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by jweede
5504 days ago
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As noted in the comments of the article: "This article is not new but was first published in 'The Australian' in July 2008. [Evans] has never published a peer-reviewed paper on climate change and, up until 2008, has only published one paper in 1987 on a totally unrelated subject. From 1999 to 2006 Evans consulted to the Australian Greenhouse Office designing a carbon accounting system that is used by the Australian Government to calculate its land-use carbon accounts for the Kyoto Protocol. While Evans says that he "knows a heck of a lot about modeling and computers," he states clearly that he is "not a climate modeler." Evans has published an article for the Alabama-based Ludwig von Mises Institute, a libertarian think tank: Evans also published a background briefing document for the Australian chapter of the Lavoisier Group, a global warming "skeptic" organization with close ties to the mining industry." So take that however you like. |
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If someone is giving pure opinion then you have to evaluate the source. But if someone is presenting facts you have to evaluate the facts and there's no real point in evaluating the source (sources can give incorrect facts but that's exactly why you're evaluating the facts themselves). So in the case of someone stating facts the source is irrelevant because they are just serving to draw your attention to facts which you should then independently verify yourself.
In the article he makes several factual claims that can be verified to be true or false...
"They keep lowering the temperature increases they expect, from 0.30C per decade in 1990, to 0.20C per decade in 2001, and now 0.15C per decade"
"In the United States, nearly 90% of official thermometers surveyed by volunteers violate official siting requirements that they not be too close to an artificial heating source."
"satellites say the hottest recent year was 1998, and that since 2001 the global temperature has levelled off."
"The Earth has been in a warming trend since the depth of the Little Ice Age around 1680. Human emissions of carbon dioxide were negligible before 1850 and have nearly all come after the Second World War "
Those facts are what's relevant and it's those that should be evaluated (to the best of my knowledge all but the 1998 being the hottest year claim are true). Then you can draw your own conclusions based on those facts plus the ones you already knew. Who the author is or what he's published is besides the point.
Edit: on the 1998 claim I found this with a quick Google search: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/05/02/a_tale_of_two_thermo...