Logging the Onset of The Bottleneck Years This weekly posting is brought to you courtesy of H. E. Taylor. Happy reading, I hope you enjoy this week's Global Warming news roundup skip to bottom Another week of Climate Disruption News December 27, 2009 Chuckles, COP15 - Post-Mortems, COP15 - CO2 Trade, COP15 - Renewable Energy, … Continue reading Another week of GW News, December 27, 2009
Month: December 2009
Veselé Vánoce
Happy Holidays to all regular and part time readers out there! Frosty the Coalman, is a jolly happy soul, He's abundant here in America and he helps our economy roll. Frosty the Coalman's getting cleaner every day He's affordable and adorable and helps workers keep their pay. There must have been some magic in clean … Continue reading Veselé Vánoce
Another week of GW News, December 20, 2009
Logging the Onset of The Bottleneck Years This weekly posting is brought to you courtesy of H. E. Taylor. Happy reading, I ho8pe you enjoy this week's Global Warming news roundup skip to bottom Information overload is pattern recognition December 20, 2009 Chuckles, Copenhagen, COP15 Dailies, Copenhagen Accord, COP15 Rhetoric, COP15 Demos, COP15 REDD 550 … Continue reading Another week of GW News, December 20, 2009
How to bash your head against one tree so hard you can no longer see the forest
WUWT's Willis Eschenbach has supposedly uncovered how Evil scientists have fabricated a warming trend in Darwin. Deltoid has the details on why those pesky adjustments were actually made. Of course those details were cleverly hidden, like Jone's decline, where no denialist would ever find it: in the peer reviewed literature! This fake investigation is called … Continue reading How to bash your head against one tree so hard you can no longer see the forest
MPR Interview
You can hear the interview Paul Huttner of Minesota Public Radio did with me here. My part starts just after minute 7 of Part 2 and is about 6 minutes long. The show page is here. Listen to Part 1: http://minnesota.publicradio.org/www_publicradio/tools/media_player/js/swfobject.js/**/ and/or part 2: http://minnesota.publicradio.org/www_publicradio/tools/media_player/js/swfobject.js/**/ I hope the association with Real Climate was not over … Continue reading MPR Interview
Another week of GW News, December 13, 2009
Logging the Onset of The Bottleneck Years This weekly posting is brought to you courtesy of H. E. Taylor. Happy reading, I hope you enjoy this week's Global Warming news roundup skip to bottom Another week of Climate Disruption News December 13, 2009 Chuckles, COP15, COP15 Dailies, COP15 Tools, COP15 Alternate Forums, COP15 The Editorial, … Continue reading Another week of GW News, December 13, 2009
A few good reads on the CRU email hacking
I have had these tabs open in Firefox for quite a while now hoping to have the time to comment on them in a bit of detail but time is not on my side (sorry Mic). So I would just like to list them briefly and recommend them for your review. From Balloon Juice: Especially … Continue reading A few good reads on the CRU email hacking
Yours truly on Minnesota Public Radio
For anyone near the computer on Sunday 6PM CST I will be on Minnesota Public Radio's Jet Streaming program for a very brief interview. After the fact I will link to an MP3 file. he interview has already been taped and I think it went pretty well, but we will see how it was from … Continue reading Yours truly on Minnesota Public Radio
Guardian’s editorial on Copenhagen
The Guardian has run a front page editorial on the Copenhagen summit along with 56 papers in 20 languages. I read it at Real Climate who "takes no formal position" on its statements. I suppose it is to avoid the acusation of being political... Well, I have rarely read an editorial I agree with more. … Continue reading Guardian’s editorial on Copenhagen
A visual approach to the climate debate
Here is a fabulous boil down approach to the climate debate. The main site is called "Information is beautiful" and like Robert Rhode's Global Warming Art, it provides a compelling and beautiful graphical presentation of an otherwise rather dry and technical topic. What do people think? Too simplistic? Too technical for a lay audience?