CnP wrote:Thanks. I'm afraid I might not be able to satisfy your curiosity fully. Anyway a quick answer:
Thank you for your answers. It matches essentially what I've read elsewhere (both on climate science and skeptical websites), but I find it very helpful to hear it described by someone who is directly involved, to verify the information I have. I hope that on neutral ground like a Go forum we can continue to have a conversation about this topic without the acrimony that usually goes along with it in dedicated forums.
.. anyway by the basic science I meant climate is warming and we are to blame. As for a testable hypothesis there is the problem that we have only one example, one world. We can't do any global-scale experiments on the planet and observe the results (other than the rather unfortunate one we're doing now). That is really a major reason for climate modelling. The climate model includes as good a representation of the climate as we can make, given the limits of our knowledge and limits set by the computing resources available. Equations for the fluid dynamics of Atmospheric circulation, for example, were the first to go in, around the 1980s I think and other aspects such as ocean biology are now included. With these models you can do experiments, i.e. re-run recent history including human emissions of CO2 (and all other climate forcings), for example, or just with natural climate forcing (e.g. solar variability and volcanoes). What you see is that to reproduce the global temperature record you need to include the human emissions terms. Without them you don't see the warming that is observed in the last half of the 20th century. So to summarise, climate models are our best guess at how the climate system works and they strongly suggest we're warming the climate and will continue to do so in the future.
Within this paragraph lies one of the core issues I have with climate science: the concept that you can run "experiments" with models. Personally, I think science must verify its theories in the real world, and a true experiment is only something that is performed on nature. We may think that we learn something by running a model or finding an elegant mathematical theory, but we cannot be certain, we always need a physical system as an unbiased arbiter of truth. The argument "we don't know what else it could be" is dangerous, and it would be easy to find historical examples of where it has gone spectacularly wrong.
Regarding computer models, personally I'm a software guy, and somewhat flippantly I could say I don't trust computers. There's a serious issue however; I know just how easy it is to fool oneself to think that a piece of software you've written is correct only to then find the one logical flaw that makes it collapse. My gut feeling is that trying to model something as complex as the climate is hubris. Even vastly simpler models fail badly - at the start of every Formula 1 season for example, when the cars behave differently on track than they do in the CFD simulation. And in 2008 we saw the mathematical models the economists use blow up all around us; they'd never bothered to check whether those had any connection to the real world.
Since you're working for or with the Met Office - can you tell me how much the climate models you use differ from the weather forecasting ones?
Also, another question I've never really seen answered anywhere - if you need CO2 and feedbacks to explain the late 20th century, how do the models explain the warming period 1910-1940? Greenhouse emissions surely were much lower back then, but the warming occurred at a similar rate at least according to some datasets.