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http://tinyurl.com/acdcjq
Uh-oh, not looking good for our super-hero!
http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/ ... ef=science
DOH!
Last week wasn't just a disaster for the Obama administration. Al Gore's hysteria took it on the chin, too.
As Ed notes below, Andrew Revkin reports today that Al Gore is pulling one among the numerous demonstrably false (as opposed to the merely deceptive and misleading) claims made in his slide show — this one about accelerating natural-disaster trends, a claim immediately debunked by Roger Pielke Jr. after Gore made the claim in his recent speech to the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Uh-oh, not looking good for our super-hero!
http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/ ... ef=science
CRED is fully aware of the potential for misleading interpretations of EM-DAT figures by various users. This is a risk all public datasets run…. Before interpreting the upward trend in the occurrence of weather-related disasters as “completely unprecedented” and “due to global warming”, one has to take into account the complexities of disaster occurrence, human vulnerabilities and statistical reporting and registering.
Over the last 30 years, the development of telecommunications, media and increased international cooperation has played a critical role in the number of disasters that are reported internationally. In addition, increases in humanitarian funds have encouraged reporting of more disasters, especially smaller events.
Finally, disasters are the convergence of hazards with vulnerabilities. As such, an increase of physical, social, economic or environmental vulnerabilities can mean an increase in the occurrence of disasters.
We believe that the increase seen in the graph until about 1995 is explained partly by better reporting of disasters in general, partly due to active data collection efforts by CRED and partly due to real increases in certain types of disasters. We estimate that the data in the most recent decade present the least bias and reflect a real change in numbers. This is especially true for floods and cyclones. Whether this is due to climate change or not, we are unable to say.
Once again, we would like to point out that although climate change could affect the severity, frequency and spatial distribution of hydro-meteorological events, we need to be cautious when interpreting disaster data and take into account the inherent complexity of climate and weather related processes — and remain objective scientific observers.
DOH!