Climate science, climate change reports, and the predictability of meteorological variability
Posted: 03 Sep 2025, 15:12
A report by climate scientists on climate change that was released yesterday criticized a previously released U.S. government report about the same subject matter as “science-y.”
Below is a link to the report.
Climate Experts’ Review of the DOE Climate Working Group Report
This is the kind of different opinions about climate change that made me enthusiastic about doing research to attribute climate change to natural variability and manmade influence.
Two peer reviewed papers linked below came out of this attribution effort in the complex field of climate science research.
I think that enthusiastic researchers who have the resources to continue this important attribution research may benefit from reviewing the two latest reports and the two published papers.
Step toward a Deterministic Solution of the Paradoxical Hydrological Stationarity Problem
Validation of predicted meteorological drought in California using analogous orbital geometries
Below is a link to the report.
Climate Experts’ Review of the DOE Climate Working Group Report
This is the kind of different opinions about climate change that made me enthusiastic about doing research to attribute climate change to natural variability and manmade influence.
Two peer reviewed papers linked below came out of this attribution effort in the complex field of climate science research.
I think that enthusiastic researchers who have the resources to continue this important attribution research may benefit from reviewing the two latest reports and the two published papers.
Step toward a Deterministic Solution of the Paradoxical Hydrological Stationarity Problem
Validation of predicted meteorological drought in California using analogous orbital geometries