• @[email protected]OP
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    710 months ago

    That’s very true. But I think that stems in part from the fact that some of the most prominent climate science (such as the IPCC report) features the consensus of many scientists. All climate scientists will agree on low estimates that we are very sure of. But there have been some models predicting faster increases of global temperatures than we have seen. If we would look at the average of scientific claims instead of the consensus, we might be more close to the truth.

    Nevertheless, science has been pretty right overall. Of course, not exactly right, but that wouldn’t fit in a meme.

    • Chainweasel
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      210 months ago

      I think another large part of it is that we can’t take into account the actual emissions before they happen. In some cases emissions have increased rather than decreased.
      We can estimate how much methane will be released by thawing permafrost but we can’t know for sure until it happens, we can estimate how much CO2 will be absorbed and released by seawater every year, but that can change based on environmental factors and saturation.

      I also wonder how much pressure is put on climate scientists by governments to under report or misrepresent findings.