George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

NSIDC data at odds with celebrity Arctic Ice estimate in UK Guardian

NSIDC: Arctic Sea Ice Extent Reaches Near Average in April.

6/3/12, "Guardian Goes “Full Stupid” on Arctic Ice, Contradicts Itself.," HauntingTheLibrary

"The Guardian managed to outdo itself in it’s latest foray into global warming, claiming that Arctic sea ice has declined by three quarters in the last three decades. In a series of “factoids” following an interview with pop celebrity and latest Greenpeace spokesperson for the Arctic ice, Jarvis Cocker, Lucy Seigle, the Guardian’s environment reporter, informed readers that:

Of the Arctic sea ice, 75% has been lost over the past 30 years. Last year saw sea-ice levels plummet to the second-lowest since records began. It is estimated that the North Pole could be ice-free in the summer within the next 10-20 years.

The Guardian. Jarvis Cocker: The Iceman Cometh.

However, the problem with this was not just it’s total departure from both reality and common sense, but the fact that an article in the Guardian only a couple of weeks beforehand had pointed out that this simply isn’t the case. Quoting the Met Office’s Chief Scientist, Julia Sligo, the article noted that such claims were simply “not credible” -

She also said that suggestions the volume of sea ice had already declined by 75% already were not credible. “We know there is something [happening on the thinning of sea ice] but it’s not as dramatic as those numbers suggest.”

The problem, she explained, was that researchers did not know the thickness of Arctic sea ice with any confidence.

The Guardian. Met Office: Arctic Sea Ice Loss Linked to Drier, Colder UK Winters.

In fact, as the NSIDC points out, the extent of Arctic sea ice is very close to the average for the last three decades, not down by 75% as The Guardian’s environment reporter seems to be confused about:

Overview of Conditions
Arctic sea ice extent in April 2012 averaged 14.73 million square kilometers (5.69 million square miles). Because of the very slow rate of ice loss through the last half of March and the first three weeks of April, ice extent averaged for April ranked close to average out of 34 years of satellite data.

NSIDC: Arctic Sea Ice Extent Reaches Near Average in April.

Someone should really help them out over at the Guardian’s environment section. Do you have an hour or two to spare, some basic common sense, plenty of paper and some crayons?"

-------------------------------------------------

Additional charts, graphs on above topic at WUWT:

6/3/12, "The Guardian’s ridiculous claim of 75% Arctic sea ice loss in 30 years – patently false," Anthony Watts, WUWT

Among comments:

"Rhys Jaggar says:

"You probably get a bigger number by comparing the extent at minimum, I guess.

What’s more important is what the most relevant metric is for that Armageddon of ‘rising sea levels’.

Clearly, to anyone with primary school physics at their fingertips, that is total global sea ice extent.

If you look at how that changes annually, you’ll see the fluctuations are rather smaller.

One thing people should get comfortable with is that newspapers are basically ‘factoid drug dealers’ serving up their addicts with a ‘daily fix’.

Our generation were brought up to believe newspapers formed a valuable societal role in education.

I now believe that they are comics. All of them. Playthings of rich proprietors. Tools of political influence and/or intimidation.

Thing is: if you want a newspaper to really inform and educate, enough people need to buy them/pick them up (for free ones) and enough advertisers need to buy into the message. Newspapers, after all, are ultimately advertising plays.

I only read them now to find out what the latest informational drug is. And to try and force journalists to tell some semblance of truth."




via Tom Nelson

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I'm the daughter of a World War II Air Force pilot and outdoorsman who settled in New Jersey.