Illuminate us, Mr. Settled Science. How does a change from 0.6ºC per decade to 0.2ºC (or 0.4ºC) per decade represent an exponential increase?You don't understand how exponential curves work either!

Illuminate us, Mr. Settled Science. How does a change from 0.6ºC per decade to 0.2ºC (or 0.4ºC) per decade represent an exponential increase?You don't understand how exponential curves work either!
More bullshit.If you change from 0.2ºC per decade over time to 0.6ºC over time (which would happen if you follow the higher CO2 emissions of RCP 8.5) this would be an exponential curve.
It all depends on whether we curtail CO2 emissions to end the exponential growth like RCP 2.5 or let the right wingers take us to the thermal maximum of RCP 8.5.
Your high-IQ expert is now trying to claim that numbers released in 2001 were based on modelling that was done 13 years later.I have no idea what Post you are referring to? Frankfooter has a far higher IQ than all of the right wingers on this Board!!
Obviously you cannot comprehend that 2014 to 2020 is seven FULL CALENDAR years!! Start counting 2014 from January to December, and that is one full year. Finish by counting 2020 until December. It then adds up to 7 Full years. Maybe you now comprehend this simple basic fact!!Let's review.
- The period from 2014 to 2020 is not "7 years."
- The year 2020 is not "7 years since" 2014.
For the record, I don't merely "claim" that subtracting 0.75 from 0.85 doesn't equal 0.25. It is a fact.
As was previously noted, students who have successfully completed Ontario's Grade 5 math curriculum are able to correctly calculate the difference.![]()
The seven warmest years in the 1880–2020 record have all occurred since 2014, while the 10 warmest years have occurred since 2005.
Global TemperaturesYour high-IQ expert is now trying to claim that numbers released in 2001 were based on modelling that was done 13 years later.
I guess he believes the IPCC has mastered the art of time travel.![]()
Oh god.More bullshit.
The IPCC said the 0.6ºC per decade increases had already been occurring in the 20th century.
"The 1990s was the warmest decade for 1,000 years, said the report. Temperatures rose by an average of 0.6C during the last century, with an increase in floods and droughts."
The 0.6ºC per decade was their highest temp scenario at the time. I don't remember what they call it and if I got the name wrong big fucking deal. It was their highest CO2 emission scenario, now called RCP 8.5.Furthermore, the RCP 8.5 scenario was released 13 years after the 2011 report in the IPCC's fifth assessment report: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-00177-3
The question remains: How does a change from 0.6ºC per decade to 0.2ºC per decade represent an exponential increase?
Here's a hint: It isn't an exponential increase. It's a decrease.![]()