Other planets: Jupiter, and Neptune's moon Triton.
Question: If weather models can't accurately predict even a few days in advance, how can they be relied upon to predict even longer periods into the future?
Also, Dr. Claude Allegre changes his mind: http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=2f4cc62e-5b0d-4b59-8705-fc28f14da388
My understanding is that it isn't really analogous to compare short term local forecasting with long term weather modelling; AFAIK they are actually radically different prospects. Normally, IIRC, the long term climate models are tested by shoving the variables back to that of, say, 100 years ago and then ran forward - from what I've seen they're pretty accurate in doing so.
The thing about Jupiter is that it's a vast planet hit by a comet fairly recently, so i'm not sure it's a very good model for earth climatology.
Incidentally, apparently Mars warming is suggested to be due to Malkovitch Cycles, regular 'wobbles' in the tilt of the planets orbit that are believed to have led to similar ice/warm ages on Earth.
This
page has a little bit on it, anyways
In fact, scientists have alternative explanations for the anomalous warming on each of these other planetary bodies.
The warming on Triton, for example, could be the result of an extreme southern summer on the moon, a season that occurs every few hundred years, as well as possible changes in the makeup of surface ice that caused it to absorb more of the Sun’s heat.
Researchers credited Pluto’s warming to possible eruptive activity and a delayed thawing from its last close approach to the Sun in 1989.
And the recent storm activity on Jupiter is being blamed on a recurring climatic cycle that churns up material from the gas giant’s interior and lofts it to the surface, where it is heated by the Sun.
Reading the thing about Allegre is curious - for one thing,
Kilimanjaro isn't gaining snow AFAIK (
more recent report, although Kilimanjaro is only a footnote)... it'd be nice to see some more direct quotes (apparently, his claim about the snows of Kilimanjaro was based on a piece of work covering glaciation over millions of years, and his other claim to support his position was based on a misunderstanding of what climate models predict for snowfall on the artic ice sheet). I've read that he actually hasn't published anything on climate change and perhaps isn't best qualified (supposedly qualified by a geologist), although I'd note the source wasn't the best (
http://boards.historychannel.com/thread.jspa?threadID=700010352&tstart=45&mod=1173243321167). There's always a feeling of being a hypocritical bastard pointing this out for an eminent scientist, but it has been suggested elsewhere, and I guess it's up to you to consider when weighing his opinion (namely, retired scientist-turned-politician who hasn't published any work in climate change/climatology) - although it's likewise worth tempering that with his original position and saying that, yes, there have been non-climatologists (and indeed politicians or other media peeps) who have been involved in actively 'promoting' global warming without knowing the science themselves.
Anyways, like Flip said, it's hard to judge what he meant anyways without a full set of quotes, in context. I would agree that (mostly political) scaremongering about global warming has threatened to create a boy-who-cried-wolf effect; whilst I believe the scientific consensus is that the risk is we will relatively soon put the climate into a reinforcing heating phase, the impression people are given is of humanity raising the temperature all by itself (rather than 'skewing' natural changes into a heating phase), and that things like hurricanes can be directly approportionted (which is wrong; it's possible, plausible even, but it's only a hypothesis until research can be done). The risk is still huge - one that threatens the long term survival of humanity - but not the All life Will Die / 'Day after Tomorrow' style threat that is pushed. Y'know, like the difference between humanity being pushed to the brink of extinction (possible, and economic and social collapse is a real risk in the long term), and all life on earth being wiped out (not so likely).
(incidentally, on the '90%' thing earlier. The 90% example given in the quoted times article was a personal guess by the scientist involved, and retracted when he was unable to repeat his experiment - the 90% figure given in IPCC reports is based on the consensus of, I believe, about 450 scientists)