UAH v6.1 Global Temperature Update for September, 2025: +0.53 deg. C

October 2nd, 2025 by Roy W. Spencer, Ph. D.

The Version 6.1 global average lower tropospheric temperature (LT) anomaly for September, 2025 was +0.53 deg. C departure from the 1991-2020 mean, up from the August, 2025 anomaly of +0.39 deg. C.

The Version 6.1 global area-averaged linear temperature trend (January 1979 through September 2025) remains at +0.16 deg/ C/decade (+0.22 C/decade over land, +0.13 C/decade over oceans).

The following table lists various regional Version 6.1 LT departures from the 30-year (1991-2020) average for the last 21 months (record highs are in red).

YEARMOGLOBENHEM.SHEM.TROPICUSA48ARCTICAUST
2024Jan+0.80+1.02+0.58+1.20-0.19+0.40+1.12
2024Feb+0.88+0.95+0.81+1.17+1.31+0.86+1.16
2024Mar+0.88+0.96+0.80+1.26+0.22+1.05+1.34
2024Apr+0.94+1.12+0.76+1.15+0.86+0.88+0.54
2024May+0.78+0.77+0.78+1.20+0.05+0.20+0.53
2024June+0.69+0.78+0.60+0.85+1.37+0.64+0.91
2024July+0.74+0.86+0.61+0.97+0.44+0.56-0.07
2024Aug+0.76+0.82+0.69+0.74+0.40+0.88+1.75
2024Sep+0.81+1.04+0.58+0.82+1.31+1.48+0.98
2024Oct+0.75+0.89+0.60+0.63+1.90+0.81+1.09
2024Nov+0.64+0.87+0.41+0.53+1.12+0.79+1.00
2024Dec+0.62+0.76+0.48+0.52+1.42+1.12+1.54
2025Jan+0.45+0.70+0.21+0.24-1.06+0.74+0.48
2025Feb+0.50+0.55+0.45+0.26+1.04+2.10+0.87
2025Mar+0.57+0.74+0.41+0.40+1.24+1.23+1.20
2025Apr+0.61+0.77+0.46+0.37+0.82+0.85+1.21
2025May+0.50+0.45+0.55+0.30+0.15+0.75+0.99
2025June+0.48+0.48+0.47+0.30+0.81+0.05+0.39
2025July+0.36+0.49+0.23+0.45+0.32+0.40+0.53
2025Aug+0.39+0.39+0.39+0.16-0.06+0.69+0.11
2025Sep+0.53+0.56+0.49+0.35+0.38+0.77+0.32

The full UAH Global Temperature Report, along with the LT global gridpoint anomaly image for September, 2025, and a more detailed analysis by John Christy, should be available within the next several days here.

The monthly anomalies for various regions for the four deep layers we monitor from satellites will be available in the next several days at the following locations:

Lower Troposphere

Mid-Troposphere

Tropopause

Lower Stratosphere


725 Responses to “UAH v6.1 Global Temperature Update for September, 2025: +0.53 deg. C”

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  1. Fritz Kraut says:

    Warming goes on,
    and Denying and Ignoring will goe on.

    Same procedure as every month.

    • Dirk McCoy says:

      No one is denying warming. Only that it’s caused by CO2 and thus guaranteed and persistent. The data is clear the earth has cooled past 18 months after a massive spike the couple years before. No one seems to explain why- I suspect Hunga Tonga but is there no way to measure the water vapor situation?

      • Mike Roberts says:

        I’m not sure what data you’re looking at but, even in the UAH series, there was no massive spike in the two years before March 2024 (18 months ago). I do note that there have been many periods where one could say the earth has cooled over 18 months but the long term trend is still up and we continue to see records, even in the UAH series.

        This reminds me of the escalator charts where some claim it hasn’t warmed for x years, then we see an uptick. The trend is guaranteed and persistent, especially in data sets which record temperature at the surface, where people, animals and vegetation live.

      • Dirk McCoy says:

        January of 2023 to April of 2024 was an upward spike- just look at the graph above. Then 17 months trending down. Yes, there’s a larger upward arc, just as there have been longer downward arcs… but CO2 goes up every year. Something is more powerful in these 18 month segments than CO2.

      • Gadden says:

        Dirk McCoy seems to be completely unaware of the El Nino and La Nina phenemena. If you look at the UAH graph you’ll find that it’s basically the combination of a steady upwards trend of around 0.16 degrees per decade and fluctuations up and down around this trend. The trend is driven by man-made emissions (CO2, CH4, etc.) and the fluctuations are associated with El Ninos and La Ninas (compare with https://ggweather.com/enso/oni.htm).
        Dirk McCoy ‘suspects’ Hunga Tonga (!) which is a surprisingly specific remark for someone who appears to be totally ignorant about the atmospheric greenhouse effect, the ONI and the fact that the HT effect was very small, very short-lived and probably also a COOLING (https://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/hunga-volcano-eruption-cooled-southern-hemisphere).

      • Gadden says:

        Dirk McCoy says “Something is more powerful in these 18 month segments than CO2.”

        Oh dear. Scientists have known for a VERY long time that short term changes, ranging from days to a few years, are typically much faster than CLIMATE changes. The latter refers to changes of long time averages, like over several decades. The short term ups-and-downs are quite irrelevant to CLIMATE since they cancel out each other in the long run.
        I suggest Dirk McCoy atudes the 10 and 30 year averages of the UAH graph over at https://datagraver.com/climate-data-set-uah/ . The graph showing the 30 year average is particularly informative. What you see there is the underlying trend. THAT’s what matters from a CLIMATE perspective.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Hey Gadden, if only 4% of yearly emissions are from humans then how can all of the increase in CO2 since 1750 be due to humans when during that time most fossil fuel emissions were much much less than 4%?

      • Gadden says:

        Stephen p anderson asks “if only 4% of yearly emissions are from humans then how can all of the increase in CO2 since 1750 be due to humans when during that time most fossil fuel emissions were much much less than 4%?”

        In recent decades, the average annual contributions from nature and from humans (excluding respiration which is part of the natural carbon cycle to atmospheric CO2 are approximately as follows:

        Nature emits 780 and absorbs 800 billion tons.
        Humans emit 40 billion tons and absorb no CO2.
        It’s us.

        See also https://www.climate.gov/news-features/climate-qa/how-do-we-know-build-carbon-dioxide-atmosphere-caused-humans

      • stephen p anderson says:

        So, nature ab.sorbs 39 billion of the human emissions and 761 billion of the natural emissions. So, most of the atmospheric carbon is due to nature.

      • Mike Roberts says:

        Of course most of the atmospheric carbon is due to nature, stephen p anderson, and you’d be hard pressed to find statements by climate scientists that say otherwise. This will not be true in the future if we don’t eliminate human caused emissions. However, the increase in atmospheric carbon is all human caused – it’s on top of the natural cycle.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Mike Roberts,

        If only 4% of yearly emissions are due to humans, then how can all the increase be due to humans? Physically impossible.

      • Gadden says:

        Stephen p anderson, I’ll dumb it down for you with an analogy.

        Peter has $400. Every day Paul gives Peter $100. Peter then immediately
        gives Paul $100 back. This goes on day after day, year after year. In the long run, Peter’s capital will neither grow nor shrink, right?
        Now, let’s say Mary suddenly starts showing up when this transaction occurs. As Paul hands Peter the daily $100, Mary also gives Peter some money, $4 as it happens. Paul now sees the $104 in Peter’s hand and can’t resist taking back a little more than the usual $100 so he asks for $102, and Peter gives that to him. Mary is happy giving away the $4 and does not get any money from Peter. From this day on, Mary coontinues showing up every day, giving away $4 and not expecting anything in return. So every day, Peter now receives $104 and pays $102. This means his capital will grow by $2 every day. Are you with me so far?
        Who would you say is financing Peter’s capital growth? Is it Paul or Mary?
        Let me know when the penny drops. If it doesn’t, ask a person of at least average intelligence to explain it for you.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Gadden,

        You flunk Physics 101 with your incorrect model. Do you understand that atmopsheric CO2 obeys the continuity equation which is a first order linear differential equation?

        dCO2/dt = Inflow – Outflow
        Inflow=Lb/Te (Lb=Balance Level)
        Outflow= L/Te
        L=430ppm
        If we use dC/dt=2ppm/yr (4.24PgC/yr) and a Te of 4 years.
        Outflow=430ppm/4yr=107.5 ppm/yr
        Inflow= 107.5ppm/yr+ 2ppm/yr =109.5ppm/yr
        Balance Level = 109.5ppm/yr(4yr)=438ppm
        Te (eTime) is the time it takes for Level to reach 0.693 the distance from the level to the balance level. So, in 4 years from now, the level should be 435.54ppm.
        If inflow is 5ppm human and 104.5ppm natural, then in 4 years when the level is 435.5ppm, human CO2 can be no more than 20ppm of the total. Outflow, which is 107.5ppm/yr, is 4.945ppm/yr human and 102.555ppm/yr natural. So, of the 2ppm/yr increase, 0.055ppm is human and 1.945ppm is natural. Natural emissions are greater than natural sinks. This is conservation of mass and in compliance with the equivalence principle.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Also, I don’t think your 820 billion metric tons is correct. If so, that would indicate a much shorter Te of about 2.9 years. But it could be.

      • Nate says:

        “Inflow=Lb/Te (Lb=Balance Level)
        Outflow= L/Te”

        These equations are not applicable to our atmosphere, Stephen.

        For example, the atmosphere emits to the ocean and land. If the ocean has a level Lo = Latm, then there is no emission.

        Zero.

        Outflow = (Latm-Lo)/Te

        Currently Latm and Lo are very nearly equal.

        OTOH, when the ocean warms and cools with the seasons, it will emit and then absorb CO2.

        Same with soil. And plants.

        These are all driven, dynamic, processes, that do not follow your simplistic equations.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        So, is that true for natural and human carbon?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        Do you realize you’re telling Gadden his little dollar piggy bank model is wrong?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Gadden,

        So Nate swooped in to try to save you while destroying your argument but did it with an argument that is equally as weak as yours. You’d think he’d do it with a sound mathematical argument. If he answers me, which he probably won’t because I’ll twist his poor argument into a pretzel, I’ll show you where he is wrong too.

      • barry says:

        “So, nature ab.sorbs 39 billion of the human emissions and 761 billion of the natural emissions”

        Nature doesn’t distinguish. We add 40 billion tons of CO2 in the air, and the biosphere, year after year, never absorbs enough to reduce the total CO2 concentration. It keeps going up by about half what we emit, year after year.

        It’s very, very simple math. If we add year by year twice as much as is accumulating year by year, and not taking any out, then it’s us.

      • Nate says:

        Stephen.

        A good model of carbon in surface and atmosphere is two big barrels of water connected by a thin tube. The barrels contain 400 liters.

        Raising and lowering the T of the surface seasonally, can be modeled by raising and lowering the height of one barrel each hour.

        When raised, water (carbon) flows out of the barrel (surface) thru the hose to the fixed barrel (atmosphere).

        Because it has to flow thru the thin hose, it takes time (Te) to equilibrate, but 100 liters of water (carbon) is exchanged each time the bucket is raised.

        Then when the barrel (surface) is lowered 100 liters flows back to the other barrel (atmosphere)

        Now at the same time a human is adding 4 liters to the fixed bucket per hour. During each hour about 2 liters flows to the other bucket.

        It should be obvious that a barrel (atm) increase water
        (carbon) by 2 liters (ppm) per hour (year).

        It should be obvious that this was entirely due to the human adding the water (carbon).

        Why isnt it obvioys, Stephen?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Barry,
        I showed you what happens based on the solution of the continuity equation. It is obvious that most of the yearly increase is due to nature. Your model violates the Equivalence Principle and is not based on any math.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate, you are almost there. You almost understand. The atmosphere will have a linear differential equation governed by dCO2(atm)/dt = Input – Output and Surface Ocean will have a separate equation dCO2(o)/dt= Input – Output. Also, land will have dCO2(land)/dt= Input – Output. Each solution will have its own independent Te’s for each system. Also, the deep ocean will have its own independent Te. By the way these solutions fit perfectly to the IPCC’s natural carbon cycle model. All you have to do is read Berry’s third paper. Your model (Latm-Lo)/Te doesn’t work because the atmosphere and ocean have two different Te and your solution would not work for the First order differential equation.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        You flunk physics 101. The 2ppm per year is dCO2/dt. It is the total change of CO2 in the atmosphere. It is governed by all inputs and all outputs. The balance level is set by all inputs and Te.

      • barry says:

        “It is obvious that most of the yearly increase is due to nature.”

        It’s obvious that it is due to us.

        Humans emit 40 Gt CO2 per year, the air gains 20 Gt, so nature must be taking up the other 20 Gt — meaning nature is a net sink, not a source. Therefore, the rise must come from human CO2.

        It’s basic math.

        To argue otherwise you would have to show that the biosphere somehow selectively removes anthro CO2 (zero evidence for this), and identify a source responsible for the 20 GT per year.

        It can’t be the oceans because they are accumulating. Can’t be biota because the planet has gfrenened slightly.

        But the first hurdle is the killer. We have a source, it is responsible for twice the actual increase. Nature is a net sink, humans a net contribution – twice as much as needed to account for the growth.

      • Nate says:

        “You flunk physics 101.”

        Why?

        “The 2ppm per year is dCO2/dt. It is the total change of CO2 in the atmosphere. It is governed by all inputs and all outputs. The balance level is set by all inputs and Te.”

        Sure. So point out the problem with the two barrels model. One of the barrels represents the atmosphere.

        It has inputs and outputs that conserve mass.

      • Nate says:

        “Your model (Latm-Lo)/Te doesn’t work because the atmosphere and ocean have two different Te and your solution would not work for the First order differential equation.”

        Sure it does. The Te describes the time to exchange mass from the atm to the ocean mixed layer.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Barry,

        It is basic math, but you ignore basic math and insert Barry math. Barry math is incorrect math. The math can’t be what you want it to be. It has to follow the laws of nature. Humans don’t get to invent any math they want. The Creator gave us math that governs the laws of nature. We don’t get to make up our own math if nature’s math doesn’t fit our narrative.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,
        You flunk physics 101 again. The outflow from the surface ocean is the solution to dCO2ocean/dt = Input – Output. That solution has a different Te. If your equation was true, dCO2atm/dt= Input – Output would be much larger that 2-3ppm. It would be a very large number, one or two orders of magnitude larger. So, we know its not true because dCO2/dt is only changing about 2-3ppm per year.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        Let’s take this a step further. Above, I used outflow=L/Te and I plugged in some numbers: 430ppm/4yr= 107.5 ppm per year. Let’s use your equation now: (430ppm – ?)/? = ?. Please fill in the numbers.

      • barry says:

        stephen,

        “It is basic math, but you ignore basic math and insert Barry math. Barry math is incorrect math.”

        But you were unable to show why, because the simple math is irrefutable.

        Nature is a net sink. The largest sink is the oceans and they are accumulating CO2. The next largest sink is land vegetation, which is also a net sink, not a source.

        It’s not just the straightforward math, the physical evidence corroborates.

        And as you know there is much more physical evidence, including the increase in fossil fuel CO2 in the atmosphere and oceans, evident in the change in isotopic ratios of CO2 that come exclusively from fossil fuels.

        The anthropogenic origin of CO2 increase is extremely well corroborated. There are many areas of uncertainty regarding AGW and global warming, but this is not one of them.

      • Nate says:

        Stephen, the problem is with your interpretation of your equations.

        When properly combined, they give for the flow of carbon from atmosphere to ocean:

        dC/dt = (Lb-L)/Te where

        Lb is the equilibrium concentration in the liquid is determined by the final atmospheric pressure.

        This is standard kinetics of gas absorbing into liquid.

        The problem is that in the real ocean, the concentration L in the ocean is NEVER near 0.

        So there is NEVER going to be a flow of

        dC/dt = (Lb-0)/Te = 107 ppm/yr

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        Also, if that were true the outflow would only be about 60%. So,

        dCO2/dt would be 109.5ppm/yr – 0.6(107.5ppm/yr) = 45ppm/yr.

        Is it your contention that CO2 is rising 45ppm/yr?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        IPCC (2013) disagrees with you. Their Te for outflow to ocean is 9.7 years and outflow to land at 5.5 years. This gives an overall Te of 3.5 years. According to you Te for outflow to ocean is some very large number.

      • Nate says:

        “If that were true”

        Its your equations…so?

        Dont know where u got 60% math.

        “According to you Te for outflow to ocean is some very large number.”

        The very large Te is from the mixed layer ML to deep ocean.

        So added CO2 has nowhere to dissappear. It just keeps accumulating in atm, land and ML.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “The very large Te is from the mixed layer ML to deep ocean”

        No, it is a very large Te from Deep Ocean to mixed layer. The Te is set by the mixed layer, not the deep ocean. The Te from mixed layer to deep ocean is about 9 years. The deep ocean sets the flow from the deep ocean to the mixed layer, 37100/102=363 years.

        “Dont know where u got 60% math.”

        From you. You’re the one who said the flow from atmosphere to ocean was virtually nil. So, the only flow is from atmosphere to land, according to you. So, if you eliminate all the flow from atmosphere to deep ocean then outflow drops and dCO2/dt goes to about 45ppm per year.

      • Nate says:

        “The Te from mixed layer to deep ocean is about 9 years.”

        Evidence?

        I think you are speculating.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Sorry, meant to say from atmosphere to surface ocean eliminated. You’d have from my numbers above, 109.5 – 64.5 = 45ppm/yr= dCO2/dt.

        Also, I completely agree with you, the Lb of the surface ocean or mixed layer is set by the inflows from the atmosphere and deep ocean.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        One other thing, it is not set by the atmospheric pressure but the partial pressure of CO2 in the atmosphere according to Henry’s Law and the Ideal Gas Law.

      • Nate says:

        When you going to deal with this problem?

        “The problem is that in the real ocean, the concentration L in the ocean is NEVER near 0.

        So there is NEVER going to be a flow of

        dC/dt = (Lb-0)/Te = 107 ppm/yr”

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Evidence?

        I think you are speculating……

        IPCC (2013) data.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “When you going to deal with this problem?

        “The problem is that in the real ocean, the concentration L in the ocean is NEVER near 0.”

        No, it is never near zero. For natural carbon IPCC (2013) has a value of 900PgC. L in the ocean doesn’t set the outflow from the atmosphere. L in the ocean sets the flow from surface ocean to atmosphere and from surface ocean to deep ocean. L in the atmosphere sets the flow from the atmosphere to the ocean according to Henry’s Law and the Ideal Gas Law.

        “So there is NEVER going to be a flow of

        dC/dt = (Lb-0)/Te = 107 ppm/yr”

        But there is. It is right there in the IPCC (2013) report. However, the 107.5ppm/yr is total flow to land and to ocean of all carbon. The math just isn’t on your side.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        The evidence isn’t on your side either.

      • Nate says:

        “So there is NEVER going to be a flow of

        dC/dt = (Lb-0)/Te = 107 ppm/yr”

        Well this is your equation. Given that L is close to Lb, the dC/dt is never 107 ppm/yr.

        “But there is. It is right there in the IPCC (2013) report”

        Exactly, so that tells us your theory and understanding of the natural flows is incorrect.

      • Nate says:

        “L in the ocean doesnt set the outflow from the atmosphere.”

        Very wrong, Stephen. The L in the ocean produces a back pressure on the atmosphere, which reduces the flow of gas from the atmosphere.

        The atm partial pressure of CO2 sets the balance concentration of CO2 in the ocean, Lb by Henry’s Law.

        Once the L reaches Lb, there is no more flow from the atmosphere, because the ocean is then producing a back pressure = the co2 partial pressurecin the atm. They are in equilibrium.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “Very wrong, Stephen. The L in the ocean produces a back pressure on the atmosphere, which reduces the flow of gas from the atmosphere.”

        Not according to Henry’s Law. (The amount of gas that dissolves in a liquid is directly proportional to the partial pressure of the gas above the liquid.) The L in the Surface Ocean sets the outflow from the ocean to the atmosphere and the deep ocean.

        “Once the L reaches Lb, there is no more flow from the atmosphere, because the ocean is then producing a back pressure = the co2 partial pressurecin the atm. They are in equilibrium.”

        You are getting your L’s and Lb’s mixed up and you don’t understand the continuity equation. When the Lb(atm) = L(atm), dCO2/dt=0, but there are still inflow and outflow. The same for surface ocean. The same for deep ocean. The same for land. Gross conceptual error.

        Nate’s new hypothesis. If L of all the reservoirs are equal, then all CO2 flow stops. That’s a novel hypothesis Nate. You should submit it to IPCC or better yet the Nobel Committee.

      • Nate says:

        “When the Lb(atm) = L(atm), dCO2/dt=0, but there are still inflow and outflow”

        There is exchange (swapping) of molecules at the boundary. That is not a net FLOW of gas, which is dC/dt.

        In your bottle of soda you’re thinking that there is flow of CO2 between the liquid and the gas?

        No. There is only swapping of individual molecules. Not flow.

        Now open the bottle and allow the pressure to drop in the bottle. Then when closed again, because of the pressure drop there will be a flow of CO2 from the liquid to the gas phase. We can observe that by the bubbling that continues for a few minutes.

        This results in a net removal of CO2 from the bottle, and both liquid and gas.

        Just as adding CO2 pressure to the bottle results in adding CO2 mass to both gas and liquid reservoirs. Just as anthro carbon added to the atmosphere increases co2 mass in both atm and ocean.

      • Nate says:

        Stephen, here is the Google AI description of the natural carbon flows in the carbon cycle.

        “Carbon cycle flows are the movements of carbon between Earth’s reservoirs, including the atmosphere, oceans, land, and living organisms, driven by processes like photosynthesis, respiration, decomposition, and combustion.”

        These are all driven non-equilibrium processes that produce macroscopic movement of carbon between reservoirs

        These are not simply exchanges of molecules between reservoirs in equilibrium.

        For example respiration of plants and animala. When we breath out we are producing a NET flow of CO2 from our lungs to the atmosphere. It is because of high concentration of CO2 in the blood in our veins. Nonequilibrium.

      • bill hunter says:

        Nate asked google the wrong question. the correct question returns a response wide enough to see how wrong nate is in his argument thru this entire thread.

        ”The flow of CO2 between the ocean and atmosphere is driven by air-sea gas exchange, a process that becomes disequilibrium when one reservoir’s chemical or physical conditions change, creating a flux. For example, the uptake of atmospheric CO2 by photosynthetic organisms in the ocean lowers the partial pressure of CO2 in surface waters, enhancing the downward flux from the atmosphere. Similarly, if the ocean warms, it releases dissolved into the atmosphere.”

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        None of your last two posts change anything. All they do is solidify your gross conceptual error. But I do have a question. If there is no flow of CO2 from the atmosphere to the ocean, how are the plants surviving? (Algae, phytoplankton, seaweed, kelp, etc.) Where are they getting their CO2 from?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        P.S.- You’ve done nothing but expose your gross conceptual error the last couple of days and we’re just going in circles. I see why Berry tired of you quickly. Believe what you want to believe. You’re going to anyway.

      • Nate says:

        “None of your last two posts change anything”

        Thats not how honest debate works Stephen. You have to deal with facts that contradict your claims.

        Here you are simply ignoring them.

      • Nate says:

        “If there is no flow of CO2 from the atmosphere to the ocean, how are the plants surviving? (Algae, phytoplankton, seaweed, kelp, etc.) Where are they getting their CO2 from?”

        Nowhere have I said there is no flow from atm to ocean. Ive stated many times that the surface ocean, where light gathering plants and organisms live, is increasing its Co2 concentration, keeping up with the increase from the atmosphere.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        You went from trying to make a mathematical argument and failing miserably but at least trying to essentially pointlessness.

        “Oh, but its the molecules and, and, when we breath out there’s flow…and, and…”

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,
        You’ve lost the debate and I think you know it but even if you don’t your nature is to keep going on way past relevancy and I’m not interested.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        You lie so much you can’t keep track of your lies…..

        “For example, the atmosphere emits to the ocean and land. If the ocean has a level Lo = Latm, then there is no emission.

        Zero.

        Outflow = (Latm-Lo)/Te

        Currently Latm and Lo are very nearly equal.”

      • Mike Roberts says:

        stephen p anderson, it’s not physically impossible for that 4% of emissions to accumulate in the atmosphere, due to sinks not increasing by 4%. It’s the increase which results in warming.

      • Nate says:

        “You lie so much you can’t keep track of your lies…..

        “For example, the atmosphere emits to the ocean and land. If the ocean has a level Lo = Latm, then there is no emission.

        Zero.

        Outflow = (Latm-Lo)/Te

        Currently Latm and Lo are very nearly equal.”

        Yep, as I noted, that is YOUR equation, and what it finds for the FLOW of carbon in equilibrium between reservoirs does not agree with the observed natural flows of ~ 110 ppm/yr

        As the evidence shows. The actual flows in the carbon cycle are NOT happening in equilibrium.

        They are caused by DRIVEN nonequilibrium pocesses like pumping action of photosynthesis, plant an animal respiration, decomposition, ocean T disequilibrium, etc.

        These are all cyclic driven processes that simply move carbon around without removing it.

        While anthro carbon is being added to this cycle.

        You and Berry suggest that flow is Lb/Te = 110 ppm/yr to somewhere where it disappears. Therefore the added anthro of 5 ppm/yr must also must flow out to the somewhere and dissappear.

        This is a wrong interpretation. The flows are not removing carbon, just moving it around.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        It isn’t an interpretation. It’s math. It is the only math that fits the data. I know you’ll have some dumb response like, “according to you.” But your problem Nate is that it is tough to argue against math. I know you propagandists try, knowing that most of the population like Mike Roberts, can’t understand the math but unfortunately for you, I do.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate claims that dCO2/dt = Inputs – Outputs is my equation. That’s novel, Nate. Your barrel example above was dL/dt = Inputs – Outputs. The number of people (NP) in a building per unit time is dNP/dt = Inputs – Outputs. The number of anything in anything is d()/dt = Inputs – Outputs. It isn’t my equation Nate it is Nature’s equation. Also mass flow rate x time = total mass. That isn’t my equation Nate, that’s the Creator’s equation. You can call it Nature or Physics or whatever, but it isn’t my equation.

      • Nate says:

        “It isn’t an interpretation. It’s math.”

        Sorry, math alone is not science.

      • Nate says:

        It is a valid equation. It says that when two reservoirs are in equilibtium there is no transfer of carbon MASS between them.

        On Earth, there ARE cyclic transfers of carbon mass between reservoirs..because there are nonequilibrium driven dynamics.

        In the Northern Hemisphere in the warm months there is a huge flow of carbon into the forests as a result of photosynthesis. It is like a forest carbon pump has been turned on.

        It is not explained by your Lb/Te input flux.

        Then in winter, the pump turns off.

        The N-S asymmetry produces an oscillation in atm CO2.

        https://gml.noaa.gov/aftp/products/movies/pumphandle_latest.mp4

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Every natural law is based on math.

      • Nate says:

        Different phenomena require different physics and math.

        The Shrodinger Equation doesnt apply to planetary orbits.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “It is not explained by your Lb/Te input flux.”

        Sure, it is. But we have the yearly data. The continuity equation works for any unit of time. Also, thanks for reminding us that CO2 follows temperature.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        When the slope is increasing, dCO2/dt is positive. Inflow is greater than outflow. When dCO2/dt is negative, Inflow is less than outflow. Inflow= Lb/Te and Outflow = L/Te still work. Most of the seasonal sinusoidal behavior is regulated by inflow.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “Different phenomena require different physics and math.

        The Shrodinger Equation doesnt apply to planetary orbits.”

        Wow, that’s very profound Nate. Doesn’t support your argument but it’s very profound.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        I looked it up. There is a Hamiltonian Operator for planetary motion.

      • Nate says:

        C’mon Stephen,

        It aint sufficient for any scientist to say, I wrote down some math, therefore it explains this phenomenon.

        Your equation for input = Lb/Te does NOT explain the uptake of carbon by forests through photosynthesis. It is just not applicable to that.

        Your theory does not explain why CO2 was flat at around 280 ppm for the last 10,000 years and then shot up to 440 ppm, mostly in the last 60 years.

        It has nothing to offer to explain that. That is a failure of your theory.

        However the theory of how anthropogenic emissions provide a quantitative causal mechanism accounts extremely well for the rise.

        Since accurate measurements of both atm concentration and cumulative emissions have been made, (1959) this what plotting one against the other looks like,

        https://climexp.knmi.nl/data/icum_global_co2_emissions_1959:2025corr997594.png

        It is a nearly perfect linear relationship, as predicted.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,
        I don’t know what the CO2 level has been the last 10,000 years and neither do you. I do know that the math doesn’t support Gadden’s assertion that the CO2 rise is man-made.

      • Nate says:

        Just continuing to have no answers. No response to the inconvenient facts shown to you.

        Here’s another to address your claim that ‘we dont know’ about past CO2. Of course we do know from air bubbles trapped in Anyarctic ice.

        https://www.antarcticglaciers.org/glaciers-and-climate/ice-cores/ice-core-basics/

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        What are you rambling on about? I’m supposed to respond to your speculation and propaganda and go off on one of your red herrings about proxy data. The math doesn’t support the assertion that the CO2 rise is man made. That is the cold hard fact. Anything else you’ve brought up is speculation and not pertinent.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Inconvenient facts- Al Gore

        C’mon Man- Joe Biden

        Greta next?

        You’re a propagandist, Nate. Nothing more.

      • Nate says:

        Stephen,

        If you are at the point where actual data needs to be dismussed as speculation then your argument is a loser.

        if your theory cannot account for the observations, then what is the point of it?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        You are a terrible propagandist. That is not how science works. You don’t get to play whataboutism in science. What about this? Well, what about this? In science, it only takes one thing to falsify a theory. Your theory that the CO2 rise is man-made is falsified.

      • Willard says:

        [October 16, 2025 at 5:18 PM] You don’t get to play whataboutism in science.

        [October 7, 2025 at 7:31 AM] Hey Gadden, if only 4% of yearly emissions are from humans then how can all of the increase in CO2 since 1750 be due to humans when during that time most fossil fuel emissions were much much less than 4%?

      • Nate says:

        Ad hom attacks to avoid giving answers that you dont have.

        This is all about what has been causing the sharp rapid rise in atm CO2.

        Your theory cannot explain it.

        Science’s theory (humans added it) explains the data, quantitativly.

        You keep howling in the wind, ‘but the math!’, without recognizing that all the theories use math, not just yours.

        Not all theories that use math can be right. They have to be tested against observations.

        Your fails that test.

        Sorry.

      • Nate says:

        “In science, it only takes one thing to falsify a theory. Your theory that the CO2 rise is man-made is falsified.”

        Yes Feynman made it absolutely clear that the ‘one thing’ is an observation or experiment.

        Not theory or the math in it.

        Which observation or measurement falsifies the theory that humans are causing the rise?

        And no, don’t bother to simply repeat your theory.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        And you still don’t comprehend. The evidence has to fit the math. The continuity equation is the evidence. It fits all the data.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        It is like the lapse rate. The lapse rate is an equation. It falsifies the GHE. The Equivalence Principle is a Scientific Principle. It falsifies the IPCC’s Carbon Cycle Model and the Bern Model. You can’t have a Model that is mathematically incorrect.

      • Nate says:

        “The continuity equation is the evidence. It fits all the data”

        You are just saying stuff that pops into your head, that has no basis in reality.

        There is no such evidence.

        Im sorry that your theory fails to agree with the observations rendering it useless.

        But keep the dream alive.

      • Nate says:

        “It is like the lapse rate. The lapse rate is an equation. It falsifies the GHE.”

        This makes absolutely no sense Stephen.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        It doesn’t make any sense if you have no mathematical comprehension.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        It doesn’t make sense to a fish either.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        This is Nate’s goal, to turn it from a mathematical debate, which he loses badly to a whataboutism debate. Obfuscation and chaos are the propagandist’s goal.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Here it is again Nate. It explains it perfectly.

        dCO2/dt = Inflow – Outflow
        Inflow=Lb/Te (Lb=Balance Level)
        Outflow= L/Te
        L=430ppm
        If we use dC/dt=2ppm/yr (4.24PgC/yr) and a Te of 4 years.
        Outflow=430ppm/4yr=107.5 ppm/yr
        Inflow= 107.5ppm/yr+ 2ppm/yr =109.5ppm/yr
        Balance Level = 109.5ppm/yr(4yr)=438ppm
        Te (eTime) is the time it takes for Level to reach 0.693 the distance from the level to the balance level. So, in 4 years from now, the level should be 435.54ppm.
        If inflow is 5ppm human and 104.5ppm natural, then in 4 years when the level is 435.5ppm, human CO2 can be no more than 20ppm of the total. Outflow, which is 107.5ppm/yr, is 4.945ppm/yr human and 102.555ppm/yr natural. So, of the 2ppm/yr increase, 0.055ppm is human and 1.945ppm is natural. Natural emissions are greater than natural sinks. This is conservation of mass and in compliance with the equivalence principle.

      • Nate says:

        Yes, this is a restatement of your theory.

        What observations does it explain?

        Does it account for the 120 ppm rise in the last 65 years?

        Does it explain the curreny 2 ppm rise per year?

        Science’s theory DOES explain those things.

        And the data I gave you shows a linear relationship between cumulative human emissions and atm concentration over the last 65 y of observations, in agreement with theory.

        Can your theory explain that?

        If not, then that is a failure of your theory.

        During the Little Ice Age, temperatures cooled by 0.25 to 0.5 C, but atm CO2 changed by 7 ppm.

        So clearly temperature change is not the cause of the 150 ppm rise in the last century.

        So we have sciences theory which fully accounts for the rise.

        And your theory which offers no sound explanation.

        That is a failure of your theory. Feynman says then it must be wrong.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        es, this is a restatement of your theory.

        “What observations does it explain?” Most of the CO2 rise is natural.

        “Does it account for the 120 ppm rise in the last 65 years?” Yes

        “Does it explain the curreny 2 ppm rise per year?” Yes

        Science’s theory DOES explain those things.

        And the data I gave you shows a linear relationship between cumulative human emissions and atm concentration over the last 65 y of observations, in agreement with theory.

        “Can your theory explain that?” Yes, it shows mathematically that most of the rise is natural.

        If not, then that is a failure of your theory.

        “During the Little Ice Age, temperatures cooled by 0.25 to 0.5 C, but atm CO2 changed by 7 ppm.

        So clearly temperature change is not the cause of the 150 ppm rise in the last century.” Speculation

        “So we have sciences theory which fully accounts for the rise.” Mathematically it doesn’t.

        “And your theory which offers no sound explanation.” It does, natural emissions.

        “That is a failure of your theory. Feynman says then it must be wrong.” Your theory is based on speculation. Mine isn’t.

      • Nate says:

        “What observations does it explain?” Most of the CO2 rise is natural.”

        Theory not observation.

        Do you not understand the difference?

        “Does it account for the 120 ppm rise in the last 65 years?” Yes”

        No mechanism offered, no credit.

        ““Does it explain the curreny 2 ppm rise per year?” Yes”

        No mechinism, no credit.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “Theory not observation.” Theory based on observation.

        “Do you not understand the difference?” Yes, do you?

        “No mechanism offered, no credit.” Natural emission data is from IPCC.

        “No mechinism, no credit.” See continuity equation above.

      • Nate says:

        Pure BS Stephen.

        You have not connected the dots between your equations and the rapid rise of CO2 in the last century.

        Given that CO2 is rising in air, ocean, land, and biosphere, your theory lacks a source for this added carbon.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “Pure BS Stephen.

        You have not connected the dots between your equations and the rapid rise of CO2 in the last century.

        Given that CO2 is rising in air, ocean, land, and biosphere, your theory lacks a source for this added carbon.”

        This is your opinion. I’m not attempting to connect dots. The continuity equation falsifies that the atmospheric CO2 rise is due to fossil fuels. Fossil fuels can only account for about 4% of the rise. Also, the lapse rate falsifies the GHE. It’s math.

      • Nate says:

        Shamelessly ignoring inconvenient facts that are inconsistent with your theory.

        Theories live or die on their agreement with observations.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,
        This is from IPCC 2007:

        “Turnover time “T” is the ratio of the mass “M” of a reservoir and the total rate of removal “S.” So, T=M/S. For each removal process separate turnover times can be identified.”

        It says the turnover time for Natural CO2 is about 4 years. It assumes natural CO2 has remained at 280ppm and all the rise is due to humans.

        Can you explain how nature differentiates between natural and human CO2?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        Ballantyne et. al. (2012) found there is no empirical evidence that the ability of the land and oceans to absorb atmospheric CO2 has started to diminish on a global scale. This means human CO2 has not changed the turnover time.

      • Nate says:

        “Ballantyne et. al. (2012) found there is no empirical evidence that the ability of the land and oceans to absorb atmospheric CO2 has started to diminish on a global scale”

        Of no relevance to this discussion Stephen. You are missing the point of the paper.

        It is saying that the current ability is not diminishing.

        It is NOT saying that the current rate is sufficient to prevent emissions from accumulating in the atmosphere.

      • Nate says:

        Did you miss this sentence in Ballantyne 2012?

        “Since 1959, approx. 350 billion tonnes of carbon have been emitted humans to the atmosphere, of which about 55% has moved into land and oceans”

        Thus 45% remains.

        Simply not consistent with your theory.

      • Nate says:

        “It says the turnover time for Natural CO2 is about 4 years. It assumes natural CO2 has remained at 280ppm and all the rise is due to humans.

        Can you explain how nature differentiates between natural and human CO2?”

        No need. The carbon added to the atmosphere may take 4 y to equilibrate with the land and ocean. But it returns. Most of it is not elimnated to the deep ocean. It just keeps circlating, atm -land-atm-ocean-atm.

        Anything added is still present in this circulation.Thus only 45 % of added carbon remains in the atmosphere.

        Even your math says nothing about this fraction.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “It says the turnover time for Natural CO2 is about 4 years. It assumes natural CO2 has remained at 280ppm and all the rise is due to humans.

        Can you explain how nature differentiates between natural and human CO2?”

        No need. The carbon added to the atmosphere may take 4 y to equilibrate with the land and ocean. But it returns. Most of it is not elimnated to the deep ocean. It just keeps circlating, atm -land-atm-ocean-atm.

        Anything added is still present in this circulation.Thus only 45 % of added carbon remains in the atmosphere.

        Even your math says nothing about this fraction.

        The flow from the surface ocean to the deep ocean is the same as the flow from the surface ocean to the atmosphere. I agree with you. Some of the carbon that flows from the surface ocean to the atmosphere was human carbon, but the total percent is never more than about 4-5%. Berry ran all the numbers on that in his third paper. He says it can be as high as 25% of the increase in his third paper but he is being conservative. 25% of the increase would put it at about 30-35ppm of the total.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        So, from Berry’s third paper, based on the Law of Superposition, eTimes for natural carbon and human carbon are the same. So human carbon flows into the atmosphere and then is distributed proportionately (and cycles like you claim) as natural carbon. Therefore, using IPCC 2013 data to determine flows and eTimes, the human carbon in 2020 was distributed as:

        Land-92.5 ppmv, atmosphere-33.1ppmv, surface ocean-17.9 ppmv, and deep ocean-69.5ppmv for a total of 213ppmv since 1750.

        So, for human carbon in the atmosphere, it is only 33.1/430=8% of atmospheric carbon. The rise has been about 130ppm therefore most of the rise is due to natural carbon.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “Did you miss this sentence in Ballantyne 2012?

        “Since 1959, approx. 350 billion tonnes of carbon have been emitted humans to the atmosphere, of which about 55% has moved into land and oceans”

        Thus 45% remains.

        Simply not consistent with your theory.”

        Ballantyne did not understand the continuity equation or that natural and human CO2 have the same eTimes. So, it flows from reservoir to reservoir just like natural carbon.

      • Nate says:

        “The flow from the surface ocean to the deep ocean is the same as the flow from the surface ocean to the atmosphere. I agree with you.”

        I never said that. It makes bo sense, and there is no evidence for it.

      • Nate says:

        “Ballantyne did not understand the continuity equation or that natural and human CO2 have the same eTimes. So, it flows from reservoir to reservoir just like natural carbon”

        Pure ad hom attack, as opppsed to criticizing the science content of the paper that you cited.

        Your assumption that carbon cycle experts dont understand conservation of mass etc is implausible.

        Weak.

      • Nate says:

        “Berry ran all the numbers on that in his third paper. He says”

        Clearly your argument is ‘Berry is right, because he is a genius and I believe him’ and the hundreds of other carbon cycle experts are wrong because they must be stoopid and have not yet grasped Berry’s genius.

        Very unconvincing.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “The flow from the surface ocean to the deep ocean is the same as the flow from the surface ocean to the atmosphere. I agree with you.

        I never said that. It makes no sense, and there is no evidence for it.”

        I thought you said it. If you understood you would have said it. It makes no sense to fish either. So, let’s take this one step at a time. Two questions: How does natural carbon flow to the deep ocean, but human carbon does not? Why does the IPCC have human carbon in their deep ocean inventory in their carbon cycle model if the?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “The flow from the surface ocean to the deep ocean is the same as the flow from the surface ocean to the atmosphere. I agree with you.

        I never said that. It makes no sense, and there is no evidence for it.”

        I thought you said it. If you understood you would have said it. It makes no sense to fish either. So, let’s take this one step at a time. Two questions: How does natural carbon flow to the deep ocean, but human carbon does not? Why does the IPCC have human carbon in their deep ocean inventory in their carbon cycle model if there is no evidence for it? (155PgC)

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate,

        Is that 155PgC one of those inconvenient facts you were talking about? Berry’s 69.5ppmv= 147PgC is pretty close to that IPCC number. Berry must be on to something. Berry did his own independent analysis using data from Keeling and others I believe. However, the difference is Berry is a true scientist and not trying to advance an agenda.

      • Nate says:

        “However, the difference is Berry is a true scientist and not trying to advance an agenda.”

        I see, so going back 65 y to, the 1950s, Revelle, etc have had a agenda to advance what? Climate change that nobody heard about yet?

        C’mon, Stephen,

        How do you tell Berry is a ‘true scientist’ and all the others are not?

        Maybe you have an agenda?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “However, the difference is Berry is a true scientist and not trying to advance an agenda.”

        I see, so going back 65 y to, the 1950s, Revelle, etc have had a agenda to advance what? Climate change that nobody heard about yet?

        C’mon, Stephen,

        How do you tell Berry is a ‘true scientist’ and all the others are not?

        Maybe you have an agenda?”

        You’re just a bundle of disinformation, aren’t you? Are you Soros’ Chief Climate Crazy? If he wants to pay me too, I’ll stop providing all these inconvenient facts. Revelle was the Father of climate change lunacy. He started it all. Berkley should have invalidated his diploma for fraudulent science.

        Getting back to our debate, why didn’t you answer my questions? (I already know why) I’ve got more inconvenient questions once you answer those. I’ve got more questions even if you don’t answer which I suspect you will not.

      • Nate says:

        “How do you tell Berry is a ‘true scientist’ and all the others are not?”

        Since you cant tell me, I will tell you.

        You ‘know’ based on his anti-climate-change politics aligning with yours.

        You both have the same own-the-libs political agenda, thus you ‘know’ he is a real man and real scientist.

        You dont need to understand the science much, since you can substitute your political judgement in for science knowledge.

        Of course that results in horrible science, like Trump and RFK Jr deciding that vaccines or Tylenol causes Autism.

        Thus you have ignored all the inconvenient actual scientific facts Ive shown you here, Stephen.

        Which, for any neutral observer are strong evidence for humans causing the rise of atm CO2.

        Given your mode of thinking, no amount of evidence can affect it.

        There is no point in continuing.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “Your assumption that carbon cycle experts don’t understand conservation of mass etc. is implausible.”

        I don’t think most do or they wouldn’t use the wrong equation for dCO2/dt in the atmosphere (and you) like Ballantyne. So, Ballantyne uses this equation:

        dCO2/dt= Ef-En

        Where Ef= Sum of one-way flows into the atmosphere

        En= Sum of the net exchanges between the atmosphere and land and ocean.

        He got this non-physics-based equation which is an assumption by the way from Revelle. The assumption is human CO2 remains in the atmosphere. He labels human flow as a one-way flow but then in the same work says that only half remains in the atmosphere. This is someone like Revelle who doesn’t understand the math (or maybe they do and don’t care) and are trying to make a name for themselves with an agenda. Not Berry or me. We follow the math.

        So, is the above equation correct or is dCO2/dt = Inflow – Outflow, correct? And do you think that believing they don’t or didn’t understand conservation of mass and Berry does implausible in light of this?

      • Nate says:

        None of that is an accurate representation of what was being done.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        “None of that is an accurate representation of what was being done.”

        Really?

    • Adam says:

      Doesn’t matter. Global population will peak by 2055 at just over 9 billion
      and then fall 80% over the next century. Population has already peaked in the developed world and would be collapsing were it not for immigration. Deaths exceeded births in Germany in 1972! Dramatic drops underway in Japan, China, Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Russia and much of Europe. Latin America not far behind. Parts of Africa moving in the same direction.

      • That’s a mixed blessing. Emissions are concentrated among the wealthiest nations with the lowest rates of population replacement. One China or India reaching Western levels of consumption would wipe out all the global gains from population reduction for decades after the peak.

    • stephen p anderson says:

      Nate,

      Not according to IPCC(2013). Te from atmosphere to ocean is 9.7 years and atmosphere to land is 5.5 years. And being the good mathematician that you are, you compute the overall Te to be 3.5 years. I used 4 years in my calculation above to be conservative.

  2. studentb says:

    Richard M (last month):
    “The change to the AMO cool phase is due soon.”

    Oops. The latest value is the warmest in 5 months.

  3. Bellman says:

    Third warmest September, though still a lot cooler than the previous two years.

    Year Anomaly
    1 2024 0.81
    2 2023 0.80
    3 2025 0.53
    4 2019 0.44
    5 2020 0.40
    6 2017 0.39
    7 2016 0.30
    8 1998 0.28
    9 2021 0.26
    10= 2010 0.20
    11= 2022 0.20

    My projection for 2025 is now 0.475 +/- 0.068C, with a 90% chance that 2025 will be the 2nd warmest year on record.

    • David G says:

      Your projection for the year is spot on, Bellman, using the UAH satellite data. It’s more of a nip-and-tuck race between 2023 and 2025 for the second hottest year in the surface temperature data sets. 2023 has the edge in the NOAA-NCEI data set, while 2025 has a small edge in the NASA-GISS data. No matter how it’s measured, the last three years will be the three hottest years in the instrumented record, by quite a good margin.

  4. Nate says:

    As Roy noted the trend since the start is 0.16 deg/decade.

    But the trend over the last 20 y is nearly double that, at 0.31 deg/decade.

    The warming has accelerated.

    • Arjan Duiker says:

      True, but each and every deviation from a mean that takes place within a period of 30 years or less is part of the domain called ‘weather’. Nothing to do with climate right.

      • studentb says:

        Technically correct but the trend refers to the underlying increase in the 30-year mean(s).

    • Arthur Groot says:

      Yes, the trend is accelerating. The instantaneous rate of warming from a second order polynomial fit to the data is 0.27 deg/decade.

    • Tim S says:

      Really? So the peak event of the last 3 years is part of the long term trend? Interesting!

  5. RLH says:

    Called it 10 days ago (or so).

    See https://oz4caster.wordpress.com/cfsr/.

  6. Edim says:

    It’s not controversial that the warming has accelerated since the ~1970s. It also decelerated (slightly) mid 20th century.
    If there’s “settled” climate science, it’s the climate (temperature…) record of the last ~150 years. The global (AMO-like) pattern is supported by solid evidence.

  7. Robert Ingersol says:

    Did Hunga Tonga erupt again?

  8. Clint R says:

    September’s uptick could be best explained from good global albedo data, is such existed.

  9. bdgwx says:

    The new Monckton Pause extends to 30 months starting in 2023/04. The average of this pause is 0.62 C. The previous Monckton Pause started in 2014/06 and lasted 107 months and had an average of 0.21 C. That makes this pause 0.41 C higher than the previous one.

    +0.156 +- 0.040 C.decade-1 k=2 is the trend from 1979/01 to 2025/09.

    +0.027 +- 0.010 C.decade-2 k=2 is the acceleration of the trend.

    My prediction for 2025 from the 2025/03 update was 0.43 +- 0.16 C k=2.

    My prediction for 2025 from the 2025/04 update was 0.47 +- 0.14 C k=2.

    My prediction for 2025 from the 2025/05 update was 0.46 +- 0.11 C k=2.

    My prediction for 2025 from the 2025/06 update was 0.47 +- 0.10 C k=2.

    My prediction for 2025 from the 2025/07 update was 0.46 +- 0.08 C k=2.

    My prediction for 2025 from the 2025/08 update was 0.46 +- 0.06 C k=2.

    My prediction for 2025 from the 2025/09 update is 0.48 +- 0.05 C k=2.

  10. Tim S says:

    I have a comment on monthly variability. It is not “noise”. It represents natural dynamics in the atmosphere including weather events. Monthly data cannot signal a trend of any type, but that does not mean it is noise. It has value. A tight group from month to month should demonstrate stability of some type. In the same way, a progressive movement in one direction or another provides a clue. Beyond movement of the 13-month average, a new grouping such as we have over the last several months should have some significance.

    Therefore, I think the atmosphere has cooled significantly this year. It is not noise any more than the surge that started in the beginning of 2023 is noise. Something real and significant has happened over the last 3 years. It demonstrates clearly that assigning cause and effect, or making claims about long term trends is very difficult. The only thing we can ever know for certain is the present state of the temperature of the atmosphere, not where it is going or what is causing it.

    • studentb says:

      TS, if what you say is true, then the chances of next year being warmer/cooler than the last should be 50%/50%.

      If betting on the outcome, the odds are the same as tossing a coin. You could offer me those same odds if you like and I will gladly stump up $1.

      However, to sweeten the deal let me make this counter offer:
      If it is cooler, you win $1.50
      If it is warmer, I win only $1.00

      Would you be interested?

      • Tim S says:

        Since your comment has nothing to do with anything in my comment, I will decline the offer of a stawman. I really am not interested in a random argument about nonsense.

      • studentb says:

        Let’s make it simple for you.

        Most forecasts these days are couched in probabilities.

        All you have to do is nominate your estimate of the probabilities of it being warmer or cooler next year.

        It’s not hard.

    • Nate says:

      “Therefore, I think the atmosphere has cooled significantly this year.”

      As it does every year after a strong El Nino peak occurs in the previous year.

      • Richard M says:

        The El Nino ended in May 2024 and was even replaced by La Nina conditions over the last 4 months of the year. Any El Nino effect was long gone by 2025.

        The 2025 cooling is better explained by the Hunga-Tonga warming effect dissipating. It’s a slow effect and hard to see with the noise from ENSO and sunspots. It is likely to continue for at least another year.

      • Nate says:

        Richard. It is well known that the effect of El Ninos or La Ninas on global T are delayed in UAH by 4-5 months. Because ocean warmth increases convection, whose heat is then transported around the world.

        Look at the data.

        Even in surface data, there is a delay of 3-4 months.

        https://www.columbia.edu/~mhs119/ElNino-LaNina/

        See 3rd and 4th figures.

    • Nate says:

      “making claims about long term trends is very difficult”

      Non sequitur. The long term trend short term variation are separable.

      Think of it the Earth and its chaotic weather this way.

      It is analogous to a pot of water placed on a burner with a thermometer. It is predictable that the thermometer will indicate a warming trend. Yet it will predictably show random variation due to the chaotic dynamics of heated water.

      In the case of the Earth, the burner is the measurable increase in the GHE (forcing), that predictably must cause warming.

      • Clint R says:

        Wrong again, Nate. A stove burner is able to heat water because it is much hotter than the water. But CO2 is NOT hotter than Earth’s surface, so it can NOT raise surface temperature.

        Like most of “climate science”, you don’t understand radiative physics or thermodynamics.

        When you grow up you might learn that beliefs ain’t science.

      • Nate says:

        Apparently the translation of ‘growing up’ from Clintspeak is ‘become more ignorant’.

        No thanks.

      • Clint R says:

        Denying reality is only part of your immaturity, Nate. But, it’s required by your cult.

        So, keep proving me right.

      • Nate says:

        Until you actually attempt to support your claims with real physics, real facts and sound logic, your posts can be safely ignored.

        More insults please.

      • Norman says:

        Clint R

        You know that Nate is correct about you. You make multiple statements but will never support even one with some established physics. You do not understand insulation at all. It does not add energy to a heated object, it slows down the loss of energy so a heated object gets hotter with insulation then without. CO2 and other GHG slow down the radiant energy loss of the surface and allow the solar input to achieve a higher surface temperture.

        Maybe read up on insulation and come back later when you have something to say. Other than that you just insult, and belittle any and all who question you or tell you to support your claims.

        As it stands for years you have not supported your claims with valid physics. Your posts ain’t science, just your made up version of how you think things work.

      • Clint R says:

        Child Nate, you started off trying to compare the atmosphere to a stove burner. It’s YOU that has NO understanding of the basic science.

        You just make crap up vainly trying to support your cult beliefs.

        And, if you’re insulted by reality, that’s no fault of mine.

        What will you try next?

      • Clint R says:

        Norman, you’re getting as bad as gordon with all the false accusations.

        Where did I ever say “insulation added energy to a heated object”?

        You need to quote me precisely, instead of trying to pervert reality.

      • Norman says:

        Clint R

        It is somewhat sad that you do not even know how to logically follow your own points! You basically do say that “insulation added energy to a heated object”?

        Your twisted and incorrect view of GHE is that CO2 is adding energy to the surface and warming it. If this was the actual GHE your twisted view would be correct that it violates the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics. But this view is wrong. The GHG in atmosphere act like an radiant insulator. The reduce the rate of radiant heat loss from the surface to space and allow the solar input energy to reach a higher surface temperature.

        I have demonstrated this very clearly to you with the SURFRAD plots. You are not capable of grasping what the plots clearly show.

        But I will attempt again to show you.
        https://gml.noaa.gov/webdata/tmp/surfrad_68e16706d26c8.png

        This clearly shows how GHG insulates and reduces the rate IR energy leaves the surface so that solar input will allow surface to reach a higher temperature.

        You are far worse than Gordon Robertson as a alleged science poster. At least Gordon gives some sources for his points (even though mostly from crackpots). At least he does try to support his points. You don’t even make attempts at it. You just insult and put posters down, but you never offer support for any of your arrogant beliefs.

      • Clint R says:

        Norman, it appears you have been drinking again.

        When you sober up, just link to one thing I actually said. That way I can maybe explain it so you can understand.

        I’m willing to help, but you must be sober, and address ONE topic at a time. Endless rambling is what cult children do.

      • bill hunter says:

        Nate says:
        ”In the case of the Earth, the burner is the measurable increase in the GHE (forcing), that predictably must cause warming.”

        Yes if there is such a thing as GHE forcing. Unfortunately all the efforts at demonstrating a forcing fails. . .as you well know, since you have been provided with many many experiments that have failed, yet you still toot your horn as if you don’t see them.

        And the fact is one cannot point to actual warming of the climate because the variables have not been adequately examined. In fact you sit here spouting through the top of your skull completely ignoring the many posts that Roy has posted over the past few years on UHI. Roy is a scientist, you are not.

      • Nate says:

        “Yes if there is such a thing as GHE forcing. Unfortunately all the efforts at demonstrating a forcing fails.”

        False. Direct observations from the surface and from space confirm it.

        https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/24/6375/2024/

        “Direct observational evidence from space of the effect of CO2 increase on longwave spectral radiances: the unique role of high-spectral-resolution measurements”

        https://newscenter.lbl.gov/2015/02/25/co2-greenhouse-effect-increase/

        “First Direct Observation of Carbon Dioxide,s Increasing Greenhouse Effect at the Earth’s Surface”

      • Clint R says:

        Nate, you can find crap like that all over the Internet. Neither of those two “papers” has ANY science.

        The first one is claiming CO2 increases IR to space. Think about that. That would mean CO2 would increase cooling. They put out so much rambling blah-blah that they end up proving Skepitcs right!

      • Nate says:

        “The first one is claiming CO2 increases IR to space.”

        Who knows WTF you think you read, but Fig 1 and 2 clearly show a decrease due to added CO2.

        But, if you still think it is claiming CO2 increases IR to space, quote it, and indicate page and paragraph.

      • Clint R says:

        Nate, find an adult to explain the title to you: Direct observational evidence from space of the effect of CO2 increase on longwave spectral radiances

      • bill hunter says:

        As usual we have Nate WHO IS NOT A SCIENTIST posting up science papers he doesn’t even understand. Nowhere can he point out in the science papers the work that was done to establish that the near surface atmosphere would be a mean 255k without CO2 nor that it is as warm as it is due to CO2. There is nothing at all in his references that point out any such work.

        Sheesh!

      • Nate says:

        Clint demonstrates he is an ignoramus who can’t read.

      • Nate says:

        The papers demontstrate a GHG climate forcing is observable.

        As usual, Bill you are quite confused about what a climate forcing is.

        Come back when you learn what it is.

      • bill hunter says:

        sure Nate. I will be happy to right after you try to explain it. . .which of course you can’t.

      • Willard says:

        Step 4 – Cheap Bargaining.

      • Nate says:

        Bill, not taking the bait. Come back when you have something real.

      • bill hunter says:

        we have been waiting for years for you to come up with ANYTHING scientific in nature that suggests the atmosphere is anything but a passive heat sink from heat leaving the surface and thus is incapable of dynamically forcing surface temperature.

        Your entire schtick suggests that the atmosphere without CO2 would be colder than it is with and you have produced zero evidence of that.

        Convection is more than capable of moving heat into the atmosphere all by itself and if there were no GHGs in the atmosphere the upper atmosphere would not cool as it does with GHGs.

        Convection can’t eliminate the lapse rate because of the conversion of kinetic energy into work due to adiabatic expansion of the gases without any loss of energy.

        You guys just want to ASS-U-ME the process is inefficient and can’t actually demonstrate that it is. Obviously the atmosphere is in a constant state of imbalance because of constant variation in rates of cooling and warming. . .so you just demonstrate the bottomless depth of your ignorance by constantly harping on the existence of an imbalance. Its such an obvious fact due to there being many heat sinks on this planet, the largest being the oceans.

        A first year detective can see right through the lies and deception. There is so much nonsense being thrown about when you simply have to prove one thing. If you could do that the game would be over and nothing else would need to be said.

        But its like how scientists deny the creation of the universe. They denied it for centuries claiming it was always here and endless in dimension. Then along came the discovery of redshift and now the universe was created . . . by a big bang. Now they are considering there may be other universes, probably just now recognizing that stars so far away may not have been in the big bang. . .at least when they think it happened. So does that mean multiple big bangs? Some different type of creation?

        Science is science, scientists are people. The people don’t all agree. But you can bet that an honest poll would reveal people believe what they want to believe. . . and that’s a good thing because if it were any different we really would be doomed. The last guy to recognize they were wrong is the guy most invested in his having been right. Some scientists keep that in mind, others don’t.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate is on a tear of leftist ideology. Nate, explain the forcing component of the lapse rate, i.e.- where is it?

      • Nate says:

        Standard meterology works very well and incrporates a GHE and a lapse rate.

        Nothing leftist about it.

      • Nate says:

        This is gobbldegook.

        Roy Spencer explained this to you. You never comprehended what he was saying.

    • Tim S says:

      Once again Nate is intent on proving that his only purpose here is to make argument for the sake of argument, In so doing, he demonstrates a complete lack of honesty and a failure to understand complex concepts.

      I wrote a detailed comment contain several different ideas, with one conclusion as follows:

      The only thing we can ever know for certain is the present state of the temperature of the atmosphere, not where it is going or what is causing it.

      Nate plays his usual game of taking one sentence, or a partial sentence out of context to change the meaning for his propose to make a snide remark.

      In January 2023 when there was a very low reading following 2 previous months of cooling, I do not remember seeing any comments that a very rapid rise would follow over the next few months.

      In a similar way, in April 2024, I do not remember seeing any comments that this might be the peak, and a sustained period of cooling would follow over the next year.

      Once again, nobody can predict where this is going. Some say warming will continue with increasing CO2 accumulation. Others say that the cool phase of AMO is coming in the next few years. I do not know, and I do not really care, except that I will be paying attention and interested in the outcome.

      • Nate says:

        “The only thing we can ever know for certain is the present state of the temperature of the atmosphere, not where it is going or what is causing it.”

        Nonsense, not supported by the available evidence.

        Climate models do not predict short term variations, so it is a strawman to suggest that they need to.

        The reality is that climate science has understood quite a lot about global warming, why it happens, and CAN predict that it will continue its long-term upward trend, as they have succeeded in doing reasonably accurately so far.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate still hasn’t figured out that his speculation isn’t science. My speculation is that CO2 follows temperature. So what?

      • Gadden says:

        That’s not a speculation. It’s well-known physics (Henry’s law). For example, towards the end of the last glacialization, atmospheric CO2 rose by around 10 ppm for every degree of global (average warming).
        HOWEVER, what’s happening now is entirely different from the past. Humans now inject around 40 billion tons of CO2 into the atmosphere per year. You have to be remarkably unintelligent if you think these emissions don’t play a role in the 20 ton average annual increase in atmospheric CO2. This CO2 increase corresponds to around 2.6 ppm increase per year.
        Note also that the average annual warming of the Earth is around 0.02 degrees, which would drive only 0.2 ppm of atmospheric CO2 increase if the deglacializations are anything to go by.

        If Stephen P still doesn’t get it, he should check out the following link which shows beyond any doubt, based on carbon isotope analysis, how we know what is causing the current CO2 growth in the atmosphere: https://www.climate.gov/news-features/climate-qa/how-do-we-know-build-carbon-dioxide-atmosphere-caused-humans

  11. I’ve taken a keen interest since our overlords told us we’d all perish from the energy that provides us with great luxuries and freedom.

    They’ve been proven demonstrably wrong.

    We’re looking at tiny changes over a very small period of time and there’s obviously nothing to worry about.

    • Gee Aye says:

      That’s just a flex. Three sentences all factually wrong. Face it, temperatures are going up and we’re the cause.

      • Tim S says:

        If that is true, why is the data not enough? Why do people make wild and false claims? Why do people such as Dr Michael Mann claim that odd weather events are evidence of climate change, or that COVID-19 was caused by climate change. He is all over the news with those claims. Can you blame clueless news anchors for believing him?

      • Gordon Robertson says:

        If ur no skeptical ur no Scottish.

      • Clint R says:

        Gee Aye, David H’s sentences are factually correct. They may not agree with your beliefs, but beliefs ain’t science.

        Do you have any science you want to discuss?

      • Ian Brown says:

        Temperatures are going up,and we are the cause, says Gee Aye, bet you can not prove we are the only cause, how is this warming different to past warmings? as Hubert Lamb stated decades ago, climate changes,and sometimes well withing a persons lifetime, if todays climate was my only worry,i would be a happy man.

      • Nate says:

        “Why do people such as Dr Michael Mann claim that odd weather events are evidence of climate change”

        Got a quote?

        He doesnt need any odd weather event to show evidence of climate change.

      • Nate says:

        “how is this warming different to past warmings?”

        It is much faster, and human caused.

      • Ken says:

        “how is this warming different to past warmings?”

        “It is much faster, and human caused.”

        You should see CET 1690 to 1740. Two degrees in 50 years Twice as fast as now.

      • Nate says:

        Ken,

        Are you suggesting that global temperature is accurately represented by central England’s temperature?

      • Ken says:

        “Are you suggesting that global temperature is accurately represented by central England’s temperature?”

        Yes. CET has at least as much validity as being representative of global trends as your specious claim that this warming period is faster than any other warming period.

      • Nate says:

        Easy to check if CET can well represent global average Temp over the last 50 y.
        CET and then Global temperature last 50 y.

        https://climexp.knmi.nl/data/tcet_36month_low-pass_loess1_1970:2025_a.png

        https://climexp.knmi.nl/data/ihadcrut5_global_36month_low-pass_loess1_1970:2025_a.png

        Does CET look like a good represention of global T, Ken?

        Of course not.

      • Nate says:

        Why are all these from denialist blogs or trashy sources.

        What he is claiming is that Climate change, which we have independent evidence for, is influencing regional weather in the Western US.

        There is a good case for that.

      • Tim S says:

        So there it is. Nate is not a spokesperson for anything at all, but Michael Mann is. On the other hand, Nate has no place to go, except to admit that Mann is claiming weather variability as evidence of climate change. It works for high school students who can honestly say they have never seen anything like it.

        If Mann was claiming the need to monitor continuing changes to see if a new or different pattern might be developing over decades or centuries, he would have a scientific standing for that. Instead he is going with the media inspired nonsense that climate change is real and already happening.

        There is an excellent case for human influence on the current warming. There is very weak evidence to show the full extent of what that contribution might be. The reliable history of the last 100 years and more does not support the notion that CO2 is the “thermostat” that controls temperature or sea level rise for that matter. The notion that human influence beyond natural effects is causing actual change in the long-term climate anywhere on earth is a major stretch of science. It does work very well with high school students, and that shows the strategy they are working.

      • Nste says:

        “So there it is. Nate is not a spokesperson for anything at all, but Michael Mann is. On the other hand, Nate has no place to go, except to admit that Mann is claiming weather variability as evidence of climate change”

        Tim works hard to confuse cause and effect.

        Your initial claim:

        “Dr Michael Mann claim that odd weather events are evidence of climate change”

        Your later claim:

        “Michael Mann is blaming the LA fires on climate change”

        Then you return to previous:

        “Mann is claiming weather variability as evidence of climate change.”

        The reality:

        What he is claiming is that Climate change, which we have independent evidence for, is influencing regional weather in the Western US.

        There is a good case for that.

      • Nate says:

        “with the media inspired nonsense that climate change is real and already happening.”

        This is where you stop making any sense to me. The scientific data is clear: places where most people live have significantly warmed in the last 50 y, in agreement with science predictions from 50 y ago.

        https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monitoring/climate-at-a-glance/global/time-series/nhem/land/tavg/36/8/1950-2025?trend=true&trend_base=10&begtrendyear=1970&endtrendyear=2025

      • Tim S says:

        The disgustingly dishonest Nate is doing it again, and I am sick of calling it out every time. He knows full well that he is misrepresenting my comment. It seems to be all he does. Here is the full context of my complete statement in the concluding paragraph, edited honestly for time and space with the appropriate triple dots:

        “There is an excellent case for human influence on the current warming…The notion that human influence beyond natural effects is causing actual change in the long-term climate anywhere on earth is a major stretch of science.”

        Nate will not address that statement because it is true. To be clear, a major stretch of science implies that peoples opinions are good enough. There needs to be reliable data. No hockey sticks allowed.

      • Tim S says:

        The disgustingly dishonest Nate is doing it again, and I am sick of calling it out every time. He knows full well that he is misrepresenting my comment. It seems to be all he does. Here is the full context of my complete statement in the concluding paragraph, edited honestly for time and space with the appropriate triple dots:

        “There is an excellent case for human influence on the current warming…The notion that human influence beyond natural effects is causing actual change in the long-term climate anywhere on earth is a major stretch of science.”

        Nate will not address that statement because it is true. To be clear, a major stretch of science implies that peoples opinion’s are NOT good enough. There needs to be reliable data. No hockey sticks allowed.

      • Tim S says:

        I went too fast and made a mistake. The second post is correct. Opinion’s are NOT good enough.

      • Nate says:

        So you keep adding ad-homs. And still fail to address the content of my posts.

        This is the point that you keep failing to address

        “The reality:

        What he is claiming is that Climate change, which we have independent evidence for, is influencing regional weather in the Western US.”

        He is NOT, as you keep erroneously claiming, using fires as his evidence for climate change.

        He, as well as the vast majority of climate scientists, already find the existing evidence for climat change convincing.

        I understand that science never knows things for certain. Yet they know many things well enough. And climate change is one of those.

  12. Thomas Hagedorn says:

    Basic flaw in the climate alarmism logical approach: It is fixed on the DIRECTION of the recent warming and ignores the significance of the MAGNITUDE.

    Alarmists also focus on words, instead of data, especially the popular press and politicians. “Warmest” being my favorite. “Warmest” BY HOW MUCH? “The sea is rising” BY HOW MUCH?

    Alarmists also focus on short term changes – monthly, annual, even decadal (is that a word?) – when even my English lit teacher next door knows that weather is variable. “If you don’t like the weather in ……(fill in the blank), just wait, it’ll change.”

    Alarmists also focus on one factor – CO2 – and attribute short and long term warming to it, when we know that there are many other known (ENSO and others) and likely unknown causes of temperature change (pre-industrial times) OTHER THAN CO2.

    I have looked at the changes in 30 year normals over the last two periods (1991-2020 and 1981-2010) for many airport stations in the U.S. and am quite underwhelmed by the MAGNITUDE of the warming. Despite NWS failure to locate earlier normals for me, I found a publication that has most of the data, Injustice have to get my hands on a copy (I don’t think it has been digitized. It will be interesting to compare the normal periods that included the 30s with the current normals.

    • Nate says:

      The magnitude of the average warming where most people live, in NH lands, is > 3 degrees F.

      This is noticeable. Where I live, in New England, there is very much less snow accumulation than 2 decades ago.

      Then there is the effect on global weather circulation..such as the northward expansion of the Hadley cell, that expands the desert regions such as in SW US.

      https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095927318301919

      • Thomas Hagedorn says:

        Can you provide some data to support your statements? How about the change in the 30 year average normal for your commercial airport? Name the airport and I’ll do the work first you. BTW, it is SIMPLE to do. NWS has great website/tool. Or would you rather keep using only words to support your claims? Data, please.

      • Mark B says:

        Here’s the closest airport to me. 0.6 F/decade since 1952 or more than 4 degrees F over that period. It’s very noticeable.

        https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monitoring/climate-at-a-glance/city/time-series/USW00004725/tavg/12/8/1951-2025?base_prd=true&begbaseyear=1991&endbaseyear=2020&trend=true&trend_base=10&begtrendyear=1951&endtrendyear=2025&filter=true&filterType=loess

        This tool will work for many of the moderately large cities in the US.

        Moreover, it’s really the global average affect that is central to “global warming” theory. Data for specific locations will be noiser, but in my region, if you haven’t observed it, you’re simply not paying attention.

      • Nate,

        Boston Logan’s 30 year normal annual average went from 51.5F to 51.9F over 10 years.
        Hartford’s International airport’s went from 50.6F to 51.0F over 10 years.
        Both are up 0.4F over 10 years. ( I plan to go back to earlier normal periods, which include the 1930s to look at results for a lot of US stations over almost 100 years.)

        So, at that rate it (0.4F) it would take 75 years to warm by 3 degrees. I am not sure why I should be alarmed about that. You have some very nice ski resorts in New England. I live in the Midwest and I know several people who regularly ski there. Snowfall can’t be too bad longterm.
        Warming is skewed toward nights, which generally is a good thing. It also has lengthened growing seasons. There are factors for sure, but greatly increased CO2 and added warmth has contributed to incredible increases in plant growth over the last 40 to 50 years. It has literally saved lives and pulled some out of poverty in the third world.

        Meanwhile, the magnitude of the increase from warming is far less than the normal temperature variation by day, than with differences brought about by different weather systems, than with latitude, and than with altitude. Plants, animals, and people seem to be able to adapt and even thrive in many extremely diverse climatic conditions.

        “Noticeable”, yes. “Observable”, of course. Concerning, no.

      • Mark B says:

        Thomas, If I do a temperature trend for Boston using the NOAA tool linked above since 1970 (see below for justification), I get 0.8 F/decade, so there is a large unreconciled difference between your result and mine.

        Whether or not this is “concerning” depends upon what one might be “concerned” about. It is a large and rapid climatic change by any reasonable standard.

        It’s interesting that you mention skiing with regard to New England. As a long-time (40+ years) skier I’d say that snowfall is actually less important a parameter than accumulated snow cover which is strongly dependent upon temperature. Again referring to the Binghamton NY result from above, our wintertime average temperature has risen about 1 F/decade for 40 years and the ski season is noticeably shorter than it was “back in the day”, something on the order of a month. This in spite of significant investment and advances in technology of artificial snow making at regional ski hills. You can see similar changes in other locations in the Northeast US.

        Finally, I’d offer the following plot of GISS LOTI global temperature which includes a piecewise linear fit using change point analysis to determine regime changes in the temperature trend as justification that linear analysis of recent temperature trends should start circa 1970. The physical justification is that it was around this time when concerns about air quality lead to regulation of pollutants that tended to have a cooling effect that largely negated the GHG warming.

        https://southstcafe.neocities.org/climate/GISS_LOTI_piecewise_linear.png

      • Nate says:

        And Thomas, here is winter months temp in NE region of US.

        https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monitoring/climate-at-a-glance/regional/time-series/101/tavg/3/2/1975-2025?trend=true&trend_base=10&begtrendyear=1970&endtrendyear=2025

        It shows 5 deg F warming in last 50 y. That is most certainly enough to prevent snow accumulation.

      • Mark B says:

        “Boston Logan’s 30 year normal annual average went from 51.5F to 51.9F over 10 years.”

        The Boston Logan observation station was relocated around April 1996 at the same time the instrumentation was switched to ASOS technology, so it’s non-trivial at best to compare data since that time with data prior to 1996.

        The Boston Logan average temperature since 1996 has risen at a rate of 0.82 F/decade.

        Station data from here:
        https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/homr/#ncdcstnid=20009288&tab=MSHR

        Similarly for Hartford Bradley, ASOS went online at a new location in 1996 and the average temperature trend since 1996 is 1.0 F/decade.

        Station data from here:
        https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/homr/#ncdcstnid=20004130&tab=LOCATIONS

  13. Bindidon says:

    I read above, without being suprised the least:

    ” Beyond movement of the 13-month average, a new grouping such as we have over the last several months should have some significance.

    Therefore, I think the atmosphere has cooled significantly this year. ”

    *
    Why doesn’t that surprise me?

    Quite simply because such statements, based on a review of recent months, have appeared many times on this blog in previous years.

    Many passages didn’t require a response: they were simply polemics.

    *
    The last time I felt the need to react was in 2021, when the good old Brit nicknamed ‘RLH’ suddenly claimed that 2021 was the (possibly unprecedented) harbinger of a global cooling, as all the first anomalies would be lower than those of the corresponding months a year earlier in 2020.

    *
    I was quite surprised and immediately doubted this claim. It didn’t take long for me to confirm my doubts by examining the entire UAH-LT time series in my SQL database: A simple “select” statement searching the series for all years whose first six anomalies were lower than those of the previous year sufficed.

    Later, we discovered that even all of the first eleven months of 2021 showed the same thing, with the exception of December. I then expanded the search to include those months.

    And this is the result:

    1981
    1982
    1989
    1992
    1999
    2011
    2021

    *
    And even if you look at all 12 months, you still find four years with all 12 anomalies lower than in the previous year:

    1982
    1992
    1999
    2011

    *
    For experienced commentators familiar with the influence of extreme events on the lower troposphere, it is easy to identify the causes of these four years:

    – 1982: Severe cooling due to the eruptions of St. Helens and El Chichón.
    – 1992: idem for Pinatubo.
    – 1999: The harshest transition in the satellite era from a strong El Niño to a strong La Niña.
    – 2011: The trough of the next strong La Niña.

    *
    So no: The cooling currently observed in the lower troposphere is not significant at all: it is nothing more than a reaction to the sudden vanishing of what had caused the strong warming for two years.

    What is significant, however, is the speed with which transitions from extreme deviations from the 30-year average (such as we experienced in 1997/98, 2025/16, and 2023/24) to a more normal level can occur.

    This, in my opinion, is the best weapon against alarmism in both directions.

    *
    You can be a highly successful graduate of one of the world’s most prestigious universities and still believe that a 13-month average

    https://www.drroyspencer.com/wp-content/uploads/UAH_LT_1979_thru_September_2025_v6.1_20x9-scaled.png

    can lead to a useful prediction.

    This is, of course, wrong, as the two averages in the next graph perfectlydemonstrate:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1yQHlFXQrnTvVVAvOW8Zzu-DRP5pY-ozp/view

    { Caution: I had to switch from Roy Spencer’s centred mean to front-window based ones. }

    ***
    But… apparently, such a prestigious education will not protect you from outbursts of subcutaneous aggression when responding to a simple request to switch from Fahrenheit to Celsius, as anyone can see below:

    September 5, 2025 at 3:50 PM

    ” You and Willard are two of the best examples of Dr Spencer’s commitment to free speech. Both of you would be prime candidates for a permanent ban on most moderated comment blogs, on the basis of being annoying and irrelevant. This comment about the use of the Fahrenheit temperature scale is not a new low for you, it is a typical low level snobbish and rude comment. You prove once again that arrogance is a very poor substitute for intelligence or knowledge. ”

    *
    I can’t recall having ever experienced such immature, stupid reaction.

    *
    Luckily, Roy Spencer’s blog is, on my Firefox, under control of Elliott Bignell’s excellent Tarderase add-on feature, so from now on I’ll mute this arrogant Tim S genius, as I did for Clint R and a few others.

    • Clint R says:

      When Bindi mentions me, it’s a reminder of how many times he’s proven me right.

      And, I enjoy being right….

    • RLH says:

      Do agree that https://oz4caster.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/d4-gfs-gta-daily-2014-2025-10-02.gif shows that this month is the same (or similar) to the last few years?

    • Tim S says:

      If you want to be relevant, you could try posting intelligent commentary. You could organize your thoughts into coherent sentences and paragraphs. As with Nate, I attempt to provide constructive criticism, but it is up to you to decide how you want to be considered. There is a chance that you could have something useful to contribute.

      • Nate says:

        Bwa ha ha!

        Tim thinks his ad-hominem attacks when he has no sound rebuttal, are ‘constructive criticism’.

        Nate “.. demonstrates a complete lack of honesty and a failure to understand complex concepts”

      • Tim S says:

        Nate, I am sorry if you or anyone else is offended. That is not my purpose. I think you know that I have a very strong bias toward intelligent and well-written comments. When I see this kind of disorganized stream-of-thought rant, that is poorly written and directed at me, I sometimes feel a sense of responsibility to respond, but not always. I think the people who argue back and forth with petty insults and pet names detract from what could be a useful discussion. Why do you want to be included in that group?

      • Nate says:

        “Nate, I am sorry if you or anyone else is offended.”

        No you are not.

        “That is not my purpose. ”

        Yes it is. You quite often offer no rebuttal to the content of my posts, and think insulting my intelligence is a good substitute.

        It isnt.

        “I think you know that I have a very strong bias toward intelligent and well-written comments.”

        I think you define ‘intelligent’ as ‘accepting of your unsupported often hyperbolic opinions’

        “I think the people who argue back and forth with petty insults and pet names detract from what could be a useful discussion. Why do you want to be included in that group?”

        Dude, you seem to lack any self-awareness.

      • Nate says:

        Good example here:

        “Because Nate is a disgusting liar, I need to point out that he dishonestly trimmed the quote as he always does to try to change the meaning.”

        Followed by no response or rebuttal to any of the content of my posts.

  14. Ian Brown says:

    Nate says ,how is the warming different from past warmings? Its much faster and human caused,really? since when was about 1.5c in 200 years fast? or problematic ?

    • Entropic man says:

      Since we built a civilization on coastal plains which are now under threat from rising sea levels.

      • Thomas Hagedorn says:

        Numbers, not words please, scary as they are. I will wait to build my rescue boat until you give me a reason. A few specifics. Rate of rise, USING THE AVERAGE SCENARIO (since you folks seem to love “consensus”), applied to some big U.S. ports, NYC, Miami, Boston, SF. BTW, some of those have tide gauges that go way back. Make your case.

      • Willard says:

        https://www.ipcc.ch/

        Do we have any evidence that Thomas ever audited anything, let alone climate data?

      • Ian Brown says:

        None at threat in the UK. Not one.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Ent,

        Do you mean like the city of Ur? It was built on the coast 10 thousand years ago. Isn’t it still above water?

      • Entropic man says:

        Stephen

        Around the Mediterranean coast are a number of cities which have been around for millennia. Some are still dry, some are now underwater.

        This has little to with sea level. The Eastern Mediterranean is an active tectonic zone and cities change elevation every time there is an earthquake.

        Perhaps you might like to use the submerged cities of Heracleon and Thonis as evidence that sea levels do not change.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Ent,

        Aren’t Heracleion and Thonis the same city? So, it sunk because it is on an active tectonic plate and Ur rose? Sea level rise doesn’t seem to fit that narrative. It seems our coastal areas are safe for now for the next several thousand years.

      • Nate says:

        Global average sea level rise by satellite:

        https://sealevel.colorado.edu/

        and together with tide-gauge global average sea-level:

        https://research.csiro.au/slrwavescoast/sea-level/

        Both indicate significant acceleration.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        And, yet all those ancient coastal cities are still above water. Sidon and Ur, still above water. Ur was settled about 8000 years ago, still above water. It is actually about 20 miles from the coast, now.

      • Nate says:

        Thats called a cherry pick, Stephen.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Nate, that’s how science works. Science can’t be proven only falsified.

      • Nate says:

        Sure Stephen, just pick and choose data that works for you, and ignore the data that doesnt.

        That aint how science works.

      • Nate says:

        And BTW

        “And, yet all those ancient coastal cities are still above water. Sidon and Ur, still above water. Ur was settled about 8000 years ago, still above water. It is actually about 20 miles from the coast, now.”

        Tide-gauge sea-level rise has been measured to average 2 mm/year over the last century.

        The narrative from your side is that sea level is rising, but not accelerating.

        In 8000 years that should have produced a rise of 16 m or 50 feet.

        By your team’s reckoning, those coastal cities should be submerged.

        Why arent they?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Because it isn’t rising?

      • barry says:

        The area around Ur is subject to huge deposits of alluvial sediment from the Tigris/Euphrates river system. Over time this has raised the land and the delta has encroached on the sea, which is partly why Ur is further inland. Ur didn’t move much, the coast did. So did the courses of the rivers.

      • Nate says:

        “Because it isn’t rising?”

        No. It is rising, but that started only in the last century.

        Not long enough to have flooded your cities.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Barry,

        So, that’s your hypothesis? For over 8000 years the river sediment has found its way under Ur and elevated the site and kept it above sea level? That’s it?

      • barry says:

        “So, that’s your hypothesis?”

        Hell no. You think I went to Ur and did geodetic surveys or something? I read up on expert research of the area.

        You should try doing that some time. Blogs are a very unreliable source of information.

    • Mark B says:

      One of the most recent paleo sea level reconstructions suggests it’s more likely than not that pre-industrial Holocene sea level peaked about 3500 years before present and was slowly declining prior to industrialization.

      https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-54535-0

      In any case the argument that sea level rise has not accelerated over the past few decades, requires one to ignore the data that clearly indicates the rate of sea level rise is accelerating, namely that satellite altimetry and satellite mass balance measurements, which would be a weird position for people wedded to satellite temperature because of near global coverage if one expected consistency from such people.

  15. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    Hyperscalers desperately need to free up capacity and reduce peaks so that they can connect to the grid faster; the quickest place to find spare capacity is in households; therefore, hyperscalers should pay to free up household capacity. They could get a third of the capacity they need by paying to replace electric resistance heating with heat pumps, and the rest by paying for battery storage and solar on suitable homes.

    https://www.volts.wtf/p/could-we-get-hyperscalers-to-buy

  16. Gordon Robertson says:

    A post from Ball4 that I missed on another thread but which is on-topic on this monthly thread about global temperatures. There seems to be an impression in the minds of people like B4 that the AMSU units in sats use S-B to measure irradiance, or that hand-held IR meters as depicted by B4 use S-B to calculate room temperature objects.

    “[GR]10:02 pm: “It must (b)e noted that the results apply only in the range of about 500C to 1200C.”

    [B4]No Gordon, in my room temperature kitchen my IR thermometer reads EMR brightness temperature of 32F just fine on an ordinary glass full of ice water”.

    ***

    B4…remember, heat is not IR and IR detectors measure IR frequency, not heat, which has no frequency.

    Your IR thermometer does not use S-B to calculate temperatures. The units measure IR alright but they are measuring frequency, not temperature. The units are calibrated in a lab where the frequency of IR is known for a given temperature. Ergo, the output voltages of the semiconductor units used in the meter are internally compared to lab voltages from IR emissions in a lab, and stored locally in the IR meter’s EEPROM for reference.

    In fact, there is no known IR thermometer that calculates temps based on S-B. If the temperatures being measured were in the 500C to 1200C range, they may be able to use an educated guess to derive each temperature in the range using colour. Stefan did not specify a T^4 relationship for IR or lower frequencies. In fact, there is no mention of frequency in S-B since it is based on the colour perceived by the eye.

    My argument is that the T^4 relationship between EM emission and temperature is not linear down to the room temperature range. That’s why S-B gives such nonsense readings in W/m^2 for ice.

    • professor P says:

      “In fact, there is no mention of frequency in S-B since it is based on the colour perceived by the eye.”

      I must take issue with the above statement.

      The SBL can be derived by integrating Planck’s Law over all frequencies (and solid angle). The human eye has nothing to do with it.

      • studentb says:

        professor, you are assuming GR understands integration.
        He hasn’t the first clue about calculus.

  17. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    Many parameters have trends that have been detected and attributed to human activities (Chapter 11) but have not yet changed so much that they have emerged (Chapter 12).

    The entire argument in Section 8.5 rests on this single, critical misunderstanding of these distinct concepts. This leads the authors to arrive at a demonstrably incorrect conclusion: “it is not currently possible to attribute changes in most extreme weather types to human influences.”

    In fact, the extensive attribution findings detailed in Chapter 11 of the IPCC report make it clear that humans are indeed influencing extreme weather.

    https://www.theclimatebrink.com/p/is-this-the-most-embarrassing-error

  18. sam shicks says:

    The technical foundation for today’s climate action is being seriously questioned: Balloon-based atmospheric data shows no increase in upper tropospheric humidity, undermining key positive feedback assumptions behind CO₂-driven warming. Leading scientists Dr. William Happer & Dr. Wijngaarden highlight that without observed humidity or cloud cover changes tied to CO₂, the very rationale for carbon reduction policies lacks solid evidence

    • studentb says:

      Happer has no formal training as a climate scientist. Their joint paper has been rejected by several major journals. Enough said. Don’t waste your time on them.

      • Thomas Hagedorn says:

        “Tolerance will reach such a level that intelligent people will be banned from thinking so as not to offend the imbeciles.”

        ~Fyodor Dostoevsky

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Student Bee,

        Is it your claim that because Happer has no formal training in Climate Science, that he, who has a PhD in physics with research in quantum mechanics, optics and spectroscopy, therefore can’t write papers or do research in Atmospheric Physics? What would formal training in climate science be that would support atmospheric physics research?

      • studentb says:

        Happer is 80 years old !
        Older than Trump !
        Has never published anything on climate science his entire life.
        Just another old, conservative sceptic.

      • sam shicks says:

        Dr Happer does more atmospheric physics in his sleep than you will do your entire life.

      • studentb says:

        “Dr Happer does more atmospheric physics in his sleep than you will do your entire life.”

        You hit the nail on the head. His atmospheric physics are purely dreams. I prefer to call them incoherent delusions.

        Remember, your brain cells start to die off by the time you reach 20 and continue to die through your lifespan. I estimate both Happer and you are old enough to have lost at least 20%.

      • professor P says:

        StudentB, I can understand your frustration but ageist diatribes are not suitable for a site such as this.

    • Entropic man says:

      “Balloon-based atmospheric data shows no increase in upper tropospheric humidity, ”

      Absolute or relative? The difference is important.

      Because of the clausius-clapyron relation absolute humidity increases by 7% per degree C above 0C while relative humidity remains relatively constant independent of temperature.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clausius%E2%80%93Clapeyron_relation

      Normal physics predicts that global warming would produce an increase in absolute humidity and a constant relative humidity above 0C and very low absolute and relative humidity below 0C.

      What are the balloons showing?

      • sam shicks says:

        Upper tropospheric humidity (UTH) stands for absolute or specific humidity. If I wanted to say relative humidity, I would have said relative humidity (RH). BTW, Contrary to Clausius Clapeyron, RH is decreasing in the upper troposphere. Climate alarmists need to understand the basis for Clausius Clapeyron before you assume that it shall remain constant everywhere. It has to do with an equilibrium condition of air over water. The atmosphere is not in equilibrium. Due to a multitude of dynamics, the humidity in the upper troposphere is decreasing between the 60s – Bates.

      • Nate says:

        Sam, can you point us to the data showing that?

    • stephen p anderson says:

      So first it was no formal training in Climate Science. Now it is because of his age. Which is it?

  19. Gordon Robertson says:

    prof p…”“[GR]In fact, there is no mention of frequency in S-B since it is based on the colour perceived by the eye.”

    I must take issue with the above statement.

    The SBL can be derived by integrating Planck’s Law over all frequencies (and solid angle). The human eye has nothing to do with it”.

    ***

    I am talking about how Stefan originally arrived at the T^4 relationship. He based it on an experiment by Tyndall, who had electrically heated a platinum filament wire and observed the EM given off as colours. As he heated the filament from about 500C, the wire glowed red, then orange, then yellow, etc. Another scientist converted the colours to wavelengths/frequencies and Stefan used the wavelength given off at 500C, comparing it to the wavelength given off at about 1500C. From the ratio, he developed his T^4 relationship between surface temperature and the colour/wavelength given off between temperatures.

    The law he derived is I = EM intensity = sigma.T^4. Since his law was derived circa 1879 and Planck’s Law circa 1900, claiming that Planck can be derived from Stefan makes no sense. Besides, they involved two entirely different derivation. I can see similarities in the derivation but Stefan’s was based on actual experiment while Planck’s was based on a thought-experiment and imaginative math.

    If anyone is going to claim a derivation it has to be an overly simplistic derivation in which Stefan’s Law is limited to a narrow subset of the EM spectrum.

    Planck’s formula for blackbody radiation, is U(f,T) = (8.pi.hv^3/c^3).(1/[e^hf/kT – 1]). Nothing in common with Stefan’s formula.

    Since Stupidb is such a smartass re his claim that I can’t do integrals, let’s see him derive Stefan from Planck.

    The key to Planck is the exponential term e^hf/kt and it helps to understand what he was trying to accomplish. At the time, the EM spectrum was defined loosely as e = hf, where e is EM intensity. It tells us that as frequency(f) of EM increases, the intensity increased. Therefore UV frequencies will be more intense than IR frequencies. Unfortunately, as f-> infinity, so did the intensity, an undesirable condition called the ultraviolet catastrophe which differed from actuality.

    Planck’s solution is an exercise in sheer fudging. He reasoned that that UV intensities were far less rare than frequencies in the mid-light spectrum and got around the issue by using an exponential function to suppress the likelihood of EM intensities on the UV side of the EM spectrum.

    Look at the exponent with e, which is hf/kT…

    h = Planck’s constant
    f = frequency
    b – Boltzmann’s constant
    T = absolute temperature.

    That’s the same hf from e = hf above. To prevent it running away as f -> infinity, Planck divided it by kT. Let’s look at the exponential, e.

    Essentially, e^hf/kT is a probability function that reduces the intensity of radiation as it rises to higher temperatures. This has nothing to do with Stefan’s Law which is based on an experiment where temperature was varied and the colour produced from a filament was observed.

    The problem here is Boltzmann, a man for whom I have little respect. He tried to reproduce the work of Clausius and screwed it so badly we are left today with idiotic claims based on a totally theoretical and statistical guessing game about atomic theory.

    I am all for abandoning blackbody theory as useless and untenable. I won’t hold my breath since in my field of electrical engineering they are still teaching conventional current flow theory, which dates back to the 1700s when Ben Franklin proposed it. Ben can be forgiven since the electron was not discovered till another 100+ years after his definition but the clowns in universities who maintain that silly theory based on a sheer paradigm cannot be excused.

  20. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    Floods will likely become a staple of warming winters as well.

    Steady rain, which is currently a feature of winter months, will probably continue, and total rainfall is expected to increase.

    When the ground is already saturated, waterways tend to rise. Bridges and sewers designed for historical rainfall levels may come increasingly under pressure.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/resources/idt-d6338d9f-8789-4bc2-b6d7-3691c0e7d138

    Sometimes, Pure Denial acts like an implicit Sammich Request.

    Why waste time searching for “effects of climate change in the UK” when one can rant about the gubmint instead on a blog every day?

    • Ian Brown says:

      That sounds much like a UK historical weather record Willard, many such winters with mild weather and heavy rains, even Caesar had problems with the British climate, historic floods drowned thousands, after a wet Autumn and Late Summer, last winter was predominately dry, ca sera sera.

      • Willard says:

        That sounds like denial to me, Ian.

        I’ll indulge once more, but after that you’ll need to carry your own weight:

        The latest assessment of the UK’s climate shows how baselines are shifting, records are becoming more frequent, and that temperature and rainfall extremes are becoming the norm. The latest State of the UK Climate report, published by Wiley in the Royal Meteorological Society’s ‘International Journal of Climatology’, provides insight into the UK’s changing climate.

        The report highlights how the UK’s climate has warmed steadily from the 1980s onwards, albeit with individual cooler years, with the greatest implications from the increasing frequency and intensity of daily temperature extremes.

        https://noc.ac.uk/news/uk-sea-level-rising-faster-global-average

        Alternatively, can jump right to Step 3 – Saying Stuff.

    • Ian Brown says:

      Shame about the drought and shortage of rainfall in the UK last winter and spring of 2025. how does that fit in with your increasing winter rainfall theory? maybe its just weather,

  21. Bindidon says:

    The Hagedorn guy wrote above:

    ” Rate of rise, USING THE AVERAGE SCENARIO (since you folks seem to love “consensus”), applied to some big U.S. ports, NYC, Miami, Boston, SF. BTW, some of those have tide gauges that go way back. Make your case. ”

    *
    Ah well ah well!

    Willard is right: newcomer Hagedorn recommended himself on this blog (September 29, 2025 at 10:10 AM) as an auditor, with the usual mixture of modesty and fervor!

    Oh look:

    ” I am auditing Elements of Climatology at a respected university in the U.S. ”

    *
    We now have a renowned auditing specialist – by the way as it seems, particularly in sea level issues, n’est-ce pas? – whom we can commission to review the following sea level data for the US East coast, which we obtained from the PSMSL site and processed using our own software package:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mTv3cqd3f14xcgFxF7-TalMzGRSrZF-5/view

    This chart is originated from the computation of sea level anomalies for the following PSMSL tide gauges – without considering Vertical Land Movement:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1rE7554ribDDMBkh6wv6SKm1nFNiYt8Yg/view

    At the end of each line you see:
    – life: linear trend for the gauge’s entire activity since start;
    – 93-22: linear trend for the gauge’s activity since start of the satellite-borne observations in 1993;
    – their difference;
    – the diff/life percentage (by which the gauge info is sorted upwards).

    *
    The incredible thing here was to discover that the ‘AVERAGE SCENARIO’ for these 50 East coast tide gauges, politically and polemically discredited by the Auditor-in-chief’, looked very similar to the data of the single PSMSL gauge

    12; 40.700000; -74.013333; NEW YORK (THE BATTERY)

    to such an extent that I had to display the polynomial for the 50 gauge average in dash mode – otherwise, you wouldn’t have seen that for the New York Battery gauge below it, he he.

    *
    A few words re: ‘Vertical Land Movement’

    Despite intensive preprocessing of all gauge data to achieve global level homogeneity between gauges, PSMSL still provides very coarse data because it publishes gauge data independently of land movements around the gauges (upward for isostatic rebound, downward for land subsidence).

    While it’s essential to consider this when calculating actual sea level rise or fall, this correction is pointless when considering the local situation.

    If you lived where the sea level was rising by a staggering 100 mm annually due to subsidence, you wouldn’t care if this resulted in a global rise of a mere 5 mm/year!

    *
    Source

    PSMSL

    https://www.psmsl.org/data/obtaining/rlr.monthly.data/rlr_monthly.zip

    GPS

    https://www.sonel.org/-Vertical-land-movements-.html

    **
    Maybe the newcomer Hagedorn should either technically contradict the sea level data presented above, or refrain from useless ‘consensus’ polemics.

    • Thomas Hagedorn says:

      Well, Bindi, I have to say I am just devastated by your personal attacks. Devastated. Wiping away a tear right now. And, if winning a debate boosts your ego, then I declare you the victor! Feel better? Good. Now, if your long, technical response puts additional wind in your sails. Terrific!! I decided I will not waste any more time with Willard, who seems to be a team mate of yours, and deals in a lot of ad hominem. My purpose here is not as much to debate, as to learn. To debate is to win an argument, parrying opposing viewpoints without really considering their validity. I can be convinced! Hint: insult is not a good way to start. But that’s ok. I’ll give you another chance if you are interested in responding. Considering the length of your post, you are quite interested and seemingly knowledgeable in the subject (sea level rise).

      Richard Feynman said “If you can’t explain something to a first year student, then you haven’t really understood.” I always liked better the version that used bartender in place of student. So, I am that bartender. Can you put your ego aside for a moment and answer my question succinctly? Without links to reams of data, off point, just in the text of your response. In inches, how much has the sea level risen at some of our major U.S. ports that have gauges over a long period of time and, given the recent rate of rise, how much will they rise over the next 50-100 years? By SCENARIO, I meant the most likely scenario of temperature increase, not the highest temperature increase scenario, which the press and politicians seem to consistently use.

      I will pour a few more beers as I wait for your hopefully brief response. After all, I have thirsty customers to serve.

      (BTW, you guys seem to be triggered by “auditors.” That is why after 8 years I transitioned over to financial management. Nobody is happy when the auditor shows up.)

      • Clint R says:

        Very mature comment, Thomas.

        And you are right to not be upset by the cult kids here. There are about a dozen of them. They are ignorant of science, and behave like “rooftop shooters”, except they use “false accusations” instead of bullets.

        When I provide some much needed science, I sometimes get as many as 4 vicious attacks. It indicates to me how effective I am. They have closed minds and hate reality.

        Adults know that learning never ends.

      • Norman says:

        Clint R

        What science have you ever provided? I have asked you many times to support your opinions, as of date you have provided zero!! You have zero support from textbook physics, you have zero experimental evidence, you have zero measured values. You are NOT attacked by providing valid science. Posters dislike your endless insults and your lack of evidece to support even one of your claims!

      • Clint R says:

        Norman, you keep making those false accusations. But, I have provided numerous examples of textbook physics. It’s just that you can’t understand physics because you’ve never studied anything meaningful. Your total exposure is from “climate science” and things from wikipedia that confuse you.

        Just take one simple example: You can’t understand that the ball-on-a-string is a viable model of “orbiting without spin”. You have no background in orbital motion, or vectors.

        Also, you seem to forget I taught you why ice cannot boil water. It’s the same reason the sky cannot warm Earth’s surface. Incoming flux cannot raise the temperature of a surface that is emitting a greater flux.

        You don’t understand, and you can’t learn. And your childish insults far exceed anything I’ve ever said. Remember your “anal fetish”?

        Now, pound out a novel on your keyboard falsely accusing me. That’s all you can do.

      • Norman says:

        Clint R

        Just a bunch of insults and agai. Zero science! Why is this with you? What textbook physics have you given to support your opinions of how you believe heat transfer works??

        The

      • Clint R says:

        Norman proves me right, again.

      • Norman says:

        Clint R

        What are you right about. What textbook physics have you linked to. All textbook physics clearly points out your misguided view on heat exchange is quite wrong! A colder object adds energy to a hotter one. This is established physics and not disputed. It will not raise the temperature of a NON-HEATED surface (even though adding energy) because two processes are taking place. A surface both will absorb and emit radiation. The hot surface will emit more energy than it gains from the colder surface so it will cool. If it is heated by an external heat source, the temperature of the colder surface will have a direct effect on the steady state temperature reached by the hotter surface. The warmer the cold surface the higher the heated hot surface will get. It is well established physics. Prove it wrong! You are not able to do this but you are able to insult me and falsely accuse me of not understanding valid physics. When you are caught in deception, you resort to insults and diversion. Now it is time to show, textbook material, that demonstrates what I just wrote to be wrong. You will not be able to do this so I suspect if you respond it will be some ignorant insult and empty diversion.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Norman,

        People who keep spewing this nonsense are full of nonsense. Yes, it doesn’t violate any law of thermodynamics. But the probability that heat flows from higher entropy to lower entropy is virtually nil. Heat flows from the Sun to the Earth and from the Earth to the atmosphere. Heat flows from low entropy to high entropy.

      • Clint R says:

        Wrong again, Norman. If you had any REAL science you wouldn’t need to clog the blog with your rambling blah-blah. Want a couple examples of how to do it?

        *** The ball-on-a-string is a viable model of “orbiting without spin”.

        *** Incoming flux cannot raise the temperature of a surface that is emitting a greater flux.

        See? Clear, concise, and accurate.

        Maybe someday when you learn enough, you can do the same.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Norman,

        It also doesn’t violate any laws for a boulder to roll up hill, or to roll up a speed bump.

      • Thomas Hagedorn says:

        Dr Roy posted a blog article about sea level rise a few years back:

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/2018/05/

        Sounds like it is a devilish topic to try to unpack. 1 foot rise per century does not sound like something we can’t handle with present technology. And it looks like 1/2 the rise could not have been from CO2 increases/warming. I’ll keep my waders in storage!

      • Norman says:

        Stephen P Anderson

        I already know that Clint R has no background in valid physics. I thought you stated you had a Chemistry degree. How is it that you do not grasp basic science and think it to be nonsense?? Where did you learn your Chemistry from?

        I find it a waste of time to link textbook material to Clint R as he just ignores whatever does not fit in with his opinions. I know you are a radical right-wing political mind but I did think you might have a little science inside that brain of yours.

        Heat is a concept of the amount of energy transferred from a hot body to a cold body so, no, heat does not flow from cold to hot. Energy always flows both ways. The temperature of a cold body will change the temperature of a hotter surface. Roy Spencer has clearly shown this as all textbooks on the subject also support this. Why you choose this ignorant position with a science background makes little sense.

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/2016/08/experiment-results-show-a-cool-object-can-make-a-warm-object-warmer-still/

        https://ahtt.mit.edu/

        Download a heat transfer textbook at the above link.

        stephen p anderson. I challenge you to find any textbook on heat transfer that would show my view is an incorrect one. Until you do this you might want to hold back on what you call nonsense!

      • Thomas Hagedorn says:

        The recent DOE report, co-authored by Dr Roy, has a section on sea level rise, starting at pg 75. A NOAA report included there pretty much answered my question.

      • Clint R says:

        Norman, you started the day off by proving me right. I never get tired of being right. Thanks.

        You can hardly make a comment without insults, false accusations, and links to things you can’t understand. You can’t find anything wrong with the science I present, so you just have to invent crap.

        Prove me right some more. I can take it.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Norman,

        Without greenhouse gases what would the temperature of Earth’s surface be? What would be the temperature at the top of the atmosphere?

      • Norman says:

        Clint R

        You have zero science! You post unsupported opinions and reject all evidence againt your unsupported opinions! I have requested you do an experiment with two heat lamps but you do not do science at all. You never have and never will buy you will insult. It is the only thing you know how to do.

      • Nate says:

        “The recent DOE report, co-authored by Dr Roy, has a section on sea level rise, starting at pg 75. A NOAA report included there pretty much answered my question.”

        The flaws of that report are many, as have been pointed out by numerous climate scientists.

        Its main flaw, as Roy admits, is that it is not intended to be a balanced assessment of the facts, but to promore the minority ‘climate skeptic’ point of view.

        In addition, DOE broke the law by forming a climate advisory committee in secret, with members selected for their biases.

      • Clint R says:

        Keep proving me right, Norman. The more you prove me right, the more you prove yourself wrong.

        That’s win-win, for me.

      • Norman says:

        Clint R

        Since you are not understanding, let me ask you a question. Do you know the difference between opinion and science?

      • Clint R says:

        Good question, Norman.

        “Science” is what I offer in my comments. “Opinions” are what you offer.

        For example, I have stated The ball-on-a-string is a viable model of “orbiting without spin”. But, you reject that based only on your opinion. You have no viable model, only your opinion.

        See the difference?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Norman,

        Yes, it only took me about a minute to find a thermodynamics textbook that doesn’t spew that garbage.

        https://www.physics.ox.ac.uk/system/files/file_attachments/basic_thermo.pdf

    • Bindidon says:

      We’ll see whether or not the auditor is able to detect the small mistake I made… errare humanum est.

    • stephen p anderson says:

      Norman, does energy flow from the Earth to the Sun?

      • Norman says:

        Stephen p anderson

        Yes energy flows from Eatrh to Sun.

      • Nate says:

        Stephen, does the Earth emit IR radiation to space?

        What does it do in the direction of the sun? Do you imagine it bounces back off the sun’s rays, or what?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Yes, it does. From the top of the atmosphere. Nate without GHG what is the temperature of the surface and the top of the atmosphere?

      • stephen p anderson says:

        That is a question that neither you nor Norman will answer. You only ask questions, right Nate?

  22. Gordon Robertson says:

    stoopidb…”Here you are dumbass:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stefan%E2%80%93Boltzmann_law#Derivation_from_Planck's_law

    but I don’t think your weak engineer’s brain is capable of following it”.

    ***

    I had been leaving stoopidb, aka student_b, alone because I was feeling sorry for him. That’s because he is the type who posts links involving calculus without having the ability to explain the integral used.

    Having explained over and over that the T^4 factor in Stefan’s original equation is derived from an experiment by Tyndall where the integration must take place between 500C and 1200C, not 0 and infinity.

    Stoopidb refers me to an integral, supposedly representing the S-B equation, which is laid out as follows…

    P/A = integral [0->infinity].I(f,T) df

    I have used f rather than nu for frequency. T is obviously temperature and as used her indicates T as a constant. Therefore this is a one-dimensional n integration of instantaneous frequencies, df, with temperature held constant. Makes no sense.

    I have omitted the second integral that accounts for the angle of radiation using a cosine factor. It’s not important here, basically because the entire integral is wrong, however, it too must be a double integral.

    You cannot calculate an area using a line integral!!!! Duh!!! The person who entered this article obviously has no idea how to do 2nd year math as applied to integrals. What are the chances he/she has any idea about the S-B law or it’s so-called relationship with Planck.

    The equation above is trying to calculate P/A, meaning power per unit area of emitted EM. Temperature is a measure of heat. Where is the reference to heat in the EM energy? There is no heat in EM and using units of power related to mechanical energy id plain stoopid.

    Even Ball4 knows that.

    Be that as it may, let’s carry on. They infer that P/A is equal to the sum of all infinitesimal changes in temperature per infinitesimal change in frequency. That requires a double integral where one integral is calculated from f1 to f2 and the other from T1 to T2. This rocket scientist has used one integral to cover both. Not only that, they have tried to cover the view factor using a single integral to cover an area (the cosine factor).

    I could go on tearing this pathetic equation apart but it would be wasted on the likes of stoopidb since he obviously lacks the background to recognize it himself. So, let’s look at the contribution of Boltzmann that converted the simple Stefan equation, based on a valid experiment, to the Boltzmann contribution based on a thought experiment.

    According to Google AI, “The Boltzmann constant (k), also known as k_B, is a fundamental physical constant that relates the average kinetic energy of particles in a substance to the temperature of that substance. With a defined exact value of 1.380649 × 10⁻²³ joules per kelvin (J K⁻¹), it is a key proportionality constant in statistical mechanics”.

    The first point is that B. did not do experiments, all of his work, and Maxwell’s, being worked out as a thought experiment via statistics. B. did not calculate KE’s directly, he hypothesed them statistically.

    Note that Boltzmann “relates the average KE of ***PARTICLES*** in a substance to the temperature of the substance”. It has nothing to do with radiation (EM) and part of the reason is this. In the time of Boltzmann, no one knew what electromagnetic radiation was, or its relationship with atoms, especially electrons, which were not discovered till some 15 years after Boltzmann did his work.

    Getting back to Planck, his work was a thought experiment in which he fudged the math to create a probability that certain frequencies of EM were less likely to exist than others. Again, Planck conceded years afterward that had he known the relationship of electrons and EM it would have made his work infinitely easier.

    I claim the derivation of S-B from Planck is bogus. The reason is simple, the derivation requires an integration of frequency from 0->infinity in a line integral that appears to hold the temperature, T, constant. That is an example of blackbody theory where T is always constant. In other words, blackbody theory normally applies under thermal equilibrium.

    Blackbody theory should be abandoned as the nonsense it is.

    In the Stefan version of S-B, both the temperature and frequency vary over a temperature range from about 500C to 1200C. The meaning is clear, both the temperature and frequency must be integrated over that range and that has not been done. Furthermore, after using such limits of integration it is not appropriate, without proof, to use mathematics to extrapolate S-B outside that range.

    • studentb says:

      What a mish mash of garbage.
      Let’s make it simple:

      “Every physical body spontaneously and continuously emits electromagnetic radiation and the spectral radiance of a body, Bν(ν, T), describes the spectral emissive power per unit area, per unit solid angle and per unit frequency for particular radiation frequencies.

      The quantity Bν(ν, T) is the spectral radiance as a function of temperature and frequency. It has units of W·m−2·sr−1·Hz−1 in the SI system.”

      To obtain Wm-2 you must integrate Bν(ν, T) over all solid angles and frequencies.

      Voila, you obtain the SBL!

      This works for both planetary and solar temperatures.

  23. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    Arguing with crazy fanatics who think “not only is ‘distance’ a conserved quantity, but so is ‘area'”, “In REAL physics, flux is NOT energy”, “flux cannot be averaged”, “Earth’s shadow causes the phases of the Moon”, just to name few, isn’t debate, it’s an exercise in futility and only serves to legitimize the illegitimate.

    Not all opinions are worthy of patient consideration.

    If someone points at a chicken and declares that it’s an elephant, you can’t waste your time debating the issue. There is no issue to debate, whether it’s conducted civilly or otherwise.

    Trying to reason with those who have taken leave of logic and reason is like giving medicine to the dead.

    • Clint R says:

      Ark provides us with yet another example of his juvenile cultism, and inability to accept reality.

      “not only is ‘distance’ a conserved quantity, but so is ‘area'”

      That’s a clear example of how some things are “accounted for”. It explains the word “conserved”, as used in science. For example, energy is conserved, but flux is NOT conserved.

      “In REAL physics, flux is NOT energy”

      That simple fact alone debunks the cult’s “Earth Energy Budget”.

      “flux cannot be averaged”

      More evidence the EEB and EEI are BS.

      “Earth’s shadow causes the phases of the Moon”.

      That was just one of gordon’s many flubs. After repeated criticisms, I believe he has begrudgingly recanted.

      Let’s see if Ark can accept this reality.

      I already know the answer….

      • DREMT says:

        “For example, energy is conserved, but flux is NOT conserved.”

        I argued for hundreds of comments against the “cult kids” last month on just that point alone. They kept pretending to accept that “flux is NOT conserved” whilst doing everything in their power to insist that in every simple situation you could come up with, “flux in” always equalled “flux out”! Even if they had to redefine “irradiance” to do it…

        …I won’t be bothering, this month.

      • Clint R says:

        Yes DREMT, they have no interest in reality.

      • barry says:

        Energy conservation requires that the total incoming and outgoing powers balance. When expressed in terms of flux, this means the area-integrated incoming and outgoing fluxes are equal at steady state — though the flux densities themselves need not be equal.

        IOW, as long as you account for area, flux in equals flux out.

        400 W/m2 X 1A = 200 W/m2 X 2A = 400 W for a metre squared, 2-sided plate.

        Multiply flux by area and you get power. Simple.
        Integrate over area for incoming and outgoing, and the area-averaged incoming and outgoing fluxes are equal. Simple.

      • DREMT says:

        Flux in does not have to equal flux out.

        Even simpler.

      • DREMT says:

        …and, in fact, in most simple cases where an object is irradiated by only one energy source, and does not rotate, flux in (W/m^2) will not equal flux out (W/m^2) since the surface area receiving flux will be less than the surface area emitting flux.

        It’s only when the surface area receiving flux is the same as the surface area emitting flux that flux in will equal flux out. One example could be a rotating sphere irradiated by only one energy source…but, in that case, you would have to both spatially and temporally average the irradiance for flux in to equal flux out.

      • barry says:

        “It’s only when the surface area receiving flux is the same as the surface area emitting flux that flux in will equal flux out.”

        Exactly!

        What do you think is happens when the solar flux on a plane is divided by 4?

        This makes the receiving surface area of a globe the same size as the emitting area of a globe.

        You are so close to understanding, but your bias permanently blinds you.

        The math is clear but your denialism will not permit you to see it.

        Shall we talk again of how average temperatures are different to average flux? You seemed happy in this red herring.

      • DREMT says:

        “What do you think is happens when the solar flux on a plane is divided by 4?“

        I already said, barry:

        “One example could be a rotating sphere irradiated by only one energy source…but, in that case, you would have to both spatially and temporally average the irradiance for flux in to equal flux out.”

        So, for the Earth, a value of approx. 240 W/m^2 (960 W/m^2 divided by 4) for the irradiance would be a spatial and temporal average.

      • barry says:

        Great, seems the argument is over. Small caveat that you don’t need to time-average: power (and thus flux) already represents energy per unit time, and that metric is consistent (joules per second). For equilibrium, you just need to integrate over area, which is variable.

      • DREMT says:

        “Shall we talk again of how average temperatures are different to average flux? You seemed happy in this red herring.”

        You’ve had a pretty rough couple of months, barry. Mistake after mistake. Clint’s point #2 from his 11-point critique of the Earth’s energy budget is pretty straightforward. The values for radiant exitance in the budget all suffer from the same problem – they’re averages, thus they don’t abide by the SB Law, thus they’re “physically meaningless”. Not “useless”, but “physically meaningless”, all the same. You experienced no end of confusion over that.

        To start with, you thought Clint meant that radiative flux itself was non-linear, when obviously he was referring to the relationship between temperature and flux. Then, I showed you the link to Nikolov & Zeller’s first paper, so you could learn about Hölder’s inequality. You got their paper all wrong, which you eventually admitted to. But, even after Clint had clarified with his example of the two surfaces, you still kept on with your confused misrepresentations.

        You didn’t get why his criticism had nothing to do with our previous discussions on the Green Plate Effect. Maybe you still don’t!? You won’t say. You messed up by backing ChatGPT in its silly mistake on the plate receiving 400 W/m^2 and emitting 200 W/m^2. It said the plate emitted 400 W/m^2 “in total”, and you backed it! You accused Clint of misrepresenting you in your discussion about blackbodies, but that misrepresentation made no difference to his point, overall. You left the scene without saying a word, again.

        Then, finally, you still didn’t get that his point #2 does not require a conversion of the averaged value from flux to temperature to be valid. Quite a lot of mistakes, there, overall! No wonder you haven’t been posting much.

        In any case, Clint’s point #2 is indeed a red herring as far as the current point of contention goes – we’re actually currently talking about the problem with “time-averaging” irradiance. That problem was exemplified by the wooden sphere and the laser, here:

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/2025/09/uah-v6-1-global-temperature-update-for-august-2025-0-39-deg-c/#comment-1713791

        a different argument altogether. You’ve got to be more careful with following these more complex discussions, barry!

      • DREMT says:

        OK, so now barry’s made a new mistake:

        “Small caveat that you don’t need to time-average…”

        barry doesn’t seem to understand that the approx. 240 W/m^2 average for irradiance for the Earth is of course “time-averaged”, since the Earth does not receive energy over its entire surface area at any one moment. It’s only after it has completed at least one full rotation on its own internal axis that the Earth will have received energy over its entire surface area, thus any figure for irradiance that involves the full surface area of the Earth must be temporally averaged over at least 24 hours.

      • barry says:

        “The values for radiant exitance in the budget all suffer from the same problem – they’re averages, thus they don’t abide by the SB Law, thus they’re “physically meaningless” ”

        That comment is meaningless. “Abide by the S/B law” is meaningless. You are using this meaningless shorthand to indicate that averaging flux and averaging temperature produces different results on conversion due to the non-linearity of the S/B law.

        However, if you don’t make the conversion, there is no issue. And your super silly comment that the problem exists even if you don’t convert is just an empty word salad.

        Averaged temperatures are “physically meaningless” you said, and also “useful.”

        Same with area-averaged fluxes. No one claims that the area-averaged flux represents the actuality of flux on the surface, which varies over a curve, for example. What any sane person understands is that area-averaging is a useful shorthand to compare flux in with flux out.

        It’s a wonder you continue to run around in circles trying to find a problem that doesn’t exist. Why not let Clint defend his absurdities by himself?

        And you’re wrong about time-averaging the irradiance on a sphere. It could be non-rotating and you still only need to spatially average at equilibrium and get the right answer. You do not need to factor for rotation at all when calculating a global energy budget. All you have to do is divide the incoming radiation by four to get the global output.

        Which you already did! There was no time-averaging in your own solution.

        Do stop trying to make controversies where there are none.

      • DREMT says:

        All wrong, barry. I’ve never known someone to get so much wrong whilst being so certain they’re correct. I can’t be bothered to keep correcting you about Clint’s point #2. Just think whatever you want – life’s too short.

        But the “time-averaging” thing…where to begin?

        The only way you can say the irradiance for the Earth is approx. 240 W/m^2 is if you average the input over at least 24 hours. That’s just a fact, barry. Nobody else on your side of the debate would even dispute it. Once again I’m getting pushback for being correct!

      • DREMT says:

        Premise 1) We wish to find a figure for the irradiance of the Earth involving the entire Earth’s surface.
        Premise 2) The entire Earth’s surface is only irradiated once it has completed one full rotation.

        Therefore:

        Conclusion: A figure for the irradiance of the Earth involving the entire Earth’s surface is necessarily “time-averaged” over at least 24 hours.

        QED.

      • DREMT says:

        I may as well post this, lest anyone get confused by barry’s nonsense:

        Asking Google, “if you take flux values from a non-isothermal surface and average them, will that average abide by the Stefan-Boltzmann law?”

        Returns:

        “No, an averaged flux value from a non-isothermal surface will not directly abide by the Stefan-Boltzmann law (\(F=\sigma T^{4}\)). This is because the law requires a single, uniform temperature, and averaging the flux would be incorrect; you must average the temperatures first, or use the integral of the flux over the surface to find the correct average temperature, before applying the law. 

        Why averaging flux doesn’t work

        The law is non-linear: The Stefan-Boltzmann law is proportional to the fourth power of the temperature (\(T^{4}\)). This means areas with higher temperatures contribute disproportionately more to the total radiation than cooler areas.

        Flux is not uniform: On a non-isothermal surface, the flux is not the same everywhere because the temperature varies.

        Incorrect calculation: Averaging the flux values directly (\(\frac{\sum \sigma T_{i}^{4}}{N}\)) is mathematically and physically incorrect. It does not represent the total radiation from the surface. 

        The correct way to find the average flux

        Average the temperature: The correct approach is to find the average temperature (\(T_{avg}\)) of the surface first. This is done by integrating the temperature over the surface area and dividing by the total area.

        Apply the law: Once you have the average temperature, you can use the Stefan-Boltzmann law to find the average flux: \(F_{avg}=\sigma T_{avg}^{4}\).”

  24. Ian Brown says:

    Willard says,sounds like denial to me,is that so Willard, the UK climate began warming shortly after 1850 , to say a short period of records after 1980 proves extremes are getting worse ,is nonsense. as for sea level increase North Shields tidal guage shows no such alarmist rate of increase, what has changed, is the fact that the Met office now give any normal depression a fancy name, most which would not get into Hubert Lambs list of historic Storms, no one denies the climate has changed, why would it not? Why did you not show the slight cooling of the sixties and seventies, a cooling that in the early sixties almost destroyed the Icelandic fishing industry, a cooling that triggered a great drought in South America,and the coldest winter in England since the little ice age, in the early seventies floods in Australia,widespread severe cold in the Eastern seaboard of the US, and many parts of Northern Europe with shipping frozen in the Adriatic,i could give you a comprehensive list of UK weather reports five or six hundred years,but life is too short,if the last forty years bothers you,then i cant help you.

  25. Bad Andrew says:

    Rhetorical Fun For Today:

    GROK estimates

    Subtotal (2011–2023): ~$10.1T has been spent on Fighting Climate Change globally.

    A couple of questions-

    Money well spent?

    Will a couple of trillion a year going forward still save the planet? or will more than that be required?

    Andrew

    • Nate says:

      “Subtotal (2011–2023): ~$10.1T has been spent on Fighting Climate Change globally.”

      Where from?

      Most likely a lot of this is simply adding much needed clean grid power at a cost less than coal or nuclear.

      Yes, that seems worthwhile.

    • Arkady Ivanovich says:

      I found no credible source that documents “Subtotal (2011-2023): ~$10.1T has been spent on Fighting Climate Change globally.”

      Question: where did you get that number?

      • Bad Andrew says:

        Ark,

        It was in an answer from GROK. The question was Can the total amount of money spent on fighting climate change be estimated?

        Nate,

        “Yes, that seems worthwhile.”

        Did you do a cost/benefit analysis?

        Andrew

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        So, no facts.

        All you need to know is that the professional engineering societies that oversee the standards for our physical infrastructure (civil, mechanical, electrical, and chemical) explicitly recognize the reality of climate change. They are revising design standards to ensure mitigation, adaptation, and resilience in the systems that society depends on.

        AI

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Bad,

        Your figure, even if accurate, sounds immense until placed in context.

        According to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/A679RC1Q027SBEA), private fixed investment in information-processing equipment and software within the U. S. alone totaled roughly $10.5 trillion over that same period.

        IOW, the entire world’s climate-related spending (if your number were even correct) would merely represent roughly the same magnitude as just one domestic category of U.S. business investment.

        Engineers understand such magnitudes as routine elements of economic modernization, not aberrations.

        That is why the professional engineering societies responsible for real infrastructure (civil, mechanical, electrical, and chemical) formally recognize climate change and are revising standards for mitigation, adaptation, and resilience.

        AI

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Bad,

        For still broader perspective:

        The US National Debt has increased by $1.7 trillion since the Debt Ceiling was raised just 3 months ago, from $36.2 trillion to $37.9 trillion (https://fiscaldata.treasury.gov/datasets/debt-to-the-penny/debt-to-the-penny).

    • Anon for a reason says:

      Follow the money. It’s a billion dollar industry that quite happily fly experts & influencers around the world to extol the virtues of believing in climate change vs capitalism.

      Climate changes, whoops do. There are more pressing issues.

      • Bad Andrew says:

        “It’s a billion dollar industry”

        AFAR,

        Lemme issue you one slight correction-

        Evidently it’s a Trilllllllion dollar industry.

        Otherwise, I agree.

        Andrew

      • Willard says:

        California, the fourth largest economy on planet Earth, is this summer using 40 percent less natural gas than it did two years ago to generate electricity.

        If you wanna know why the fossil fuel industry is freaking out and sponsoring every bad politician on Earth, that’s why.

        https://bsky.app/profile/emorwee.bsky.social/post/3lvbtbyv5z22p

        Contrarians need no sponsor tho.

      • Tim S says:

        This 40% reduction in natural gas in California is due in large part to a reduced AC demand from a cooler than normal summer. Not to worry, the media narrative works both ways, so climate change also includes cooler than normal weather. It also shows how clueless people will push short term effects into long range projections.

      • Bad Andrew says:

        Speaking of California…

        I wonder if this Climate Change Remedy was included in our total?

        “Overview of the Project
        The California high-speed rail project was initially proposed to connect San Francisco and Los Angeles with a high-speed train, aiming to revolutionize transportation in the state. However, the project has been plagued by numerous challenges since its inception, including extensive delays and massive cost overruns. Originally estimated to cost around $33 billion in 2008, the projected cost has now escalated to between $128 billion and $135 billion, with completion timelines pushed into the 2030s.

        Current Status
        As of now, the project has not laid any high-speed tracks despite 16 years of planning and approximately $15 billion spent.”

        Can we even survive until 2030? California will be underwater!

        Fight On, Climate Warriors! We’re all counting on you! lol

        Andrew

      • Ian Brown says:

        The Chinese are in seventh heaven ,all that money to manufacture components and solar panels using millions of tons of coal,as the diplomat said,useful western idiots,

    • Donald says:

      So it’s a deal – about an order of magnitude less – when compared to the annual costs of fossil fuels. Good to know.

      AI Overview
      Yes, the total amount of money spent on producing and burning fossil fuels can be estimated, with global estimates from organizations like the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the International Energy Agency (IEA) putting the cost in the trillions of dollars annually, encompassing both direct subsidies and the societal costs of climate change and pollution. For example, the IMF estimated global fossil fuel subsidies reached $7 trillion in 2022, an amount that includes explicit financial support to the industry and the implicit costs of air pollution and climate change.

      • Bad Andrew says:

        Donald,

        Thanks for your post. Ah… but there’s a little catch in your comparison…

        Producing and Burning Fossil Fuel = Reality

        Fighting Climate Change = Fantasy

        I wonder why AI didn’t catch that little wrinkle?

        Andrew

      • Donald says:

        Do subsidies only count when talking non-fossil fuels?

        It is now generally cheaper to generate energy using renewables than using fossil fuels, and the price is only going down.

        Even if only factoring in the undisputed subsidies for fossil fuels, renewables are cheaper already and don’t contribute to the currently estimated 2 year reduction in average global life expectancy attributed to air pollution.

      • Entropic man says:

        Bad Andrew

        “I wonder why AI didn’t catch that little wrinkle? ”

        Because AI is getting better at spotting bullsh*t like yours.

      • Bad Andrew says:

        Climate Warrior EM,

        Let us know when you Climate Warriors have saved the planet and how much it cost. Just leave a comment here. Thanx.

        Andrew

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Climate Misinformer BA,

        I took a look at your Event Horizon blog and noticed that while it covers a range of personal and political reflections, there’s no indication of formal background or published work in climate science, atmospheric physics, or energy systems. That’s fine in itself, but it makes your confident statements about global climate spending and physical climate processes a clear case of someone speaking out of school.

        If you want to critique the scale and complexity of climate policy meaningfully it helps to start from the evidence base, rather than selective cost figures pulled out of context.

        Unless your goal is simply to spread misinformation rather than contribute to informed debate.

        Thanx.

        AI

      • Clint R says:

        Ark, if you want people to only address the real science, then you should start it off. Explain how CO2’s 15μ photons can raise the temperature of a 288K surface.

        Unless your goal is simply to spread misinformation, due to your TDS and alarmism, rather than contribute to informed debate.

        Now, run home to hide under your bed….

      • Bad Andrew says:

        “a clear case of someone speaking out of school”

        Ark,

        You may have missed this concept along the line somewhere, but I represent a guy commenting on a blog.

        You’re obviously taking the issues discussed here way too seriously.

        …which is the point, of course.

        Andrew

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Bad,

        Serious issues merit serious consideration. Put simply, if rigor feels excessive, we have different standards.

        AI

      • Bad Andrew says:

        “Serious issues merit serious consideration.”

        Ark,

        Sure. These issues are so serious that you’ll… comment on a blog just like me.

        OK, Climate Hero. You’re doin’ great, Champ. Keep it up. You’re a Rigorous Climate Blog Superstar, Rigorously Saving The Planet. Clap, clap, clap.

        Andrew

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Bad,

        Yes, some subjects actually are serious. Stop embarrassing yourself.

        AI

      • Bad Andrew says:

        “Yes, some subjects actually are serious.”

        Ark,

        And apparently, I’M a serious subject, because you are spending an awful lot of time on me. I’m touched.

        Andrew

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Bad,

        You’re an unserious person who raised a very serious subjet; a subject which merits my utmost attention.

        Thank you for your attention to this [serious] matter.

        AI

    • MaxC says:

      EU alone is planning to use 1.5 trillion euros ($1.6 trillion) per year of investments to meet its 2050 net zero emissions target.

      It was UN diplomat Maurice Strong who came up with this Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) concept (see the Club of Rome and Agenda 2030/Agenda 21). Maurice Strong lived in China and was financed by China. That is why AGW is also called “Chinese hoax”.

      “The concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive,” Donald Trump wrote on Twitter in 2012.

  26. Dan Pangburn says:

    The assumption by many Climate Scientists that water vapor increase is just feedback from temperature increase caused by CO2 increase is shown to be FALSE. Verification, with links to source data, is at Sect 7 in the analysis documented at https://watervaporandwarming.blogspot.com.
    The assumption is wrong because the NASA/RSS measured average global WV increase is substantially more than possible from just feedback from planet warming as measured by UAH 6.1. The maximum possible WV increase from feedback is limited by the Clausius-Clapeyron relation.
    The nominal ratio, measured-WV/max-WV-from-feedback has been declining since a maximum of about 2 in 2016 to about 1.4 in 2024. Even at a ratio of 1.4 the probability that the assumption is false is more than 99 %.

  27. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    There are five markets that are in the spotlight for us at the moment:

    Saudi Arabia signed the-largest deal within Europe, Middle-East and Africa, or EMEA, region — the 2.6 gigawatts Masdar KEPCO and GD Power Al Sadawi PV Plant.

    Germany was the largest market for wind investments after China, and also has a strong solar portfolio building.

    India’s renewable energy investments reached $11.8 billion in the first half of the year, with auctions of projects that combine solar, wind and storage being the main driver of new capacity.

    Turkey saw solar investment rise 12% in the first half of 2025.

    Indonesian investment rose nearly fivefold over the-same period, with the government’s latest power development plan creating a $96 billion investment opportunity over the next 10 years.

    https://about.bnef.com/insights/clean-energy/record-renewable-energy-investment-in-2025-three-things-to-know/

    Another win for Dirty Donald!

    • MaxC says:

      You can’t run businesses, hospitals, etc. on occasional electricity like wind turbines and solar panels. The electrical grid is expected to deliver continuous and uninterrupted electricity no matter what.

      • RLH says:

        That’s what batteries are for.

      • Willard says:

        You’re so 2015, Max:

        Worldwide solar and wind power generation has outpaced electricity demand this year, and for the first time on record, renewable energies combined generated more power than coal

        https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/solar-wind-renewables-coal-electricity-1.7653234

        Ever heard of batteries?

      • MaxC says:

        Willard: Running big industrial factories on batteries! I nearly laughed my head off. 🙂

      • Willard says:

        Laughter is good for the soul, troglodyte:

        With GE Vernova steam turbines, cement manufacturers can recover heat from the kiln exhaust released during the manufacturing process and then generate electricity from that waste heat. This heat is typically produced by pre-heater waste gas and air-quenching waste gas.

        Steam produced from these two waste gases during the cement waste heat recovery process powers the steam turbine, creating an electrical power source for the plant. Because the cement plant is using waste in this way, it can reduce its dependence on costly fuel sources and grid power.

        https://www.gevernova.com/gas-power/industries/cement

        You realize I’m no hippie, right?

      • MaxC says:

        RLH: Modern hydrogen steel plant needs electricity 1200 MW/h continuously day and night. Where can I buy such a battery?

      • Donald says:

        Canada is the source of about 5% of all aluminium produced globally, almost exclusively manufactured using mechanical energy storage.

        As mentioned earlier – renewables now generate more electrical power than does coal, globally; apparently, energy storage is being addressed in the real world.

      • Willard says:

        Here, Champ:

        https://stegra.com/the-boden-plant

        The more you make me work for you, the less credibility you got.

      • RLH says:

        “Modern hydrogen steel plant needs electricity 1200 MW/h continuously day and night. Where can I buy such a battery?”

        Try specking one!

    • Thomas Hagedorn says:

      Heh, this blog is about science, not science fiction. Anyone reading the above needs to go to the IEA (international energy data) and the EIA (U.S. energy data) and look at the latest annual data. Solar and wind are a cruel joke. And look at the increases in coal in India and China.

      • Donald says:

        The UK currently generates more than half of its electricity from renewables, and is still increasing that ratio. This is reality. The UK has heavy industry – it’s pretty famous for having invented it, actually.

        Will all fossil fuel plants be immediately replaced? No, some such plants will be required as part of a resilient system for many decades yet.

        But pretending that renewables are not practical and are not more cost effective than new fossil fuel power generation? Now that’s fiction.

      • Nate says:

        Not at all. They are the largest contributor to NEW power generation.

        Historically every new source of energy, coal, oil, hydro, nuclear, natural gas, had exponential growth initially, that lasted 30-40 y.

        We are in that initial growth period for solar and wind.

      • Donald says:

        According to the recent Ember report, China and India have reduced fossil-fuel generation by 2% and 3.1% respectively, while increasing renewables by about 30% (China: +43% solar, +16% wind)

        Are coal emissions increasing in _absolute_ terms? Yes, because China is undertaking an industrial and urban revolution, while still producing only a fraction of US per capita emissions. But those coal plants are being designed as back ups to the far larger volume of new renewables.

      • Willard says:

        Thomas handwaves to this:

        Renewable sources of electricity generation are continuing to grow strongly around the world, with global capacity expected to more than double by 2030, according to the IEA’s latest medium-term forecast. Led by the rapid rise of solar PV, renewables’ expansion is taking place in a context of supply chain strains, grid integration challenges, financial pressures and policy shifts.

        https://www.iea.org/news/global-renewable-capacity-is-set-to-grow-strongly-driven-by-solar-pv

        Roy’s contrarians are cruel, but considering the current administration, they’re no joke.

      • Thomas Hagedorn says:

        Well, keep trying guys. I CAN be convinced by data and argument. I have changed my mind before. But fear doesn’t work too well on me. I have faced imminent death twice in my life. Once in uniform, once out of uniform.

        As the saying goes “size matters.” The direction of a vector is important. The length of the vector is even more important. With me, numbers always “Trump” (intentional attempt to trigger certain people on this blog) words. An energy source can comprise 2% of total supply or consumption and increase 50% to 3% of total supply/consumption over, let’s say, a short period of time. It still will pale in comparison to the other 97%. Further, the overall energy supply will be growing at a fast pace (third world development, AI, crypto mining). So, absolute CO2 production is very likely to continue to increase. Do you really expect developing countries with vast numbers of energy starved poor people to reduce their coal use? I am glad that the relatively meaningless growth rate of highly subsidized, inefficient and ineffective wind and solar floats your boat, but can we global warming heretics please stop subsidizing the true believers whimsy?

        So, what is wrong with my logic? I didn’t supply exact numbers, but they are easily obtainable at IEA and EIA. I didn’t make anything up. And stop using a pro warming think tank for your argument. Use somewhat independent DATA, please.

      • Willard says:

        Dear Thomas,

        If you ever want to be taken seriously, do like Rob and post your audited results:

        https://qoppac.blogspot.com/2025/04/annual-performance-update-returneth.html

        Until then, you’re just an old guy who keeps saying stuff.

        Who in their right mind would like to convince troglodytes?

      • Nate says:

        ?”I am glad that the relatively meaningless growth rate of highly subsidized, inefficient and ineffective wind and solar floats”

        Quantify ‘meaningless’ in your view please.

        In what way are these inefficient?

      • Nate says:

        In 1910 the number of US horses was still 40x larger than the number of automobiles, yet automobile numbers were exponentially rising…which Thomas would have called ‘meaningless’.

        Horses will dominate for the forseeable future, he would have declared.

        We all know what happened next.

  28. Gordon Robertson says:

    clint…”“Earth’s shadow causes the phases of the Moon”.

    That was just one of gordon’s many flubs. After repeated criticisms, I believe he has begrudgingly recanted”.

    ***

    Let’s put this one to bed. I was obviously having a bad hair day and confused eclipses with phases. On several occasions, I have explained how phases come about, through the view angle between the lunar near side and the Sun, so I obviously understand the difference. I find it somewhat sad that alarmists cling to one gaffe and cannot even begin to scientifically rebut any other claims I have made.

    Ironically, NASA uses the motion of the same phase shift in shadow on the near face as proof that the Moon is rotating. I have heard nothing out of the spinners about that, who obviously regard NASA as an authority figure. NASA is essentially claiming that the apparently moving shadow created by the Sun shining at different angles in the lunar orbit on the near face is proof of rotation.

    With regard to Clint’s whine that I have made many flubs, I am still awaiting a scientific critique from him. All he seems to manage are insults and ad homs.

    He has recently made a fool of himself by claiming flux is not conserved then follows that up by claiming distance and area are conserved. That gaffe indicates Clint has no idea what conservation means in this context. Besides, Einstein might disagree with him. E. thought that length varied as an object approached the speed of light. E. like Clint failed to understand that time has no existence outside the human mind. Having redefined time incorrectly to suit his bad theory, he reasoned that since length is a function of time, to humans, it must change as time changes.

    Again, flux is a mathematical concept introduced by Newton as a measure of a rate of change. Referring to such flux in terms of conservation is ingenuous. As such, flux is nothing more than an idea, or thought, having no meaning in actuality. It is energy that has meaning, an actuality, even though we have no idea to date of what it is in actuality. When we refer to a flux in relation to an energy like electromagnetic energy, magnetic energy, or solar energy, which is EM, we are referring to an instantaneous rate of change of those energies over an area.

    With electrical energy of a specific frequency, say 60 Hz, we average the power over one cycle of a sine wave. Presumably, it is possible to average the energy of EM over one cycle, provided the EM frequency is a single frequency. How can you do that when bazzilions of frequencies are involved? Planck claims to have done it, using presumptions and fudging. At that, his calculations apply only to an imaginary energy, blackbody radiation.

    Let’s look at how the definition of flux has become obfuscated in modern times. For example, what do we mean by solar flux per metre squared at TOA? Through any square metre is beaming bazillions of different frequencies of EM. Since the frequency of each constituent EM component varies, there has to be great phase differences over the spectrum, meaning EM summation is taking place.

    How do we measure such a vast range of frequencies? We can’t, there are simply no instruments that can measure the entire spectrum accurately. So, we use mathematical means using something antiquated like S-B. We calculate the estimated solar surface temperature and apply S-B to calculate the EM generated. Then we created a sphere with a diameter of approx. 93 million miles and work out what the EM should be in a square meter of the sphere at TOA.

    Let’s face it, this is Mickey Mouse science at its best. Calling the power/square meter calculated ‘flux’ is even more MM. For it to be regarded as flux, a known function must be applied and the derivative take of that function. To apply Newton correctly, we need to measure each individual frequency in the square meter and calculate how it is varying.

    All we can do is generalize based on projected averages. Any instrumental measurement is severely restricted to the bandwidth of the instrument and at that, all the instrument can do is measure the average intensity, not being able to measure in distinct ranges like UV. Essentially, all the 1300+ watts claimed at TOA per square meter can tell you is how good a suntan you might acquire.

    It would be far more helpful if we could measure in narrow bandwidths to see how solar output is varying in each bandwidth.

    Ergo, solar flux is an ambiguous term that reveals nothing about how the energy is changing instantaneously in the square metre. Hence, flux is being used generically and not as Newton intended it. It is actually a reference to a fuzzy human concept of how the energy in that square metre appears visually, a collection of lines, as in a magnetic field, or bazillions of photons/quanta as in an EM field. And that presumes photons exist.

    The problem is that we in modern times have focused the meaning of flux to refer to changes in such imaginary fields. That was not how Newton had intended the meaning of flux, or fluxions, as he called them. He was referring to an instantaneous rate of change between two or more variables in a general manner, not referring only to imaginary fields, as we now use the word. The modern term for fluxions is the derivative, or instantaneous rate of change of a function.

    Poor Clint, mired in his particular form of logic, sticks obstinately to his egregiously incorrect definitions in science. He thinks heat is not energy but a transfer of an undefined energy which in reality has to be thermal energy, or heat. He thinks electric current flows positive to negative even though modern textbooks grudgingly admit that electrons, the actual current carriers, flow negative to positive. They cannot explain what could possibly flow positive to negative since all the real positive charges in a conductor are fixed in place in the nucleus of atoms.

    Clint thinks entropy is a measure of disorder even though Clausius defined it as a summation of heat quantities. That is clear in his formula for entropy which is S = integral dq/T. Not a mention of disorder, just one variable, q, the symbol for heat.

    Clint goes on an on, one gaffe after another. But, hey, other than that, he’s an OK guy.

    • Clint R says:

      gordon, you can’t support any of your false accusations. Like the other Leftists, you just make up crap to clog the blog. Even Bindi knows you’re a fraud.

      But, keep proving me right. I like being right.

  29. Gordon Robertson says:

    binny…”I have often enough exposed Robertson’s blatant lies about Lanka and measles”.

    ***

    The above reference is to an offer of 100,000 Euros offered by scientist Stefan Lanka if anyone could prove, using one paper, that the measles virus has been isolated.

    Fortunately, the German high court saw the argument differently than you. That is, Lanka still has the 100,000 Euros claimed by the plaintiff.

    Lanka had argued that no one paper has successfully proved the measles virus has been isolated. If he is right, then the measles vaccine is some concoction of substances that has nothing to do with measles.

    The lower court erred, in the view of the higher court, since they allowed the plaintiff to reference (cherry pick) dribbles from several papers. In essence, he has collated arguments from several papers to present his proof that measles virus had been successfully isolated.

    This sound a lot like modern climate alarm where the entire theory, AGW, is stitched together from various fabrications. No pun intended.

    That suggests to me that the plaintiff was an ijit, much like Binny, the two appearing to be peas of a pod. He obviously could not comprehend a simple set of instructions laid out by Lanka and Binny cannot understand any of it. He as offered statements referencing the plaintiff as referencing Lanka.

    The higher court went one step further, it called it’s own expert, who ended up agreeing with Lanka. The court had no intention of ruling on whether the measles virus has been isolated, their sole intention was to verify, or not, the lower court decision, which Lanka had claimed erred by allowing several papers to be referenced.

    However, the overall outcome of the trial was an important discovery made by Lanka. The basis of most viral experiments trying to prove viral action was that the suspected virus killed healthy laboratory cells, an idea that came, I think, from Koch’s Postulate. Lanka proved, using an independent lab, that the healthy cells would have died anyway due to pre-treatment in the labs, whether or not they were infected by a viral substance.

    The healthy cells are treated with antibiotics to prevent infection and they are starved to ensure a timely death. In other words, the cells were set up to die anyway. When I read that, I found it hard to accept that modern scientists are so obtuse as to use such laboratory chicanery. Lanka, discovered, through research, that no lab claiming to have isolated a virus, had performed a control study to check for the obvious.

    Lanka has claimed that none of the modern viruses, including covid, have proved to have been isolated. When the original SARS virus (an ancestor of covid) had been claimed isolated, the paper was rejected on the ground that the particles claimed to be a virus were uncertain as to their origin.

    This is a serious problem in viral research, trying to prove that what is claimed as a virus is actually a virus.

  30. Gordon Robertson says:

    student b…”The quantity Bν(ν, T) is the spectral radiance as a function of temperature and frequency. It has units of W·m−2·sr−1·Hz−1 in the SI system.”

    To obtain Wm-2 you must integrate Bν(ν, T) over all solid angles and frequencies”.

    ***

    You are failing to grasp my point. Bν(ν, T) as used here, by Planck, is a reference to a theorized set of vibrations, as if they were tiny oscillators. That was the model applied by Planck since he did not know of electrons, which produced the frequencies due to their angular velocity in an orbit.

    Planck intended this at one temperature, a blackbody temperature. It was never meant to represent anything other than a theory, hence it could be integrated theoretically from 0 -> infinity with just frequency. Wein came along and extrapolated Planck’s function to changing temperatures.

    Stefan’s original formula, I = sigma.T^4, was derived from Tyndall’s experiment which did actual laboratory measurement in a range from about 500C to 1200C. The T^4 relationship was calculated some 15 years before Planck and in a specific temperature range.

    There is no way to imply Stefan from Planck unless you restrict the integration to the range of 500C to 1200C and use a whole lot of fudging and imagination. No one has ever proved that S-B is valid over the entire absolute temperature range. That is also why ice gets a ridiculous value of radiation over 300 w/m^2.

    I have read, with higher temperatures, the S-B exponent reaches T^5.

  31. Dear all
    I`ve been following this discussion for about 35 years. And the arguments on either side remain the same. I have been very skeptical
    myself about the human driven warming. There has been the Iris-Effect and the AMO and the PDO going together into a negative phase and of course the ENSO. The difference in 2025 is, that we have much more information about our planet. We know much more about the temperature in different layers of the oceans than we knew in the times, when the temperture was measured on the surface.

  32. Willard says:

    BACK AT THE RANCH

    White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller raised eyebrows during a live CNN interview this week after claiming that President Donald had “plenary authority” during a conversation about the deployment of the National Guard in Oregon.

    Video of Miller’s statement has gone viral – not only due to Miller’s controversial assertion – but because of the way he suddenly cut himself off mid-sentence, leaving his statement incomplete.

    Donald having “plenary authority” suggests the president has assumed total power over the decision to deploy the National Guard in some states. It is unclear whether Miller paused due to technical difficulties or stopped himself after apparently realising the implications of what he was saying.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/plenary-authority-stephen-miller-cnn-dictator-b2841627.html

    An angel must have whispered “Posse Comitatus” in his ear.

    Either way, another win for Donald!

    • Arkady Ivanovich says:

      Two things going on there:

      1/ The revealing slip of the mask.

      And,
      2/ The sudden cutoff indicates that they perceive real danger in letting that idea stand unqualified in a public, broadcast setting.

      This may become Exhibit A in the Nuremburg style trials when the regime is eventually brought to account.

      • Clint R says:

        Ark, you better get back under your bed. They are coming for you.

      • Willard says:

        Hey Puffman, riddle me this –

        About 1 in 3 US Nobel prize winners are immigrants.

        About 1 in 4 were government employees at some point.

        About 44% of all Nobel prize winners were educated in US higher education.

        Do you think Donald is destroying the Murican education system so he and other troglodytes have better chances to win a prize?

      • MaxC says:

        Most people in China, India, Africa and South America live in poverty without proper education. Then there is this Islamic world, where 50% of people (women) have no education and men study only Qur’an.

        Only in the USA, Canada, Australia, part of Asia and West Europe (including Russia) people get higher education. In the USA people waste their time studying imaginary AGW, intersectionality and things like CO2 emissions of cow’s farts. Trump is destroying this part of the American education system, which is a good thing and worth a Nobel prize.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        MaxC,

        Yeah, not the only thing Trump is destroying: Farm bankruptcies are soaring amid low crop prices, while Trump considers bailout of up to $14 billion.

        Nobel Prize in Economics, you reckon?

      • Clint R says:

        Dang Ark, is supply/demand another concept you don’t understand?

        Russia is dumping wheat to help pay for their invasion of Ukraine. China is slowing learning to grow enough wheat to feed their population, so their imports are dropping. And US producers, being the most effective, are achieving harvests up to 40 bushels/acre.

        Trump will support US farmers, you can count on that. In the past, farmers have been paid NOT to plant, until the prices stabilize.

        But the satellites are tracking you. Better throw your cell phone down the toilet, put more layers of tin foil on your head and get back under your bed. They’re coming after you….

      • Willard says:

        Hey Puffman, riddle me this –

        Donald believed his Truth Social post demanding prosecutions of James Comey and other political foes was a private message to his attorney general, and “and was surprised to learn it was public.”

        Do you realize you’re in my thread?

      • Clint R says:

        Don’t worry Willard, you’re probably not the only cult child that didn’t get it.

        Maybe when you grow up?

      • Willard says:

        I’m quite sure everybody but you realize you’re replying to my comments, Puffman.

        Riddle me this – are you obsessing over people monitoring your activity because you are using Covenant Eyes like Mike J does?

      • barry says:

        The Truth Social post is a doozy. What caught my eye beyond the flagrant weaponization of the DoJ, was that Trump demanded the AG prosecute people because not doing so made them “look bad.”

        WTF?

        The executor of the law isn’t interested in the propriety of the prosecutions, only the optics on his reputation.

        Which we already knew, but now he’s just gone and stated it in black and white.

        Conservatives excoriated Biden on the notion that he was making Garland go after political enemies. This with no evidence at all that Biden made demands on Garland, and some evidence to the contrary.

        But when dear leader does the same thing they lashed, in full public view – well, now you see just as plainly the ethical consistency of conservatives.

        Zero. They have zero ethical standards. They are salivating at the revenge, suddenly all on board with weaponising the DoJ. No principle, no scruple, just vengeance.

  33. Nate says:

    The US govt is pushing a return to coal.

    Problem is, nobody wants it.

    They tried to auction the rights to 167 Million tons of coal on federal land in Montana.

    The only bid was 0.1 cents per ton, from a Navajo tribe.

    https://apnews.com/article/trump-coal-sales-public-lands-montana-b2dbbdc81e7afbf24947b9a4b32fa417

    A decade ago, such coal auctions yielded $1.10 per ton.

    Conservatives are all about letting the market decide.

    Seems it decided: coal is worthless.

    • Thomas Hagedorn says:

      Simple. Fracking made nat gas far cheaper. It is also cleaner, but that is not why we have gone to it. It has greatly reduced the U.S. production of CO2. Your welcome. Now work on getting China and India to buy our LNG.

    • Nate says:

      Yes gas. And renewables.

      Using this tool energy trends can be charted

      https://www.energyinst.org/statistical-review/energy-charting-tool/energy-charting-tool

      For the US energy consumption (EJ) by source and year we see:

      Year. Coal Gas Renewables
      2005. 22.4 21.7. 1.3
      2024. 7.9. 32.5. 9.7

      Change. -14.5. 10.8. 8.4

    • Ian Brown says:

      we still burn coal in the UK Nate, many prefer it for domestic use,especially those living in rural areas who do not have Access to gas.the big problem is ,it has to be imported from Columbia, the irony is that the people who burn it are living on top of millions of tons of coal, but our quaint governments, past and present refuse to allow anyone to dig a hole in the ground,

  34. Dan Pangburn says:

    In 2015 the measured increase trend from 1988 was 0.923 kg/m^2 while the calculated increase, limited by the Clausius-Clapeyron relation and based on the UAH temperature trend for the same time period, was 0.486 kg/m^2. This demonstrates that the assumption by many Climate Scientists that water vapor increase is just feedback from temperature increase caused by CO2 increase is wrong.

    • barry says:

      Sorry, are you saying the alarmist scientists underestimated water vapour increase?

      • Dan Pangburn says:

        Yes. AFAIK, they use the WV level calculated within the GCMs instead of the up to about twice as high (in 2016) values measured and reported by NASA/RSS. The surge in WV has been contributed to by increasing world population of about 3.1 billion since 1988, increasing population of desert areas, and increasing irrigation.

      • barry says:

        The Clausius-Clapeyron relation yields 6-7% increase in atmos WV for every 1K of warming.

        UAH LT global temp increased by a total of 0.3K over the period 1988 to 2015 inclusive.

        If global mean TPW baseline before the 1980s is about 25 kg/m2, then the increase for the temp change is 0.52 kg/m2 (7% increase C/C).

        What figures did you use?

        Having looked around at various papers there is a wide range of values given for WV increase, with fairly wide uncertainty (often as much as 30% – 40%). Picking just one figure without acknowledging this range and uncertainty doesn’t seem to be a neutral read on the matter.

      • Dan Pangburn says:

        To minimize noise in the measured UAH data I used the regression for the data 1988 to 2015. Regression eqn 0.009444x-18.979 gives 0.255 K for the 27 years. Times my best assessment of 6.7 %/K and a nominal WV level of 28.5 kg/m^2 yields WV increase from planet warming of 0.255 * 0.067 * 28.8 = 0.487 kg/m^2.
        NASA/RSS reports average global WV anomalies at https://data.remss.com/vapor/monthly_1deg/old_files/tpw_v07r02_198801_202312.time_series.txt and claim an RMS accuracy of about 1 mm (= 1 kg/m^2). The regression slope for this data is 0.03423 for an increase in the 27 yr of 0.03423 * 27 = 0.924 kg/m^2.
        Comparison ratios for neighboring years are shown at Fig 7.1 in the analysis at (click my name).

  35. Gordon Robertson says:

    stoopidb “I have read,…”

    Sure you have. Which comic book was it?”

    ***

    Stoopidb has obviously conceded that he is out of his element and unable to respond to the science I have presented, hence he resorts to his true nature…ad homs and insults.

    He is even more stoopid than I thought, however, since the premise I presented is stoopid simple. That is, you simply cannot compare Planck, whose equation refers to blackbody radiation derived from a thought experiment, and at a constant temperature, with generous mathematical fudging, to a relationship (Stefan’s) derived from actual experimentation in a fixed temperature range.

    Put more succinctly, there are no provisions in Planck for a variation in temperature. Unable to understand basic calculus, Stoopidb presents a line integral that sums frequencies from 0 ->infinity while holding the temperature constant.

    Anyone who has used data from a fixed temperature range would not dream of extrapolating the derived equation to a different range based on statistical analysis without further experimental proof.

    Unless, of course, you are as stoopid as stoopidb.

    • studentb says:

      Here is the thing.
      The SBL has been around since 1879.
      “Master mind” GR proposes it is not applicable over all temperatures. i.e. he wants us to believe that nobody has bothered to check its veracity in over 125 years.

      Think about it.

      125 years.

      Think of the thousands, nay, tens of thousands of scientists who have apparently been deluded over this time span!

      Only now, with his cutting insights and mastery of calculus has GR revealed their folly!

      My god! Let’s put GR up on a pedestal with Newton, Einstein etc.!

      FFS

      • RLH says:

        So you should not have a problem in showing the papers?

      • Norman says:

        studentb

        In the past I spent some time finding and posting links to Gordon showing experiments done at cooler temperatures than the fisrt experiments. The experiments verified SB law but Gordon ignores any thing other than what he blindly believes.

        Case of point, he believes a crackpot named Lanka on Measles and rejects all evidence that does not agree with Lanka. I have linked him to Electron Microscope images of measles and then he is a super expert in the field of electron microscopes (even though he has never even ran one before or set up samples) so he rejects all this.

        I asked him to explain how measles vaccine (a weakened virus of the more dangerous one) was able to almost eradicate the disease but he ignores this as he has no answer but Lanka (the mighty one) could not possibly be a liar and crackpot so the more logical path is that every researcher in the field of viruses is wrong and corrupt or stupid, only Lanka knows anything. More logical thought process would be to think Lanka is wrong and the others may actually know what they are talking about.

        One thing is most certain. Gordon Robertson thinks he is right in all his zany ideas (which are not his own, he reads crackpot web sites) and will never think or question his version of reality.

  36. Gordon Robertson says:

    ent…Bad Andrew

    “I wonder why AI didn’t catch that little wrinkle? ”

    ***

    ent…hope you are not reliant on AI. Many people regard it as something novel, something dangerous that will take over society. For someone like myself, who has spent decades working with computer hardware, software, and electronics, especially digital electronics, I see nothing to fear.

    Any computer is only as good as its program and programs are written by humans. Programs vary markedly in quality but even the best cannot replicate the human mind simply because no one has any idea how it works. We don’t even understand intelligence or awareness so what’s the point of talking about artificial intelligence?

    Computers can do calculations much faster than humans, in general, although the human mind has an uncanny ability to do parallel thinking that computers cannot do. I think that’s partly because computers do multitasking through code threads that cannot always be running at the same time. Parallel processing in a computer is more using multiple processors (cores) to operate threads in parallel.

    AI is a reference to the fast processing speed coupled with ways of storing information and accessing it. Algorithms have been developed to enhance data processing and data processing is not intelligence. Google has imposed their AI on us with every search and from what I have seen, Google AI is simply a very fast data processor. However, it seems reliant on entities like Wikipedia.

    GIGO…garage in, garbage out.

    The human mind does not require multiple processors to do very complex functions. It is the control centre for much of the body and keeps us alive, freeing us to think independently. As evidenced here in Roy’s blog much of that free thinking is wasted due to a hard-coding imposed on the system by culture and conditioning. We also have the ability to see the conditioning and become aware of it, a trait many of us are not even aware exists.

    • Entropic man says:

      I expect “AI” to be a failure.

      The large language models just manipulate words without meaning and their hallucinations corrupt datasets.

      Following the South Sea bubble, the tulip bubble, the railway bubble, the dotcom bubble and the biotech bubble I expect an AI bubble.

    • Bad Andrew says:

      GR,

      I, for one, am not reliant on AI. I occasionally probe GROK with questions just to kind of test the AI waters, mostly for entertainment purposes.

      I do think GROK collects the “conventional wisdom”- whether that “wisdom” is right, wrong, insane, stupid, deceptive or whatever. It could be any of the above. So, with that expectation, I don’t expect AI to be anything but glorified GIGO programming.

      Andrew

  37. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    Solar set a new ERCOT record (last Tuesday) on Sept. 9, generating almost half of total demand in the fast-growing Texas electricity market while providing more than 40% of the state’s electricity for seven straight hours, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

    The latest record is the 17th of 2025, an astounding 7,785 megawatts (MW) higher than the first record of 22,092 MW set Jan. 24. New data from ERCOT—the Electric Reliability Council of Texas—also highlights solar’s reliability over the summer: For the period from June 1 through Aug. 31, solar met 15.2% of all demand in the ERCOT system, more than coal’s 12.5% market share.

    It also covered 26.9% of peak-hour demand. The peak hour output, which averaged 20,817 MW over the course of the summer, was a 5,408MW increase from just one year ago.

    https://ieefa.org/resources/summer-solar-and-battery-storage-records-texas

    • jim2 says:

      Wow! 7 entire hours!! Just WOW!!!

    • Arkady Ivanovich says:

      Everything’s bigger in Texas.

      Austin-based startup Base Power announced it raised a billion dollars in Series C financing. Their goal: keep the lights on during the next winter storm.

      The company, co-founded by Zach Dell, aims to install batteries that offer on-site energy storage options for customers. The company launched in 2023.

      “The chance to reinvent our power system comes once in a generation,” said Dell in a press release. “The challenge ahead requires the best engineers and operators to solve it, and we’re scaling the team to make our abundant energy future a reality.”

  38. Norman says:

    stephen p anderson

    I do not know if you would wander up the thread to look at my response to your post.

    https://www.drroyspencer.com/2025/10/uah-v6-1-global-temperature-update-for-september-2025-0-53-deg-c/#comment-1717496

    You linked to some pages covering thermodynamics and claimed this shows it is “nonsense” to accept that energy from a cold object does flow to a hotter one.

    Your link DOES NOT demonstrate anything about it. It has no study at all on heat transfer. It is just discussing some basic ideas in thermodynamics (1st, 2nd Law, Entropy, reversible process, Carnot engines) but nothing concerning how energy transfer works!

    Here is one for you to look at.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnot_heat_engine

    The warmer the cold reservoir with respect to the hot reservoir, the less efficient the engine!! The temperature of the cold certainly affects the energy flow from the hot source.

    • Norman says:

      stephen p anderson

      Here is a link to show that energy transfer IS a TWO-WAY process (CAPS for emphasis). The energy of the lower energy object gets transferred to the higher energy object.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elastic_collision

      Even though the energy in atomic collision is two way (or multiple if more than two atoms are involved) the macroscopic heat flow is one way. A hotter gas will transfer its energy to the lower temperature gas but the lower temperature gas, on the atomic level, transfers its energy to the atom with higher kinetic energy. It is not a ONE-WAY transfer of energy. So that the warmer the cold gas is the slower the hot gas loses its energy.

      Real Heat transfer will have a heated gas (additional source of energy constantly supplying it) reach a higher temperature if the surrounding wall temperature is increased. The rate the gas will lose heat is reduced as the wall temperature goes up so that the same input energy will cause the gas to reach a higher temperature.

      Likewise with GHG. There reduce the rate the surface loses energy and so the solar input will cause the surface to reach a higher temperature.

      • Clint R says:

        Sorry Norman but you’re still confused.

        You criticize gordon for spouting nonsense, but you do the same. You’re confusing your opinions with science.

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/2025/10/uah-v6-1-global-temperature-update-for-september-2025-0-53-deg-c/#comment-1717474

        You don’t have a clue about the Carnot cycle. You just find things on the Internet you can’t understand. You’ve never studied thermodynamics, so you don’t know the Carnot cycle refers to things like steam engines, air conditioners, and heat pumps.

        But keep trying to pervert the laws of physics.

      • Nornan says:

        Good golly. The unscientist comes along to insult and pretend he knows science. So will you support your claims or not or will you just continue your endless taunts and insults? We all know what you will not do! Provide any valid science for your opinions. Since you know nothing about heat exchange or thermodynamics why don’t you try to leatn it?

      • Willard says:

        Hey Puffman, riddle me this –

        Drunken Pete, Donald’s pick to run the Pentagon, regularly abused alcohol to the point that he passed out at family gatherings, and once needed to be dragged out of a strip club while in uniform, according to an ex-relative’s account of his behavior that was given to U.S. lawmakers and reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

        https://www.wsj.com/politics/policy/pete-hegseth-affidavit-witness-drunk-passing-out-e216ca85

        Does anything says “America First” more than letting another country put an Air Force base in Idaho, and why do you keep trying to make yourself relevant?

    • stephen p anderson says:

      Norman,

      Nowhere in the textbook that states energy exchanges between a hot and cold object. It states the Laws of Thermodynamics as they were originally written. It also has section on entropy and microstates. It isn’t impossible for energy to flow from cold to hot, only improbable due to entropy. Does energy flow from Earth to Sun? Not impossible but improbable.

  39. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    The planned demolition of the UK’s last coal-fired power station has reached a key step.

    Ratcliffe-on-Soar Power Station was switched off on 30 September 2024 after generating electricity since 1968.

    On Thursday, Rushcliffe Borough Council approved plans to knock down the cooling towers, the main power station building, and other buildings on site with controlled explosives.

    According to plans, it will take until at least 2030 to knock down and clear the site.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvgqez9gqrko

    Let’s spare a thought for Matt King Coal.

  40. Gordon Robertson says:

    norman…”n the past I spent some time finding and posting links to Gordon showing experiments done at cooler temperatures than the fisrt experiments. The experiments verified SB law but Gordon ignores any thing other than what he blindly believes”.

    ***

    Don’t recall those links, Norman. Don’t go to a lot of trouble, but if you have one on hand, please re-post.

    I saw one the other day that claims the surface temperature of the Earth is 288.15K, based on S-B. It uses blackbody theory coupled with S-B and a whole lot of suppositions. Google AI points out how to calculate the temperature using S-B then admits it is theoretical and essentially wrong, because Earth’s surface temperature is not even and has a very wide range of temperatures.

    Therefore, at any one time, Earth’s surface temperature could range from -90C(183.15K) to +60C (333.15 K) in any one spot, and the +15C average based on S-B calculations is more smoke and mirrors than actual. The S-B average of +15C (288.15K) means absolutely nothing.

    ———–

    “Case of point, he believes a crackpot named Lanka on Measles and rejects all evidence that does not agree with Lanka. I have linked him to Electron Microscope images of measles and then he is a super expert in the field of electron microscopes (even though he has never even ran one before or set up samples) so he rejects all this”.

    ****

    Yes, but Lanka is an expert on EM image interpretation and he claims the image shown for measles is not a virus but cell debris. That’s not so unusual. The first claim of the SARS virus isolation was rejected due to the fact no one could agree it was a virus shown by the EM.

    Besides, Norman, Lanka has a standing offer of 100,000 Euros for anyone who can prove, using one paper, that measles has been isolated. No one has claimed it although one wag tried, cherry picking several papers. The lower court fell for it but the higher court dismissed their claim. If he is such a crackpot, why was he able to convince the higher court, who appointed their own expert, who agreed with Lanka?

    An interesting aside came from the court hearing. Lanka had an independent lab verify that cells used to test viruses will die on their own due the lab preparations. The cells are pre-starved and affected by antibiotics used to prevent them being infected by bacteria. Why do cells have to be pre-starved, to ensure they’ll die?

    Why has no one noticed this gaffe in lab protocol other than Lanka? Not one study claiming to have isolated a virus, on the basis they infected and killed healthy cells, bothered to run a control study to see if the cell pre-treatment would cause the cells to die on their own.

    ———

    “I asked him to explain how measles vaccine (a weakened virus of the more dangerous one) was able to almost eradicate the disease but he ignores….”

    ***

    I did not ignore it, Norman, I claimed I did not know the facts. However, I have gained enough skepticism of claims that disease has been eradicated with vaccines to claim we need to look deeper into the matter. The fact that such skepticism is being rejected by the poobahs is of concern. People should e encouraged to do such science, not be coerced into not rocking the boat.

    I was never vaccinated for polio and I have never had polio. Touch wood. I grew up in conditions of poverty with a diet that would be considered today to be sub-standard, yet no polio and no major illnesses. I am thankful.

  41. Gordon Robertson says:

    norman…”Here is a link to show that energy transfer IS a TWO-WAY process (CAPS for emphasis). The energy of the lower energy object gets transferred to the higher energy object.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elastic_collision

    Even though the energy in atomic collision is two way (or multiple if more than two atoms are involved) the macroscopic heat flow is one way. A hotter gas will transfer its energy to the lower temperature gas but the lower temperature gas, on the atomic level, transfers its energy to the atom with higher kinetic energy. It is not a ONE-WAY transfer of energy. So that the warmer the cold gas is the slower the hot gas loses its energy”.

    ***

    Norman, how can I get through to you that the word energy is a generic representation of different forms of energy? On its own, energy does not mean much and the word can be seriously misleading.

    Elastic collisions (mechanical energy) occur only between solids with hard surfaces, like snooker balls. In that case, with two balls colliding, there is a transfer of momentum from one mass to the other. Call it an energy transfer if you want but a transfer of momentum is easier to visualize. It means a heavier mass traveling at the same velocity as a lighter mass will have have a higher momentum since momentum = mass x velocity.

    During a collision, the heavier mass will transfer more momentum to the lighter mass than the lighter mass transfers to the heavier mass. Nothing to do with heat transfer.

    I realize some try to apply this to atoms in a gas but they are wrong. Any collisions are of a different nature altogether, involving electrostatic forces. That theory dates back to the 19th century before the atomic structure was discovered. Of course, you and Clint may be that old. Tee hee.

    Atomic collisions are a different principle altogether since there is never a solid colliding with a solid. An atom is comprised of an estimated 99.99% empty space. Most of the mass is concentrated in the nucleus and the electron orbits are so large wrt the nucleus the space taken up by electrons and the orbital extents is essentially trivial.

    You seem to be visualizing gas atoms in a container as tiny snooker balls, or ping pong balls, bounding off the solid walls of the container.

    ———–

    “Real Heat transfer will have a heated gas (additional source of energy constantly supplying it) reach a higher temperature if the surrounding wall temperature is increased. The rate the gas will lose heat is reduced as the wall temperature goes up so that the same input energy will cause the gas to reach a higher temperature”.

    ***

    You have failed to define what heat is and how it is transferred. Atoms gain and lose heat through electrons. It’s dumb to talk about one atom heating or cooling although it makes sense micro-scopically. Here, we are talking about gaining and losing KE, where heat is defined macroscopically as the relative KE of the atoms. Electrons gain and lose heat by gaining and losing KE, which they gain through being exposed to a heat source, or by absorbing certain frequencies of EM.

    That’s the reason heat cannot be transferred from a colder body to a hotter body. Electrons don’t work in reverse in that they cannot absorb EM frequencies from a colder mass. They cannot absorb heat either from a colder mass since they need to absorb it from electrons at a higher KE level, ergo, a hotter mass.

    ———

    “Likewise with GHG. There reduce the rate the surface loses energy and so the solar input will cause the surface to reach a higher temperature”.

    ***
    How can a trace gas possibly affect the rate of cooling of the surface? Newton’s Law of Cooling of a surface is based on temperature difference and the temperature of the atmosphere is obviously controlled by nitrogen and oxygen, which account for 99% of the atmosphere.

    Actually, there would be no temperature difference since two bodies in contact, like the atmosphere and surface, should be at thermal equilibrium. However, air has the property that when heated by the surface, its constituent air rise, allowing cooler air to replace it. That’s how the surface cools principally, via cooler air from aloft. That air is 99% nitrogen and oxygen. CO2 has a negligible effect.

  42. Gordon Robertson says:

    student b…”The SBL has been around since 1879.
    “Master mind” GR proposes it is not applicable over all temperatures. i.e. he wants us to believe that nobody has bothered to check its veracity in over 125 years”.

    ***

    You could prove it yourself. Just use S-B to calculate the EM given off by ice, which is claimed to be 300+ w/m^2, then use the EM to warm something while measuring the warming effect with a thermometer.

    That ouhgta show ’em. Then you could post here while bragging about your Nobel.

    If you get enough square meters of ice, you should be able to fry an egg. May be why no one has tried to prove it.

    But, hey, if I’m missing something, I’m willing to hear your explanation.

    Please remember that EM contains no heat and no mechanical energy, and should not be measured in watts. Under certain conditions, if a source is hot enough, it can give off EM of sufficient intensity to cause warming if a cooler mass absorbs it and converts it to heat. That does not work the other way around…2nd law.

    746 electrical watts represents 1 mechanical horsepower. A 750 watt electrical heater gives off loads of heat as a space heater, but those are electrical watts, which are equivalent to 1 HP.

    According to S-B, there should be an equivalent amount of power available in 2 m^2 of ice. After all, 300+ watts is almost half a horsepower. Sure, it’s spread over a square metre, but it should e additive with enough ice.

    What am I missing?

    • Clint R says:

      Poor gordon is never going to be able to understand these issues. So I no longer try to teach him. But, the danger is he will mislead others who have a desire to learn. This is why I make the effort here.

      Like all of “climate science”, gordon does not understand “flux”. This is the short term used for the radiant flux calculated from the Stefan-Boltzmann Law. That flux being the photons emitted from a surface, based on its temperature.

      There is a lot of confusion about this simple, straight-forward concept. A flux is not the same as energy. The photons have energy, but the flux cannot be treated as energy. For example, energy can be treated as a quantity, that is, it can be added, subtracted and averaged. Energy is said to be “conserved”. But flux, except in very special cases, cannot be added, subtracted, or averaged. “Flux” is NOT conserved.

      gordon keeps confusing flux with energy and power. He doesn’t understand that Watts/m² is NOT the same as Joules. Worse, he’s now comparing flux to “horsepower”. Don’t be confused by his confusion!

      gordon claims the S/B Law is invalid because it shows a block of ice is emitting about 300 W/m². He believes that means the ice is emitting the same as a 3-100W light bulbs. (He’s believing “Watts” (units of power) are the same as “W/m²” (units of flux). What gordon can’t understand is a 100W light bulb has a filament temperature close to 3000K (5000 °F)! So from the S/B Law, the filament is emitting over 4,000,000 W/m². Don’t be confused by his confusion.

      Flux has units of W/m², energy has units of Joules, and power has units of Watts. They are all very different, and cannot be treated the same.

      Energy — Joules
      Power — Watts — Joules/second
      Flux — W/m² — Power/square meter

    • studentb says:

      “What am I missing?”

      Don’t tempt me !!!

      In any case, I think CR has explained your confusion.
      (surprisingly, I will give credit to CR….just this once though).

      One last attempt from my end.
      GR, imagine you are suddenly floating alone in deepest darkest space. Your body begins to rapidly cool. You are heading towards being snap frozen at -273degC.
      Suddenly I come by and offer you a frozen blanket (at 0degC)
      Should you take it to ward off being snap frozen or do you
      reject my kind offer on the basis that the blanket is colder than your body and cannot possibly be of any use?

  43. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    While Australia debates the merits of going nuclear and frustration grows over the slower-than-needed rollout of solar and wind power, China is going all in on renewables.

    New figures show the pace of its clean energy transition is roughly the equivalent of installing five large-scale nuclear power plants worth of renewables every week.

    A report by Sydney-based think tank Climate Energy Finance (CEF) said China was installing renewables so rapidly it would meet its end-of-2030 target by the end of this month — or 6.5 years early.

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/2024-07-16/chinas-renewable-energy-boom-breaks-records/104086640

    Will Donald win that one, or is he only barking this morning to make his best friends more money in shaking off weak hands?

    Time will tell!

    • MaxC says:

      At the same time China has expanded the capacity of coal-fired plants more in the first half of 2025 than at any time in the past 9 years!

      And in the U.S Department of Energy (DOE) announced a $625 million investment to expand and reinvigorate America’s coal industry, aiming to boost energy production and support coal communities nationwide.

      Donald and Xi are winners!

      • Willard says:

        For some reason our troglodyte omitted some bits from his assistant:

        In the first half of 2025, China added a record amount of renewable energy capacity, including approximately 210 GW of new solar and 50 GW of new wind capacity.

        The country’s new solar capacity additions alone in the first half of 2025 were more than twice the rest of the world combined.

        China’s total installed solar photovoltaic capacity surpassed 1,000 GW (1 TW) for the first time in May 2025, and its combined wind and solar capacity now exceeds its thermal (mostly coal) capacity.

        The official strategy is for new coal plants to increasingly serve a “supporting” or “regulating” role—acting as a flexible backup to manage the intermittent nature of high volumes of solar and wind power—rather than as primary baseload generators

      • MaxC says:

        Willard: So you finally admit that for every TW of solar and wind power you have to build massive coal-fired power stations to “support” and “regulate” occasional wind and solar power.

      • Willard says:

        As soon as you’ll admit that coal currently accounts for half of China’s energy production, down from three-quarters in 2016, Max.

        Troglodytes have *no* idea how fast these damn socialists are moving.

  44. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    Albert Einstein’s Desk on the day of his death 18th of April 1955 at age 76: https://ibb.co/Fk0SNBfm

    There is nothing that can be said by mathematical symbols and relations which cannot also be said by words. The converse, however, is false. Much that can be and is said by words cannot successfully be put into equations, because it is nonsense. When a physical writer expresses an assertion in words only, he is refusing to stand up to the test.

  45. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    I was out riding my horse and shooting my guns all morning so maybe I missed it, but how’s the big Wall Street Stock Market rally going?

    Also, has Trump been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize yet?

    • Clint R says:

      No Ark, you were hiding under your bed all morning. Then you heard the stock market dropped, but being a child you don’t understand that is a “buying opportunity”.

      Trump is mocking the bogus “Nobel Peace Prize”. He, like most adults, knows it is a hoax. Greta is more likely to get it than Trump. It’s a “reward” for brain-dead Leftists, by brain-dead Swedish Leftists.

      If you ever grow up, you will understand.

    • MaxC says:

      So it was you who shot the Wall Street bears!
      Norway had two choices, and they chose 400% tariffs.

      • MaxC says:

        … Wall Street bulls! Sorry, my bad.

        My advice is not to sell in panic during stock market crash. Get rich instead.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        MaxC.

        So it was you who shot the Wall Street bears!
        My youngest son pushed me into Gold more than 10 years ago. Yesterday I sent him a Goldgenie phone.

        Norway had two choices, and they chose 400% tariffs.
        The Nobel Peace prize was more breaking news this year than any of the others because Trump had been very vocal recently in claiming that he should win it. Trump received multiple nominations for the award, but many of them came after the February 1 deadline for the 2025 prize so, (1) Trump was aware of the deadline and is simply playing to his moronic cult, or (2) Trump truly doesn’t understand how this works.

        Instead, it went to a DEI nominee (Maria Corina Machado) from the current super bad enemy of the day, Venezuela, for being subversive while identifying as a woman. Her accomplishments are pretty meh.

        I am busting a gut here; it is just too funny. The whole thing is a publicity stunt anyway to make us forget that Alfred Nobel made a fortune selling dynamite for wars.

    • Willard says:

      Donald only has one choice:

      To win.

      And now the market, that sore loser, is reacting.

      Have his sons dumped their crypto beforehand, and how is that legal?

      Troglodytes don’t care.

    • Bindidon says:

      People like Clint R, Robertson and some others who constantly haunt this blog deny everything, regardless of the evidence.

      Clint R’s most recent denial:

      ” Trump is mocking the bogus “Nobel Peace Prize”. He, like most adults, knows it is a hoax. Greta is more likely to get it than Trump. It’s a “reward” for brain-dead Leftists, by brain-dead Swedish Leftists. ”

      *
      How can anyone be so stupid as to perversely ignore what is visible everywhere – probably even on Fox News?

      *
      Let’s look at the Hill site which is anything but a leftist corner.

      https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5529126-donald-trump-nobel-peace-prize-insult/

      Trump: It would be ‘an insult to our country’ if he doesn’t get Nobel Peace Prize

      *
      Among the many surprising moments at President-elect Donald Trump’s campaign rallies this year were his repeated declarations that he should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

      Last month, Trump stood on a stage in Las Vegas and declared, “They gave Obama the Nobel Prize … He got elected and they announced he’s getting the Nobel Prize. I got elected in a much bigger, better, crazier election, but they gave him the Nobel Prize.”

      On the campaign trail, Trump often mentioned being nominated for the Nobel Prize — the last time in October 2024 by a member of the House of Representatives. His previous nominations have focused on his Middle East diplomacy, his effort to bring about diplomatic normalization between Kosovo and Serbia, and for his outreach and summitry with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

      *
      Clint R and his friend Robertson are, among all deniers of everything (from the GHE till the lunar spin), the dumbest and the most brazen ones.

  46. I M Wright says:

    Most climatologists have been misled by Raymond Pierrehumbert’s promotion of the concept known as “radiative forcing”—a notion that has been rigorously challenged by leading scientists such as Professor Claes Johnson. It is a fundamental error to claim that radiation from colder regions of the troposphere can raise the temperature of a warmer surface. This violates basic thermodynamic principles.

    The surface is warmer not because of back-radiation, but primarily due to the gravitationally induced temperature gradient—a well-established physical reality recognized by physicists since the 1870s. Moreover, such downward radiation does not slow the rate of radiative cooling at the surface, and it certainly has no effect on dominant non-radiative cooling mechanisms like convection and evaporation.

  47. Norman says:

    Gordon Robertson

    So you can’t say I did not show you, I am sending you a link to an experiment where Stefan-Boltzmann Law holds at much colder temperatures than your platinum heated metal used in the original experiment. It is still warmer than room temperature but much colder than your range. The Law holds. It is considered a science Law because (like Gravity) it holds for all experimental tests so far.

    https://stuff.lanowen.com/Physics/Labs/Phys%20260L/Lab4/Lab_4_Stafan-Boltzmann-Law.pdf

  48. Gordon Robertson says:

    clint…”Like all of “climate science”, gordon does not understand “flux”. This is the short term used for the radiant flux calculated from the Stefan-Boltzmann Law. That flux being the photons emitted from a surface, based on its temperature”.

    ***

    And what, pray tell, is emitted from a surface? It is electromagnetic energy. Flux is simply a mathematical concept to help us visualize the EM and quantify it. With a pure magnetic flux, the flux is a reference to the magnetic field strength around a magnet, again, a visualization aid.

    It is EM intensity that is measured by S-B.

    Here’s a good one. A flux meter is used to measure magnetic flux. It works by moving a coil of wires in a magnetic field and measuring the voltage/current induced in the coil. Therefore, lines of force per unit area are measured using a voltage just as temperature is a measure of the expansion of mercury in a mercury thermometer.

    If a piece of iron is held close to a magnet, a physical force is developed that draws the iron to the magnetic. If we want to determine the strength of the magnetic flux field, we can state it in webers, where 1 weber = 10^8 lines of force. Of course no one can see lines of force since they are mathematical visualization concepts.

    I mean, how the heck would you measure the number of lines of force? It’s nothing more than a figment of the human imagination, quantified imaginatively in a relative manner. Something is definitely there causing a force ut we have no idea what it is physically.

    It is unfortunate that some ijits came up with the idea of honouring physicists by renaming terms that can be visualized, like lines of force or flux density, with human names.

    The human ego knows no bounds.

    With electrically-operated relays, there is a pole piece with wires wound around it that produces a magnetic field when current runs through the coils. Essentially, it is an electromagnet. The coil has a steel pole piece in the middle to concentrate magnetic flux, which flows through the core like an electric current, through the armature and back into the core. The armature is steel and on a hinge with a spring so it can be attracted to the magnetic pole piece and release when the current is stopped.

    Incorporated in most relays is a flux gap, which is a variable gap between the pole piece and the armature, that controls the intensity of the magnetic flux by varying an air gap over which the flux must flow. Varying the air gap, one can control the speed at which the relay activates and releases.

    Here, the word flux is used to describe an unknown. We have no idea what a magnetic field is, or an electric field for that matter. However, we need words to describe the unknown phenomena, hence the word flux.

    ***

    Clint ruminates even more incorrectly…

    “There is a lot of confusion about this simple, straight-forward concept. A flux is not the same as energy. The photons have energy, but the flux cannot be treated as energy. For example, energy can be treated as a quantity, that is, it can be added, subtracted and averaged. Energy is said to be “conserved”. But flux, except in very special cases, cannot be added, subtracted, or averaged. “Flux” is NOT conserved”.

    ***

    Utter confusion. Flux does not exist, it is a concept developed by humans to aid in visualization. Talking about it being conserved, or not, is plain silly. How does one conserve something that is not there, like time? The idea was introduced by Newton in a generalized way to enable him to define the instantaneous rate of change of a function.

    Something is there but we don’t know what it is or what form it takes. In lieu of that, we invented a visualization and called it flux.

    Put another way, if there is no electromagnetic energy flowing through an area there can be no flux. Fourier called heat flow a flux and if there is no heat flowing, there is no flux.

    Ergo, flux represents a flow of energy.

    Scientists in the 19th century, like Faraday, Oersted, and Lenz, discovered ‘something’ happening around a conductor when a direct electric current flowed in the conductor. ‘Something’ was deflecting a compass needle. They had to call it something, so they called it flux. In that case, the flux was a name for an electromagnetic field, although no one understood the relationship between electric charges flowing in a conductor and electric and/or magnetic fields.

    Why do I know this? I have been indoctrinated in it since an early age in the field of electronics. We were taught all this in basic electronics.

  49. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    Picture how big the Hoover Dam is. An absolute unit. The Hoover Dam has a power capacity of 2 gigawatts (GW).

    The solar farm that the Admin just cancelled could have produces 6.2 GW of power. That’s more than 3 Hoover Dams.

    https://bsky.app/profile/costasamaras.com/post/3m2srukufxc2s

    Prices will go up.

    Will Donald be able to blame Joe?

  50. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    DREMT is wrong:

    The only way you can say the irradiance for the Earth is approx. 240 W/m^2 is if you average the input over at least 24 hours. That’s just a fact, barry. Nobody else on your side of the debate would even dispute it. Once again I’m getting pushback for being correct!

    Here’s how:

    1/ The value of 240 W/m² represents an instantaneous global average, not a 24-hour time average.

    2/ The factor of ¼ is not a temporal averaging factor, but a geometric one that arises from the ratio of the Earth’s cross-sectional area intercepting sunlight to its total surface area.

    3/ This geometric relationship holds independently of time and even for a non-rotating planet.

    4/ The value of 240 W/m² is the global mean absorbed solar radiation, not the incident irradiance.

    • DREMT says:

      Premise 1) We wish to find a figure for the irradiance of the Earth involving the entire Earth’s surface.
      Premise 2) The entire Earth’s surface is only irradiated once it has completed one full rotation.

      Therefore:

      Conclusion: A figure for the irradiance of the Earth involving the entire Earth’s surface is necessarily “time-averaged” over at least 24 hours.

      QED.

    • DREMT says:

      “1/ The value of 240 W/m² represents an instantaneous global average, not a 24-hour time average.”

      At any instant, half the globe is not irradiated.

      “2/ The factor of ¼ is…a geometric one that arises from the ratio of the Earth’s cross-sectional area intercepting sunlight to its total surface area.”

      Understood since high school.

      “3/ This geometric relationship holds independently of time and even for a non-rotating planet.”

      Half of a non-rotating planet will never be irradiated, assuming there’s only one energy source.

      “4/ The value of 240 W/m² is the global mean absorbed solar radiation, not the incident irradiance.”

      And, the argument made in my 10:25 AM comment remains correct, regardless.

    • Clint R says:

      Ark doesn’t understand the science. Earth warmed by 4 sources each providing 240 W/m² to the surface and equally spaced around the equator would only raise Earth to 255K (0 °F, -18 °C).

      That’s just typical for the GHE cultists. They have no knowledge of radiative physics and thermodynamics, and they can’t learn….

      • stephen p anderson says:

        Several things falsify GHE theory. (1) Continuity Equation, (2) Equivalence Principle, and (3) The Lapse Rate. For cultists like Ark and Willard, political correctness is way more important than scientific correctness.

      • Clint R says:

        Yes Stephen, it’s nonsense. Sad that so many “scientists” are apparently unable to debunk it. One has to wonder if ego and funding are not factors.

        Even people with little science can see through the hoax. Just watching the cult kids play here is enough for people with common sense to know that “dog won’t hunt”.

      • stephen p anderson says:

        They are afraid of all the psychopathic bullies on the left. Leftism truly is a mental disorder affecting a large percentage of the population. Look what it has done to California and New York. The sane are fleeing those states in droves.

    • Willard says:

      You might also like:

      The convicted felon and current President of the United States officially launched a new government website dubbed DonaldRx during a press conference at the White House on Friday. It’s very Donaldy. And we mean that in the worst way possible.

      https://gizmodo.com/trumprx-is-a-narcissistic-ai-generated-nightmare-2000671309

    • Bindidon says:

      Roy Spencer appears to be the primary victim of his own blog’s “philosophy” of preserving freedom of speech.

      Despite his explicit request to the blog posters to finally stop their endless denying, they continue to publish their utter nonsense.

      https://www.drroyspencer.com/2024/08/yes-the-greenhouse-effect-is-like-a-real-greenhouse-and-other-odds-and-ends/

      *
      These stupid, ignorant boys truly lack any respect, hence deserve themselves none.

      • Clint R says:

        Bindi, if you would like a proper debunking of any “experiment” that claims “cold” can warm “hot”, I’m willing to do it if you will agree to not comment here for 90 days.

        If I can find at least 5 things wrong with it, you must also agree to not comment for an additional 90 days.

        So, pick out your best “experiment”. You need a vacation anyway….

      • DREMT says:

        The pushback for being correct continues…

        It’s not even a controversial point, that’s the funny thing. That the approx. 240 W/m^2 figure for irradiance of the Earth necessarily involves “time-averaging” over at least 24 hours would not even be disputed by any serious scientist. That’s not the controversial part of the overall argument.

        The only thing I got wrong was saying to barry, “nobody else on your side of the debate would even dispute it”. Clearly, in fact there are indeed other people whose views align with barry that are prepared to kick up a fuss about irrefutable facts for some reason.

        I bet if I simply posted a comment saying the Earth was round I would get pushback from the usual suspects on here…

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Bindidon.

        Dr Spencer, in the post you linked to, was reminding us that great people talk about ideas, average people talk about events, and small people talk about other people.

        IOW he wants us to the great people.

        Thanks for the reminder.

      • DREMT says:

        Well, the “idea” is that it’s not even remotely controversial to say the approx. 240 W/m^2 value for irradiance is necessarily “time-averaged” over at least 24 hours.

    • DREMT says:

      Wait until these guys learn that the approx. 240 W/m^2 value for irradiance is typically “time-averaged” over a full year, to account for seasonal variation…

      • Nate says:

        Science understands that both the spatial average and the temporal average global flux is 240 W/m2.

        There is no sound rationale to deny this.

      • DREMT says:

        I’m correct, Nate.

      • Nate says:

        Thats called you are high on your own supply.

        Just saying ‘Im correct’ is not an argument, and since you employ this non-argument way too often, you have lost all credibility.

        Too bad.

      • DREMT says:

        Nate, I’m not going to have the same discussion with you in two different places. That would just be stupid. Take it down-thread.

  51. Ian Brown says:

    To much false information ,says Willard, you post a link from a biased group, i get my information from the horses mouth,i have friends and family in Australia from Wagawaga to Durban ,and they all say the same thing,ever since the forced transition prices have increased yearly,the only people who really benefit from this ,are the ones rich enough to install their own solar and battery back up.it benefits no one,other than the rich.as for the environment,dont get me started, all this destruction because of a none existent climate crisis, at least Queensland have seen the light,and committed themselves to coal untill at least 2046.

    • Willard says:

      Ian, you rant and rant and again expect room service. Australia has open electricity markets, a bit like ERCOT. There, for reasons troglodytes may never understand, it costs more. Regulated markets are cheaper, in general but also in Australia. At least unless you’re not stuck with private rentier monopolies like in the Deep South.

      If you reduce energy sources, prices increase; renewables are an energy sources. Ask your buddies if they can do syllogisms. If not, tell them this: when coal or gas goes up, electricity goes up.
      If everybody uses coal or gas, both go up. When renewables go up, well we don’t know about that because they always go down.

      Also, nobody should be living in WA. Not enough people for too big of a grid. When they’ll go solar and tide, I’ll reconsider. Only half-joking. The only WA dude I know is quite a rascal. Can’t even comment here anymore. All work and no play made him a dull boy.

  52. Gordon Robertson says:

    norman…”Gordon Robertson

    So you can’t say I did not show you, I am sending you a link to an experiment where Stefan-Boltzmann Law holds at much colder temperatures than your platinum heated metal used in the original experiment. It is still warmer than room temperature but much colder than your range. The Law holds. It is considered a science Law because (like Gravity) it holds for all experimental tests so far.

    https://stuff.lanowen.com/Physics/Labs/Phys%20260L/Lab4/Lab_4_Stafan-Boltzmann-Law.pdf

    ***

    Norman…have you actually read through and understood this so called experiment? It’s not actually an experiment but a lab class for undergrads aimed at using pseudo-science to convince the naive that it actually proves S-B at room temperature.

    The scientific method:

    1)state your theory
    2)sate your method
    3)describe your equipment and material
    4) make your observations
    5)draw your conclusions to back your theory.

    That method is not followed here.

    1)it begins with a theory already established in a temperature range of about 500C to 1200C. In other words, it begins at a conclusion and sets out to prove it, albeit badly. Then it interpolates the results outside that range using inference.

    2)it fails to adequately describe the equipment.

    It uses a thermistor, which is a resistor that is sensitive to HEAT. A thermistor is of no use detecting infrared. It may respond somewhat to a high intensity IR but not as a useful devise for detecting IR accurately. Here. hopefully, they use it only to measure surface temperature.

    It uses a Leslie cube which is a cube filled with hot water. The sides of the cube are painted with different colours to change the emissivity of each side. A thermistor is of no use detecting IT intensity from any face of the cube unless you attach the thermistor directly to the faces of the cube, in which case it measures heat, not IR.

    As an aside, this reminds me of an experiment we were offered in electrical engineering where the voltage current relationship in a resistor was presented as a straight-line curve on an oscilloscope. When I told the lab instructor that you can’t do that he nearly crapped himself.

    Smoke and mirrors!!! If you measure the the DC voltage across a resistor using an oscilloscope, it gives you a straight line representation on the scope, above a zero base line. But, how do you represent current, which a scope cannot measure? You use smoke and mirrors.

    You insert another resistor into the circuit and input that into the scope y-axis as another voltage, and it resolves the two inputs as a sloped straight line. If you put two AC signals of the same frequency into the vertical and horizontal inputs, the scope resolves them as a circle, called a Lissajous figure. If the ratio between frequencies is 2:1, the scope produces a figure of eight, and so on.

    Oscilloscopes measure voltages, not currents. They can only e used to measure a current by measuring the voltage across a resistor then using Ohm’s Law.

    This lab instructor in the S-B experiment is only pulling the wool over the eyes of gullible students by trying to convince them that S-B applies at room temperature. They are doing nothing more than using slight of hand to do it.

    They begin by offering a table of thermistor readings with the note…

    “TABLE I: Thermistor measurements along with the calculated Temperatures for several Leslie cubes, as well as the sensor measurements from the Thermopile for all 4 sides of the cubes”.

    Note the ‘calculated temperatures’ slipped in there.

    Excuse me? They have not described the cube or a thermopile, which also measures heat, presuming both can be used to measure IR. Later, they use radiation from the thermopile as a basis for an IR measurement, without measuring the IR intensity directly, which cannot be done. This is a fundamental mistake, presuming essentially that heat and IR are the same thing. EM is an electric field orthogonal to a magnetic field and contains no heat.

    This is shoddy reasoning, that somehow, a cube filled with hot water is only radiating IR and that the radiated IR is heat. Not so. Heat and IR have essentially nothing in common. Most of the heat from the water is conducted through the cube faces and is dissipated mainly through air molecules absorbing the heat directly.

    I might add that Tyndall’s original experiment, in which he discovered IR being absorbed by CO2, made the same error. They used a very primitive thermopile to detect the IR, claiming the IR as heat. I am not disputing his claim that CO2 can absorb IR, only that the experiment as a whole is flawed due to the use of a thermopile, which measures heat, not IR.

    There is no way, in this experiment, to ascertain how much of the heat dissipated is due to direct conduction to air molecules and how much is radiated via IR. This is the same error included in the AGW theory, where it is presumed that most of the Earth’s surface heat dissipation is due to IR emission.

    They go on and on making inferences based on calculations. In the conclusions they state…

    “This experiment was able to confirm the Stefan-Boltzmann Law, at low temperatures using Leslie Cube’s at various
    temperatures to measuring the infrared radiation of various materials at various temperatures and was confirmed to
    be dependent on T4”.

    At no time in the entire experiment did they ****MEASURE**** IR intensity, they simply inferred it using Planck and S-B itself. In other words, they used methodology and inference equally to arrive at their conclusion.

  53. Gordon Robertson says:

    ark….”Here’s how:

    1/ The value of 240 W/m² represents an instantaneous global average, not a 24-hour time average”.

    ***

    The 240 w/m^2 is based on the calculated solar power at TOA which itself is misleading. It is not possible to calculate a meaningful intensity over a spectrum of frequencies as broad as the solar spectrum. That’s especially true when the intensity varies with frequency with most power concentrated in the UV band.

    Skin burning and skin cancer are caused by a tiny part of the solar spectrum, in the UV band. The meaning is clear, most solar EM intensity is concentrated in the UV spectrum. That means e = hf was wrong and Planck had to include an exponential term in his equation to fudge his curve.

    ———

    “2/ The factor of ¼ is not a temporal averaging factor, but a geometric one that arises from the ratio of the Earth’s cross-sectional area intercepting sunlight to its total surface area”.

    ***

    Don’t forget, the Earth’s axis is tilted toward and away from the Sun during one orbit. That causes the Arctic and Antarctic to suffer from low and no solar intensities. Geometry does not work very well with such annual variations and Earth’s temperatures are far more due to that tilt factor than any trace gas.

    ——–
    “3/ This geometric relationship holds independently of time and even for a non-rotating planet”.

    ***

    Does not hold for any planet since it is a constant trying to represent a very dynamic process.

    ——–
    “4/ The value of 240 W/m² is the global mean absorbed solar radiation, not the incident irradiance”.

    ***

    The value is a fictitious value fabricated by minds trying to establish a moot point, that a trace gas is dangerously warming our atmosphere/planet. It’s akin to the fictitious global average temperature.

    • studentb says:

      Sad. I must award a giant F.

      On the bright side, I hear there is a school for delinquent engineers. I am sure GR can be rehabilitated.

  54. Willard says:

    SOLAR MIMINUM UPDATE

    The hundreds of thousands of homeowners who have expiring flood insurance policies under the NFIP are unable to renew them while the authorization is lapsed. The program will not be able to ensure payment of claims if a major flood drains its reserve funds, and experts predict that the ongoing lapse could affect more than 1,000 real estate sales each day.

    Republican leaders have said numerous times that Congress has to fund the government before other priorities can be negotiated, but there is nothing stopping lawmakers from bringing legislation to the floor during a shutdown.

    https://www.eenews.net/articles/lawmakers-cast-blame-for-flood-insurance-lapse-but-do-little-about-it/

    Another day, another occasion for Donald to DOGE his obligations, another win!

    • bill hunter says:

      Willard wants a specialty sammich made to order! when the dems should simply agree to open the government for everybody.

      • Willard says:

        Gill wants to shield his troglodyte buddies from any responsibility by misconstruing the concept of sammich request.

        Next he’s gonna argue like his best billionaire buddy who, right after calling COVID restrictions “fascism” and saying that SEC penalties for announcing a fake leveraged buyout of Tesla trampled on his first amendment free speech protections, that the “only solution” is to send jackboots on the ground:

        https://www.sfchronicle.com/sf/article/elon-musk-benioff-federal-troops-san-francisco-21097096.php

        LOL!

      • bill hunter says:

        the dems don’t want to open the government for everyone and treat everyone equally.

        instead they want this controversy and instead of accepting the sammich prepared by the majority they want thousands of sammiches custom prepared so they can cherry pick politically to their own benefit.

        obviously Willard isn’t a real fan of democracy he just pretends to be when it suits him.

      • Willard says:

        Gill has a very hard time grokking “there is nothing stopping lawmakers from bringing legislation to the floor during a shutdown”.

        Perhaps he should ask Grok?

        Meanwhile, he condones Russ Vought doing illegal things. But even if it was legal, imagine the ad:

        “Come work for the GOP, where you randomly won’t be paid whenever Congress is dysfunctional.”

        Signed by the GOP, with tagline – because we like it dysfunctional.

        Too bad there’s no blue pill for that, Mike Johnson!

      • bill hunter says:

        legislation has been on the floor since before the government shutdown to continue funding the government but Willard wants a different sammich made especially for him.

      • Willard says:

        Gill fabricates once more.

        It’d be easy for the gubmint to pass a bill to keep food assistance programmes open. Or to pay employees, which they are legally bound to do. Or to meet every single of their other payment obligation.

        Including for insurance.

        But the GOP, like our troglodytes, is all bluster and no substance. Its members prefer performative outrage to real leadership.

        And they’re still getting paid.

        ROFL!

      • bill hunter says:

        Willard fabricates an invalid argument that only a part of federal budget goes to pay someone that the government is obligated to part. and the only part he wants to selectively pass is the part he sees to be most beneficial to himself.

        the custom sammich orders are getting out of control.

      • Willard says:

        So obviously Gill can’t get “there is nothing stopping lawmakers from bringing legislation to the floor during a shutdown”.

        Let’s try with three numbers:

        15M — the number of people Republicans want to kick off health care

        20M — the number of people Republicans want to 2x health premiums for

        0 — the number of times Republicans have called the House back to reopen the government.

        Will he be able to feign ignorance once more?

      • bill hunter says:

        Willard says:

        So obviously Gill can’t get “there is nothing stopping lawmakers from bringing legislation to the floor during a shutdown”.

        Let’s try with three numbers:

        15M — the number of people Republicans want to kick off health care

        15M – the number of illegal immigrants.

        20M — the number of people Republicans want to 2x health premiums for

        those were passed by the democrats with an expiration date set by the democrats in 2021 as a temporary assistance due to the pandemic. the pandemic has been over for years now.

        0 — the number of times Republicans have called the House back to reopen the government.

        thats because the house bill has been passed and is now waiting for senate approval. the dems are making government worker families to go without food and/or shelter to get their custom sammich.

      • Willard says:

        Gill speaks as if Russ Vought wasn’t on the troglodytes’ side.

        He might as well argue that peeping Mike isn’t responsible for not swearing in Adelita!.

        Roy’s troglodytes are as disingenuous as the GOP.

      • bill hunter says:

        Evidence please.

      • Willard says:

        Step 2 – Sammich Request

  55. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    Book of Radiance, Chapter 1, Verses 1-6

    1/ And lo, there arose among the doubters one who said, “Behold, flux in needeth not equal flux out, for the day shineth not upon all the Earth at once.

    2/ And the wise did smite their foreheads, saying, “Verily, thou hast mistaken a shadow for the Sun.

    3/ For he measureth the instant and calleth it eternity, and counteth the hemisphere for the whole, forgetting that the sphere turneth ever beneath the light.

    4/ Knowest thou not that geometry, not the clock, divideth the power by four? And that this was established from the first rotation, yea, even before thy spreadsheet was born?

    5/ Surely the Earth needeth not wait a day to know her share of the Sun, for her balance is written in area, not in hours.

    6/ Therefore is it spoken: He that confuseth the moment with the mean shall wander forever in the desert of false fluxes, crying “Time average!” where none is needed.

    • DREMT says:

      And yea, verily, Google was asked:

      “Is the 240 W/m^2 figure for irradiance time-averaged over at least 24 hours?“

      And it respondeth with:

      “Yes, the figure of 240 W/m² for Earth’s irradiance is an average value that is calculated over a 24-hour cycle and across the entire surface of the globe.”

    • DREMT says:

      In fact, you will find that the approx. 240 W/m^2 figure is typically averaged over an entire year. As I said up-thread, and you ignored. You don’t have to remain ignorant, Arkady, you’re never too old to learn basic facts about climate science.

      Exactly how old are you pretending to be, again? 80? 90?

    • DREMT says:

      “Knowest thou not that geometry, not the clock, divideth the power by four?”

      I never said that the “divide by four” was anything other than related to geometry. If you “divideth the power by four” you are effectively spreading the irradiance over the entire surface area of the Earth. What I am pointing out is that the entire surface area of the Earth only receives the light after one complete rotation. So no, I am also not “forgetting that the sphere turneth ever beneath the light”.

      You can only call the 240 W/m^2 figure an “instantaneous global average” if you are prepared to average irradiance over surface area not receiving the irradiance! That would give you an artificially low and unrealistic number. A more realistic “instantaneous global average” would in fact be 480 W/m^2.

      In any case, you can’t deny that in practice, the 240 W/m^2 figure is “time-averaged” over at least 24 hours. I just get people pushing back when I’m obviously correct about something, because it’s me!

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        You now seem to be saying that, for a rotating Earth the instantaneous a b s o r b e d flux (1-α)So/4 is somehow less than it would be for a tidally locked Earth.

        IOW, Thou hast cast aside the law of balance, and forgotten the commandment of energy, which saith: What cometh in, must also go forth.

        Thus it is written: Flux in and flux out are ever joined; what God and geometry have made one, let not the doubters put asunder.

      • DREMT says:

        “You now seem to be saying that, for a rotating Earth the instantaneous a b s o r b e d flux (1-α)So/4 is somehow less than it would be for a tidally locked Earth.”

        A more realistic instantaneous absorbed flux for a rotating Earth is the same as it would be for a non-rotating Earth – 480 W/m^2.

      • Clint R says:

        Glad to see you understand something, Ark. You correctly make a distinction between “rotating” and “tidally locked”. (Although “tidally locked” is just a nonsense phrase for “not rotating”.)

        But, you’re still confusing energy with flux. That’s one of the mistakes in “climate science”. Flux cannot be divided, but energy can. Also, “flux-in and flux-out” are not the same for Earth. Even energy-in and energy-out are not the same.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        DREMT.

        Good luck finding a credible source in support of your “more realistic instantaneous a b s o r b e d flux… 480 W/m^2.

      • DREMT says:

        No source required – just the ability to think for yourself and understand that at any instant, the Earth receives radiation from the Sun over only half the surface area that it is emitting from. So, if we accept that the Earth emits approx. 240 W/m^2 from its entire surface area, then it will be receiving 480 W/m^2, spatially averaged, over the lit hemisphere in that instant.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        No source required – just the ability to think for yourself…

        So, it’s just in your head. Got it.

      • DREMT says:

        If you really want what you would probably consider a “credible source”, then try the Green Plate Effect, from Eli Rabett. Nobody had any problems accepting that the Blue Plate, on its own, receives 400 W/m^2 on one side (equivalent to the “lit hemisphere”) and emits 200 W/m^2 from its entire surface area, at equilibrium. It’s exactly the same principle.

      • Willard says:

        Gemini:

        “As a geometrical sphere (or more accurately, a spheroid), Earth has only one continuous, outer surface.”

      • Willard says:

        A quick reminder on Sky Dragon cranks:

        https://xkcd.com/3155/

    • Nate says:

      Google/AI

      What is the spatially averaged abs.orbed solar flux?

      “The spatially averaged absorbed solar flux is the average amount of solar energy absorbed by a planet’s surface and atmosphere over a specific area. For Earth, the globally averaged absorbed solar flux is approximately 238 W/m2”

      Some people never learn.

      • DREMT says:

        I’m correct, Nate.

      • Nate says:

        In your own mind. In reality, obviously not.

      • DREMT says:

        “Can you average irradiance over surface area not receiving that irradiance?”

        Returns:

        “No, you cannot average irradiance over a surface area that is not receiving it, because irradiance is defined as the power per unit area that is falling on the surface“.

      • Willard says:

        Gemini also says:

        “One watt is equivalent to:

        One joule of energy transferred per second

        And it also says:

        “Yes, a second is significantly shorter than a year.”

      • Nate says:

        Re: “spatially averaged global flux”

        Google/AI correctly answers

        “For Earth, the globally averaged absorbed solar flux is approximately 238 W/m2”

        And if you want to find a spatially averaged global X, where X can be anything, you have to look at the value at every location (0 or not 0), sum it up, and divide by global surface area.

        We dont remove areas that have 0 from the global surface area.

        That would not give an accurate global average.

      • DREMT says:

        Premise 1) We wish to find a figure for the irradiance of the Earth involving the entire Earth’s surface.
        Premise 2) The entire Earth’s surface is only irradiated once it has completed one full rotation.

        Therefore:

        Conclusion: A figure for the irradiance of the Earth involving the entire Earth’s surface is necessarily “time-averaged” over at least 24 hours.

        QED.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Premise 1) (1-α)So/4

        Premise 2) (1-α)So/4

        Therefore:

        Conclusion: Always (1-α)So/4

        QED

      • DREMT says:

        Yes…sadly, that about sums up your argument, Arkady. You seem unable to take on board new information. I already said to you:

        “If you “divideth the [flux] by four” you are effectively spreading the irradiance over the entire surface area of the Earth. What I am pointing out is that the entire surface area of the Earth only receives the light after one complete rotation. So no, I am also not “forgetting that the sphere turneth ever beneath the light”.

        And, you are completely non-responsive to that new information. You simply continue to chant, “divide by four”, “divide by four”, over and over again.

        Pointless!

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        You are completely non-responsive to the geometry and conservation principles involved: Energy in = Energy out.

        (1-α)SoπR² = 4πR²σT^4

        Pointless!

      • DREMT says:

        But, I agree – typically, energy (J) in does have to equal energy (J) out.

        The mistake you are making up-thread is to consider that flux (W/m^2) in has to equal flux (W/m^2) out!

        Down here, I’m perfectly happy to accept a figure for approx. 240 W/m^2 for the irradiance of the Earth…so long as it’s understood that’s “time-averaged” – with all the criticisms that go along with such “time-averaged” values.

        Who knows, if we ever get past the pushback I’m receiving on this not-at-all controversial issue, we might be able to proceed to discussing the controversial part!

      • Clint R says:

        Ark and Nate will probably NEVER get it. Ark is now converting to energy by multiplying Earth’s surface area by the bogus flux. Multiplying by “bogus” results in “bogus”.

        And poor Nate is so confused he doesn’t even know his own cult’s “science”. He believes in “238 W/m2” for absorbed solar, ignoring NASA’s claim of “163 W/m²”.

        They can’t even understand their own nonsense….

      • Nate says:

        “Can you average irradiance over surface area not receiving that irradiance?”

        Silly queustion.

        No one here is saying average the flux only on the non-irradiated side to find the irradiance on the other side!

        Of course its answer is no.

        “No, you cannot average irradiance over a surface area that is not receiving it, because irradiance is defined as the power per unit area that is falling on the surface“.

        For the whole Earth, the surface is the surface of the whole Earth obviously. And the spatial average for THAT surface is 238 W/m2, same as the temporal average.

      • DREMT says:

        Nate tries to dream up some ridiculous interpretation of my question.

        The question is clear, the answer is clear.

        You seem to need to push back on this issue. I have no idea why.

        “No, you cannot average irradiance over a surface area that is not receiving it, because irradiance is defined as the power per unit area that is falling on the surface“.

        The irradiance “falls only on the lit surface”, obviously. By definition, then, you cannot average irradiance over the surface area that is not receiving it, i.e. the side of the object that is not irradiated in that moment!

        This goes back to my very first comment this month, which I intended to be my only comment:

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/2025/10/uah-v6-1-global-temperature-update-for-september-2025-0-53-deg-c/#comment-1717320

        You guys really do everything in your power to assert that “flux in” must always equal “flux out”. As I said, and you now prove once again, even going so far as to try to redefine what “irradiance” is!

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        DREMT.

        Of course you find it inconvenient but it’s called a law for a reason, it applies everywhere, “up-thread” and “Down here.

        All I’ve done is write the longhand form of the equation because you were triggered by the “divide by four” version.

      • DREMT says:

        Arkady, the law doesn’t apply to flux (W/m^2), it applies to energy (J). There’s no problem with energy conservation in anything that I’m saying, either up-thread or down here.

        You need to stop bashing your straw men and start listening to what the adults are saying. I know, it’s hard being a teenager. I remember. But, there’s no need for you to go online impersonating an 80-year old man with 50 years engineering experience just because nobody takes you seriously out in the real world.

      • Willard says:

        Gemini:

        “In a climate model, energy is typically expressed and analyzed in terms of fluxes.”

      • DREMT says:

        Nate, the approx. 240 W/m^2 figure for irradiance is a spatial and temporal average, as explained, and not refuted. Discussion over. No need for another month’s back and forth.

      • Clint R says:

        It appears the cult kids need a refresher:

        Why the “Earth’s Energy Budget” graphic is nonsense.

        https://postimg.cc/yJFTRZzW

        #1 Flux does NOT balance.

        Radiative flux is not a conserved quantity. That means it does not need to “balance”. It’s very possible to have more flux coming in than going out. For example, a hypothetical sphere receiving 960 W/m² would be emitting 240 W/m². “960” does not equal “240”. The cult tries to treat flux as energy. Energy is a conserved quantity, flux is not conserved.

        #2 Flux does NOT average.

        Because of the non-linear nature of radiative flux, it can not be averaged.

        #3 The incoming solar is NOT 340.4 W/m².

        The cult has divided the solar constant, about 1370 W/m², by 4. Radiative flux can not be simply divided!

        #4 The absorbed solar is NOT 163.3 W/m².

        After dividing solar constant by 4, they then adjust for albedo. Then, they adjust again for more albedo. Reducing solar to a measly 163 W/m² which would correspond to a temperature of about 232K (-43°F, -42°C). Solar panels would not work. That flux couldn’t even melt ice!

        #5 The cult can’t even get the arithmetic right.

        Solar does not add correctly 340.4 – 77 – 22.9 – 77.1 = 163.4, NOT 163.3. (I know it’s a petty point, but it’s in the graphic. The cult kids couldn’t even catch an arithmetic error!)

        #6 The 239.9 W/m² is bogus.

        No one knows what Earth’s emitted “average” flux is. A hypothetical sphere at 288K would be emitting 390 W/m². At some point in space, that same flux would be reduced to 239.9 W/m², but it would also be reduced to 139.9 W/m², or 39.9 W/m², or any value between 390 and 0 W/m², at distance, due to the Inverse Square Law. Claiming Earth emits 239.9 W/m² is just more fraud.

        #7 Back-radiation of 340.3 W/m² cannot warm a 288K surface.

        An expensive IR thermometer measures overhead clear sky at about -50°F. But 340.3 W/m² corresponds to 41°F! Compare the bogus 340.3 back radiation with the bogus “absorbed solar” of 163.3 W/m². In cult “science”, the sky is warming Earth more than Sun!!! That ain’t science, it’s fraud.

        #8 Back-radiation is not all CO2.

        There are several radiative gases in the atmosphere. CO2 is one of the least effective, as it has a very limited line spectrum from Earth’s surface emission, specifically the 15μ photon, which carries less energy than the WDL photon from an ice cube.

        #9 Assigning some values of flux to thermals and latent heat is another prime example of the fraud.

        How did they conjure up values of W/m² for thermals and latent heat? That ain’t science!

        #10 Earth’s outgoing energy seldom matches the incoming energy.

        In fact, the outgoing energy is typically LESS than the incoming due to “losses” like molecular collisions, weather, and photosynthesis. The solar energy gets converted to other forms of energy than thermal, so never leaves the system.

        #11 The clouds only emit!

        In the cult’s bogus energy “budget”, clouds are only emitting. It’s as if the clouds have some internal energy source.

        *****

        Well if anyone is interested in reality, that should be enough to completely debunk the “Earth Energy Budget”. But, there’s one more important point. They end up with a “net absorbed” of 0.6 W/m². The implication is that Earth is accumulating energy. But notice they NEVER provide any error margins. All their values are meant to be taken as absolute. That is, they get to make up whatever they want.

        Photosynthesis by itself is estimated to be about 2% of solar. After albedo, that amounts to about 19.2 W/m². If you use their “divide-by-4” fallacy, it still means 4.8 W/m² is devoted to photosynthesis. That’s 8 times the bogus 0.6 W/m²! And I suspect their other errors are even larger.

        It’s all bogus, and would make great comedy if so much money, and negative impacts on society, weren’t involved.

        But, there was one thing they got correct. Notice in the distribution of solar (yellow arrows to left) — the 77 W/m² And the 22.9 W/m². Notice the descriptions, “reflected by clouds and atmosphere” and “reflected by surface”. They are admitting flux can be reflected. Maybe the cult kids will now accept that flux can be reflected….

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        DREMT at 6:40 PM

        Arkady, the law doesn’t apply to flux (W/m^2), it applies to energy (J). There’s no problem with energy conservation in anything that I’m saying, either up-thread or down here.

        In the planetary context, the Law of Conservation of Energy necessarily involves energy flows (fluxes) since, without flux, conservation is trivial.

        Your confusion is elementary.

        You need to stop bashing your straw men and start listening to what the adults are saying. I know, it’s hard being a teenager. I remember. But, there’s no need for you to go online impersonating an 80-year old man with 50 years engineering experience just because nobody takes you seriously out in the real world.

        Your sophomoric attempt to impugn my character merely confirms that I’ve already won the argument.

        Sorry for your loss.

      • DREMT says:

        You haven’t listened to a word I’ve said, and I couldn’t care less if you think you’ve won something. Give yourself a pat on the back, if you wish, Arkady.

      • Nate says:

        “You seem to need to push back on this issue. I have no idea why.”

        On the contrary, the situation is that I found via your favorite Google/AI that the spatial average absorbed flux is 238 W/m2.

        And there is absolutely no controversy about this. It is a geometrical fact, and easily calculated from the know parameters of the sun and Earth.

        YOU, need to deny this fact. Who knows why.

        As always, you think you know better than scientists, and all valid sources

      • DREMT says:

        It’s the spatial and temporal average, so if you ask it what the spatial average is, of course it’s going to give you that answer.

        Ask it a more sensible question:

        “Is the 240 W/m^2 figure for solar irradiance at TOA a spatial and temporal average?”

        and you will get a more sensible answer:

        “Yes, the 240 W/m^2 figure is a spatial and temporal average, specifically representing the global average of solar energy absorbed by the Earth, not the incoming solar irradiance at the top of the atmosphere (TOA).”

      • Clint R says:

        I realize Ark, Nate, and Willard will NEVER understand any of this. So, for any adults interested:

        Photons emitted from a surface fall in the category of a “radiative flux”. It may just be called “flux”. But, if it involves photons emitted from a surface, it has units of “W/m²”. It may be called “energy flux” by the unwashed, but it is actually a “power/flux”. And, since “power” is not conserved, a power/flux is certainly not conserved.

        Cult children can get so confused that they can’t be un-confused!

      • Nate says:

        There is no reason to keep asking Google confusing, leading questions, when you should be able to do the simple math.

        At any moment in time, the input solar flux, spatially averaged over the globe, is F0(1-alpha)/4.

        Where as you know, F0 is the solar flux at the Earth-sun distance.

        Now continue to obfuscate endlessly.

      • Willard says:

        Gemini:

        “Albedo is a measure of the reflectivity of a surface or a body, indicating the fraction of incident (incoming) light or electromagnetic radiation that it reflects.”

      • Nate says:

        Again, Clint’s brain explodes when confronted with the simple fact that the area involved in this problem is the surface area of the Earth, which is fixed.

        Thus scientists divide energy by this fixed area and talk about the energy input and output of the Earth “per m^2”

        They have no problem or confusion about this. I don’t know why Clint does.

        And everyone in this field can understand that power times time is energy.

        Thus scientists can talk about the average global power input or output per m^2, IOW in flux units.

        They have no problem or confusion about this.

        In fact, they prefer to talk about flux because it is directly related to temperature.

        So there is no problem here at all. Scientists can do simple math, since that is a requirement of their profession.

        Now Clint will continue to insist there is a problem here. But it is not an actual problem, for scientists.

      • DREMT says:

        You can ask it as many times as you like, the answer is always in the affirmative. You get a differently-worded response every time, of course. Here is a more detailed response:

        “Yes, the figure of 240 W/m^2 for solar irradiance at the top of the atmosphere (TOA) is a global, annual average, not a constant value. The actual amount of solar radiation received varies significantly by location, time of day, and season due to factors like Earth’s spherical shape, axial tilt, and atmospheric conditions. The global solar constant, for example, is a much higher average of approximately 1361 W/m^2 at the edge of space, which is then reduced and absorbed as it passes through the atmosphere. 

        The 240 W/m^2 figure represents the total solar energy absorbed by the Earth over the course of a year, averaged across the entire planet’s surface.

        This is different from the solar constant, which is the solar irradiance measured at Earth’s distance from the sun before the effects of the atmosphere are considered.

        The Earth’s actual energy budget is a balance between incoming solar radiation and outgoing thermal radiation to space, with the 240 W/m^2 value reflecting the amount absorbed after reflection and absorption by clouds, aerosols, and gases.”

      • Nate says:

        BTW DREMT,

        There is no logic in this sentence.

        “It’s the spatial and temporal average, so if you ask it what the spatial average is, of course it’s going to give you that answer.”

      • DREMT says:

        “At any moment in time, the input solar flux, spatially averaged over the globe, is F0(1-alpha)/4.”

        Ah, but you can’t spatially average it over the entire globe, at any moment in time. That’s the problem. At any moment in time, only half of the globe is actually receiving the irradiance. So, unless you’re willing to redefine “irradiance”, the 240 W/m^2 value does not represent what is received “at any moment in time”.

      • Clint R says:

        As I have said several times, the cult kids will NEVER understand this. They keep believing “flux” is “energy”. They don’t have enough background to understand that “W/m²” is not “Joules”.

        It seems they are only here to prove me right.

        Works for me….

      • DREMT says:

        “There is no logic in this sentence…”

        What I’m saying is, you are expecting too much of the AI. It’s unlikely to be able to differentiate between “a spatial and temporal average” and just “a spatial average”. So when you ask it for the latter, it’s just going to give you the former. Do you really expect it to put all the information together, and be able to think for itself, “hmmm, well the irradiance is only received on one half of the globe at any one moment, so a more realistic average for what is received at any one moment would actually be 480 W/m^2?”

        Of course not! It’s just going to return the value that gets bandied around the internet the most, 240 W/m^2, and not even realise the problem with that.

        This is why I try to ask it simple questions that lead to a “yes” or “no” type of response. Less chance of it messing up.

      • Nate says:

        “but you can’t spatially average it over the entire globe, at any moment in time.”

        Of course you can. Not an actual rule. Just your assertion.

        Now continue to try to tell scientists that what they are doing is not allowed.

        FyI. there are parts of the poles that recieve no sunlight for months, we still include them in the spatial or temporal average.

      • DREMT says:

        The bizarre, endless, relentless pushback over nothing continues.

        “Of course you can. Not an actual rule. Just your assertion…”

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/2025/10/uah-v6-1-global-temperature-update-for-september-2025-0-53-deg-c/#comment-1718576

      • DREMT says:

        “…in the spatial or temporal average.”

        It’s complete nonsense to try and suggest there’s a “temporal average” all of its own. I mean…how would that even work? Averaged over time but somehow not averaged over the entire surface area of the Earth!? Nonsense. If it’s averaged over time (at least 24 hours) then it’s necessarily averaged over the entire surface area of the Earth. Spatial and temporal.

        There are two things getting discussed here:

        1) An “instantaneous global average” for irradiance, i.e. what is received by the Earth “at any one moment”.
        2) A “spatial and temporal average” for irradiance, i.e. what is received by the Earth over at least 24 hours and therefore over its entire surface area.

        You propose that 1) and 2) are the same value, approx. 240 W/m^2.

        I suggest 480 W/m^2 is more realistic for 1), and 240 W/m^2 works for 2).

        Either way, there is no “temporal average” all of its own!

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        You keep redefining global on the fly. In (1) you mean only the sunlit hemisphere, in (2) the whole globe.

        The correct instantaneous global-mean a b s o r b e d flux is:

        (Sunlit half + Nightside half)/2 =

        (((1-α)So)/2 + 0)/2 = (480+0)/2 = 240 = (1-α)So/4

        QED.

      • DREMT says:

        The instantaneous irradiance for the globe is only on the sunlit half. Obviously. You’re averaging irradiance over surface area not receiving the irradiance! Then you applaud yourself for it.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        There is nothing that can be said by mathematical symbols and relations which cannot also be said by words. The converse, however, is false. Much that can be and is said by words cannot successfully be put into equations, because it is nonsense. When you express an assertion in words only, you are refusing to stand up to the test.

      • DREMT says:

        I went over the maths last month with the simple example of the plate:

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/2025/09/uah-v6-1-global-temperature-update-for-august-2025-0-39-deg-c/#comment-1715262

        It’s the exact same principle, just with bigger numbers.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        Clint says: “#1 Flux does NOT balance. … For example, a hypothetical sphere receiving 960 W/m² would be emitting 240 W/m².”

        Clint, you are exposing a fundamental misunderstanding here. Your sphere is NOT receiving 960 W per square meter of its surface. Every square meter of one entire hemisphere is receiving 0 W. The other hemisphere facing the light source is receiving between 960 W per square meter of surface and 0 W per square meter.

        If the sphere was truly receiving 960 W per square meter of surface, then (in steady-state, of course) it would emit 960 W per square meter of surface.

        The source RADIATES a unidirectional 960 W/m^2 beam toward the sphere.
        The sphere RECEIVES between 0 – 960 W/m^2 on its surface
        The sphere RECEIVES an average of 240 W/m^2 over its surface
        The sphere EMITS an average of 240 W/m^2 over its surface

        Until people clarify (in their writing and in their own thinking) precisely what flex they mean, misunderstandings will just fester.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        DREMT.

        The instantaneous irradiance for the globe is only on the sunlit half. Obviously. You’re averaging irradiance over surface area not receiving the irradiance! Then you applaud yourself for it.

        The globe has Antipodal Points which you want us to pretend do not exist because they don’t fit your narrative.

      • DREMT says:

        “The sphere RECEIVES an average of 240 W/m^2 over its surface…”

        Assuming the sphere is not rotating, then the minimum possible average it can receive is 480 W/m^2 (averaged over the lit hemisphere). An average as low as 240 W/m^2 would require redefining what “irradiance” means.

        This is getting boring…

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        DREMT.

        Tell me you’ve never studied Physics without saying you’ve never studied Physics.

        You are trying to solve a physics problem with philosophy and rhetoric rather than physical principles. Your reasoning is metaphysical, not physical.

        You are arguing the “tree falls in the forest” fallacy: in Physics, the wave exists whether or not someone hears it.

      • Nate says:

        “Ah, but you can’t spatially average it over the entire globe, at any moment in time. That’s the problem. At any moment in time, only half of the globe is actually receiving the irradiance. So, unless you’re willing to redefine “irradiance”, the 240 W/m^2 value does not represent what is received “at any moment in time”.”

        Again DREMT you are weirdly making up strange rules about averaging, that make no sens.

        The surface pf interest is the Earths surface. We want to find the average of quantities over that whole surface.

        We sum the values in every km^2 on the surface then divide by the total km^2 of the Earth.

        There is no change to this calculation if some of the values are 0.

        Because the average for the Earth must include the whole surface area

      • DREMT says:

        Nate, I’m not making up any “rule”. You, on the other hand, are trying to redefine “irradiance”.

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/2025/10/uah-v6-1-global-temperature-update-for-september-2025-0-53-deg-c/#comment-1718576

        That is why you fail. All of you.

      • Nate says:

        Nothing to do with the definition of irradiance, which is flux per unit area of a surface.

        Because we are interested in AVERAGE flux hitting a surface. There is no requirement that the whole surface is receiving flux. For example a disk lit in the center. We can stll determine the average flux over the disk, if that was of interest.

        That is of interest for the Earth. Because the averge flux for the Earth moment to moment will at all times be approx 238 W/m2, approx the same as the average output flux.

        Fact. And in fact it might be of interest to know the variations of this over a day.

        Are these facts that somehow cannot or should not be known?

        If so, that is truly absurd thinking.

      • DREMT says:

        “No, you cannot average irradiance over a surface area that is not receiving it, because irradiance is defined as the power per unit area that is falling on the surface“.

        The irradiance “falls only on the lit surface”, obviously. By definition, then, you cannot average irradiance over the surface area that is not receiving it, i.e. the side of the object that is not irradiated in that moment!

        This goes back to my very first comment this month, which I intended to be my only comment:

        https://www.drroyspencer.com/2025/10/uah-v6-1-global-temperature-update-for-september-2025-0-53-deg-c/#comment-1717320

        You guys really do everything in your power to assert that “flux in” must always equal “flux out”. As I said, and you now prove once again, even going so far as to try to redefine what “irradiance” is!

      • DREMT says:

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_irradiance

        “The average annual solar radiation arriving at the top of the Earth’s atmosphere is about 1361 W/m^2. This represents the power per unit area of solar irradiance across the spherical surface surrounding the Sun with a radius equal to the distance to the Earth (1 AU). This means that the approximately circular disc of the Earth, as viewed from the Sun, receives a roughly stable 1361 W/m^2 at all times. The area of this circular disc is πr^2, in which r is the radius of the Earth. Because the Earth is approximately spherical, it has total area 4πr^2, meaning that the solar radiation arriving at the top of the atmosphere, averaged over the entire surface of the Earth, is simply divided by four to get 340 W/m2. In other words,averaged over the year and the day, the Earth’s atmosphere receives 340 W/m2 from the Sun. This figure is important in radiative forcing.”

        That would then be further adjusted for albedo to get the approx. 240 W/m^2 figure. According to all sources, except the extremists currently pushing back on this blog, the approx. 240 W/m^2 figure for irradiance of the Earth is a spatial and temporal average.

      • DREMT says:

        A more detailed answer from Google on irradiance:

        “No, you cannot average irradiance over a surface area that is not receiving it. Irradiance is defined as the power per unit area, so if a part of the surface area is not receiving any radiation (irradiance of zero), its contribution to the average is zero. Averaging would only include the area that is actually illuminated. Irradiance is a measure of power per area: The formula is E=P/A, where E is irradiance, P is power, and A is the area the power is falling on.

        Zero irradiance: If a portion of the surface area receives no light, the irradiance for that specific area is zero.

        Averaging calculation: When calculating the average irradiance for a system with some parts receiving light and some parts not, you would only sum the power from the illuminated areas and divide by the total illuminated area, not the entire surface area.

        Example: Imagine a solar panel where half is covered. The total power output is only from the illuminated half. The total illuminated area is half the panel’s size. The average irradiance would be the total power divided by the illuminated half, not the total panel area.”

      • Willard says:

        Gemini:

        “At its core, an Energy Balance Model (EBM) is designed to find the equilibrium state where:

        Energy In=Energy Out

        From the perspective of physics and calculus, the fundamental energy balance equation must hold at every instant in time.”

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Google Gemini:

        Question:
        is the following assertion correct: “when calculating the average irradiance for a system with some parts receiving light and some parts not, you would only sum the power from the illuminated areas and divide by the total illuminated area, not the entire surface area.”

        Answer:
        The assertion is incorrect because the average irradiance is defined as the total power incident on a surface divided by the entire surface area, including both illuminated and unilluminated parts. The average irradiance represents the overall power density across the entire system.

        In fields like solar energy, average irradiance is a standard metric used to compare system performance and determine expected energy generation. Using the total area in the calculation provides a realistic view of the overall power density, which is crucial for accurate system modeling and analysis.

      • DREMT says:

        Well, my response came from the question I asked earlier, and every time I ask Google that question (main search bar) I get a similar AI overview.

        Just tried it again:

        “No, you cannot average irradiance over a surface area that is not receiving it. Irradiance is the power received per unit area, and it can only be averaged over the area that is actually receiving the radiation”.

        which stands to reason!

      • DREMT says:

        If you were averaging a group of people’s heights, you wouldn’t include a “non-entity” with a height of zero, now would you? That would skew the average down and give you a physically meaningless result.

      • Nate says:

        “No, you cannot average irradiance over a surface area that is not receiving it, because irradiance is defined as the power per unit area that is falling on the surface“.”

        Again, you are telling me that I cannot do what I did, and telling scientists they cannot do what they do.

        It seems that you have trouble understanding how that logically is a failed argument.

        Now, keep saying it. Maybe if you say it enough times it will begin to make sense.

        But not likely.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        DREMT argues: “If you were averaging a group of people’s heights, you wouldn’t include a “non-entity” with a height of zero, now would you? That would skew the average down and give you a physically meaningless result.”

        A better analogy would be averaging a group of people’s *incomes*. Consider a group of 10 people.
        * 10 @ $20,000 each –> the group average is $20,000 per person.
        * 5 @ $40,000 each, 5 @ $0 –> the group average is $20,000 per person.
        * 1 @ $200,000, 9 @ $0 –> the group average is $20,000 per person.
        The people who are not earning incomes are not ‘non-entities’ and are included in calculating the average.

        And the surface on the back side is not ‘non-surface’. “Zero” is a perfectly number to include in an average.

        If you want an average just of the lit SUBSET of a surface of an object, that is fine. But if you want an average of the ENTIRE object, you must include the entire surface! And in this case, since we are looking at the average EMITTED from the ENTIRE surface, then logically we would compare that to the average RECEIVED by the ENTIRE surface.

      • DREMT says:

        The aim is to reflect physical reality.

        For an instantaneous average of irradiance, we are looking to reflect the reality that at any one moment, the Earth receives sunlight over only the lit hemisphere, whilst it emits from the entire surface area of the globe.

        480 W/m^2 in and 240 W/m^2 out reflects that reality.

        240 W/m^2 in and 240 W/m^2 out does not.

      • DREMT says:

        Nate falsely attributes a quote to me which was actually from Google, then rants and raves childishly.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        DREMT argues: “If you were averaging a group of people’s heights, you wouldn’t include a “non-entity” with a height of zero, now would you? That would skew the average down and give you a physically meaningless result.”

        A better analogy is averaging a group of people’s INCOMES. Consider a group of 10 people.
        * 10 people @ $20,000 each  average of $20,000 per person
        * 5 people @ $40,000 + 0 people $0  average of $20,000 per person
        * 1 person @ $200,000 + 0 people $0  average of $20,000 per person
        The group average is averaged of the whole group. The people earning $0 are not ‘non-entities’.

        Similarly, if you want the average irradiance of the earth, you average over the whole earth, INCLUDING the areas where irradiance happens to be 0 W/m^2. Sure, you could say the irradiance is 480 W/m^2 on the lit hemisphere and 0 W/m^2 on the unlit hemisphere. But in the context of earth’s energy balance, the “physically meaningful result” is the whole earth average of 240 W/m^2.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        DREMT writes:
        The aim is to reflect physical reality.

        480 W/m^2 in and 240 W/m^2 out reflects that reality.

        I’m not a climate scientist but, a back of the envelope calculation using a 240 W/m^2 (480-240) Earth Energy Imbalance gives you about 35 °C per year heating rate.

        That’s not “physical reality,” that’s magic and moonbeams.

      • Nate says:

        “Nate falsely attributes a quote to me which was actually from Google, then rants and raves childishly.”

        This is the idea that your are promoting and arguing.

        Are you now realizing it makes no sense and are backing away from it?

        Finally!

      • Nate says:

        ““There is no logic in this sentence…”

        What I’m saying is, you are expecting too much of the AI. It’s unlikely to be able to differentiate between “a spatial and temporal average” and just “a spatial average”. So when you ask it for the latter, it’s just going to give you the former.”

        And I agree that Google/AI can easily be confused by science questions and give inaccurate or contradictory answers.

        It even made this very point.

        So why do you keep offering its (cherry picked) answers as evidence of anything?!

        How bout just using logic and agreed upon facts?

      • DREMT says:

        Arkady still doesn’t even understand that “flux in” (W/m^2) does not need to equal “flux out” (W/m^2) for energy (J) to balance. I have no idea why he would choose to embarrass himself like that. Nobody else is confused by the concept.

        Tim, we’re currently talking about an instantaneous average for irradiance. In which case, you cannot average irradiance over the entire globe, because the entire globe is not receiving the irradiance, moment by moment.

        Reality does not seem to concern these guys. They literally want to average solar irradiance where the Sun don’t shine!

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        DREMT writes:
        Arkady still doesn’t even understand that “flux in” (W/m^2) does not need to equal “flux out” (W/m^2) for energy (J) to balance. I have no idea why he would choose to embarrass himself like that. Nobody else is confused by the concept.

        Energy flow in – Accumulation = Energy flow out
        It’s very simple actually!

      • DREMT says:

        “How bout just using logic and agreed upon facts?”

        Well, it seems to be a universally accepted and agreed upon fact (besides the “cult kids” on here, who think they know better), that the approx. 240 W/m^2 figure for solar irradiance is, necessarily, a spatial and temporal average. I’ve not seen any decent evidence to the contrary, and I’m the only person who has presented any evidence besides Google AI/Gemini (I linked to a Wikipedia article, which everybody studiously ignored).

        So, that’s that.

      • Nate says:

        “I’ve not seen any decent evidence to the contrary, and I’m the only person who has presented any evidence besides”

        Is just about the ability to do simple math.

        The instantaneous global average flux is F0(1-alpha)/4.

        But maybe some of us cant do the simple math, and require some AI bot to explain it to them.

        Oh well.

      • DREMT says:

        Why are you pretending I don’t understand that 960 W/m^2 divided by 4 is 240 W/m^2?

        What exactly do you think you will gain by making this ridiculous false accusation? Who will you convince, do you think?

        Do you think nobody has been paying attention to the discussion? Is that it?

        Nate, “dividing by four” averages the irradiance over the entire surface area of the sphere. The question has always been, when is it appropriate to do so?

        The answer is: only when the Earth has completed at least one full rotation.

        The approx. 240 W/m^2 figure for irradiance is, necessarily, a spatial and temporal average.

      • Nate says:

        “Ah, but you can’t spatially average it over the entire globe, at any moment in time.”

        Yes, I can and did.

        Where do you get the F*ked up idea that you can tell scientists that they cannot do what the obviously do?

        You have lost all credibility.

      • DREMT says:

        Weird response from Nate.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        DREMT argues: “Tim, we’re currently talking about an instantaneous average for irradiance. In which case, you cannot average irradiance over the entire globe, because the entire globe is not receiving the irradiance, moment by moment.”

        Maybe this will break you out of your limited thinking.

        It is currently night outside where I am. If I go out and measure the solar irradiation, what will I get? The answer is clearly 0 W/m^2. Not “undefined because it is not receiving radiation”. Not “unknown because we have to wait for dawn.”. I don’t need to measure for a year or even a day or even an hour. The value at this instant is 0 W/m^2.

        Someone else 100 km away could measure at this same instant and also get 0 W/m^2. Someone a couple 1000 km away might get 50 W/m^2 at this same instant. Someone half way around the world might 600 W/m^2 at this same instant. Someone where it is noon might get 960 W/m^2 at this instant.

        If we average a million measurements at this instant taken randomly around the world, we would get about 240 W/m^2. Again, there is no need to wait a day. We have the instantaneous result.

        Now, of course, that number might go up or down a bit if we remeasure in an hour or a day or a month. But that has never been your issue. For some reason, you don’t seem to grasp that “0 W/m^2” is a perfectly valid measurement and a perfectly valid input to an average.

      • DREMT says:

        Tim, I’m not disputing that a zero figure for irradiance is a valid measurement. I’m pointing out that, as Google confirms, irradiance is only to be averaged over the surface area receiving it. Every time it’s asked the question “can you average irradiance over surface area not receiving that irradiance?”, it returns a result in the negative. I’ve posted up several of the results already.

        But, even if you dispute that evidence, and insist that for some illogical reason you think it makes sense to average solar irradiance where the Sun don’t shine, then you’re still left with the fact that, for an instantaneous average, 480 W/m^2 in and 240 W/m^2 out better reflects the reality that at any one moment the Earth receives light over only the lit hemisphere whilst it emits from the entire sphere. 240 W/m^2 in and 240 W/m^2 out does not reflect that reality at all.

      • DREMT says:

        So, for example, here is another response to the question asked of Google:

        “You cannot average irradiance over a surface area that is not receiving it because irradiance, by definition, is the radiant power incident on a surface per unit area. A surface area that receives no radiation has an irradiance of zero, so averaging over it would be mathematically meaningless and physically inaccurate. Here is a breakdown of why this is a flawed concept: 

        Irradiance is about reception. The core idea of irradiance (W/m^2) is to measure the concentration of power hitting a surface. If a part of a surface is shaded or is not in the path of the light source, no radiant power is incident on it.

        Zero irradiance. The irradiance on any area not receiving radiation is zero. If you include this zero-irradiance area in your calculation, you would be averaging the power received over a much larger area than the one that is actually receiving the power. This would result in an average value that misrepresents the true power density.

        Misleading result. For example, imagine calculating the average solar irradiance for a rooftop. If you include the area of the rooftop that is permanently in the shade, your average would be artificially low and would not accurately reflect the conditions affecting solar panels placed in the sunny areas.

        Focus on the active area. In practice, engineers and scientists focus on calculating the average irradiance over the active area—the part of the surface that is actually receiving radiation. For a photovoltaic (PV) panel, for instance, you would calculate the average irradiance over the panel’s active area, taking into account the angle of incidence, rather than averaging over the entire, non-irradiated surroundings.”

      • Willard says:

        Gemini:

        “A zero-dimensional (0D) model, also known as a lumped-parameter model, is a mathematical or physical model that ignores all spatial dimensions and variations within the system being analyzed.

        In a 0D model, the entire system or a component of it is treated as a single point or a single control volume where all properties (like temperature, pressure, concentration, or velocity) are assumed to be uniform throughout.”

      • DREMT says:

        The problem is…mathematically, you can do whatever you like. It’s hard to argue, “you can’t average irradiance over surface area not receiving the irradiance” because mathematically, you can, of course. The question is really whether you should do, or not. The question is also whether it represents the correct physics to do so, or not. I think what the Google responses are trying to get at is that generally it’s just going to give you a misleading result by artificially lowering the overall average figure.

      • Willard says:

        Gemini:

        “A 0D model doesn’t work by including “zero-height” entities.”

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        “as Google confirms …”
        That, in itself, should be a huge red flag! Google and AI are NOT competent scientific sources.

        “Every time it’s asked the question “can you average irradiance over surface area not receiving that irradiance?”, it returns a result in the negative. “
        Try a better, more basic question, like “How do you calculate average irradiance for an object?” Then the answer is “To calculate average irradiance for an object, divide the total radiant power P received by the object by its surface area A using the formula I=P/A.” Clearly this equation for average irradiance for the earth would use the earth’s total area.

        Others have already done similar queries with similar results. You already knew that other, similar queries produce ‘our’ interpretation. Only your ‘confirmation bias’ leads you prefer your goggle result.

        “you’re still left with the fact that, for an instantaneous average, 480 W/m^2 in and 240 W/m^2 out better reflects the reality”
        I disagree 110%. What next?? “270 W/m^2 out on the day side and 210 W/m^2 out on the cooler night side far better reflects the instantaneous reality.” “280 W/m^2 out near the equator and 200 W/m^2 out near the poles far better reflects the instantaneous reality.”

        The discussion is about energy balance for the earth. The WHOLE earth. As such, an average over the WHOLE earth is FAR more informative and useful than averaging different quantities over different parts of the surface.

        At any given instant, when averaged over the surface of the earth:
        * the average flux in is about 240 W/m^2
        * the average flux out is about 240 W/m^2

      • DREMT says:

        Tim dismisses Google as a scientific source…then uses it himself. He gets what he thinks is the answer he wants, then declares that I am the one with “confirmation bias”.

        Yes, Tim, it’s understood that you divide power by area to get the irradiance. The question is, obviously, should you be dividing by only the surface area which is actually receiving the power?

        I posted my last Google response because I think it makes a good case. And, it’s not a biased source. It has no ulterior motive for making the case that it does. It’s saying things that I would be saying myself, but I know that if I say them, I’ll just receive pushback no matter what. So, that’s why I’m using it. Clearly, you have no real argument against what it’s saying.

        And, the rest of your comment is just more of the same as what you’ve already said. You don’t have an argument against what I’m saying, so you just attack some straw man about “what next??”

      • Nate says:

        Endless denial.

        You admit Google AI can be confused, thee keep giving its answers to confusing questionds as evidence.

        “you can’t average irradiance over surface area not receiving the irradiance”

        This answer assumes light is shined on one surface and someone wants to find irradiance over a different surface.

        Nothing to do with our problem.

      • DREMT says:

        “This answer assumes light is shined on one surface and someone wants to find irradiance over a different surface.”

        False, Nate. But, you got one thing right…your denial is endless.

        They just keep pushing back on the parts of the argument that are not controversial. Truly bizarre.

      • Nate says:

        “Yes, Tim, it’s understood that you divide power by area to get the irradiance. The question is, obviously, should you be dividing by only the surface area which is actually receiving the power?”

        Well, again, you seem to not understand what averaging over a SURFACE means.

        For the disk that is lit in the center, if you divide by only the area that is lit, you will not be getting the average flux over the surface of the disk.

        Oh well.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        DREMT,
        You keep arguing about what area we “should” be using. You are the one not giving a strong case for your position. When talking about the energy balance of the earth as a whole, we “should” be talking about the earth as a whole, and the average flux for the whole surface. Averaging different quantities over different areas simply makes later steps more complicated and less transparent.

      • DREMT says:

        On the contrary, Tim, I (and Google) have given an excellent case for “my” position. You just haven’t responded to any of it. For one thing, “my” position does not involve redefining what “irradiance” is. Your position does. As Google and I have pointed out many times, “irradiance” is the power per unit area over the surface area receiving it. Your redefinition is, “irradiance” is the power per unit area over whatever the hell surface area we feel like. So, if a spotlight is illuminating a five metre squared circle on an absolutely massive stage, you apparently think you would average the power received over any surface area you want. Perhaps a ten metre squared circle with the illuminated spot in the centre. Perhaps the entire, massive stage. Perhaps half the massive stage with the illuminated spot in the centre. Perhaps the entire auditorium! Why not the entire unlit hemisphere of the Earth, including the illuminated spot! Just dilute the actual intensity as much as is required. No need to worry about reality…

      • DREMT says:

        Tim says down-thread:

        “But since the discussion is about energy balance over the entire sphere…”

        This all started from Clint’s eleven-point critique of the Earth’s energy budget, from over a month ago. The approx. 240 W/m^2 figure for irradiance in the Earth’s energy budget is a spatial and temporal average. It’s averaged over an entire year! The figure is not meant to be, nor is it even implied to be, an instantaneous average. So, let’s get that straight, right now. I’m already correct, because in the context of our discussion, the approx. 240 W/m^2 for irradiance is a spatial and temporal average.

        You still want to argue with me about an instantaneous average, for some reason. All I can do is point out that you all apparently agree “flux is not conserved”. Well, the reason “flux is not conserved” is that irradiance and radiant exitance often don’t occur over the same amount of surface area. Yet, you seem to want to argue that the surface area can always be the same if you just choose to average irradiance over the object’s total surface area. In which case, you may as well be suggesting that flux is conserved!

        You’re just contradicting yourselves.

      • Willard says:

        Gemini:

        “The word “instantaneous” generally means:

        1. Happening or done immediately and very quickly, without any perceptible delay.

        Example: “We received an instantaneous response to the emergency call.”

        2. Occurring or present at a particular instant (a single moment in time).

        This meaning is often used in scientific or mathematical contexts, such as in physics or calculus. For example, instantaneous velocity is the velocity of an object at a specific, precise moment in time, as opposed to its average velocity over a time interval.

        Example: There is no doubt that the former is a better representation of the reality, for an instantaneous average.”

      • Nate says:

        “Irradiance is the power per unit area over the surface area receiving it. Your redefinition is, “irradiance” is the power per unit area over whatever the hell surface area we feel like.”

        Indeed scientists find average flux over any surface they feel like, or need to, to analyze a problem.

        Even if some parts of that surface have 0 flux.

        No matter how often someone bizarrely tells them they ‘shouldn’t’.

      • Nate says:

        To measure the averge absorbed solar global flux over the month of June we record the flux at every location ideally every minute of every day, for the whole month.

        Do we include areas, such as in the middle of Antarctica, that recieve no flux at all during June, in the calculation?

        Doing what DREMT says we SHOULD do, we would not count the areas that receive no flux.

        But then that is not the whole Earth area that would be used the denominator of the average calculation.

        Would we get the correct global average flux, 240 W/m2?

        No we would obviously not, because we are not performing the average over the full global area.

        To correctly find a global average, we need to include all points on the globe, regardless of whether they have 0 flux or not.

        QED

      • DREMT says:

        Nate, why don’t you just admit that you think flux is conserved?

        All of this is just your elaborate way of denying the fact that “flux is not conserved”, basically.

        I make arguments. You guys completely ignore them, and just keep repeating yourselves. Your aim is always just to be the last ones repeating yourselves.

        You push back endlessly on parts of the overall argument that are really not controversial. So I get tied up in this sort of nonsense indefinitely.

        There’s nothing controversial about what I’m saying. Irradiance is the power per unit area over the surface area receiving it. Otherwise, a blackbody cube receiving 1200 W/m^2 on one face and emitting 200 W/m^2 could be described as receiving 200 W/m^2 “averaged over all of its surface area”. I mean…like I said, you may as well just be honest and admit you think flux is conserved, if you want us to buy that.

      • DREMT says:

        “To measure the averge absorbed solar global flux over the month of June we record the flux at every location ideally every minute of every day, for the whole month…”

        …and so, that is a spatial and temporal average. Of course I accept using zero irradiance values in such an average. Pretty much every location on the planet is going to have zero irradiance values at some point over 24 hours…it’s called “night time”.

        “Do we include areas, such as in the middle of Antarctica, that recieve no flux at all during June, in the calculation?”

        Yes. It’s a spatial and temporal average, so again, including zero irradiance values is going to be necessary.

        When looking at the instantaneous average, or the average irradiance for a sphere that is not rotating, you would only average over the surface area actually receiving the irradiance. Like with the cube I mentioned. Otherwise, you may as well just argue that flux is conserved!

      • Nate says:

        I made an argument that demonstrate the flaws in your logic.

        Naturally, you have no rebuttal so you completely ignore it, and try to change the subject.

        So thats that.

      • Nate says:

        “Irradiance is the power per unit area over the surface area receiving it”

        Sure, and it can be 0. Thus its average over a given surface, must consider all the values on that surface, even the 0 values, as we must do to find the global average for the Earth , as shown above.

        This is an absolutely standard way to average.

        There should be no pushback on this non controversial fact.

        And yet….

      • Nate says:

        “Yes. It’s a spatial and temporal average, so again, including zero irradiance values is going to be necessary.”

        Indeed so. Glad to hear it.

        But this of course contradicts your argument that the definition of irradiance prevents us from considering the places with 0 flux.

      • DREMT says:

        Nate…do you accept that flux is not conserved?

        If so, does the cube receive 1200 W/m^2, or does it receive 200 W/m^2?

        Just make up your minds, already…

      • DREMT says:

        “But this of course contradicts your argument that the definition of irradiance prevents us from considering the places with 0 flux.”

        There’s no contradiction, because all locations receive irradiance given enough time, and this is a spatial and temporal average we’re talking about.

      • Nate says:

        “There’s no contradiction, because all locations receive irradiance given enough time, and this is a spatial and temporal average we’re talking about.”

        False. Rationlizing your erroneous argument.

        In the month of June which is the month of interest, there clearly are regions with zero irradiance.

        We dont change the calculation due to these zero regions.

        Your ‘its the definition of irradiance’ argument is thoroughly debunked.

        Thus you have been shamelessly trying to change the subject.

      • DREMT says:

        “We don’t change the calculation due to these zero regions…”

        …because, in time, they too will be irradiated. That’s why these spatial and temporal averages are typically performed over the full year.

        You’ve debunked nothing, Nate. In fact, it’s you that’s using this as an excuse to avoid answering my questions, because you know your argument is debunked.

      • Nate says:

        “because, in time, they too will be irradiated.”

        New ad-hoc rules added to get you out of jail for violating your other made-up rules.

        If we can use future irradiance to qualify regions, then our original use of the unlit side of the Earth in the calculation of the instantaneous spatial average global abso.rbed solar ought to be just fine.

        Your rules upon rules are fun but uneccessary.

        Much simpler rule, use whatever the hell surface you want to use to average the flux over. As science does.

      • DREMT says:

        Nate doesn’t seem to understand that “temporal” means you average “over time” and “instantaneous” means you average “in the moment”.

        “In the moment”, the Earth only receives energy over half of its surface area. A fact that is correctly represented by an input of 480 W/m^2, and incorrectly represented by an input of 240 W/m^2.

        And, that is the end of the rational debate. Of course, Nate will continue anyway…

      • Nate says:

        Nope, you just keep trying dodgy excuses, but still contradicting yourself.

        Your rules are for you, but not for science.

      • Nate says:

        “In the moment”, the Earth only receives energy over half of its surface area.”

        In the month of June, the Earth receives energy over ~ 90% of its surface area.

        Yet (only) in the second case do you use 100% of global area.

        Whether you acknowledge it or not, that is a contradiction, and thus illustrates the arbitrary nature of your made up rules.

      • DREMT says:

        Of course, Nate will continue anyway…

    • Arkady Ivanovich says:

      Book of Radiance, Chapter 1, Verses 7-10

      7/ And lo, I say unto thee: In the matter of the heavens and the Earth, the Law of Conservation of Energy is fulfilled only through the flowing of power, for without flux there is naught to conserve.

      8/ Verily, thy confusion is elementary, and thy wisdom as the vapour that vanisheth in the sun.

      9/ Thy childish striving to wound my name proclaimeth my triumph before all men.

      10/ Truly, I say unto thee, sorry for thy loss.

  56. Bindidon says:

    It’s so simple to learn how thermistors work, how they can be used to measure infrared in a wide frequency spectrum…

    Any ‘real’ engineer knows that.

  57. Willard says:

    BACK AT THE RANCH

    The 2,900 pages of chats, shared among a dozen millennial and Gen Z Republicans between early January and mid-August, chronicle their campaign to seize control of the national Young Republican organization on a hardline pro-Donald platform. Many of the chat members already work inside government or party politics, and one serves as a state senator.

    Together, the messages reveal a culture where racist, antisemitic and violent rhetoric circulate freely — and where the Donald-era loosening of political norms has made such talk feel less taboo among those positioning themselves as the party’s next leaders.

    https://www.politico.com/news/2025/10/14/private-chat-among-young-gop-club-members-00592146

    Another WIN for Donald!

  58. THE NON-LINEARITY OF THE S-B EMISSION LAW is a kind of approach to the planet surface emission behavior, when considering two identical planets absorbing the same amount of incident EM energy as HEAT. And then, the planets IR emiting the same exactly amount of outgoing energy.

    So the faster rotating planet’s surface would have the less differentiated temperature, and the higher average surface temperature.

    Thus, when a planet rotates faster, all other things the same, it is considered that the planet absorbs the same amount of HEAT, no matter how much faster the planet rotates.

    But when a planet rotates faster, all other things the same, the planet actually absorbs a larger amount of HEAT.

    And, of course, that larger amount of absorbed HEAT is IR emitted too, so the radiative energy balance

    ( Energy in = Energy out ) to be necessarily met.

    The faster rotation leads to a larger amount of absorbed HEAT, that is what makes it very POWERFUL the Solar Irradiated planet surface Rotational Warming Phenomenon (N*cp )^1/16 true.

    The ROTATIONAL WARMING PHENOMENON amplifies the planet average surface temperature.

    So, the planetary surface (N*cp ) product is one of the planet average surface temperature deterministic parameters.

    https://www.cristos-vournas.com

    • Gordon Robertson says:

      christos….interesting point about faster rotating planet being warmer. Seems obvious, since more of the surface is covered by solar radiation per rotation. What is not so obvious is the intensity of radiation from the surface must be lower than the intensity of radiation from the Sun.

      Since intensity is measured in w/m^2, that means less power is emitted than is received, per unit time. It is equally obvious that energy in cannot equal energy out since there is a time factor involve where the energy in cannot equal the energy out in the same time.

      That is a good explanation for the so-called greenhouse effect, which is independent of human causes.

      A mistake made in the AGW theory is focusing too much on radiation, which is 260 times less effective at cooling the surface than direct conduction of heat from the surface to the atmosphere.

      Here’s another point. Different planets will have different atmospheres. The thicker the atmosphere, the more the atmosphere will absorb heat from the surface. And, the hotter the atmosphere will be. Venus is closer to the Sun and has more solar input. It has a much more dense atmosphere than Earth therefore it warms more.

      Venus rotates much more slowly than Earth and should be cooler on average. However, the atmosphere is very dense and the surface temperature is about 30 times hotter.

      That warming on Venus has been blamed incorrectly on a greenhouse effect. The surface of Venus is some 400C hotter than Earth’s surface, its atmosphere is thicker, and it is closer to the Sun. The Earth’s warming has been incorrectly blamed by Carl Sagan on a greenhouse effect and his views were perpetuated by James Hansen at NASA GISS.

    • Good evening, Gordon!

      I would like to develop the Rotational Warming Phenomenon in short again.
      Again, because it gets explained time-after -time better and better.

      0). The EM energy is not heat. When hitting a surface (matter) the EM energy is not heat.
      There an interaction process occurs.

      When interacting, the matter doesn’t permit the EM energy in. What matter spontaneously does  is to emit EM energy, not to absorb EM energy.
      Matter is able to absorb energy only when the energy is in form of heat (by conduction and convection).

      When EM energy interacting with matter:
      1). Some is immediately gets reflected from the skin layer at the same frequencies it hits matter (SW reflection)

      2). The rest, the not reflected part, because the skin layer couldn’t reflect it as it is (SW), couldn’t reflect that portion at its initial frequencies…
      The rest, while interacting with matter, which matter is already incapable to get rid of it at the initial (SW) frequencies – that process induces the skin layer’s higher temperature. 

      The immediate IR emission takes place.
      The higher the skin layer’s temperature, the higher the immediate IR emission’s the EM energy’s frequencies.

      As a result – the higher the skin layer’s temperature, the higher the immediate IR emission’s the EM energy’s INTENSITY.

      3). There is a temperature gradient (the skin layer / the inner layers) – the gradient conducts energy in form of heat into inner layers and that heat gets absorbed.

      Let’s see now,
      The higher the skin layer’s induced temperature – the more energy is IR emitted and the less energy is conducted into inner layers.

      The lower the skin layer’s induced temperature – the less energy is IR emitted and the more energy is conducted into inner layers.

      A question begs for an answer:
      Why the higher temperature gradient (the skin layer / the inner layers) leads to the lesser energy being conducted as heat into inner layers.

      It is because the skin layer emits IR EM energy at fourth power (4) of its absolute temperature T.

      And. on the other hand, the skin layer conducts heat at ΔT gradient 
      (the skin layer / the inner layers), which is much-much smaller.

      Conclusion:

      For the same portion of the not reflected EM energy, which portion interacts with skin layer, while the matter mobilizes its strengths to get it back out as the EM energy it is…
      the tension induces a higher skin layer’s temperature…

      But, the higher is the surface’s (N*cp) product, the less is the induced the skin layer’s temperature…

      And, the higher is the surface’s (N*cp) product, the less is the immediate IR energy, and the more is the energy in form of heat absorbed in inner layers.
      So, for the same portion of the not reflected EM energy, some planets or moons absorb more in form of heat, and some absorb less.
      Also, it should be noticed, that the not reflected portion of the incident solar flux never gets entirely absorbed as heat in inner layers.
      It never gets entirely absorbed as heat in inner layers, because, when EM energy hits matter, there is always the interaction process occurs, thus there is always present  a smaller or a larger amount of the immediate IR emitted EM energy.

      //////////////////
      For the more remote planets and moons the incident solar flux is weaker.

      So, the weaker is the on the planet the solar flux , but for surface’s with the same (N*cp) product, the higher is by the planet’s surface 
      the (absorbed heat / immediate IR emission) ratio.

      Because, for those planets, the skin layer’s induced temperature T is much lower, so, as a concequence, it is much lower the immediate iR emission EM energy (the T in fourth power),

      And, the ΔT gradient (the skin layer / the inner layers) the temperature difference is comparably to the (the T in fourth power) allows to conduct heat at higher ratio.

      So, for two planets with the same (N*cp) product, the more remote planet has a higher
      the (absorbed heat / immediate IR emission) ratio.

      /////////////////////////
      Thank you Gordon, for your support.
      Good night.

      https://www.cristos-vournas.com

  59. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    Brazil is now generating more power from solar than Germany. Pakistan, over six years, has imported solar panels at such volume that their capacity equals that of the national electricity grid. Countries across Africa, where hundreds of millions lack a grid connection, are lighting homes and businesses and medical clinics with Chinese-made solar panels at a record scale. Oil-rich Nigeria is even installing a solar mini-grid at its presidential villa — a way to work around persistent power outages.

    https://thinc.blog/2025/10/13/trump-war-on-clean-energy-a-massive-self-own-but-is-it-fatal/

    Perhaps giving Argentina money when it sells its soybeans to China will allow Donald to win again?

  60. Gordon Robertson says:

    binny…”It’s so simple to learn how thermistors work, how they can be used to measure infrared in a wide frequency spectrum…

    Any ‘real’ engineer knows that”.

    ***

    Here we have an example of a climate alarmist who insists on expressing incorrect opinions in a field where another (me) has specialized.

    A thermistor is called a thermistor because it is designed to respond to heat. The ‘therm” in the name should e a clue since it means heat, as therme, in Greek. Ask Christos, he speaks the language.

    A thermistor is a special kind of resistor in which the resistance varies with temperature, within a small range of temperatures. One application is attached to a heat sink where the thermistor can send back temperature information to a control centre to advise it that the heat sink, hence the semiconductor it is cooling through heat dissipation, is getting outside its safe temperature range.

    Thermistors are not used as IR detectors for a good reason. One could conceivably heat a thermistor using an IR heat lamp but the change in resistance would be meaningless. The resistance change would not indicate the temperature of the source only that the thermistor had been heated enough to change resistance.

    Although the thermistor might heat enough to affect its resistance, provided the IR intensity was strong enough to affect it, it responds much more efficiently if it is connected directly to the heat source, where it can detect temperature directly via heat conduction.

    At a distance, any IR detected would have reduced significantly in strength due to the inverse square law. Unlike detectors that respond to IR frequency, hence are affective at a distance, the thermistor is unlikely to respond to IR intensity at a distance. That’s especially true in the experiment mentioned since it is performed at room temperature where IR emission intensity would be negligible.

    To detect IR at a distance, highly sensitive semiconductor devices are used where the IR frequency affects current flow at the electron level. That tells us nothing in itself, unless the device is calibrated to known IR temperature effects on the semiconductor in a lab. In other words, the device must have that data in its EEPROM memory with which it can compare the effect of weak IR on the semiconductor.

    I have given an example several times of the IS^2 law. A 1500 watts ring, glowing cherry red on an electric stove would burn flesh severely if touched directly. Such is the effect of 1500 watts. However, a finger can be brought close to touching the ring, within an inch, and will not burn the flesh significantly over a short period. Most of the heat detected is via direct conduction through heated air molecules.

    With the finger held a few inches away from the heated source, little is felt from either direct conduction or radiation. With the finger a foot away, little or nothing is detected from either source.

    It’s the same for a thermistor, It heats only as much as the heat source will permit. A few inches from the source it may detect warmth in the air from heated air molecules, but little or nothing from the IR emitted.

    Let’s face it, the colour red on the heated rings indicates it is giving off EM in the visible spectrum. A piece of iron heated to the same colour should have the same temperature. If the iron could be heated further, its colour would change to orange, yellow and might give off colours eventually reaching into the blue spectrum.

    The fact that the iron will appear white is a clear indication of additive colouring. White can be produced by adding the colours red, green and blue in proper proportion. In other words, the colours of a rainbow are not given off visibly since somewhere beyond red the separate colours start to add, producing other colours.

    That is the case with an arc welder where staring at the arc will burn parts of the retina due to strong UV light given off (flash). The point is, at room temperature, none of that is possible and any IR given off is very weak. If we go further down the temperature scale to ice, at 0C, there is simply no way it can given of the S-B calculated value of 315 watts/metre squared.

    The Sun can only produce a claimed 240 watts/metre squared at the Earth’s surface yet S-B claims ice can produce more heat than the Sun.

    Yeah, right!!

  61. Willard says:

    BACK AT THE RANCH

    As artificial intelligence company OpenAI plans its rapid construction of behemoth power-guzzling data centers to fuel the AI boom, it has hired a new energy chief – an official from the first Trump administration who is a dedicated champion of natural gas.

    John McCarrick, the company’s new head of Global Energy Policy, was a senior energy policy advisor in the first Trump administration’s Bureau of Energy Resources in the Department of State while under former Secretaries of State Rex Tillerson and Mike Pompeo.

    OpenAI has additionally chosen not to disclose the carbon footprint of ChatGPT-5, its most advanced AI model to date, despite the fact that researchers told the Guardian it uses “a significantly larger amount of energy” than responses from GPT-40. The company, which is rapidly expanding internationally, does not have formally announced climate or sustainability targets.

    https://www.desmog.com/2025/10/13/openais-new-energy-chief-is-a-trump-administration-natural-gas-evangelist/

    • Anon for a reason says:

      Willard, why should company need to formally announce its climate of ESG goals? If you don’t want to use AI then that’s your choice but what gives you the right to demand others must follow your beliefs?

      • Willard says:

        Step 2 – Sammich Request

        Let’s remind our mouse:

        The deal with Broadcom would use as much power as 8 million US households, according to Reuters, as concerns have been raised about AI’s impact on the environment. A 2024 Department of Energy report on data center energy usage found that data centers are expected to consume about 6.7% to 12% of total US electricity by 2028, up from 4.4% in 2023.

        https://edition.cnn.com/2025/10/13/tech/openai-broadcom-power

        This will raise electricity prices of everyone, more so in states with troglodytes controlling Public Service Commissions. We all know how they specialize in shady deals.

  62. Bindidon says:

    I forgot to reply to the Hunter boy’s nonsense he wrote in the previous thread (September 28, 2025 at 10:42 AM):

    ” The non-spinner position is that minimal angular momentum of a rotation is when the axis is deemed to be at the center of an object and that the angular momentum increases exponentially as the axis is deemed to exist further from the COM of the object.

    that is a brilliant and very useful observation. ”

    Wow.

    *
    Like his friends, the Hunter boy has still not provided any data to support his claim. They all endlessly repeat the same unscientific assumptions without providing any evidence other than, for example, Nikola Tesla’s trivial denying pamphlet, published in an anonymous inventor’s newsletter.

    Furthermore none of them was ever able to explain why Moon’s alleged inability to spin about its polar axis is valid for satellites only, surprisingly however not for planets.

    Finally, the spin of Jupiter’s and Saturn’s major satellites has been observed and measured since probably two centuries.

    *
    ” It was taught to Bindidon but Bindidon took the additional step of claiming that the rotation on an external axis doesn’t exist but instead is a translation of the object combined with a rotation on the COM of the object. ”

    Never in my life have I ever written such neither technically let alone scientifically valuable, imbecile nonsense.

    Kepler has clearly stated that the shape of all celestial bodies’ orbits is an ellipse; orbits are not rotations. Conversely, the bodies’ rotation has nothing to do with orbiting.

    *
    ” To maintain this viewpoint Bindidon is willing to ignore the fact that the entire rotational motion of moon is guided by earth’s gravity, not from some mysterious unidentified object that sometime far in the past put a spin on the moon. ”

    That is now the very best of the Hunter boy’s sheer nonsense.

    If that were the case, then we can all be one hundred percent sure that Isaac Newton, the brilliant discoverer of the concept of… gravity, would have explained it that way.

    He did not at all. It’s so boring to have to repeat this all the time…

    On the contrary, he explained in his Principia Scientifica that he agreed to the concept of the lunar spin (whose first data – period, inclination of the spin axis – was collected and processed by Domenico Cassini: anybody can see this in Book III, Proposition XVII, Theorem XV).

    Original text in Latin, annotated by two very knowledgeable persons:

    https://books.google.de/books?id=x-_K1KGZvv4C&pg=PA51&lpg=PA51&source=bl&ots=LtVy4wJkn_&sig=ACfU3U3JXf_82r1c#v=onepage&q&f=false

    The most recent translation from Latin (among about ten others) made by Ian Bruce in 2012:

    http://www.17centurymaths.com/contents/newton/book3s1.pdf
    (Page 744 / 23)

    *
    It is simply unbelievable that lunar spin deniers consider Newton a hero and accept everything he wrote… except his explanations of… the lunar spin – explanations which were understood and accepted by an incredible amount of scientists who lived and worked after him.

    It is simply unbelievable that lunar spin deniers doubt centuries-old scientific findings in this field, including the fact that calculations of the lunar spin period from 1750 and today produce the same value, even though they are based on completely different observational instruments and methods for processing the observational data.

    It is simply unbelievable that lunar spin deniers dare to doubt the usefulness of the lunar spin based computation of the drift of lunar descent points with respect to the orbiting module’s trajectory, in order to obtain a lunar ascent time for a secure rendez-vous of the lunar vehicle and the module.

    Finally, it is no wonder that they are all too cowardly to simply go to an observatory with their nonsensical claims: they are all afraid of having to give them up quickly.

    • Clint R says:

      Bindi is obsessed with this Moon nonsense. He must know he’s lost the debate because he keeps throwing the same crap against the wall:

      * He takes Newton out-of-context.

      * He has no viable model of “orbiting without spin”.

      * His attempt to foist a bunch of phony links, “proving lunar spin”, has failed.

      But funnier yet, he doesn’t realize the inconsistency in modern astronomy (formerly astrology). Modern astronomy realizes Earth rotates 365.25 times in one orbit. That is the actual axial rotations we see. They don’t add a rotation for the orbit, since an orbit does not make for an actual axial rotation. Yet they claim Moon has 1 spin per orbit.

      Earth actual spins/orbit = 365.25, no spin added for orbiting.

      Moon actual spins/orbit = 0, but they add one for orbiting.

      Institutionalized science strikes again, and fools many.

    • Bindidon says:

      Obsessed? No. I just replied once more to the Hunter boy’s sheer nonsense.

      *
      1. ” * He takes Newton out-of-context. ”

      What exactly in the text below could anybody take ‘out-of-context’ [sic] ?

      This is from Ian Bruce’s direct translation of Newton’s original Latin text:

      PROPOSITION XVII. THEOREM XV.

      The daily motions of the planets is uniform, and the libration of the moon arises from its daily motion.

      It is apparent by the first law of motion and Corol. 22. Prop. LXVI. Book I that Jupiter certainly is revolving with respect to the fixed stars in 9 hours and 56 minutes, Mars in 24 hours and 39 minutes, Venus in around 23 hours, the earth in 23 hours 56 minutes, the sun in 25 1/2 and the moon in 27 days 7 hours 43 minutes.

      It is evident that these are found from the phenomena.

      Spots in the body of the sun return at the same place on the solar disc in around 27 1/2, with respect to the earth; and thus with respect to the fixed stars the sun is rotating in around 25 1/2 days.

      Truly because there is the monthly revolution of the moon about its axis : the same face of this will always look at the more distant focus of its orbit, as nearly as possible, and therefore according to the situation of that focus will hence deviate thence from the earth.

      This is the libration of the moon in longitude: For the libration in latitude has arisen from the latitude of the moon and the inclination of its axis to the plane of the ecliptic.

      N. Mercator has explained this theory of the libration of the moon more fully in letters from me, published in his Astronomy at the start of the year 1676.

      *
      I have shown many times the place in Mercator’s treatise where he explains us what Newton told him.

      *
      2. ” * He has no viable model of ‘orbiting without spin’. ”

      Why?

      Apart from asteroids, no celestial body orbiting another one has been ever discovered which would lack the spin about its polar axis.

      *
      3. ” * His attempt to foist a bunch of phony links, “proving lunar spin”, has failed. ”

      For years, I’ve been waiting for denialist Clint R to prove this with real arguments, data, and scientific sources. I’ll probably have to wait forever.

      *
      4. ” But funnier yet, he doesn’t realize the inconsistency in modern astronomy (formerly astrology). ”

      Clint R doesn’t himself realize that he herewith insults even Newton as an ‘astrologer’.

      *
      For the incredibly confused rest I repeat:

      Finally, it is no wonder that they are all too cowardly to simply go to an observatory with their nonsensical claims: they are all afraid of having to give them up quickly.

      Hence Clint R never will tell his nonsense to anyone who scientifically proves him wrong.

      You see how denial works…

      • Clint R says:

        1. As has been explained MANY times, Newton was referring to “revolving with respect to the fixed stars“. But with respect to Earth, or respect to its orbital path, Moon is NOT rotating. There is NO angular momentum about its CoM.

        2. Bindi has NO viable model for “orbiting without spin”, only incessant blah-blah.”

        3. Bindi can’t link to even ONE “proof” of lunar spin. That’s because there is NO lunar spin.

        4. Bindi can’t explain why Earth has no extra spin days, while Moon gets an extra spin day. Inconsistencies in astrology.”

        And we get to go to “an observatory” every night there is a clear sky. We always see the same side of Moon.

        What will Bindi try next?

    • Bindidon says:

      ” 1. As has been explained MANY times, Newton was referring to ‘revolving with respect to the fixed stars’. But with respect to Earth, or respect to its orbital path, Moon is NOT rotating. ”

      For years, I incessantly tried to explain to Clint R, Robertson, the fake mod DREMT and the Hunter boy that when Newton (and anyone else) uses the expression ‘with respect to the fixed stars’, s/he does not refer to the motion of celestial bodies but to these bodies’ motion PERIOD:

      Spots in the body of the sun return at the same place on the solar disc in around 27 1/2, with respect to the earth; and thus with respect to the fixed stars the sun is rotating in around 25 1/2 days.

      None of these stubborn four deniers has ever been able to understand this, let alone to accept it and to stop their common, intentional misrepresentation of the concept.

      *
      ” 2. Bindi has NO viable model for ‘orbiting without spin, only incessant blah-blah. ”

      Sorry, this is simply too dumb.
      *
      ” 3. Bindi can’t link to even ONE ‘proof’ of lunar spin. ”

      This is a pure lie: I have shown many proofs of this spin, but YOU are the one who polemically discedrits these proffs and denigrates their authors, but are unable to technically and scientifically disprove them.

      *
      ” 4. Bindi can’t explain why Earth has no extra spin days, while Moon gets an extra spin day. Inconsistencies in astrology. ”

      No idea what you invent here, show us a published article proving your unscientific claim.

      *
      ” And we get to go to ‘an observatory’ every night there is a clear sky. ”

      I didn’t mean you looking at stars with a telescope, child.

      I mean, you clearly lack the balls to enter into a discussion with an astronomer and explain to him/her that the Moon does not spin: you will never do that.

      *
      ” We always see the same side of Moon. ”

      Truly because there is the monthly revolution of the moon about its axis : the same face of this will always look at the more distant focus of its orbit

      You don’t understand what Newton said, do you?

      *
      Feel free to answer with more nonsense; I won’t reply however, you are too obstinated, too boring.

  63. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    DREMT’s hubris.

    Google Gemini:
    Question:
    Evaluate the accuracy of the following assertion: the only instance in which “flux in” does not need to equal “flux out” for energy to balance is when the Accumulation term is non-zero.

    Answer:
    The assertion is accurate. The energy balance equation demonstrates that “flux in” must equal “flux out” for energy balance only when the accumulation term is zero, a condition known as a steady-state system.
    If the accumulation term is non-zero, then “flux in” and “flux out” are unequal.

  64. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    A series of political missteps and policy disputes has strained Energy Secretary Chris Wright’s relationship with the White House, 10 people familiar with the dynamic told POLITICO — causing some to question how much longer he can last in Donald’s Cabinet.

    The friction, these people said, includes complaints that Wright was too slow to loop in the White House on his plans to kill tens of billions of dollars in Biden-era clean energy grants — and too willing to defend the interests of industries that want some of that funding preserved. Decisions on revoking those grants brought him into conflict with White House staff, POLITICO reported last week.

    https://www.politico.com/news/2025/10/17/chris-wright-white-house-00612920

    In other news, the Leopard Ate My Face meme turned 10 years yesterday.

  65. Bindidon says:

    Hegseth in Spetzop-dress

    Following the meeting between Trump and Zelensky, one detail is causing a stir in Russia: the tie worn by US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth. Hegseth caused a stir with an unexpected fashion choice, writes the Russian state news agency Tass: ‘A tie in the colors of the Russian tricolor’.

    https://i.postimg.cc/Fs0pXDJD/Hegseth-in-Spetzop-look.jpg

    In fact, footage of the meeting shows the US Secretary of Defense in the White House wearing a tie with white, blue, and red stripes, in the same order as the Russian national flag. However, the US flag also has these colors, but not in that order; an unfortunate coincidence?

    *
    For those who don’t know: ‘Spetzop’ is the name given by the Russian warriors for their war against Ukraine.

    People like Robertson (see his “Azov Battalion” syndrome), but also many young Russians who celebrated the end of World War II in Moscow on May 9 of this year, truly believe that Russia is fighting in Ukraine a country full of Nazis, just as it fought against Hitler’s SS henchmen and the Wehrmacht in World War II.

    OMG…
    *
    Some in the White House are apparently naive enough to believe they can stop Putin from sending drones into Ukraine every day to kill civilians and destroy Ukraine’s energy sector just before winter sets in.

    Putin has no interest in peace and has the Trump’ing boy firmly in his grasp.

    So one day the Trump’ing boy says that the US has plenty of Tomahawks and can therefore supply many to Ukraine via Europe; the next day, after a phone call with Putin, the Trump’ing boy says that the US indeed does have plenty of Tomahawks, but needs them for itself…

  66. angech says:

    Gordon Robertson says:
    October 15, 2025 at 10:19 PM
    christos….
    “interesting point about faster rotating planet being warmer. Seems obvious, since more of the surface is covered by solar radiation per rotation.”

    Does not compute.
    Think of it this way’
    If your comment was right, then by the same logic more of the surface is covered by darkness per rotation as well.
    The warmth due to faster rotation is due to the phenomenon of
    Stefan-Boltzmann law, statement that the total radiant heat power emitted from a surface is proportional to the fourth power of its absolute temperature.

  67. Ian Brown says:

    Shame about the drought and shortage of rainfall in the UK last winter and spring of 2025. how does that fit in with your increasing winter rainfall theory? maybe its just weather,

    • Willard says:

      Step 2 – Sammich Request

      More warmth means more water, more water means more rain, bigger rains means more water at some place, less at others.

      Alternatively, RTFR:

      https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg2/chapter/chapter-4/

    • Arkady Ivanovich says:

      maybe its just weather,

      I don’t think that I’ll ever forget the winter of ’72
      It must have been the coldest year that I ever knew
      I left my home in Dallas to head out for Idaho
      Before I reached Colorado I hit three feet of snow

      Oh Lord, let the wind blow you know I’m so cold
      Rock Springs to Cheyenne is a bad stretch I’ve been told
      2 o’clock in the morning on Thanksgiving Day
      It’s a damn good thing I’m a God fearing man
      I’ve been forced to pray
      Yeah it’s a damn good thing I’m a God fearing man
      I’ve been forced to pray.

  68. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    The Earth is not a flat plate.

    The Earth receives solar radiation over the equivalent of a flat disk because, at a distance of ≈215 solar radii, the sun’s rays arrive in plane-parallel configuration.

    (1-α)So(πR²) = (4πR²)σT^4
    (1-α)So/4 = σT^4

    Any 480 W/m² “in” scenario implicitly assumes a very different geometry, one where the Sun is so close that its rays diverge significantly, which is not the case in reality.

    • DREMT says:

      “Sure, you could say the irradiance is 480 W/m^2 on the lit hemisphere…”

      – Tim Folkerts

    • Clint R says:

      Ark displays his ignorance of the science.

      Only one spot on Earth receives the 960 W/m². The rest of the hemisphere is reduced by the cosine function, being 0 W/m² at Earth’s limb. The integrated value then is 480 W/m², if flux could be treated as such. But, the 480 W/m² is much closer to reality than the 240 W/m² nonsense.

      Even Bindi knows this….

    • Willard says:

      “the surface on the back side is not ‘non-surface'”, op. cit.

    • DREMT says:

      “Any 480 W/m² “in” scenario implicitly assumes a very different geometry, one where the Sun is so close that its rays diverge significantly…”

      Incorrect. They’re now so desperate they’re just openly spreading misinformation. None of the others step in to correct it.

    • Willard says:

      “If the sphere was truly receiving 960 W per square meter of surface, then (in steady-state, of course) it would emit 960 W per square meter of surface.” Op. Cit.

    • DREMT says:

      None of the others step in to correct it.

    • Willard says:

      “There is no need to wait a day. We have the instantaneous result. “. Op. cit.

    • DREMT says:

      The reality is, at any one moment the Earth is only receiving light over one hemisphere, while it emits from the entire sphere.

      480 W/m^2 in and 240 W/m^2 out reflects that reality.

      240 W/m^2 in and 240 W/m^2 out does not.

      There is no doubt that the former is a better representation of the reality, for an instantaneous average. I just get endless pushback for stating obviously true things.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        DREMT:
        480 W/m^2 in averaged over the sunlit hemisphere and 240 W/m^2 out averaged over the entire sphere reflects reality.
        240 W/m^2 in averaged over the entire sphere and 240 W/m^2 out averaged over the entire sphere reflects reality.

        Both reflect reality. Each is interesting and useful.

        But since the discussion is about energy balance over the entire sphere, then for most purposes, the SECOND option is more useful and informative for current purposes.

      • DREMT says:

        The reality I’m referring to is that at any one moment the Earth is only receiving light over one hemisphere, while it emits from the entire sphere. The second option does not reflect that reality.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        At least DREAMT is making some progress about understanding 240 W/m^2.

        EARLIER: “The only way you can say the irradiance for the Earth is approx. 240 W/m^2 is if you average the input over at least 24 hours.”

        NOW: “There is no doubt that the former is a better representation of the reality, for an instantaneous average.”

        “240 W/m^2” as an instantaneous average has moved from ‘impossible’ to merely ‘less good’.

        ———————————–

        As for what is ‘better’, that depends on the purpose. Let’s expand on your idea of ‘two regions is better than one’. If two regions [better represents reality than one, why not 10 regions instead of 2? For example, find the average irradiance for the bands of the globe where the sun is 80-90 degrees above the horizon, 70-80, … 0-10, and below the horizon. That a MUCH better ‘representation of reality’ than 480 W/m^2 for an entire hemisphere. Or how about a grid of 360 x 180 regions each 1 degree on a side? Even better yet!

        BUT! Averages are not meant to be ‘the best representation of reality’. Averages are meant to be the best 1 number summary of a set of data.

        And for GLOABAL energy balance, the best 1 number summary is a GLOBAL average.

      • DREMT says:

        I’ve not changed my position one iota, Tim. And, I never will.

        I stand by what I said. The only way you can say the irradiance for the Earth is approx. 240 W/m^2 is if you average the input over at least 24 hours. Or, if you change the meaning of “irradiance”, of course…which you’re perfectly prepared to do.

        By pointing out that the former option better represents reality than the latter, I’m merely acknowledging your refusal to let the latter option go. I’m pandering to your beliefs, not changing my position. I’m just trying to get you to concede anything at all.

        But, there’s no chance of that. I’m wasting my breath.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        “The only way you can say the irradiance for the Earth is approx. 240 W/m^2 is if you average the input over at least 24 hours. ”

        Still no! In 1 second irradiance can be measured in any specific location at that specific time. If you measure a bunch of these scattered around the world at that moment and average them, you will get ~ 240 W/m^2.

        There is no need to wait 24 hr to get a value of ~ 240 W/m^2.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        DREMT says (in his link): “For one thing, “my” position does not involve redefining what “irradiance” is.”
        My position does NOT redefine irradiance.

        I define irradiance as watts per square meter of EM flux — the standard definition. For example, as measured by something like this:
        https://www.tequipment.net/Fluke/IRR1-SOL/Solar-Field-Analyzers/
        There is a fixed area of the detector and it measures how much light is arriving and gives a reading for irradiance for the detecting area.

        “you apparently think you would average the power received over any surface area you want.”
        Ah! Do you want to now talk about AVERAGE irradiance over an area, rather than irradiance at one specific spot? I can indeed average the irradiance over any area I want. I just choose an area that is interesting or important to me.

        Suppose I take my meter and measure inside your spotlight and get 100 W/m^2. Then I check 9 other uniformly spaced locations on the stage and get 0 W/m^2 (outside the spotlight). The average for the whole stage is 10 W/m^2. I don’t see how you could possible object to averaging multiple readings from multiple locations. The fact that some locations are measured to be 0 W/m^2 and some are measured to be 100 W/m^2 doesn’t stop me from finding a valid average of the individual measurements across the stage. (And yes, I could also average over the whole auditorium and maybe get 2 W/m^2)

        “10 W/m^2” is the best 1-number summary of the brightness of the stage as a whole. Just like the average “240 W/m^2” is the best 1-number summary of solar irradiance for the earth.

      • DREMT says:

        …and, just to be extra clear, this:

        “If you measure a bunch of these scattered around the world at that moment and average them…”

        …is what I’m disagreeing with. You shouldn’t be taking samples from the entire Earth’s surface and averaging them, because the entire Earth’s surface is not irradiated in that moment. You should only be taking samples from the lit hemisphere, and averaging them. You are redefining what “irradiance” is, as explained in the linked comment.

      • DREMT says:

        “My position does NOT redefine irradiance.“

        Yes it does, Tim, as explained in my linked comment, and not refuted by your response here. I recommend readers just look at the linked comment in full. I’m getting bored of repeating myself.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        “You shouldn’t be taking samples from the entire Earth’s surface and averaging them, because the entire Earth’s surface is not irradiated in that moment. ”

        We are trying to compare (total incoming power to the whole surface) with (the total outgoing power from the whole surface), Absolutely we should be averaging both incoming radiation and outgoing radiation for the whole surface.

      • DREMT says:

        The reality I’m referring to is that at any one moment the Earth is only receiving light over one hemisphere, while it emits from the entire sphere. “240 W/m^2 in and 240 W/m^2 out” does not reflect that reality.

        Getting very bored of repeating myself.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        DREMT, what question are you trying to answer? Why are you averaging the fluxes to begin with? Why are you interested in the average irradiance?

        I am trying to address the question “How does the total EM power leaving the earth, P(out), compare to the total EM power arriving at the earth, P(in)?”

        To understand P(out) and P(in), I could just as well study P(out)/A and P(in)/A, where A is the total area of the earth. Dividing both sides by a fixed, known amount keeps the relationship the same.

        But P(in)/A is just the average incoming flux over the whole surface. P(out)/A is just the average outgoing flux over the whole surface.

        Dividing P(in) by total area gives me useful information about my original question.

      • DREMT says:

        The reality I’m referring to is that at any one moment the Earth is only receiving light over one hemisphere, while it emits from the entire sphere. “240 W/m^2 in and 240 W/m^2 out” does not reflect that reality.

        The question I want answered is, “why do you people hate reality so much?”

      • DREMT says:

        “Suppose I take my meter and measure inside your spotlight and get 100 W/m^2. Then I check 9 other uniformly spaced locations on the stage and get 0 W/m^2 (outside the spotlight). The average for the whole stage is 10 W/m^2. I don’t see how you could possible object to averaging multiple readings from multiple locations.“

        As I said up-thread…mathematically, you can do whatever you want. Nobody is disputing the maths. The point is – your 10 W/m^2 for the stage is misleading at best. And your 2 W/m^2 for the whole auditorium is even more misleading, and meaningless. The reality is, there’s only a spotlight on that 5 m^2 area of the stage. That’s it. This averaging including surface area that is not irradiated just dilutes the flux. Now…I could even concede there are situations where it might be useful to know the information…but, everything has limits. Everything has to be “within reason”. I say, averaging solar radiation where the Sun don’t shine, for an instantaneous average of 240 W/m^2, is well outside of reason.

        Only an instantaneous average of 480 W/m^2 has anything to do with reality…and even then, it’s still pushing it. Some might argue 960 W/m^2 (no averaging at all) is the way to go. I’m at least trying to meet you guys in the middle.

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        “The point is – your 10 W/m^2 for the stage is misleading at best. “

        The point is — ANY average is “misleading”. The whole point of an average is to ignore specific values and come up with one number that summarizes some set of information. An average NEVER gives a complete picture.

        “there are situations where it might be useful to know the information …”

        Not “might be”, but “are”! 240 W/m^2 tells you that — if you multiply by the area for the object being illuminated — you get the total power to the object. At the total power into the object is an EXTREMELY valuable number.

        For energy balance, your 480 W/m^2 is the useless information. Useless until you ALSO specify it is for half the surface, and FURTHER specific the remaining surface is 0 W/m^2.

      • DREMT says:

        Tim admits that all the 240 W/m^2 can tell him is “total power” – a number which you can get without even needing to average at all. Whereas, the 480 W/m^2 actually reflects the reality that only the hemisphere is irradiated in that moment. The 240 W/m^2 does not reflect that reality at all. So, Tim chooses against reality, for no real reason.

      • Willard says:

        Gemini:

        “The term “Solar Constant” (S0​) is a bit of a misnomer; it is not a physical constant like the speed of light. It is an average value that represents the mean solar electromagnetic power per unit area.”

      • DREMT says:

        Obviously, you can get the “total power” received with all three of the numbers:

        1) 960 W/m^2 x area of the “Earth’s shadow” disk = “total power” received.
        2) 480 W/m^2 x area of the lit hemisphere = “total power” received.
        3) 240 W/m^2 x area of the sphere = “total power” received.

        So, truly, there is nothing to be gained by using the 240 W/m^2 number. It just dilutes the flux, fails to represent reality and fails to even meet the definition of “irradiance”. It’s basically just an insult to people’s intelligence.

      • Willard says:

        Gemini:

        “A 1D (One-Dimensional) climate model is a simplified computer simulation of a planet’s climate that focuses on variations along only one spatial dimension, typically either altitude (vertical) or latitude (horizontal).

        These models are much less complex and computationally intensive than full-scale 3D Global Climate Models (GCMs), making them ideal for initial studies, conceptual understanding, and testing fundamental climate physics.”

      • Nate says:

        “So, truly, there is nothing to be gained by using the 240 W/m^2 number. It just dilutes the flux, fails to represent reality and fails to even meet the definition of “irradiance”. It’”

        For the billionth time, no one here or in climate science is denying the diurnal cycle.

        Therefore your claim of a “failure to represent reality” is a non-failure and totally fake problem.

        In science, it is standard to look at only the subset of available information that is needed to answer a question

        Here, the 240 W/m2 average input flux is addressing the questipn of an energy imbalance.

        You want to instead study the diurnal cycle? Probably not, but no one is stopping you.

        Now its time to find a new non controversy.

      • DREMT says:

        There’s no controversy in anything I’m saying, Nate. That’s the funny thing.

        Perhaps readers will check out the linked article. Then they will find the controversial part of the argument. Nobody on here even allows me to get to it, pushing back instead on the parts that should not even be disputed!

    • Willard says:

      Gemini:

      “The zero-dimensional (0D) model is the simplest in a hierarchy of climate models. More sophisticated models are built by adding spatial dimensions to increase accuracy and detail.”

    • Tim Folkerts says:

      Arkady says: “Any 480 W/m² “in” scenario implicitly assumes a very different geometry, one where the Sun is so close that its rays diverge significantly, which is not the case in reality.”

      I must admit I don’t understand this comment.

      960 W/m² implies a parallel beam of 1370 W/m^2 sunlight with about 30% reflected away.

      480 W/m² implies that beam averaged a hemisphere.
      240 W/m² implies that beam averaged a sphere.

      I am having trouble picturing 480 W/m² due to a close, diverging beam.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Tim Folkerts.

        I am having trouble picturing 480 W/m² due to a close, diverging beam.

        My reasoning is as follows.

        Standard Model:
        (1-α)So(πR²) = (4πR²)σT^4
        (1-α)So/4 = σT^4
        240 = σT^4

        Non-Standard Model:
        (1-α)So(2πR²) = (4πR²)σT^4
        (1-α)So/2 = σT^4
        480 = σT^4

        Also shown here: https://ibb.co/20nXwN9r

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        Arkady, that doesn’t clarify anything for me. To increase the total power delivered, you would need to illuminate the “back side” a bit. I am not sure how you expect to illuminate the back side with a CLOSER source.

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        Okay.

        The Non-Standard Model increases the size of Earth’s shadow from that of the Standard Model; nothing to do with illuminating the night side.

        Do you see that (1-α)So/2 ≫ (1-α)So/4 ?

        The Math and the linked figure are very clear, I think.

      • DREMT says:

        One of the most elaborate straw men I’ve ever seen. So much effort has gone into creating it. The little diagram, and everything! Classic. I’m honoured that you would go to such lengths to misrepresent something as simple as the “480 W/m^2 in”. Truly remarkable.

      • Willard says:

        Gemini:

        “The figure of 480 W/m2 is being used in a calculation or argument that involves Earth’s hemispherical area”

      • Tim Folkerts says:

        Arkady, Yes, something divided by 2 is larger than something divided by 4. But your shadow drawing is not a valid argument for more flux hitting the sphere.

        You could double the absorbed power by, for example…
        * putting a second sun on the opposite side, so there is no night side.
        * moving the sun 0.707 AU away, so the intensity, So, is 2x stronger.

        If you instead move the source closer but also dim it so that So is constant, you will intercept LESS flux. Look at this diagram. For a light source at “B” providing So to the surface, the intercepted area is the circle around “A”, not the area of some shadow somewhere behind the sphere.
        https://undergroundmathematics.org/thinking-about-geometry/r9694/images/diagram-labelled.png

      • Arkady Ivanovich says:

        your shadow drawing is not a valid argument for more flux hitting the sphere.

        Exactly my point!

        Thanks.

      • DREMT says:

        “960 W/m² implies a parallel beam of 1370 W/m^2 sunlight with about 30% reflected away.

        480 W/m² implies that beam averaged a hemisphere.
        240 W/m² implies that beam averaged a sphere.”

        Yes, it’s pretty straightforward. No need for elaborate straw men.

        At any one moment, the Earth does not receive the sunlight over its entire surface area. “480 W/m^2 in” reflects that fact. “240 W/m^2” in does not, in any way, shape, or form, reflect that fact.

  69. Bindidon says:

    Today a bit of daily info about sea ice extent at both Poles.

    1. Absolute data

    1.1 Arctic

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1J9kx750_CtARv4sKfXBddRnkZm3E2U4v/view

    1.2 Antarctic

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1BY_ACQnX5hfQbvPAih6YTzsYEISTatTO/view

    *
    As always, many prefer looking at absolute data; but it is no easy to see, in a 365 day chart, how far away from the mean of 1981-2010 the extent has been during the current year.

    *
    2. ‘Anomaly’ data

    Obtained by subtracting for each day d in each year y, the value of the same day d30 in the daily means for 1981-2010 (the normals) from the value of d in y, thus removing the annual cycle.

    { The Robertson ignoramus has never understood this concept: He genuinely believes that NOAA’s trivial explanation to the inexperienced public would describe the exact procedure. }

    2.1 Arctic

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1QBlh325tHF-4NRlWsHf_6sgskO_ipyse/view

    2.2 Antarctic

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PdqOctb7zaMgvdMdX2sId1g_o7U13mM-/view

    *
    3. Finally, a look at the global sum of 2.1 and 2.2:

    3.1 Absolute

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1srcqo5JwpPsfCGMbRnbnGVq2JLxq-m3Y/view

    This chart looks a bit strange, as it represents the sum of two complementary datasets.

    3.2 ‘Anomaly’ data

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1DnrnCfQjICj21o1gOeFMbMI1xsF0nZoj/view

    Nothing to scare about; we are – in my layman’s opinion, of course – far away from a dramatic sea ice loss situation.

    Conversely, we are also far from the supposedly imminent recovery of sea ice everywhere, which is so often claimed by ‘interested’ pseudo-skeptics: we are currently at 3.5 Mkm^2 on mid October for the Globe, what is quite respectable, as is shown by graph 3.2.

  70. Bindidon says:

    It’s always funny to read things like:

    ” Hate to tell you Bindidon but all the months demonstrate a dramatic flattening of the decline in sea ice. ”

    The Hunter boy was speaking about Arctic sea ice in September.

    He doesn’t need to tell me anything about sea ice: I download its data from two sources since about 10 years.

    I guess he never did and won’t ever; but he nonetheless always knows everything better; that’s the hallmark of the retired elementary school teacher :–)

    Today, let’s look beyond the Arctic and take a look at global sea ice, and leave the daily corner to monthly data.

    Here are the ten lowest records of the monthly global sea ice extent data for September:

    2024 20.69 (Mkm^2)
    2023 21.18
    2025 22.39
    2022 22.59
    2016 22.68
    2019 22.69
    2017 22.73
    2018 22.75
    2020 22.77
    2012 22.78

    *
    The 1981-2010 mean is with 24.90 km^2 at position 28 in the sort, just above 1994. This does not mean however that a return to more sea ice couldn’t happen in a near future: at position 27 in the list, we namely find… 2013.

    *
    Here is a chart comparing absolute sea ice extent data in the Arctic, the Antarctic and for the whole Globe:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PjYVPnEn62uSwtG7Nw_eTFtorNribnM3/view

    Source of all the stuff:

    https://masie_web.apps.nsidc.org/pub/DATASETS/NOAA/G02135/

    • bill hunter says:

      Bindidon says:

      ”Today, let’s look beyond the Arctic and take a look at global sea ice, and leave the daily corner to monthly data.”

      Mr. Po Datahead instead of acknowledging the point regarding a couple decades of alarmist warnings of imminent disaster in The Arctic consults his datasets and regales us with a dataset that merely demonstrates minor changes in ice levels that would seem to fit well within the boundaries of a natural variation seen in ice core deposits.

      Just the type of response one would expect from a narcissist. Bindeadon comes through yet again.

    • Bindidon says:

      Hunter boy

      You behave like a little, stubborn and coleric 12-year old child. That’s why I name you ‘Hunter boy’.

      Firstly, this information was not directed to you but rather to those who understand what I learned, use and mean. Neither do you.

      *
      Secondly, you were the one who pointed on September 2025 whixch showed the highest summer sea ice extent level in the Arctic since a decade or so.

      Thirdly, you are inexperienced in puncto climate lime series – be it UAH or anything else – that you even did not see that I published above absolute data, which is always flatter then if anomaly-based.

      You post about climate exactly like you wrt the Moon’s motions: zero technical skill, zero science.

      • bill hunter says:

        The topic I was discussing Bindidon was the summer ice extent issue where graphic artists like you were prophesizing a significant loss of summer ice resulting in zero summer ice and the extinction of polar bears from drowning while desperately swimming to find an ice patty to rest upon being used to extract money from elderly dowagers. This hasn’t been occurring for an adequate period of time to DECLARE the climate is changing by your own standards.

        Where is your graph on that Bindidon? After all it’s the only topic I brought up here. Why are you so desperately avoiding it to the extent of trying to change the discussion?

    • Bindidon says:

      Oh I forgot to show you more of the alarmistic corner, this time starting in 1951:

      https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ebdqPl_tmxazXAMchHEU87zVvvPdonef/view

      Have some fun!

  71. Gordon Robertson says:

    angech….”If your comment was right, then by the same logic more of the surface is covered by darkness per rotation as well.
    The warmth due to faster rotation is due to the phenomenon of
    Stefan-Boltzmann law, statement that the total radiant heat power emitted from a surface is proportional to the fourth power of its absolute temperature”.

    ***

    S-B does not deal with heat, it deals only with EM. The related heat is lost as the EM is created and S-B is concerned only with the intensity of EM radiated. EM is produced when electrons in atoms of a surface drop from a higher energy level to a lower energy level. Since the higher energy level represents a higher KE for the electrons, it also represents a macro-level increase in heat. When the electrons drop back to a lower orbital level, the KE, hence heat, is converted to EM at the angular frequency of the orbiting electrons and the gained heat is lost completely.

    As to the effect of a planet’s angular speed on temperature, let’s begin with the Moon which does not rotate locally at all. The Moon’s near side always points inwardly at the Earth. When the Moon is between the Earth and the Sun, the far side gets continuous sunlight for 14 days of the Moon’s 28 day orbital cycle. The far side’s average temperature is +127C during that period. When Earth is between the Moon and the Sun, the lunar near side gets perpetual sunlight, and the far side has an average temperature of -133C.

    That range of -133C to +128C gives us an example of a planetary body that does not rotate at all. It’s mathematical average over one orbit is -6C whereas a faster rotating planet like Earth, with an extensive atmosphere, and oceans, has a mathematical average of +15C. Whereas the lunar average is an average of extremes and not that reliable it does demonstrate that a body that does not rotate on a local axis is cooler overall despite the extremes in temperature.

    Your argument is based on the amount of time in the unlit state but you must consider the rate of heat dissipation versus the rate of heat intake on the lit side. The rate at which radiation in the IR spectrum is lost is 1/260th of the rate it is lost due to direct conduction to the atmosphere touching the surface. That figure comes from the work of studies done using the Pyrani gauge by Tom Shula.

    https://tomn.substack.com/p/tom-shula-a-novel-perspective-on

    It means that the rate of heat dissipation is much lower than the rate of heat creation from solar EM. Ergo, any heat created will be radiated on the unlit side much slower than it was created. Also, much of the created heat will be absorbed by the atmosphere and retained for a period of time.

    This explains the so-called GHE far better than a trace gas.

    It stands to reason that a faster rotating planet will expose more surface area to solar energy and have less time to dissipate the heat acquired before the solar warming cycle begins again.

    Of course all this depends on several factors as well, such as the composition and thickness of an atmosphere, the native surface temperature, perhaps due to internal heat sources, etc.

  72. Gordon Robertson says:

    binny…”People like Robertson (see his “Azov Battalion” syndrome), but also many young Russians who celebrated the end of World War II in Moscow on May 9 of this year, truly believe that Russia is fighting in Ukraine a country full of Nazis, just as it fought against Hitler’s SS henchmen and the Wehrmacht in World War II”.

    ***

    Robertson bases his critique of the Ukraine on fact. Anyone interested might look up Oliver Stone’s video on the Net ‘Ukraine on Fire’. I was skeptical when I first watched the video and I tried to verify each controversial claim the video made. It proved accurate.

    There were outright Nazi supporters in the Ukraine during WW II and they justified their eager participation on a means to free the Ukraine. Some Ukrainians stepped overboard and participated in the atrocities against Jews and other minorities targeted by the Nazis.

    One of them was Stepan Bandera, a co-leader of the infamous UON, a group of Ukrainians white supremacists formed in 1929 while the Ukraine was a Russian soviet. Their petty actions against Stalin, a monster, got him so peeved that he started a famine in the Ukraine that wiped out many poor Ukrainians.

    Another was the SS Galicia, a battalion of Ukrainians who fought freely for the Nazis. I say ‘freely’ because some nationalities were pressed into action at the risk of their lives if they reneged.

    Both Bandera and the SS Galacia are feted each year in a candlelight vigil in the Ukraine and it was passed into law in 2016 that such Nazi collaborators be honoured in the Ukraine. I have no idea how many Ukrainians are involved in this lunacy and I am not trying to tar the entire country. However, if peace is to be attained in the Ukraine, something has to e done about the unrest created by out and out white supremacists who are armed.

    The Azov battalion was sanctioned by the US Congress due to their Nazi associations. Their flag was based on a Nazi SS insignia and many of the soldiers openly wore the swastika tattooed on their bodies.

    In 2012, when an internationally approved president was elected in the Ukraine, things went swimmingly till the president selected an economic package offered by Russia over the EU, whose offer was claimed by the president to involve cutbacks for ordinary Ukrainians. As a result, some Ukrainians revolted in a peaceful demonstration that turned ugly when Ukrainian nationalists got involved with arms and ran the president off.

    When a president for whom they had voted was run off in a coup, native Russians trapped in the Ukraine, some 18 million, in the Donbass region, revolted. The ordinary army could not deal with them and Azov was sent in, committing atrocities. When that came to the attention of Putin, he took Crimea in retaliation but no move was made to invade the Ukraine.

    We don’t hear of any of this through the Western media, who present the Ukraine as an innocent nation striving for democracy and being bullied by Russia.

    The atrocities continued and the native Russians continued to fight back. Zelensky promised to fix the problem and made it worse. During the process he stifled the media and essentially became a dictator.

    After 8 years of that, Putin lost it and invaded. As he put it, and I don’t know if he can be trusted, he only wanted to give the Russians a chance to vote on their future. He also wanted to get rid of Azov, which he did immediately. Russia has never tried to move further into the Ukraine than the Donbass region, lending credence to their claim they had no interest in taking over the country.

    We won’t know till the violence is settled and meantime, NATO and the media are doing its best, using propaganda, to engage us in a nuclear war. Binny should e more careful with what it is he wishes for since he is essentially next door to Russia and one nuke will take most of Germany out.

    That’s my concern. We should be talking to Putin seriously whereas all we are accomplishing is fanning the fires of a potentially disastrous nuclear war.

    • Clint R says:

      From ChatGPT:

      Would Russians living in Ukraine want to live under Russia or Ukraine?

      Summary

      * Most prefer Ukraine, especially after witnessing what Russian occupation and invasion have looked like.

      * Some may still feel emotional or cultural ties to Russia, but these do not automatically translate into political support for Russian governance.

      * Support for Russia among ethnic Russians in Ukraine has significantly declined since the war began.

      Putin is a murderer. He’s “liberating” people that don’t want to be liberated. IOW, he’s trying to take over Ukraine.

  73. Gordon Robertson says:

    christos…”The EM energy is not heat. When hitting a surface (matter) the EM energy is not heat.
    There an interaction process occurs.

    When interacting, the matter doesn’t permit the EM energy in. What matter spontaneously does is to emit EM energy, not to absorb EM energy.
    Matter is able to absorb energy only when the energy is in form of heat (by conduction and convection)”.

    ***

    Let’s explore this together.

    My version…open to amendment.

    According to Neils Bohr, circa 1913, electrons in atoms that make up a surface absorb EM energy and convert it to heat. Electrons that are in a normal orbital energy level in any atom are in the ‘ground state’. If they have moved to a higher orbital energy level, they are said to be excited, a temporary condition before falling back to a lower orbital energy level.

    An electron in an excited state that is still orbiting an atomic nucleus, has gained kinetic energy. That gain in KE for all atoms of affected mass, is considered to be heat. The KE level of the electrons can be raised by adding heat to the mass, absorbing EM of the proper frequency from a hotter source, or by simply increasing the pressure on the mass.

    If the excited electron drops back to a lower orbital energy level, not necessarily all the way to ground state, it must give up the KE it gained earlier to become excited. That means the electrons dropping back en masse lose heat. They do so by converting the KE to EM, which it radiates away at a specific frequency. If it drops only a few energy levels it emits IR and if it drops more energy levels the frequency of EM it radiates has a progressively higher frequency.

    In hydrogen, for example, an electron can gain up to 7 orbital energy levels. If it drops back from level 7 to 4, or in between, it emits IR. If it drops all the way to ground state from level 7, it emits UV. The temperature of the hydrogen will have a decisive factor on the frequencies emitted.

    Of course, EM radiation is only a surface feature since interior electrons in a mass do not radiate EM. Rather, they transfer any heat gained via electrons to other atoms.

    I think that answers an earlier question you pose re why heat is lost as it penetrates further into a mass like the Earth’s surface. Each mass has a specific thermal resistance which is the inverse of its conductance.

    Fourier stated the heat flow equation as…

    dq/dt = [k.A.(Th – Tl)]/l

    where…

    dq/dt = instantaneous rate of heat flow
    k = thermal conductivity of the material
    A = cross-sectional area
    Th = hot temperature in a gradient
    Tl = low temperature in a gradient
    l = length

    Integrating this equation should give the total heat conducted and its obvious the amount is dependent on the temperature differential and the thickness of the mass.

    • Gordon,

      So we agree, that the excess heat is what affects the climate, and not the greenhouse effect itself.

      The solar energy is not heat. Only a portion of the incoming solar energy is transformed into heat, and that heat is what the planet surface absorbs.

      The Rotational Warming Phenomenon describes the mechanism a planet with a higher the (N*cp) product is capable to absorb more solar energy in form of heat.

      https://www.cristos-vournas.com

      • studentb says:

        Still pushing BS uphill?
        Nobody believes your arbitrary fudge factor FI (=1 or 0.47) which you have subjectively defined.
        Very unscientific – as can be expected from skeptics.

    • Climate alarmists and Climate skeptics argue about the role of the greenhouse gasses in the Earth’s temperature.

      Alarmists claim it is the GHG that cause a temperature rise.
      Skeptics do not agree – they claim the temperature rise is due to other reasons.

      But both, alarmists and skeptics follow the same mistaken concept, they mutually claim that it is the atmosphere – in the first place – it is the atmosphere which warms Earth’s surface, they mutually claim that atmosphere acts as a kind of a protective blanket.

      And, it is a mistaken concept.

      https://www.cristos-vournas.com

  74. Willard says:

    BACK AT THE RANCH

    Colombian president says US military struck Colombian boat, killed his citizens

    https://abcnews.go.com/International/colombian-president-us-military-struck-colombian-boat-killed/story?id=126348450

    Let’s hope the pilots who did this did not wear crowns.

    There’s only one KING!

  75. Bindidon says:

    The disgusting, dirty Trump~ing boy throws feces at peaceful protesters from his fighter jet:

    https://www.n-tv.de/politik/Trump-kontert-Proteste-mit-KI-Videos-als-Koenig-article26106163.html

    But I suspect millions of MAGA-obsessed Trumpistas applauded him joyfully and loudly.

    You can’t fall any lower.

    • Clint R says:

      You left out the best part, Bindi. Trump was wearing a crown!

      He really knows how to trigger Leftists.

      What you kids don’t understand is that people wouldn’t be allowed to freely protest like this under a king/dictator. The (paid-for) crowd proves themselves wrong!

      • Willard says:

        Hey Puffman, riddle me this –

        Tennessee native Josh Abbotoy heads RidgeRunner. Abbotoy also is managing partner at New Founding, the conservative venture capital firm backing the Highland Rim Project.

        Abbotoy is a later addition to New Founding. The company was started by Nate Fischer, the current CEO, and Matthew Peterson, who left New Founding for Glenn Beck’s Blaze Media. They each received financial assistance from the Claremont Institute, a right-wing think tank where Peterson was vice president for education and founder of the influential journal American Mind, aimed at young conservatives. Both Fischer and Abbotoy were Lincoln Fellows at Claremont.

        https://baptistnews.com/article/the-far-right-is-building-aligned-communities-while-looking-for-a-red-caesar/

        How come the Claremont Institute does not think it’s a joke, and actually is wishing for a Red Caesar?

    • professor P says:

      It certainly is amazing that a 79 year-old, president no less, can behave like a naughty 10 year-old. MAGAS may laugh, but it is just another sign of the decline of the USA. Mark my words, there is more (and worse) to come.

      • Clint R says:

        Yes PP, USA has been in decline. MAGA is all about reversing that.

        It’s only going to get worse for the cult kids. Reality can be harsh teacher.

      • Willard says:

        Hey Puffman, riddle me this –

        Colombian public media reports that a U.S. military strike on a boat on September 15—the second attack on a vessel by the U.S. in the Caribbean that we’re aware of—was a Colombian boat and was in Colombian territorial waters.

        At least one of the three victims extrajudicially killed in the strike was Colombian lifelong fisherman Alejandro Carranza.

        Alejandro’s identity is confirmed by his cousin.

        The Colombian boat was adrift and had its distress signal up due to an engine failure.

        https://bsky.app/profile/gabriellehecht.bsky.social/post/3m3kgxgwrf22b

        Is this how teh Donald will make the US of A win again?

  76. Gordon Robertson says:

    christos….”Gordon,

    So we agree, that the excess heat is what affects the climate, and not the greenhouse effect itself.

    The solar energy is not heat. Only a portion of the incoming solar energy is transformed into heat, and that heat is what the planet surface absorbs”.

    ***

    In English, a misnomer is defined by Merriam-Webster as “a use of a wrong or inappropriate name”.

    There is nothing more wrong, or inappropriate, as the misuse of the name ‘greenhouse effect’ to describe warming in the atmosphere. The GHE suggests that the atmosphere is warmer than it should be due to the same effect that warms a greenhouse.

    This misinformation, which is now chicanery, is based on a misunderstanding dating back to the 19th century. In those days, no one knew anything about the structure of atoms or the relationship between electrons in those atoms and electromagnetic energy. It was presumed in those days that heat moved through the atmosphere as ‘heat rays’ and the concept of heat rays has been confused, in modern times, with the trapping of heat, when IR is trapped by glass in a real greenhouse.

    Trapping IR in a real greenhouse has nothing to do with the warming of the air inside the greenhouse. The warming is all due to air molecules being warmed by infrastructure, soil, vegetation, being warmed by solar energy. When the air is warmed, the molecules become agitated and that is heat. Heated air must rise and as it does, the heated air is trapped by the glass ceiling and walls.

    Warming in a real greenhouse is due to a blocking of natural convection by the glass. Modern greenhouses are cooled by opening vents in the ceilings and walls, allowing a certain amount of heat to escape, to control temperature. There is no such mechanism in the atmosphere itself and the action that does produce warming has nothing to do with blocking convection. In fact, air convection, as in rising, heated air, is seldom blocked.

    Yes, we agree that any excess heat is due to other causes and not to a fictitious greenhouse effect. If the Earth had no oceans and no atmosphere, with its current rate of rotation, it would be cooler than the Moon, even though both are exposed to a similar amount of solar radiation.

    I also agree that only a portion of incoming solar is converted to heat. Anything reflected from the surface or the atmosphere is not converted.

  77. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    Foundational knowledge functions much like the structural base of a building; it is essential yet often overlooked. It bears the weight of all subsequent understanding and therefore requires periodic examination to confirm its integrity and to prevent unnoticed issues from compromising the entire structure.

    The behavior of atmospheric constituents in a b s o r b i n g outgoing infrared radiation but not influencing significantly the incoming solar radiation (they have no strong a b s o r p t i o n bands at solar wavelengths) is known as the greenhouse effect…

    The radiative transfer calculations of Manabe and Strickler (1964) indicate that if all the CO2 were removed from the atmosphere, but other constituents maintained their present concentrations, the mean surface temperature would be some 10 C lower. Since lower temperatures would reduce the atmospheric concentration of water vapor and hence its contribution to the greenhouse effect, the actual reduction in temperature would be larger. This water vapor feedback effect is of crucial importance in evaluating the climate consequences of an increase in atmospheric CO2…

    Man-Made Carbon Dioxide and Climate Change: A Review of the Scientific Problems.
    By P.S. Liss and A.J. Crane. Geo Books, Norwich 1983.

    • Clint R says:

      Sorry Ark, but you’re STILL making the same mistakes. Just making “calculations” without the correct physics ain’t science.

      You need to show how CO2’s 15μ photons can warm a 288k surface. And you can’t do that!

      Now crawl back under your bed before the kings find you….

      • studentb says:

        I see you are still banging on about magical 15μ photons that apparently “know” their source temperature. I bet you believe in unicorns too.

      • Clint R says:

        Child sb, making false accusations only demonstrates your immaturity and ignorance.

        Please continue.

      • Donald says:

        The spectrum of wavelengths emitted by black bodies at temperatures of 235k and 288K include photons of 15 microns.

        Do the 15-micron photons originating from a 288K surface not warm a secondary 288K surface? If so, why would a 15-micron photon from a surface with a different temperature not also warm the same 288K surface?

      • Clint R says:

        Good question, Donald. It’s a good question because it hits directly at the crux of the problem — very few people understand the basic physics.

        All of “climate science” seems to ignore the basic physics. The CO2 nonsense is all about increasing temperature, right? But none of the hoax promoters understands what temperature is, let alone what is required to raise temperature.

        Start with an understanding of “temperature”:

        A bucket of water has a temperature. Humans invented a way to measure that temperature. A simple mercury thermometer is placed in the water. The molecules in the water have kinetic energy — they are moving. As the molecules strike the glass tube of the thermometer, their energy gets transferred to the glass and then to the mercury. If the water is hot, the water molecules cause the mercury molecules to become more active, causing the mercury to expand, causing its level in the tube to rise. We calibrate the tube for whatever temperature scale we prefer — Celsius, Fahrenheit, Kelvin (Absolute), Rankine, or other.

        Simple.

        The temperature of the water becomes the temperature of the mercury. We say the temperature is due to the average kinetic energy of the molecules. If no new thermal energy is added to the water, or lost, the temperature remains constant, and the thermometer reads the same temperature.

        Next, it’s necessary to understand what is required to raise temperature:

        If a heater raises the water temperature, the thermometer reads higher.

        If ice is added to the water, its temperature drops. The average kinetic energy of the molecules is reduced, the level of the mercury falls, and the thermometer reads a cooler temperature.

        It’s important to note here that adding ice adds both mass and energy to the water. Mass does not determine temperature, so we need to only consider the energy. The average kinetic energy of the ice molecules is less than the average kinetic energy of the water molecules, so the average kinetic energy decreases, and the thermometer reads a lower temperature.

        Energy is added, but the temperature decreases!

        So, adding energy does NOT always result in a higher temperature. It HAS TO BE the right kind of energy. As applied to climate science, the frequency of absorbed photons would have to raise the average kinetic energy of the water molecules. That’s why we know ice cannot boil water, and CO2’s 15&mu photons can not warm Earth’s 288K surface.

        It’s simple. Just basic physics.

    • Gordon Robertson says:

      All this proves is that Manabe and Strickler are a couple of cranks. We already knew that after they were exposed by Gerlich and Tscheuschner. G&T pointed out that none of their claims have been scientifically verified.

      M&S are claiming in essence that a trace gas is causing a 10C warming in the atmosphere, a claim not backed by any known science. Such a claim defies the Ideal gas Law and the heat diffusion equation.

      Heat diffusion is a reference to the ease with which heat moves through a substance. It’s known that air itself has a low conduction factor so why should a trace gas have the ability to transfer large amounts of heat?

      That is emphasized better when the trace gas, CO2, makes up only 0.06% by mass of the entire atmosphere. The Ideal Gas Law tells us, for a constant volume, that the 0.06% mass translates to a warming of no more than 0.06C in the transfer of heat to the rest of the atmosphere.

      From wiki…

      Heat diffusivity = alpha = k/p.Cp

      where k = thermal conductivity (W/m-K)
      p = density (K/m^3)
      Cp = specific heat capacity(J/Kg.K)

      For anyone interested there is an excellent example of heat diffusivity calculation for the atmosphere in their paper (pages bottom 6 to 10) at the following link.

      https://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0707/0707.1161v4.pdf

      One thing that stands out with those critical of G&T is the complete lack of scientific rebuttals. Any critiques have been abysmally rhetorical and lacking substance.

      An example, when Halpern et al (Eli Rabbet) rebutted G&T, at one point they claimed that G&T’s use of the 2nd law suggested one body of two bodies radiating at each other was not radiating. They based that on the mistaken assumption that heat had to be transferred between two bodies at different temperatures, an assumption that is prevalent in climate alarm theory.

      The 2nd law is clear and G&T used it correctly. In a rebuttal they pointed out that in a heat transfer, heat is the energy being transferred and that the only way to sum heats in a transfer is to sum heat quantities based on the 2nd law (that is, heat can only be transferred by its own means hot to cold). It is not permissible to mix EM with heat in the sum, based on an incorrect assumption that EM will produce heat in a hotter body when radiated from a cooler body.

  78. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    For decades, state and federal officials have been warning about the kind of catastrophic damage wrought by the storm that hit Western Alaska over the weekend.

    But those predictions, along with hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding for mitigation efforts, were not enough to prevent dozens of homes from floating away when struck with the remnants of Typhoon Halong, leaving one person dead and hundreds in emergency shelters.

    https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/rural-alaska/2025/10/16/officials-for-years-knew-about-flood-risks-in-rural-alaska-the-recent-storm-illustrated-how-little-they-have-to-show-for-it/

    Drill, baby Donald, drill!

  79. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    The 2009 Gerlich & Tscheuschner paper (GT09) has been scientifically debunked in the peer-reviewed literature (https://www.worldscientific.com/doi/10.1142/S021797921005555X), as well as in several excellent technical blogs.

    This paper has been justifiably disregarded. None of its principal conclusions are substantiated or valid. Its overall quality falls well below the standards expected of a scientific publication, and its acceptance for publication is, at best, surprising.

    In this journal, Gerhard Gerlich and Ralf D. Tscheuschner claim to have falsified the existence of an atmospheric greenhouse effect.1 Here, we show that their methods, logic, and conclusions are in error. Their most significant errors include trying to apply the Clausius statement of the Second Law of Thermodynamics to only one side of a heat transfer process rather than the entire process, and systematically ignoring most non-radiative heat flows applicable to the Earth’s surface and atmosphere. They claim that radiative heat transfer from a colder atmosphere to a warmer surface is forbidden, ignoring the larger transfer in the other direction which makes the complete process allowed. Further, by ignoring heat capacity and non-radiative heat flows, they claim that radiative balance requires that the surface cool by 100 K or more at night, an obvious absurdity induced by an unphysical assumption. This comment concentrates on these two major points, while also taking note of some of Gerlich and Tscheuschner’s other errors and misunderstandings.

    Halpern J. B., Colose C. M., Ho-Stuart C., Shore J. D., Smith A. P., Zimmermann J. (2010), Comment on “Falsification of the Atmospheric CO2 Greenhouse Effects within the Frame of Physics”, International Journal of Modern Physics B, 24:1309-1332.

    • Arkady Ivanovich says:

      GT09 appears to be structured mainly around disputing claims drawn from popular science sources, encyclopedias, and early twentieth-century writings, while showing little awareness of, or engagement with, the contemporary academic literature in climate science.

      The paper relies on careless verbal reasoning and unsuitable examples that distort others’ arguments through a misapplication of basic thermodynamic principles.

      Another recurring tactic is to claim that the subject is “too complex to be knowable,” using this as a pretext to dismiss legitimate efforts to establish a coherent body of knowledge.

      Most critically, the paper’s conclusions are demonstrably inconsistent with observed reality.

      The authors devote 18 pages to the physics of actual greenhouses, seemingly unaware that the term “greenhouse effect” is metaphorical and not meant to imply that the atmosphere operates identically to a physical greenhouse. While they correctly note certain differences, they overlook the essential point where the metaphor remains valid: in both cases, sunlight provides a continuous energy input, and in both, a mechanism slows the escape of heat, producing a rise in temperature as a result.

      • Clint R says:

        Ark, the reason people find it hard to debunk the GHE nonsense is because it’s a moving target. For example, can you state your definition/description of the GHE nonsense?

        You can’t!

      • studentb says:

        The reason why people find it hard to debunk “Earth is a sphere” nonsense is because it’s a moving target.

        The same with the composition of the moon. It’s so hard these day to prove it is made of green cheese.

  80. Philj says:

    https://tinyurl.com/fpnk72ba

    The seasons numbers are in. Looks like a significant recovery in ozone levels.

    I expect cooling sea surface temps to follow

  81. Willard says:

    SOLAR MINIMUM UPDATE

    Even as the federal government attempts to prop up the waning coal industry, New England’s last coal-fired power plant has ceased operations three years ahead of its planned retirement date. The closure of the New Hampshire facility paves the way for its owner to press ahead with an initiative to transform the site into a clean energy complex including solar panels and battery storage systems.

    https://grist.org/energy/new-englands-final-coal-plant-shuts-down-years-ahead-of-schedule/

    Should the DOE give Donald 250M like the DOJ intends to do?

  82. Bindidon says:

    Robertson’s lies about Russian aggression against Ukraine are unimaginable and just as disgusting as those of Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Viktorovich Lavrov, who two days ago brazenly repeated that Russia could not stop its “special operation” until Ukraine was completely “denazified.”

    Robertson’s pro-Putin small talk about Russian aggression is exactly what French, Italian, and German neo-Nazis have been saying for years, especially on Telegram and Instagram.

    It has been known for years that Russia funds all of these European far-right activities as often as possible. The goal is clear: destabilization.

    *
    I have responded to his incredible lies at least once, but Robertson doesn’t bother with replies to his posts (no matter what they were about), discards all those replies, and starts his lies all over again.

    *
    But it’s not just this “denazification lie” that should be emphasized; The other, no less relevant, claim is that Russia simply wanted to liberate the Russian-speaking regions of eastern Ukraine from Ukrainian oppression.

    The worst thing about this Russian lie is that it is gradually becoming clear that what was already suspected is bitter reality: several hundred Ukrainians living in the east of the country, who openly speak out and demonstrate against the Russian siege, have been forcibly recruited by Russia over the past two years to fight against their own countrymen.

    *
    I previously posted a link to a 2022 article in the French newspaper Le Monde, which featured an interactive image showing how Russia started a war it thought it could win within three days.

    Anyone can see that Russia’s invasion streams came not only from the east, but also from the north, with one attempt even to immediately capture Kyiv:

    https://www.lemonde.fr/les-decodeurs/article/2022/03/02/guerre-en-ukraine-suivez-en-carte-l-evolution-de-l-invasion-russe-au-jour-le-jour_6115863_4355770.html

    A more recent graphic shows the aggression from the beginning until October 2025:

    https://www.lemonde.fr/les-decodeurs/article/2022/05/11/invasion-de-l-ukraine-en-cartes-l-evolution-des-combats-semaine-apres-semaine_6125591_4355770.html

    *
    The best part of Robertson’s infamous stories is that on May 9 of this year, the Russian nomenklatura declared that Ukraine did not exist as an independent country: it had always been part of Russia and would soon become so again.

    *
    What Putin, Medwedew, Lavrow, Pesky and their nearest acolytes in Moscow want is simply the re-establishment of the CCCP, i.e., the USSR.

    • Bindidon says:

      In a paragraph above, I wrote incorrectly:

      ” The worst thing about this Russian lie is that it is gradually becoming clear that what was already suspected is bitter reality: several hundred Ukrainians living in the east of the country, who openly speak out and demonstrate against the Russian siege, have been forcibly recruited by Russia over the past two years to fight against their own countrymen. ”

      Should read

      ” The worst thing about this Russian lie is that it is gradually becoming clear that what was already suspected is bitter reality: several hundred thousand Ukrainians living in the east/south of the country, who openly speak out and demonstrate against the Russian siege, have been forcibly recruited by Russia over the past two years to fight against their own countrymen.

      These recruited Ukrainians are of course considered ‘Russians’ by Russia since it has illegally and unilaterally annected Ukraine’s eastern and southern regions. “

  83. Arkady Ivanovich says:

    Perception vs Energy Conservation: it’s like they speak a different language!

    Physics requires energy conservation over the entire object, not only the lit part. “Skeptics” see sunlight illuminating a disk of area πR² and assume that the rest of the sphere somehow “does not count.” But the laws of physics require that what is absorbed by the illuminated portion must, in steady state, be balanced by emission from the entire planet’s surface area, 4πR².

    If I asked: if a tree falls in the forest and there is no one around to hear it, does it make a sound? I can guess with 99.99% certainty what the skeptics’ answer would be. Their reasoning often stops at perception, not physics.

    Posted on 17 August 2011 by Chris Colose.
    Some recent attention has recently been going around the web concerning a new “paper” done by Joseph E. Postma (PDF here) which claims to “…physically negate the requirement for a postulation of a radiative atmospheric greenhouse effect.” It has been echoed particularly by some of the more crackpot web sources like climaterealists.com, and of course is spreading around various “skeptic” blogs.

    The claims are of course extraordinary, along the lines of Gerlich and Tseuchner’s alleged falsification of the atmospheric greenhouse effect. As is often the case with these types of “skeptics,” the more extravagant the claim, the more obscure the publishing venue; in this case the host is Principia Scientific International, which according to the website “…was conceived after 22 international climate experts and authors joined forces to write the climate science bestseller, ‘Slaying the Sky Dragon: Death of the Greenhouse Gas Theory.'” Most rational people would stop here, but this is the Americanized age where we need to glorify everyone’s opinion and must provide rebuttals for everything,…

    • DREMT says:

      Poor Arkady still hasn’t got over losing the argument.

    • Clint R says:

      Ark lives under his bed, hiding from the kings. About once a day, he emerges to demonstrate his ignorance of science. Here, he’s STILL confusing flux with energy.

      They just can’t learn….

    • Arkady,

      “Physics requires energy conservation over the entire object, not only the lit part. “Skeptics” see sunlight illuminating a disk of area πR² and assume that the rest of the sphere somehow “does not count.” But the laws of physics require that what is absorbed by the illuminated portion must, in steady state, be balanced by emission from the entire planet’s surface area, 4πR².”
      (Emphasis added)

      Arkady, please, define, what is absorbed by the illuminated portion???

      https://www.cristos-vournas.com

  84. Gordon Robertson says:

    ark…”Physics requires energy conservation over the entire object, not only the lit part. “Skeptics” see sunlight illuminating a disk of area pR² and assume that the rest of the sphere somehow “does not count.” But the laws of physics require that what is absorbed by the illuminated portion must, in steady state, be balanced by emission from the entire planet’s surface area, 4pR²”.

    ***

    As I have claimed before, the conservation of energy laws are generalities based on the science prior to 1913 when Bohr discovered the real relationship between electrons in atoms and electromagnetic radiation. The conservation laws have been generalized from the 1st law of thermodynamics which actually dealt only with heat and work. sometimes either/or depending on which energy is available.

    I think the idea that energy can neither be created nor destroyed is such a generality and the law applies more to energy transformation from one energy type to another. Naturally, if a certain amount of solar EM is converted to heat, there should be no losses in the conversion. We already know, however, that the law does not apply to reflected solar EM thus the law is incomplete to begin with in that energy in does not have to equal energy out as far as solar impinging on the surface.

    Energy reflected away initially does not have to be balanced by radiated IR.

    Both Christos and I have discussed this at length and neither of us had any problem with the unlit side of the planet, realizing that energy out via IR on the dark side is important. We, as well as other skeptics, also agree that the problem is far more complex than the overly simple Trenberth-Kiehle energy budget shamozzle which is based on calculations rather than direct observation.

    Furthermore, the so-called energy budget essentially ignores heat dissipation at the surface via direct conduction to air molecules touching the surface. Such heat dissipation, according to Shula and the Pirani gauge, is 260 times more effective at heat dissipation than radiation and keeps heat in the atmosphere for extended periods, as do the oceans.

    The energy budget theory a la Trenberth-Kiehle is far too naive to be taken seriously.

    —————–

    “Some recent attention has recently been going around the web concerning a new “paper” done by Joseph E. Postma (PDF here) which claims to “…physically negate the requirement for a postulation of a radiative atmospheric greenhouse effect.” It has been echoed particularly by some of the more crackpot web sources like climaterealists.com, and of course is spreading around various “skeptic” blogs.

    The claims are of course extraordinary, along the lines of Gerlich and Tseuchner’s alleged falsification of the atmospheric greenhouse effect. As is often the case with these types of “skeptics…”

    ***

    More propaganda from the peanut gallery. Joe Postma made at least one important observation, that we build greenhouses to do what the atmosphere cannot do. That says it all for the contrived greenhouse effect, which makes little sense.

    The paper to which you referred earlier, by Halpern et al, which reputedly disproved G&T, is a serious joke. I have revealed several times the naivete in the paper re the 2nd law. When G&T, both experts in thermodynamics, claimed the 2nd law forbade a transfer of heat both ways between objects of different temperatures, Halpern et al naively claimed that would mean one object was not radiating.

    Duh!!!

    Clearly the authors do not understand that heat is not transferred both ways between bodies of different temperatures by radiation, conduction, or convection. Clausius and his contemporaries can be forgiven their view that heat moved through space as heat rays since the real mode of transfer via EM was not yet understood. Nevertheless, Clausius had the astuteness to claim that heat transfer via radiation must obey the 2nd law.

    However, since it has been known since 1913 that heat is converted to EM, which can be transferred between bodies of different temperatures, but only from hot to cold, as per the 2nd law, there is no excuse for the authors in Halpern et al for not knowing that.

    AGW theory is based partly on the same ignorance. It is presumed that heat can be transferred both ways between bodies of different temps by EM. a presumption that is wrong. That is the basis of G&T, that heat from a colder atmosphere cannot be transferred to a warmer surface that supplied the energy in the first place.

    Bohr revealed in 1913, his theory of EM generation and absorption by electrons in atoms. That is the true basis of quantum theory to this day. The electrons can only absorb EM at discrete frequencies and the absorption involve a resonance between the frequency of the incoming EM and the angular frequency of the electron.

    Anyone doubting this has only to look up the spectral lines of hydrogen. Each spectral line has a very specific frequency. For example, the lines corresponding to red in the spectrum is at 656.3 nm = 456.792 Thz. That’s how specific the electron emission frequency is when it created the EM for a red line.

    Since the EM frequencies generated by colder masses do not resonate with the electron angular frequencies in hotter masses, the electrons simply ignore the EM from colder masses. Some have asked how an electron knows the difference and the answer is right there. An electron’s angular frequency depends on the temperature of the mass and as the temperature rises, the electron KE increases. If the temperature increases enough, the electrons will gain so much energy that bonds will break and the masses will disintegrate.

    That’s basically why heat cannot be transferred cold to hot by any means. No energy can be transferred, by its own means, from a lower energy state to a higher energy state. That means AGW theory defies the basic energy laws.

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