"...Lovelock agreed that the level of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide in the 
atmosphere is rising, but contended that temperature has not increased as 
expected since 2000." "There's nothing much really happening yet. We were 
supposed to be halfway toward a frying world now,"

Rising CO2 isn't just about climate, it's also about ocean acidification, which 
perhaps unlike mean global temperature, is relentlessly and predictably 
increasing.  In any case, given what is at stake and what we know, unclear how 
Lovelock is now unalarmed.
-Greg



________________________________
From: Josh Horton <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, April 26, 2012 7:25:34 AM
Subject: [geo] Lovelock Backs Down

Food for thought ...

http://www.livescience.com/19875-gaia-lovelock-climate-change.html



'Gaia' Scientist Takes Back Climate Change Predictions


A scientist and author, James Lovelock, who once predicted doomsdaylike fallout 
from climate change has backtracked, calling his own projections and those of 
others "alarmist." Even so, climate scientists stress Lovelock's backtracking 
doesn't negate the reality of climate change, and in fact, his past predictions 
highlight some overall misunderstanding about planetary warming.
Lovelock, who introduced theGaia Hypothesis describing life on Earth as a vast 
self-regulating organism some 40 years ago, also stated that since 2000, 
warming 
had not happened as expected.
"The climate is doing its usual tricks. There's nothing much really happening 
yet. We were supposed to be halfway toward a frying world now," Lovelock told 
MSNBC.com in an interview.
While warming may not have reached Lovelock's expectations, it is clearly 
happening. Global temperature data shows the world is heating up. The first 
decade of this century was the warmest on record for more than a century, part 
of a trend in increasing warmth over the past 50 years, according to the U.S. 
National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration. Lovelock's hypothesis 
has 
played a prominent role in the environmental movement.
In a conversation with MSNBC's Ian Johnston, Lovelock agreed that the level of 
the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is rising, but contended 
that temperature has not increased as expected since 2000.
This is a significant reversal for Lovelock. In a column written for the U.K. 
newspaper The Independent in 2006, he wrote, "before this century is over, 
billions of us will die and the few breeding pairs of people that survive will 
be in the Arctic where the climate remains tolerable."Lovelock's views were not 
in line with mainstream climate science to begin with, Michael Mann, a 
Pennsylvania State University climate scientist, pointed out.
"As I see it, Jim's views were at the alarmist end of the spectrum of 
scientific 
opinion, so frankly I see him largely as just coming back into the fold of 
mainstream thinking," Mann wrote in an email to LiveScience. "That having been 
said, he has made some statements which appear to reflect a misunderstanding of 
what the science has to say." [Busted: 10 Climate Change Myths]Kevin Trenberth, 
a climate scientist at the independent National Center for 
AtmosphericResearch (NCAR) in Boulder, Colo., went further: "The fact is he 
knows little or nothing about climate change."
The past decade has seen a reduced rate of increase in warming. but it remains 
consistent with the overall warming trend, Trenberth said.
Global temperatures fluctuate from year to year and over short time scales as a 
result of natural variability. These ups and downs can obscure the overall 
trend, particularly if someone is looking to generate a particular result, he 
said. "You can take a piece of that record and get the wrong view as to what is 
happening."
Next year, Lovelock expects to release a new book. He said he believes his 
projections went too far in a previous book, "Revenge of Gaia" (Allen 
Lane/Penguin, 2006). Even so, Lovelock stressed that humanity should still try 
to curb its use of fossil fuels, according to MSNBC.com.
You can follow LiveScience senior writer Wynne Parry on 
Twitter @Wynne_Parry. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and 
discoveries on Twitter @livescience and onFacebook.
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