ivanhater wrote:
ok, first off, your coming off a little rude....
I'm sorry if you think I'm being rude - that isn't my intent nor do I see what it is I've said to offend.
im not dismissing anything....and im not attacking your point of view so i would appreciate it if you wouldnt attack mine, the problem is you do not have enough proof to justify that global warming is the cause of the increase in the number of hurricanes and intensity, if there was enough proof to justify your view, there wouldnt be a big debate about it all over the world.....i thought we were exchanging ideas in this thread and im learning in the process but instead you want to be rude
I didn't attack your point of view. What I did was try to state as clearly as I could what the state of knowledge is at this point:
1) We know that we are at the peak of the mutidecadal cycle of the Atlantic thermohaline circulation, and that accounts for a large part of the intensity of recent Atlantic seasons including this one.
2) We also have strong evidence at this point that a moderate amount of increase in tropical SSTs (apprax. 0.3 degrees celsius) can be attributed to anthropogenic global warming.
3) There is a well understood connection between high SSTs in the tropics and the formation and intensification of tropical cyclones. Dr. Gray himself (whose skepticism on any AGW component to hurricane intensity is the original subject of this thread) uses SSTs as one component of his seasonal forecast methodology. The relationship is not a linear one, as there are many other factors involved in cyclogenesis, but there is a relationship.
Given this, I find it hard to understand how Dr. Gray can categorically state that there is no AGW contribution to the intensity of recent seasons. One can legitimately bring up issues of uncertainty in the historical data and suggest that this may have introduced errors in Dr. Emmanuel's and Dr, Webster's research, but uncertainty cuts both ways - there can be no reasonable way I can see to rule out such a contribution on the basis of the argument he puts forth.
In fact, given the fact that Dr. Gray himself agrees that there is a moderate warming signature throughout the tropical SSTs and he himself uses SSTs as one component of his forecasting methodology, I find his categorical denial very mystifying.