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I'd really like to see someone credible (a proper research organisation employing real scientists, meteorologists and other relevant people) look into the big picture.So instead of blaming man pollution on Global Warming or as they now call it Climate Change, why not have such a discussion on the Sun and the Earth?
We know about the sun. NASA etc has a lot of useful data there.
We know about ENSO (El Niño Southern Oscillation) and various meteorological organisations have a lot of data about that one.
More recently we've become aware of the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) and again the meteorological organisations have data.
We know about man-made heat additions from the burning of fossil fuels, nuclear reactors, hydro power etc. The International Energy Agency (IEA), the Energy Information Administration (EIA, a US government agency), and BP (as in BP the oil company) all have very good data sets covering current and past energy production from fossil fuels, nuclear and hydro. The only real uncertainty relates to biomass although there are some pretty good estimates available.
We don't have precise data, but some reasonable estimates are available (largely based on IEA, EIA and BP data) relating to other emissions too. SO2, NOx, CH4 and so on.
NASA and others have historical satellite images useful for determining the extent of large scale land use changes over time. Eg bitumen roads absorb solar radiation far more than a forest does. With proper analysis a lot of useful information could be gained from this.
And we know about the weather. Meteorological organisations have a lot of data on rainfall, temperature, wind speed and so on as well as things like sea surface temperatures. Others, such as water utilities and hydro-electric operators collectively have a huge amount of data relating to surface runoff. Others such as National Parks services, fire brigades, agricultural organisations etc have data relating to soil moisture levels both in developed and natural areas.
There are other possibly useful data sources as well. Eg highway departments, councils etc would in many cases have historic data about snow and ice impacts on roads. Airports and airlines might have some useful data relating to weather at airports too - it's definitely something they pay a lot of attention to operationally.
What it really needs is someone to put that altogether and come up with some plausible explanations as to what's going on. As I said, you don't have things like the two downward "steps" in runoff in south-west WA and much of Tasmania without there being a cause. There have been other observations of changes in various parts of the world too.
It really needs someone credible to look at all the data from a proper research perspective.
At present, all we've really got is politically tainted research which assumes a link to CO2 plus the various efforts of everyone from farmers to dam operators to economists trying to match various data sets in order to find some sort of linkage relating to their own specific area of interest.
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