Apparently, within a few years, there will be no beaches left on the east coast. Blahahhahaha! Shockingly, climate scientist were wrong again.
Forecasts of global temperature rises over the past 15 years have proved remarkably accurate, new analysis of scientists' modelling of climate change shows. The debate around the accuracy of climate modelling and forecasting has been especially intense recently, due to suggestions that forecasts have exaggerated the warming observed so far – and therefore also the level warming that can be expected in the future. But the new research casts serious doubts on these claims, and should give a boost to confidence in scientific predictions of climate change. The paper, published on Wednesday in the journal Nature Geoscience, explores the performance of a climate forecast based on data up to 1996 by comparing it with the actual temperatures observed since. The results show that scientists accurately predicted the warming experienced in the past decade, relative to the decade to 1996, to within a few hundredths of a degree. The forecast, published in 1999 by Myles Allen and colleagues at Oxford University, was one of the first to combine complex computer simulations of the climate system with adjustments based on historical observations to produce both a most likely global mean warming and a range of uncertainty. It predicted that the decade ending in December 2012 would be a quarter of degree warmer than the decade ending in August 1996 – and this proved almost precisely correct. The study is the first of its kind because reviewing a climate forecast meaningfully requires at least 15 years of observations to compare against. Assessments based on shorter periods are prone to being misleading due to natural short-term variability in the climate. The climate forecast published in 1999 is showed by the dashed black line. Actual temperatures are shown by the red line (as a 10-year mean) and yellow diamonds (for individual years). The graph shows that temperatures rose somewhat faster than predicted in the early 2000s before returning to the forecasted trend in the last few years. Photograph: Nature Geoscience The new research also found that, compared to the forecast, the early years of the new millennium were somewhat warmer than expected. More recently the temperature has matched the level forecasted very closely, but the relative slow-down in warming since the early years of the early 2000s has caused many commentators to assume that warming is now less severe than predicted. The paper shows this is not true. Allen said: "I think it's interesting because so many people think that recent years have been unexpectedly cool. In fact, what we found was that a few years around the turn of the millennium were slightly warmer than forecast, and that temperatures have now reverted to what we were predicting back in the 1990s." https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/mar/27/climate-change-model-global-warming
That's true, and very true indeed! Most peer review papers perhaps too theoretical could not get patents, partly due to practicality. So many published financial trading articles/papers with peer reviewed cannot be viable or profitable systems. Conceptually the papers are useful, but practitioners/traders know and understand they are simply not practical nor profitable as they show in the papers. Practitioners in many fields prefer to get patents rather than papers, as they don't need others' review at all. Or many rejected papers after peer review can be ground breaking ideas/concepts that can be proved useful and brilliant many years after rejection. However, many patents are good jokes. Just 2 cents!
No, if we really want to be honest, we have to ask why anybody accepts peer review as furnishing the unvarnished facts. from our own gov't, an article on why peer review is near worthless: Peer review: a flawed process at the heart of science and journals https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1420798/by R Smith - 2006 - Cited by 457 - Related articles At the BMJ we did several studies where we inserted major errors into papers that we then sent to many reviewers., Nobody ever spotted all of the errors. Some reviewers did not spot any, and most reviewers spotted only about a quarter. Peer review sometimes picks up fraud by chance, but generally it is not a reliable ..
Even the left wing Guardian admits that peer review promotes fake science. And now you know why liberals gravitate towards peer review. Publish-or-perish: Peer review and the corruption of science | David ... https://www.theguardian.com › Science › Controversies Sep 5, 2011 - David Colquhoun: Pressure on scientists to publish has led to a situation where any paper, however bad, can now be printed in a journal that claims to ... Those problems are so very obvious you'd imagine that the journal would apologise for a failure of the peer review process, and for a press release that ...
When defining a timeline target (by year 2025) without referring to what is the current status, and the adverse change of status during the timeline period, as well as the rate of change in a nonlinear/exponential manner due to its cumulative nature, it's hard to comprehend any urgency at all! How about clean-up of micro-beads? Micro-beads (that cannot be filtered by today's technology) in ocean waters may have passed a critical status far before the deadline! Ocean water would have already become ocean soup by 2025! Probably irreversible! Together with ocean temperature and sea level!