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The Science Isn't Settled - The Limitations of Global Climate Models

by Dr. Timothy Ball
March 21, 2007

Computerized models of the earth?s climate are at the heart of the debate over how public policy should respond to climate change. Global climate models ? also called general circulation models ? attempt to predict future climatic conditions starting with a set of assumptions about how the climate works and guesses about what a future world might look like in terms of population, energy use, technological development, and so on.

Analysts have pointed out, however, that many of the assumptions used in modeling the climate are of dubious merit, with biases that tend to project catastrophic warming, and have argued that climate models have many limitations that make them unsuitable as the basis for developing public policy.

Dr. Tim Ball discussed the paper The Science isn't Settled, published by the Fraser Institute (www.fraserinstitute.ca/admin/books/files/ScienceIsntSettled.pdf), and examined two major limitations that hinder the usefulness of climate models to those forming public policy.

Full Text of "The Science Isn't Settled - The Limitations of Global Climate Models" (PDF, 2216 KB)
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