sock masters) who has created 1,027 confirmed sock puppets, another 167 suspected socks, and probably many untagged or unrecognized ones. This page lists some recent creations. His modus operandi has changed over time, but includes proposing reasonably worded additions on the talk page that only on close examination turn out to be irrelevant, misinterpreted, or give undue weight to certain aspects. Scibaby is banned, and Scibaby socks are blocked as soon as they are identified. Some editors silently revert his additions, per WP:DENY, while others still assume good faith even for likely socks and engage them. Q21: What about this really interesting recent peer-reviewed paper I read or read about, that says...? A21: There are hundreds of peer-reviewed papers published every month in respected scientific journals such as Geophysical Research Letters, the Journal of Climate, and others. We can't include all of them, but the article does include references to individual papers where there is consensus that they best represent the state of the relevant science. This is in accordance with the "due weight" principle (WP:WEIGHT) of the Neutral point of view policy and the "Misplaced Pages is not an indiscriminate collection of information" principle (WP:IINFO) of the What Misplaced Pages is not policy. Q22: Why does the article define "climate change" as a recent phenomenon? Hasn't the planet warmed and cooled before? A22: Yes, the planet has warmed and cooled before. However, the term "climate change" without further qualification is widely understood to refer to the recent episode and often explicitly connected with the greenhouse effect. Per WP:COMMONNAME, we use the term in this most common meaning. The article Climate variability and change deals with the more general concept. Q23: Did the CERN CLOUD experiment prove that climate change is caused not by human activity but by cosmic rays? A23: No. For cosmic rays to be causing global warming, all of the following would have to be true, whereas only the italicized one was tested in the 2011 experiment:
  • Solar magnetic field must be getting stronger
  • The number of cosmic rays reaching Earth must be dropping
  • Cosmic rays must successfully seed clouds, which requires:
  1. Cosmic rays must trigger aerosol (liquid droplet) formation,
  2. These newly-formed aerosols must grow sufficiently through condensation to form cloud-condensation nuclei (CCN),
  3. The CCN must lead to increased cloud formation, and
  4. Cloud cover on Earth must be declining.
Perhaps the study's lead author, Jasper Kirkby, put it best: "...it actually says nothing about a possible cosmic-ray effect on clouds and climate, but it's a very important first step." Q24: I read that something can't fix climate change. Is this true? A24: Yes, this is true for all plausible single things including: "electric cars", "planting trees", "low-carbon technology", "renewable energy", "Australia", "capitalism", "the doom & gloom approach", "a Ph.D. in thermodynamics". Note that it is problematic to use the word "fix" regarding climate change, as returning the climate to its pre-industrial state currently appears to be feasible only over a timeframe of thousands of years. Current efforts are instead aimed at mitigating (meaning limiting) climate change. Mitigation is strived for through the combination of many different things. See Climate change mitigation for details. References
  1. ^ Powell, James (20 November 2019). "Scientists Reach 100% Consensus on Anthropogenic Global Warming". Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society. 37 (4): 183–184. doi:10.1177/0270467619886266. S2CID 213454806. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Commission for Climatology Frequently Asked Questions". World Meteorological Organization. Archived from the original on 5 May 2020. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
  3. Harris, Tom. "Scientists who work in the fields liberal arts graduate Al Gore wanders through contradict his theories about man-induced climate change". National Post. Archived from the original on 30 August 2011. Retrieved 11 January 2009 – via Solid Waste & Recycling. {{cite web}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; 4 February 2012 suggested (help)
  4. Arriola, Benj. "5 Good Arguments Why GlobalWarming is NOT due to Man-made Carbon Dioxide". Global Warming Awareness Blog. Retrieved 11 January 2009.
  5. Ahlbeck, Jarl. "Increase of the Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Concentration due to Ocean Warming". Retrieved 11 January 2009.
  6. Kirby, Simon (11 April 2007). "Top scientist debunks global warming". Herald Sun. Retrieved 11 January 2009.
  7. Brahic, Catherine (16 May 2007). "Climate myths: Human CO2 emissions are too tiny to matter". New Scientist. Retrieved 11 January 2009.
  8. "More Notes on Global Warming". Physics Today. May 2005. Retrieved 10 September 2007.
  9. Battle, M.; et al. (2000). "Global Carbon Sinks and Their Variability Inferred from Atmospheric O2 and d13C". Science. 287 (5462): 2467–2470. doi:10.1126/science.287.5462.2467.
  10. The Royal Society (2005). "Ocean acidification due to increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide". Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  11. "Met Office: Climate averages". Met Office. Archived from the original on 24 February 2009. Retrieved 23 January 2009.
  12. Climate Central (18 January 2017). "2016 Was the Hottest Year on Record". Climate Central. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  13. The Saga of Erik the Red, 1880, English translation by J. Sephton, from the original Eiríks saga rauða.
  14. "Cold Hard Facts". Tamino. 8 January 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2009.
  15. Peterson, T. C.; et al. (2008). "The Myth of the 1970s Global Cooling Scientific Consensus". Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 89 (9): 1325. Bibcode:2008BAMS...89.1325P. doi:10.1175/2008BAMS2370.1.
  16. Gwynne, Peter (28 April 1975). "The Cooling World". Newsweek. p. 64.
  17. Verger, Rob (23 May 2014). "Newsweek Rewind: Debunking Global Cooling". Newsweek.
  18. Gwynne, Peter (21 May 2014). "My 1975 'Cooling World' Story Doesn't Make Today's Climate Scientists Wrong". insidescience.org.
  19. Ravilious, Kate (28 February 2007). "Mars Melt Hints at Solar, Not Human, Cause for Warming, Scientist Says". National Geographic News. Archived from the original on 2 March 2007. Retrieved 6 March 2008.
  20. Ravilious, Kate (28 February 2007). "Mars Melt Hints at Solar, Not Human, Cause for Warming, Scientist Says (page 2)". National Geographic News. Archived from the original on 2 March 2007. Retrieved 6 March 2008.
  21. Marcus, Philip; Shetty, Sushil; Asay-Davis, Xylar (November 2006). Velocities and Temperatures of Jupiter's Great Red Spot and the New Red Oval and Implications for Global Climate Change. American Physical Society. Retrieved 9 May 2007.
  22. Goudarzi, Sara (4 May 2006). "New Storm on Jupiter Hints at Climate Change". Space.com. Retrieved 9 May 2007.
  23. Philip, Marcus S. (22 April 2004). "Prediction of a global climate change on Jupiter" (PDF). Nature. 428 (6985): 828–831. Retrieved 9 May 2007.
  24. Yang, Sarah (21 April 2004). "Researcher predicts global climate change on Jupiter as giant planet's spots disappear". University of California, Berkeley. Retrieved 9 May 2007.
  25. Elliot, J. L.; et al. (10 July 2003). "The recent expansion of Pluto's atmosphere". Nature (424): 165–168. doi:10.1038/nature01762.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  26. Foerster, Jim. "What's The Difference Between Private Weather Companies And The National Weather Service?". Forbes.
  27. Eilts, Mike (27 November 2018). "The Role of Weather—and Weather Forecasting—in Agriculture". DTN.
  28. "What do the CERN experiments tell us about global warming?". Skeptical Science. 2 September 2011.
  29. Brumfiel, Geoff (23 August 2011). "Cloud Formation May Be Linked to Cosmic Rays". Scientific American.
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Terminology 3,669 3,669
Global temperature rise 70 26,654
Temperatures prior to present-day global warming 2,663 2,663
Warming since the Industrial Revolution 11,054 17,615
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Nature and wildlife 7,139 7,139
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Climate migration 2,953 2,953
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Clean energy 8,135 8,135
Energy conservation 1,719 1,719
Agriculture and industry 3,477 3,477
Carbon dioxide removal 2,919 2,919
Adaptation 7,773 7,773
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International climate agreements 6,851 6,851
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Early discoveries 6,198 6,198
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Carbon capture rates for CCS

Hi everyone. I have a few proposals regarding statements on carbon capture and storage in this article. Here's my first proposal. We have an unsourced sentence that says:

Where energy production or CO2-intensive heavy industries continue to produce waste CO2, the gas can be captured and stored instead of released to the atmosphere.

I propose changing it to:

Where energy production or CO2-intensive heavy industries continue to produce waste CO2, technology can sometimes be used to capture and store most of the gas instead of releasing it to the atmosphere.

As explained in the World Resources Institute source, "today’s carbon capture systems do not capture 100% of emissions. Most are designed to capture 90%, but reported capture rates are lower in some cases." Additionally, it is not economically or geologically feasible to deploy CCS at all or even most facilities. There are 2,400 coal power plants in the world and thus far we have managed to add CCS to four of them. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 21:41, 24 October 2024 (UTC)

Done. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 20:30, 30 October 2024 (UTC)

References

  1. Lebling, Katie; Gangotra, Ankita; Hausker, Karl; Byrum, Zachary (2023-11-13). "7 Things to Know About Carbon Capture, Utilization and Sequestration". World Resources Institute.

Carbon sequestration section

The Carbon sequestration section has contents that describe carbon dioxide removal and carbon capture and storage. These three concepts are often confused. The vast majority of carbon sequestration happens through spontaneous, non-anthropogenic processes that have been going on for hundreds of millions of years and will continue if we just leave the forests alone. Most of the content in this section is about human activity that aims to increase the amount of carbon that is sequestered, i.e. carbon dioxide removal. There is also some content on carbon capture and storage, which technically involves sequestration but is usually deployed in processes that desequester more carbon than they sequester.

I propose 1) Retitling this section as "Carbon dioxide removal" and 2) Moving the two sentences on CCS to the end of the first paragraph in the "Clean energy" section. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 20:11, 25 October 2024 (UTC)

Done. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 20:36, 30 October 2024 (UTC)

Paper about our work & suggestions

A paper by Olivia Steiert came out on the work we do here, analysing how our group dynamics and our interpretation of policies and guidelines resulted in the current article.

The paper analyses whether we consider climate change as an event (vs process), and if we call it a crisis. It's somewhat critical of us doing neither sufficiently clearly. The paper doesn't give that many pointers how we could achieve this however. We've made progress over the last 6 years in changing the article to be more about climate change now, rather than climate change in the future, but I wonder if there is more to do here. (changing the crisis framing is a discussion I won't reopen). If there are no objections, I might send Steiert an email asking her to join us. In the meantime, I'm suggesting two changes in the lead

The current rise in global average temperature is primarily caused by humans burning fossil fuels since the Industrial Revolution -->

Amplified warming in the Arctic has contributed to thawing permafrost, retreat of glaciers and sea ice decline --> something in the present tense. I'd suggest leaving out polar amplification too. The quote doesn't fully capture this sentence anyway, and the source doesn't make the connection between polar amplification and these specific impacts. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 19:44, 30 October 2024 (UTC)

Thanks for sharing this, interesting article. The study uses the May 2022 version of this article, I wonder what she'd think of the current version.
As for the sentence, The current rise in..., I believe we had added "since the Industrial Revolution" to clarify what is meant by current. Bogazicili (talk) 17:50, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
Upon reflection, I'd like to keep since the Industrial Revolution. One of the criticism in the article is that we are vague in terms of our tenses. When things happened, are happening, or will happen. (Why is it so hard to arrive at a clear understanding of when climate change is happening and why do temporal constructions of this event vary so broadly)
since the Industrial Revolution gives precision and clarity to that sentence. I think it accurately describes rough timescale of human-induced climate change.
Other overview sources might say things like The industrial activities that our modern civilization depends upon have raised atmospheric carbon dioxide levels by nearly 50% since 1750
If you click Industrial Revolution, it largely matches with above: Beginning in Great Britain, the Industrial Revolution spread to continental Europe and the United States, from around 1760 to about 1820–1840. Bogazicili (talk) 14:44, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
My thinking here is that "since the industrial revolution" may be a bit misleading, in the sense that most warming really happened in the last 50 years, rather than over such a long period of time. I'm also appreciating the simplicity of the POTD description below, and would like to move away from a WP:seaofblue in terms of number of links. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 17:13, 1 November 2024 (UTC)

That's a very good point, but I think we should add that (in the last 50 years part) into the lead, instead of removing "since the Industrial Revolution" part. I know you value conciseness but I think this time precision beats conciseness.

Again, the study was up to May 2022 version of this article. This is the 31 May 2022 version of the article. I think the current version of the lead is much more precise, as we define since when the current climate change has been happening. Industrial activities (NASA source) started with industrial revolution. Of course it was limited in 18th century. In 19th century it was few countries (UK etc), with coal etc. With technology (oil etc) and more countries industrializing, warming increased in 20th century, which is your point.

Also note that many cumulative emissions graphs go back to 1750 Our World in Data. I'll check few more sources tomorrow, including WP:Tertiary sources, to see how they cover it. Bogazicili (talk) 17:38, 2 November 2024 (UTC)

The prose quality of the first paragraph was definitely better in that version at least. I don't think "adding to greenhouse gases" is correct English. If I can find time, I might suggest a new version of our opening in a separate discussion section.
My guess is that many sources don't talk about "industrial revolution" in their first paragraph, instead only use that when they go into the weeds of the topic.
—Femke 🐦 (talk) 18:03, 2 November 2024 (UTC)

@Femke: here are some WP:Tertiary sources I found with Oxford Reference Online database through Misplaced Pages Library.

There are lots of results. Only some of them are below:

The first two have detailed entries. I'd recommend you to check them:

The term global warming has become synonymous in the press with human-induced climate change. ... Carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere have increased such that 2009 values of about 385 ppmv are over 36 percent higher than preindustrial values of 280 ppmv and over half that increase has occurred since 1970 (Figure 1).

Climate Change entry:

An Overview
... During the past two centuries, anthropogenic activity has resulted in large increases in the atmospheric greenhouse gas content, which has caused a detectable increase in global temperatures and are predicted to continue to increase for many decades before the climate system reaches a new equilibrium. ...

Global warming entry:

..Levels rose to 275 ppmv during the warm interglacial phases, and that level is also considered representative of the preindustrial era of the nineteenth century...

The two below have shorter entries:

By the way, there is an entire encyclopedia on climate change communication, The Oxford Encyclopedia of Climate Change Communication.

I think we should mention something like pre-industrial in the first paragraph. But we can shift things around. For example, the last sentence in first paragraph cites IPCC AR6 WG1 Technical Summary 2021, p. 67. That page mentions:

Since 1750, changes in the drivers of the climate system are dominated by the warming influence of increases in atmospheric GHG concentrations and a cooling influence from aerosols, both resulting from human activities

p.4:

Observed increases in well-mixed greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations since around 1750 are unequivocally caused by human activities

I'll make my proposal below in a new section Bogazicili (talk) 19:02, 3 November 2024 (UTC)

Article housekeeping

Thanks Femke for removing unused references and other tidying. I could pitch in to help with that kind of thing for an hour or two this week. What else needs to be done? Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 02:26, 31 October 2024 (UTC)

Just to let you know, I intend to clean up after myself, but got sidetracked. For the areas I edited, some of the citations aren't to chapters but to overall IPCC reports. I'll be fixing those. Bogazicili (talk) 16:54, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
Thanks Bogazicili!
In terms of housekeeping, I try to do the following every one/two years:
  • See if overcitation has slipped in, which is often a red flag for text-source integrity issues. One example is overcitation after "Smaller contributions come from black carbon, organic carbon from combustion of fossil fuels and biofuels, and from anthropogenic dust", which has 6 sources. (I you could help here!)
  • Check if jargon such as anthropogenic has slipped back in, and reword using plain English
  • Reread the article, and check if there is text-source integrity for surprising statements
  • Reread the article, and update numbers which need updating.
—Femke 🐦 (talk) 17:19, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
Not that big of an issue, but the source formatting is also slightly messy and inconsistent in places (e.g. Harvnb is used for most things but not all, some things are missing various fields, etc). Sgubaldo (talk) 19:17, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
Wow, that's a lot of work that you've been doing regularly! I'll take on the overcitation thing. Will indicate here when I've finished checking. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 19:42, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
I'll have much more time to work on this tomorrow (Sunday). I think I added most of the AR6 citations. I'll be fixing those tomorrow. And then I can also pitch in with the rest of the housekeeping. Bogazicili (talk) 17:18, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
I think I fixed the parts I had added. Bogazicili (talk) 20:31, 5 November 2024 (UTC)

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Contemporary climate change involves rising global temperatures and significant shifts in Earth's weather patterns. Climate change is driven by emissions of heat-trapping greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane. Emissions come mostly from burning fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas), and also from agriculture, forest loss, cement production and steel making. Climate change causes sea level rise, glacial retreat and desertification, and intensifies heat waves, wildfires and tropical cyclones. These effects of climate change endanger food security, freshwater access and global health. Climate change can be limited by using low-carbon energy sources such as wind and solar energy, by forestation, and shifts in agriculture. Adaptations such as coastline protection cannot by themselves avert the risk of severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts. Limiting global warming in line with the goals of the 2015 Paris Agreement requires reaching net-zero emissions by 2050. This animation, produced by NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio with data from the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, shows global surface temperature anomalies from 1880 to 2023 on a world map, illustrating the rise in global temperatures. Normal temperatures (calculated over the 30-year baseline period 1951–1980) are shown in white, higher-than-normal temperatures in red, and lower-than-normal temperatures in blue. The data are averaged over a running 24-month window.

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Suggestions for the first sentence

The first sentence is awkward, and I'd love to craft a new first sentence before we get to be on the main page. The "in common usage" is especially jarring, and may fall slightly foul of WP:REFER. I have two suggestions:

  1. Climate change encompasses global warming—Earth’s ongoing temperature increase—and its wider effects on Earth's climate.
  2. Current climate change is the ongoing rise in global average temperatures and the resulting effects on Earth's climate.

It's a common thing that more text gets bolded than the title alone, to clarify immediately to the reader what the topic is where there is some need for disambiguation. I think this may release us from the need to be a bit pedantic in the introduction. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 19:26, 2 November 2024 (UTC)

The preamble "In common usage" distinguishes current CC from "Climate change in a broader sense" that's in the second sentence. The distinction is important since we should (must?) quickly define the article title, focus attention on what this article is about, and link to the other article (Climate variability and change). I remember the community grappling with how to achieve these goals; the current text was the result. "In common usage" isn't jarring, though some might call it a bit formal. "Current climate change" (suggestion 2) isn't a much-used term. —21:10 The current wording tells the reader immediately that common-use "CC" is not the academically correct use. Of Suggestion 1 and 2, though, I definitely prefer Suggestion 1. —RCraig09 (talk) 22:23, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
The distinction is not between "academic usage" and "common usage". Academics use the terms like everybody else in their papers. IPCC has it in their name, WMO classifies their reporting under climate change. The difference is between definitionally and non-definitionally. If you have a sentence with is, you imply a definition, so we need to make clear in some way that we're talking about "Contemporary", "Present-day", "Current" climate change. What we can do as well is 2b:
2b. Current/present-day/contemporary Climate change ...

—Femke 🐦 (talk) 09:00, 3 November 2024 (UTC)

I prefer 'Contemporary' to 'Current', but I like the wording in Suggestion 1 more. My suggestion would be something like:
Contemporary climate change encompasses global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its wider effects on Earth's climate.
Also, if the first sentence changes, the next two will probably need tweaking too. Sgubaldo (talk) 12:20, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
I wonder what percentage of the population knows what "contemporary" means. I'd estimate less than 80/90%, hence my suggestions for slightly less elegant wording. Two difficult words close to each other (contemporary/encompasses), makes it more difficult to guess the word meaning for those unaware. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 12:23, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
In that case, I would propose: "Present-day climate change includes both global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its wider effects on Earth's climate." Sgubaldo (talk) 12:52, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
I like that variation. Present-day may prevent some knee-jerk reactions of Wikipedians trained to remove the word MOS:Current from articles. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 12:58, 3 November 2024 (UTC)

Pinging all those with recent talk page activity: @Clayoquot, Amakuru, Bogazicili, Chipmunkdavis, Sunrise, and Alaexis:. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 09:31, 3 November 2024 (UTC)

I prefer the first one because it includes the other common term, global warming. Global warming also redirects to this page, as it should. Bogazicili (talk) 14:28, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
I concede Femke's point (09:00) re academics/definitions. My concern is to explicitly convey that there are two definitions of CC. This distinction parallels the fact that today's CC is different from historical/generic CC. Detail: reviewing https://www.thesaurus.com/browse/contemporary, I'm OK with "current" or "present" or "present-day" or "recent" or "ongoing" or "newfangled" (well, maybe not "newfangled :-) :-). —RCraig09 (talk) 17:03, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
I think it's more elegant to do it implicitly (present-day climate change), rather than explicitly. We want people to read about the topic of climate change, rather than about the intricacies of how terms are used in the first paragraph. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 17:06, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
By "explicitly" I didn't mean super-ultra-formally. I think the distinction of definitions is accomplished by the second sentence, "Climate change in a broader sense...". That's all I meant. I'm OK with most of the smaller-change proposal I've read in this discussion. —RCraig09 (talk) 17:11, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
I have a slight preference for Sgubaldo's proposal. All of them sound fine to me though. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 17:17, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
Just to clarify, since there are multiple proposals. I'm ok with this latest one: "Present-day climate change includes both global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its wider effects on Earth's climate." Bogazicili (talk) 17:43, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
If no one objects, I'll wait until tomorrow to see if there's any more replies, and then I'll make the changes. Sgubaldo (talk) 19:12, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
Changes made. Sgubaldo (talk) 12:43, 4 November 2024 (UTC)

FYI: removed 'mainly' from lead

I changed "The current rise in global average temperature is mainly driven by human activities, especially fossil fuel burning since the Industrial Revolution" to "The current rise in global average temperature is mainly driven by human activities, especially fossil fuel burning since the Industrial Revolution". The best guess is taht 100% of climate change is driven by human activities (per new source), so the old wording was misleading and the old source didn't talk about this. The word driven itself also doesn't require 100% causation (that would be is caused by), so even when the percentage of human-induced climate change deviates from observed climate change, this wording should remain correct.

I did this boldly, as the old text was not really supported and misleading. Hope that's okay. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 10:20, 3 November 2024 (UTC)

  • Agree. As Earth was on a very slight cooling trend for ~10,000 years, I remember reading that humans cause "more than" 100% of global warming, though it would be confusing to say that literally. —RCraig09 (talk) 17:07, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
    The idea of a Holocene Thermal Maximum some 8,000 years ago is a bit contested. Regional climate proxies say there was one, but globally it's a more complex picture, and models think there's been continuous warming / stable temperatures.
    The more than 100% since pre-industrial also isn't true anymore as I understand it, as the last couple of years have seen very rapid warming. The source I cited is also the one used by the IPCC, and they say the best guess is exactly 100% caused by humans with some uncertainty. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 17:17, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
    @Femke: do you still want to remove "since the Industrial Revolution" part? That can be reworded and moved to the last sentence. Proposal below. Bogazicili (talk) 20:30, 3 November 2024 (UTC)

The lead, first paragraph

This is what the first paragraph of the lead would look like, after recent changes and suggestions in Talk:Climate_change#Suggestions for the first sentence and Talk:Climate_change#Paper about our work & suggestions and above section.

Didn't include the sources in the article, and some of the new sources are above. For the "accelerating in the past 50 years", I will use .

In common usage, climate change describes global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its wider effects on Earth's climate. Climate change in a broader sense also includes previous long-term changes to Earth's climate. Present-day climate change includes both global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its wider effects on Earth's climate. Climate change in a broader sense also includes previous long-term changes to Earth's climate. The current Present-day rise in global average temperature is driven by human activities, especially burning fossil fuels. especially fossil fuel burning since the Industrial Revolution Fossil fuel use, deforestation, and some agricultural and industrial practices release greenhouse gases. These gases absorb some of the heat that the Earth radiates after it warms from sunlight, warming the lower atmosphere. Carbon dioxide, the primary greenhouse gas driving global warming, has grown by about 50% and is at levels unseen for millions of years. Starting roughly around 1750 and accelerating in the past 50 years, greenhouse gas concentrations have been increasing. Carbon dioxide, the primary greenhouse gas driving global warming, is at levels unseen for millions of years

Bogazicili (talk) 19:31, 3 November 2024 (UTC)

I think the the new text is not great for flow. Most of the sentences are roughly the same lenght, with makes for slightly uncomfortable reading. I don't feel strongly about removing "industrial revolution", but I don't think moving it to later is that much of a change? —Femke 🐦 (talk) 21:52, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
I suggested the changes with this criticism in mind. Why is it so hard to arrive at a clear understanding of when climate change is happening and why do temporal constructions of this event vary so broadly
Now we have two clear dates (since 1750 and accelerating in the past 50 years). Bogazicili (talk) 22:02, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
@Bogazicili "accelerating in the last 50 years" suggests to me the rate of warming is increasing across that time period. i think you mean that the last 50 years has exhibited a higher rate of warming that the precedding period.
you may also like to add to that, during this 50 year period, attribution studies are able to clearly discern human driven change from natural forcing -- this relates to the time series figure on the page. DecFinney (talk) 13:14, 16 December 2024 (UTC)

References

  1. Our World in Data, 18 September 2020 harvnb error: no target: CITEREFOur_World_in_Data,_18_September2020 (help)

Proposed replacement of graphic in "Impacts" section

A. Existing graphic: The sixth IPCC Assessment Report projects changes in average soil moisture at 2.0 °C of warming, as measured in standard deviations from the 1850 to 1900 baseline.B. Proposed replacement: Climate change's increase of water temperatures intensified peak wind speeds in all eleven 2024 Atlantic hurricanes.C. Second proposed replacement: Times series of Category 4 and 5 Atlantic hurricanes

I've long questioned the value of the "soil moisture" graphic in the short, crowded, under-emphasized "Impacts" section.

The existing graphic's content is not discussed in article text. Also, soil moisture's broader implication on the impacts affecting humans is speculative and indirect, perhaps even suggesting that things'll get better and better for sub-Saharan Africa. (Aside: I speak out against captions that merely repeat what's in the graphic's own legends/text.)

Meanwhile, the impacts on humans of progressively more intense hurricanes is immediately and intuitively evident (see also ). I realize Graphic B is not global and is only one year's hurricanes, but I think the graphic speaks to a more striking and immediate impact of climate change.

Please comment below, on your preference. —RCraig09 (talk) 23:19, 29 November 2024 (UTC)

While I'm open to replacing that graph, I'm not a fan of adding another US-focused one in its place. Is it possible to do something similar for tropical cyclones in general? —Femke 🐦 (talk) 08:21, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
It's Atlantic focused, not "US" focused per se. I've searched for CC-intensified (Pacific) typhoons but references applying extreme event attribution to specific hurricanes/cyclones/typhoons are nearly non-existent. This chart was a rare discovery in how it makes CC's effects be concretely evident. If anyone finds similar references for the Pacific, let me know.. —RCraig09 (talk) 17:51, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
The soil moisture graph was added by User:Efbrazil three years ago. I think we could probably remove it (or move it?) but I am a bit concerned that we don't mention "soil moisture" content anywhere in the text (or is it mentioned under a different term?). I was going to suggest to move it to effects of climate change but I see it's already there. - I think my suggestion would be to remove it but to not replace it with another fairly complicated, wordy schematic (such as graph B.). Either remove it without replacement or replace it with something very visual (a photo?). In general, we do have a lot of graphs, schematics and images already in this article. Perhaps one less is actually a good thing. EMsmile (talk) 13:22, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
Droughts are mentioned. Bogazicili (talk) 21:29, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
I'd rather have this image chosen for the replacement than the other file. I do not believe using an image for one season restricted in one basin would reflect climate change's general impact on tropical cyclones. I'm a bit cautious on replacing the existing image, but I want to see more people discussing before I issue my final verdict. ZZ'S 18:21, 30 November 2024 (UTC)

IPCC's AR6 Fig. TS-22 etc.

@RCraig09 have you considered these figures?
https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1/figures/technical-summary/figure-ts-22 DecFinney (talk) 13:21, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
@DecFinney: I think that Fig. TS-22 is far too complex and detailed for a layperson encyclopedia, especially in a high-level article such as this. —RCraig09 (talk) 15:10, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
I wasnt imagining the whole thing. e.g. perhaps just the top right quarter. That seems like a really neat summary in lay terms of the kind of impacts different regions of the world could expect. It doesnt rely on the rest of the figure for understanding so I would assume its fine to crop it to make a new figure (but I am new-ish to wiki so am not sure of cropping policy).
Such a figure seems much more relevant to any person in the world. Meanwhile figures based on the atlantic seem more like a token representation of impact (i.e. just one example) as well as introducing a regional bias and thereby limiting the interest for the wider global population. I appreciate you will not being trying to illustrate all impacts. Nevertheless, the figure I propose does do a pretty job of covering bases in the a concise manner. DecFinney (talk) 15:29, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
@DecFinney: I appreciate that Fig. TS-22(b) has a lot of information, a huge amount in fact: five values for each of 35 categories. Especially for a high-level article such as this, this micro-categorization would be overwhelming for lay readers. FYI: Generally there is no general prohibition on cropping as such (every edit involves selection of material from a larger-content publication), but I seem to recall that some organization, not sure if it's the IPCC, licensed things only if presented in their entirety. I wish I had a hurricane-intensification reference for both Atlantic and Pacific, but since the main point of Graphic "B" is climate change's intensification of hurricanes rather than hurricanes themselves, I think "B" is more than adequate for purpose. —RCraig09 (talk) 18:57, 16 December 2024 (UTC)
@RCraig09 ok. the only multi-basin figure i can find that seems relevant to your aim is fig5 in https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/bams/101/3/bams-d-18-0194.1.xml
this shows the consistent projection of increased TC intensity (and rain rate) in every basin. DecFinney (talk) 07:34, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
@DecFinney: Thanks for the research. I like the global extent of the AMS datasets but the error ranges are, like, totally_outtasight_dude! I'll have to consider the various drawings in the AMS reference... I lean toward something like Figs. 3b and 4b more than the global map. A major advantage of is that it's not a long-term prediction (it's about climate change attribution), and concrete values are provided in the context of peak winds and hurricane categories. —RCraig09 (talk) 21:28, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
@RCraig09 i agree 3b and 4b are better multi-basin figs to consider.
there is a part 1 to that paper which is about attribution. when i glanced at it, i didnt spot any suitable figures. https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/bams/100/10/bams-d-18-0189.1.xml
attribution with TCs is still pretty statistically limited. i have to admit that fig1f probably justifies a focus on NAtlantic if you want to stick to an attribution based figure.
thats my last input. thanks for the discussion. im happy with whatever you decide. DecFinney (talk) 09:08, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
Many thanks. I haven't been able to conjure a graphical approach to represent multi-basin attribution/changes that's more elegant than separate bar charts with distracting and divergent error bars scattered around a world map. I think that already captures predicted impacts quite well, and that an example of Extreme event attribution (Graphic "B", above) deserves space in this article. —RCraig09 (talk) 17:36, 18 December 2024 (UTC)

Underemphasis on extreme event attribution

Caption: The ability to determine the influence of global warming on a specific extreme event (vertical axis) depends on the level of scientific knowledge about how global warming affects that type of event. More generally, this knowledge depends on the thoroughness of the records for each type of event, and on the quality of scientific models for simulating respective types of events.

The preceding discussion brings out the point that Extreme event attribution is not even mentioned in this article. I think it's very important because, more and more, the intensification of specific current events are being presented to the public as being caused by global warming. This attribution is distinct from projections of future intensification such as that shown in . Though attribution science is not yet fully developed, and is statistical in nature, I think that something should be added to the "Impacts" section. Agreement? Suggestions? —RCraig09 (talk) 17:20, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

@RCraig09 sounds reasonable to me.
i think most good science comms would say that the chance of event is made more likely by climate change. it may go as far as to say it was basically impossible before, i.e. 1 in a million year event or something but the message can get a bit lost in that. of course one can odten say there's no precident in the records.
im not sure about the plot. its not obvious to me exactly what the x axis means or what information helps determine it. what is the source of the figure? DecFinney (talk) 21:35, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
@DecFinney: Welcome to Misplaced Pages! Sources can usually be found on the Wikimedia Commons file description page (click through image itself), or in captions of charts placed in Misplaced Pages articles. Here the source is Lindsey, Rebecca (15 December 2016). "Extreme event attribution: the climate versus weather blame game". Climate.gov. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Archived from the original on 9 June 2024. Graphic adapted from Figure 4.7 in NAS 2016.. The x-axis means the degree to which models can accurately represent or predict real-world events. —RCraig09 (talk) 21:43, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
@RCraig09 cheers, sorry. phone app doesnt let me follow an image link.
image is ok. I'd change caption "more generally" to "in addition" as this is listing the other two bullets from the article that gives the necessary conditions for confidence in attribution. they are not more general than the point the graph is illustrating. id actually suggest they are more specific.
i think youve edited the image a bit? it now looks like the colours have some meaning red/green/blue. but i dont think they did in the article, where each impact had a different colours? what do the colours mean here?
the image also has removed the word "extreme" from quite a few impacts compared to the article. i would consider this to be substantive change. "extreme rainfall" (if meaning e.g. 99th percentile, short timescales) is affected by climate change differently to longer timescale averaged rainfall, which is how i would interpret the term "rainfall" on its own. i would say that scientific understanding for extreme rainfall is possibly better than mean rainfall change, and therefore i think it might not be appropriate to change that terminology in the plot. DecFinney (talk) 15:22, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
@DecFinney: Thanks for the feedback. The colors merely categorize the events (blue for cold, green for water-related, red for heat-related) to make the graphic more intuitively meaningful for a lay reader. The graphic's title includes "...extreme events..." so that the graphic can avoid needless repetition in the various individual elements. I'm not quite following your suggestion re the caption, but editors can change textual captions through ordinary editing. Here is a link to the image description page. Separately: I'm hoping for more participation from others about adding new content to the article. —RCraig09 (talk) 15:39, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
@RCraig09 I see you're points regarding the image edits. regarding caption, i will make edits when the image is in the article then, if it still seems appropriate. DecFinney (talk) 15:53, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
@RCraig09 I see you're points regarding the image edits. regarding caption, i will make edits when the image is in the article then, if it still seems appropriate. DecFinney (talk) 15:54, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

Mentioning SRM under "Reducing and recapturing emissions"

Hello! I am new to this talk page. I have been working on the SRM article and noticed that SRM is mentioned in the Climate Change article. I have some questions about how SRM is mentioned in this article.

Should SRM really be mentioned under the heading "Reducing and recapturing emissions"?

Given that SRM would only ‘mask’ climate change instead of addressing the cause, greenhouse gas emissions. "SRM contrasts with climate change mitigation activities, such as emission reductions and carbon dioxide removal (CDR), as it introduces a ‘mask’ to the climate change problem by altering the Earth’s radiation budget, rather than attempting to address the root cause of the problem, which is the increase in greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere" (IPCC_AR6_WGII_CCB-CWGB, p. 77).

I suggest either deleting the two sentences on SRM altogether or clearly explaining to the readers that SRM is somewhat related but is not a mitigation option in the pure sense. 1HumbleB (talk) 12:00, 6 December 2024 (UTC)

I agree with 1HumbleB's concerns (disclosure: we have worked together on the solar radiation modification article; that's how I got interested in this). For comparison, in the article climate change mitigation we have quite a good description of what SRM has to do with mitigation (or doesn't have to do with it). I have just moved that section further down in the article; it was under "definition" there until now which I don't think was ideal. It reads like this at the climate change mitigation article:
== Related approaches ==
=== Relationship with solar radiation modification (SRM) ===
While solar radiation modification (SRM) could reduce surface temperatures, it temporarily masks climate change rather than addressing the root cause, which is greenhouse gases. SRM would work by altering how much solar radiation the Earth absorbs. Examples include reducing the amount of sunlight reaching the surface, reducing the optical thickness and lifetime of clouds, and changing the ability of the surface to reflect radiation. The IPCC describes SRM as a climate risk reduction strategy or supplementary option rather than a climate mitigation option.
The terminology in this area is still evolving. Experts sometimes use the term geoengineering or climate engineering in the scientific literature for both CDR or SRM, if the techniques are used at a global scale. IPCC reports no longer use the terms geoengineering or climate engineering. EMsmile (talk) 10:15, 7 December 2024 (UTC)
To simplify things: I'd like to propose to delete these two sentences (for the reasons given above): Solar radiation modification (SRM) is also a possible supplement to deep reductions in emissions. However, SRM raises significant ethical and legal concerns, and the risks are imperfectly understood.. Especially the first out of these two sentences is problematic in my opinion. The phrasing reads as if there is a relationship between SRM and deep emission reductions; and it lacks nuance. Also, the topic of SRM opens a can of worms and would require more space than what can be given in this high level article. Therefore, I think it's better not to mention it here at all. Readers can easily find it in the climate change mitigation article instead. EMsmile (talk) 21:42, 10 December 2024 (UTC)
So I went ahead and deleted the two sentences in question (as there was no disagreement voiced on the talk page). Subsequently, User:RCraig09 re-instated the two sentences with the edit summary comment: "The content was in the section, Reducing and recapturing emissions: and there was no implication that SRM is mitigation. You can distinguish mitigation from SRM if you think it's important."
My response: this section is all about climate change mitigation. Directly under the section heading it says "Main: Climate change mitigation". Therefore, why do we talk about SRM in this section, which is not about climate change mitigation? It is also not about "reducing and recapturing emissions". Rather, it's about masking the warming effects, i.e. actively attempting to achieve global cooling.
So I still think that those two sentences have no place here. If others say SRM must be mentioned in this section (why?), then the two sentences ought to be changed (as per my earlier comments) and it should be made clear that SRM is neither about mitigation nor about "reducing and recapturing emissions". Otherwise we'll just create confusion. EMsmile (talk) 13:03, 18 December 2024 (UTC)
I agree with @EMsmile's points. The fact that the content was previously included under this heading and that there is NO implication that SRM is mitigation, IMO does not justify keeping it here. SRM is unrelated to climate change mitigation. It should not be listed under this heading because its inclusion implies a connection to reducing or recapturing emissions, which is not accurate. Even if we revise the sentences to clarify that SRM is neither mitigation nor about "reducing and recapturing emissions," it would still be misplaced under this heading.
I suggest we delete the sentences all together. 1HumbleB (talk) 11:58, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
Through its reduction of permafrost melt and other positive-feedback global warming processes, SRM has the indirect effect of "Reducing ...emissions" that is a section title. SRM thus helps impede the climate change that is the subject of this article. SRM therefore has a place in this article, and I'm certainly not opposed to editors pointing out the distinction between SRM and more direct mitigation techniques. —RCraig09 (talk) 17:07, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
SRM does not "reduce emissions", so I don't know what you mean with "indirect effect of reducing emissions". For comparison, in the climate change mitigation article, SRM is mentioned at the end under "related approaches". I don't know if SRM is all that important that it needs to be included in this high level article (?). People can easily find it through the sub-articles. But if several editors think it ought to be mentioned then I would either mention it elsewhere in the article, or change the section heading or make it very explicit that SRM is not climate change mitigation and does not reduce emissions. - Does anyone else have an opinion about this? EMsmile (talk) 22:07, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
For now, I've changed the wording of the two sentences to this (the bolding is used to show the changes): Solar radiation modification (SRM) is under discussion as a possible supplement to reductions in emissions. However, SRM raises significant ethical and global governance concerns, and its risks are not well understood. The old version was Solar radiation modification (SRM) is also a possible supplement to deep reductions in emissions. However, SRM raises significant ethical and legal concerns, and the risks are imperfectly understood.. (I am not sure if the wording "supplement" is sufficiently clear, and not overly optimistic.) EMsmile (talk) 22:17, 19 December 2024 (UTC)
At 17:07 I explained how SRM would inhibit permafrost melt—it would thus inhibit release of methane that was previously embedded in the permafrost. That is the indirect effect of SRM. Yes, it is a widely reported "related approach" that should be mentioned here. Re wording: closely follow source descriptions. —RCraig09 (talk) 22:32, 19 December 2024 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ IPCC (2022) Chapter 14: International cooperation in Climate Change 2022: Mitigation of Climate Change. Contribution of Working Group III to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, United States]
  2. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering (25 March 2021). Reflecting Sunlight: Recommendations for Solar Geoengineering Research and Research Governance. doi:10.17226/25762. ISBN 978-0-309-67605-2. S2CID 234327299.
  3. IPCC (2022) Chapter 1: Introduction and Framing in Climate Change 2022: Mitigation of Climate Change. Contribution of Working Group III to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, United States
  4. IPCC, 2021: Annex VII: Glossary . In Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change . Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA, pp. 2215–2256, doi:10.1017/9781009157896.022.
  5. IPCC SR15 Ch4 2018, pp. 347–352 harvnb error: no target: CITEREFIPCC_SR15_Ch42018 (help)

Copernicus: 2024 above +1.5°C

https://climate.copernicus.eu/2024-track-be-first-year-exceed-15oc-above-pre-industrial-average

Yes, I know

  • WP:NOTCRYSTAL.
  • We'll have to wait another 10 years for the 20 year average.

Still Climate_change#Warming_since_the_Industrial_Revolution could mention 2024 as the first year above +1.5 C. Uwappa (talk) 12:38, 10 December 2024 (UTC)

Categories: