Friday, October 7, 2011

To say we are causing weather would not have been possible without the influence of man is simply not true

When Al Gore said last week that scientists now have "clear evidence that climate change is directly responsible for the storm and floods and extreme drought, which has displaced millions of people this years, "My heart sank. After suggesting the idea of ??"attribution of events" in 2003, and co-author of a study published earlier this year about the origin of flooding in the UK in autumn 2000, I suspect that it may be one of the scientists spoken.

Gore is right that is in principle possible to quantify the role of human influence on climate in particular weather, and it must involve the probability of how human influences "charged climate dice "to a particular event is more likely? These issues can be resolved, because of climate change impacts are largely felt by the risk of extreme climate change, the answers matter. People have a right to know how climate change affects, and will not be passed on to platitudes like "it's the kind of event that could be expected to become more frequent."

But the fact that there is a method for determining whether a statement is true does not mean it's true, let alone someone did the study to find out. To my knowledge, the granting of formal probabilistic analysis have been published in two facts: the 2003 heat wave in Europe and the fall of 2000, floods in the UK. Both studies found the human influence on climate was most likely increased risk of the event in question, but in the case of floods in autumn 2000 was found in 10 chance that the increase was modest 20 % or less. And a follow-up study just published in the Journal of Hydrology, Alison Kay and co-authors, using the same data to search for factors that influence the risk of flooding in the spring of 2001 hypothetical. They found that emissions of greenhouse gas emissions have actually reduced the risk of flooding conditions. Understandable, since spring floods in the UK tend to result from the melting snow, thanks to the greenhouse effect now, there is less snow around



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