• Gloomy@mander.xyz
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    7 days ago

    A new study has revealed that the language used by the global climate change watchdog, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), is overly conservative - and therefore the threats are much greater than the Panel’s reports suggest.

    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/03/190320102010.htm

    As a climate scientist, it is my duty to tell you about what is happening to our world, whether it engenders fear or not.

    A failure to do this will mean that the public is left ignorant of the true extent of the climate emergency, which in turn can only hinder engagement and action.

    This is already becoming a problem, with many commentators on the right of the political spectrum, along with some climate scientists, denigrating as “doomers” anyone flagging the worst outcomes of global heating.

    Such climate “appeasement” is increasingly taking the place of denial and could be an even greater driver of inertia than fear, as it plays down the enormity of the problem — and as an inevitable consequence, the urgency of action.

    Bill McGuire

    https://edition.cnn.com/2024/03/07/opinions/climate-scientist-scare-doom-anxiety-mcguire/index.html

    • troed@fedia.io
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      7 days ago

      It’s your choice to hold opinions over scientific consensus.

      It’s known as climate science denial.

      • Gloomy@mander.xyz
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        7 days ago

        What? You literaly poster an opinion peace. By a climate scientist, yes, but so is the response I posted.

        Plus, I quoted a study in reply to the comments about the IPCC.

        How is that climate science denial?

          • Gloomy@mander.xyz
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            7 days ago

            And it is science denial to have a scientific opinion that is interpreting facts differently then the consensus?

            Also, from my first source:

            “The IPCC supports the overwhelming scientific consensus about human impact on climate change, so we would expect the reports’ vocabulary to be dominated by greater certainty on the state of climate science – but this is not the case.”

            The IPCC assigns a level of certainty to climate findings using five categories of confidence and ten categories of probability. The team found the categories of intermediate certainty predominated, with those of highest certainty barely reaching 8% of the climate findings evaluated.

            “The accumulation of uncertainty across all elements of the climate-change complexity means that the IPCC tends to be conservative,” says co-author Professor Corey Bradshaw, Matthew Flinders Fellow in Global Ecology at Flinders University. “The certainty is in reality much higher than even the IPCC implies, and the threats are much worse.”