Thread: Sea Level Rise
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Old January 22nd 19, 11:21 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
Alastair Alastair is offline
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Default Sea Level Rise

On Friday, 18 January 2019 19:43:09 UTC, N_Cook wrote:
On 18/01/2019 19:01, JGD wrote:
On 18/01/2019 17:05, N_Cook wrote:

Oceanographers seem to be comfortable with quoting IPCC projections for
SLR to 2100 but at the same time will only fit a straight line to the
Jason data.


I'm afraid that there's a reason for that, which is that they are
scientists. And a good scientist should never (and usually will never)
try to fit an arbitrary curve to a set of data, especially so when very
considerable extrapolation is involved (which is inevitably the case
when trying to forecast 80 years into the future).

The only pragmatic answer available is to use the most conservative of
assumptions or tools, which in this case is limited to a linear trend.

Obviously this creates a major headache for climate change predictions,
but the only way out is to base the curve-fitting on some sort of
defined model, which will take account of parameters like thermal
expansion of the oceans, estimated melting of land ice (insofar as it
can even be estimated roughly), and so on. I presume that there are
interdiscplinary teams that can try to put this sort of model together
and I'd guess that there this must have been happening already for a few
years. So the embryonic models must be out there somewhere in the
oceanographic literature.

But please, please, please let's not fit arbitrary functions,
exponential or otherwise, to a set of data and pretend that
extrapolation of such curves way into the future means anything at all.


Have you seen the IPCC predictions?
Well above the linear "fit" of 3.34mm per year.
I hope you can admit , that to reach such IPCC predictions, there must
be some sort of up-curve at some point.
Where is the evidence this deviation from the current "scientific"
straight line would be as late as 2080 or 2060 say , it has to happen
sometime, what is wrong in putting it where there is some evidence of
curving upwards, ie before 2020.


Nick,

There is a paper here that you might find interesting: Evolution of 21st Century Sea-level Rise Projections

https://www.researchgate.net/publica...se_Projections

If the link does not work let me know.