On Fri, 2 Feb 2007 13:30:38 -0200, you wrote:

>     Trocentos cientistas reunidos *só* para falar de
>     clima e NENHUM deles levou em conta esses detalhes
>     na hora de fazer as contas?  Só voce aqui no Brasil
>     percebeu?   ;-)

Uh, não exatamente. Não puseram esses detalhes justamente porque as incertezas 
quanto à potência desses feedbacks é muito grande.
E o IPCC só botou no relatório o que era consenso absoluto entre os cientistas. 
Isso é, o que não restava dúvida. Se havia muitas
dúvidas quanto à magnitude, simplesmente não punham nos cálculos. Simples assim.

O cenário pintado pelo IPCC é artificialmente otimista demais. E essa não é 
apenas uma opinião pessoal minha.

Lê isso, por exemplo:
http://www.countercurrents.org/cc-borenstein310107.htm

New Climate Report Too Rosy, Experts Say

By Seth Borenstein

31 January, 2007
Associated Press

Later this week in Paris, climate scientists will issue a dire forecast for the 
planet that warns of slowly rising sea levels and
higher temperatures. But that may be the sugarcoated version.

Early and changeable drafts of their upcoming authoritative report on climate 
change foresee smaller sea level rises than were
projected in 2001 in the last report. Many top U.S. scientists reject these 
rosier numbers. Those calculations don't include the
recent, and dramatic, melt-off of big ice sheets in two crucial locations:

They "don't take into account the gorillas — Greenland and Antarctica," said 
Ohio State University earth sciences professor Lonnie
Thompson, a polar ice specialist. "I think there are unpleasant surprises as we 
move into the 21st century."

Michael MacCracken, who until 2001 coordinated the official U.S. government 
reviews of the international climate report on global
warming, has fired off a letter of protest over the omission.

The melting ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica are a fairly recent 
development that has taken scientists by surprise. They
don't know how to predict its effects in their computer models. But many fear 
it will mean the world's coastlines are swamped much
earlier than most predict.

Others believe the ice melt is temporary and won't play such a dramatic role.

That debate may be the central one as scientists and bureaucrats from around 
the world gather in Paris to finish the first of four
major global warming reports by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. 
The panel was created by the United Nations in
1988.

After four days of secret word-by-word editing, the final report will be issued 
Friday.

The early versions of the report predict that by 2100 the sea level will rise 
anywhere between 5 and 23 inches. That's far lower
than the 20 to 55 inches forecast by 2100 in a study published in the 
peer-review journal Science this month. Other climate
experts, including NASA's James Hansen, predict sea level rise that can be 
measured by feet more than inches.

The report is also expected to include some kind of proviso that says things 
could be much worse if ice sheets continue to melt.

The prediction being considered this week by the IPCC is "obviously not the 
full story because ice sheet decay is something we
cannot model right now, but we know it's happening," said Stefan Rahmstorf, a 
climate panel lead author from Germany who made the
larger prediction of up to 55 inches of sea level rise. "A document like that 
tends to underestimate the risk," he said.

"This will dominate their discussion because there's so much contentiousness 
about it," said Bob Corell, chairman of the Arctic
Climate Impact Assessment, a multinational research effort. "If the IPCC comes 
out with significantly less than one meter (about
39 inches of sea level rise), there will be people in the science community 
saying we don't think that's a fair reflection of what
we know."

In the past, the climate change panel didn't figure there would be large melt 
of ice in west Antarctica and Greenland this century
and didn't factor it into the predictions. Those forecasts were based only on 
the sea level rise from melting glaciers (which are
different from ice sheets) and the physical expansion of water as it warms.

But in 2002, Antarctica's 1,255-square-mile Larsen B ice shelf broke off and 
disappeared in just 35 days. And recent NASA data
shows that Greenland is losing 53 cubic miles of ice each year — twice the rate 
it was losing in 1996.

Even so, there are questions about how permanent the melting in Greenland and 
especially Antarctica are, said panel lead author
Kevin Trenberth, chief of climate analysis at the National Center for 
Atmospheric Research in Colorado.

While he said the melting ice sheets "raise a warning flag," Trenberth said he 
wonders if "some of this might just be temporary."

University of Alabama at Huntsville professor John Christy said Greenland 
didn't melt much within the past thousand years when it
was warmer than now. Christy, a reviewer of the panel work, is a prominent 
so-called skeptic. He acknowledges that global warming
is real and man-made, but he believes it is not as worrisome as advertised.

Those scientists who say sea level will rise even more are battling a 
consensus-building structure that routinely issues
scientifically cautious global warming reports, scientists say. The IPCC 
reports have to be unanimous, approved by 154 governments
— including the United States and oil-rich countries such as Saudi Arabia — and 
already published peer-reviewed research done
before mid-2006.

Rahmstorf, a physics and oceanography professor at Potsdam University in 
Germany, says, "In a way, it is one of the strengths of
the IPCC to be very conservative and cautious and not overstate any climate 
change risk."

Copyright © 2007 Associated Press 

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Gustavo Molina - [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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