Jamie Lord on LinkedIn: ‘We should have better answers by now’: climate scientists baffled by… (2024)

Jamie Lord

Solution Architect at CDS UK

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Climate scientists are in over their heads, and it's time we faced this uncomfortable truth.The recent unprecedented spike in global temperatures has left even top experts like NASA's Gavin Schmidt baffled. Our most sophisticated climate models, honed over decades, have failed to predict the alarming pace of warming we're witnessing.This isn't just a minor discrepancy—we're talking about temperature anomalies that shatter records by margins so wide they're making seasoned climatologists question fundamental assumptions about Earth's climate system.The implications are staggering. If we can't accurately model short-term temperature fluctuations, how can we trust long-term projections that inform critical policy decisions?It's not that the underlying science of anthropogenic climate change is wrong. But our understanding of the complex feedback loops and tipping points in Earth's climate system is clearly lacking. The rapid loss of sea ice and potential changes in Earth's albedo could be accelerating warming beyond our current models' capabilities.We need a radical overhaul of climate science funding and research priorities. The current approach of slow, incremental improvements to existing models is woefully inadequate in the face of such rapid change.Are we prepared to admit that our grasp on climate dynamics might be fundamentally flawed? And if so, what does this mean for the decarbonisation targets we've set?Complacency is no longer an option. We must demand more from our scientific institutions and policymakers. The stakes are too high for anything less than a complete re-evaluation of our approach to climate science and policy.What do you think? Are we underestimating the urgency of the climate crisis?https://lnkd.in/eJtsNU4g#ClimateScience #GlobalWarming #ScientificUncertainty

‘We should have better answers by now’: climate scientists baffled by unexpected pace of heating theguardian.com

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Daniel Lane

Software Engineer at Mindera

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You may find the peer reviewed recent paper by Hansen et al to be of interest. James Hansen was the climate scientist who brought carbon dioxide driven climate change into focus in 1981. The abstract summary of the paper makes for grim reading. https://academic.oup.com/oocc/article/3/1/kgad008/7335889

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Paul Southcott

IT Analyst and Customer Support Officer at PCMIS Health Technologies

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Given weather forecasts as little as a couple of hours into the future can be quite wrong, I think anything that looks months or years into the future is pretty worthless.I know weather!=climate, and I do believe climate change is happening and something we need to sort out urgently, but any predictions beyond this don't seem worth the paper they're written on.

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Dr Felicity Heathcote-Márcz

Getting you the answers your business needs💜💡🐻❄️ Founder, Research & Business Consultant

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Wow this is shocking. In spite of flawed climate change models, the fundamental goals of decarbonisation must remain though. I think this is what governments need to focus on, leading the way in ambition and forcing change from the private sector w much stronger international standards and regulations. A risk certain actors could use this science uncertainty as justification to stall on action & investments away from fossil fuels.

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Jamie Lord on LinkedIn: ‘We should have better answers by now’: climate scientists baffled by… (33)

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