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They have been saying for decades that hurricanes would increase but they haven't. Also wave forecasts are the average height of the waves, the biggest waves can be 40% higher (NOAA definition). The article says that the wave height is increasing at less than 0.75% per year. Can they really measure that and if they could it is insignificant compared to the 40%? Yet more scaremongering non-science.
They have been saying for decades that hurricanes would increase but they haven't.
The article says that the wave height is increasing at less than 0.75% per year.
They have been saying for decades that hurricanes would increase but they haven't. Also wave forecasts are the average height of the waves, the biggest waves can be 40% higher (NOAA definition).
The article says that the wave height is increasing at less than 0.75% per year. Can they really measure that and if they could it is insignificant compared to the 40%? Yet more scaremongering non-science.
They have been saying for decades that hurricanes would increase but they haven't. Also wave forecasts are the average height of the waves, the biggest waves can be 40% higher (NOAA definition). The article says that the wave height is increasing at less than 0.75% per year. Can they really measure that and if they could it is insignificant compared to the 40%? Yet more scaremongering non-science.
Yes, that's right KE - scientsits are **** at measuring anything, they can't measure for toffee. Lucky for us you are about to make your wonderfully educated guesses and keep us all right.
- W
Well we use forecasts or do you base whether to sail or not on 23 year historic measurements.
>A figure of 0.75% increase p.a. is virtually meaningless on its own without understanding the uncertainty around that figure.
There are 1,250 drifting weather buoys and 1024 fixed weather buoys. Total 2274 bouys collecting data in a area of 139 million square miles or one buoy per 6.1 million square miles. Confidence limits are based on sample size and on the basis of that the confidence you can have in the data is nil. As I said it's bad science.
Summary
The above analyses have carefully investigated the ability to accurately extract trends from the
altimeter data set. In particular, the analysis has investigated:
Methods to extract relatively small trends in a data set with a large season signal and
noise.
Methods to determine if measured trends are statistically signicant including accounting
for serial dependence and homogeneity across months (seasons).
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The ability of the altimeter to accurately measure wind speed and wave height up to the
99th percentile.
The reliability of each separate altimeter in measuring such extreme conditions.
Any impact on measured values of monthly 90th and 99th percentile values due to the
sampling density of the altimeter.
The impact of an increase in the sampling density of observations in the latter years of
the time series.
The sampling variability one could expect in derived values of trend, as a result of sampling
variability in monthly values.
Whether trends extracted from the altimeter data base are consistent with buoy and
numerical model results.
This extensive analysis concludes that the observed trends are a reliable and unbiased estimate
of changes in the wind speed and wave height climate over the period of the measured time series.
1st statement: No argument.The climate is warming. That is as certain as can be determined by any normally objective scientist who understands the meteorology.
Man is responsible for, at least, some of that warming. Again, that is as certain ....... etc etc.
It is a massively complex problem that makes prediction for the coming week look like child’s play.
But there again I'm obviously a gullible member of the doubting public who is meteorologically illiterate.
But there again I'm obviously a gullible member of the doubting public who is meteorologically illiterate.