BOM stands for the Bureau of Meteorology.
Why is it that these agencies seem determined to make life difficult for themselves by trying to conceal data. There was ample evidence of this in the leaked emails from a few years back, yet here we are again. Concealing and tampering are the hall mark of people pushing an agenda instead of the pursuit of scientific truth. Read it here:
You keep digging hoping to find AGW isn't true or isn't bad. The real issue is how much worse will it get. More co2 is not better.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.reportfrompeter.com/index.php/global-warming-977/
APRIL 15, 2023 BY ADMIN
Global Warming
Surface of the Ocean Heats Up
Ocean surface temperatures have hit an all-time high this month, breaking every record since satellite measurements began in the 1980s. Temperatures reached a global average of 69.98 Fahrenheit (21.1 degrees Celsius) in the first days of April. The previous record of 69.9 F (21 degrees C) was set in March 2016. Both are more than a degree higher than the global average between 1982 and 2011, which runs at around 68.72 F (20.4 C) in early spring.
The new record is the result of the buildup of heat from climate change, now unsuppressed by La NiƱa — a natural ocean cycle of cold surface temperatures in the eastern Pacific that had been ongoing for three years, but which ended in March(opens in new tab
It could be that changes in cloud cover have caused this. Climate can change for a variety of reasons. CO2 has a small effect, but is by no means the only cause.
ReplyDeleteFeedbacks determine the warming on the climate a great deal. Water vapor being a very strong fast feedback is positive. There are 17 pos feedbacks and 6 negative feedbacks. There is a phrase of "Don't poke the bear" in global warming. Meaning its not safe to do so..
ReplyDeletePositive
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Carbon cycle feedbacks
Arctic methane release
Thawing permafrost peat bogs
Hydrates
Abrupt increases in atmospheric methane
Decomposition
Peat decomposition
Rainforest drying
Forest fires
Desertification
Modelling results
Implications for climate policy
Cloud feedback
Gas release
Ice–albedo feedback
Water vapor feedback
Ocean-warming feedback
Negative
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Blackbody radiation
Carbon cycle
Le Chatelier's principle
Chemical weathering
Net primary productivity
Lapse rate