Thanks.
Unfortunately I am not qualified to debate these numbers. However, that it is stated in your post in a quantitative way, a climate scientist would easily be able to refute it or not. I don't think anyone on ET is qualified to do this. For example, I could not possibly account for temperature variations based on subtle Earth rotation arguments over hundreds of years.
What we need is a scientist debate of deniers vs affirmers where all these points are brought up and debated on C-span, not on ET. I am easily able to follow an argument in this manner.
Unfortunately I am not qualified to debate these numbers. However, that it is stated in your post in a quantitative way, a climate scientist would easily be able to refute it or not. I don't think anyone on ET is qualified to do this. For example, I could not possibly account for temperature variations based on subtle Earth rotation arguments over hundreds of years.
What we need is a scientist debate of deniers vs affirmers where all these points are brought up and debated on C-span, not on ET. I am easily able to follow an argument in this manner.
The talk is from February 2012 and is not peer reviewed literature.
The shortwave radiation from the sun (called "SW in") is estimated to be 340.2 +- 0.1 watts/m^2. The amount that is immediately reflected (called "SW out") is estimated to be 100.0 +- 2.0 W/m^2, and the amount of longwave radiation (called "LW out") is 239.7 +- 3.3 W/m^2.
The net imbalance is estimated to be 0.6 W/m^2 but this is dwarfed by the errors in the amount of shortwave and longwave radiation that the Earth emits. Consequently, it's not possible to make a reasonable estimate of the number of Hiroshima bombs (LOL) that the earth is absorbing per year. The truth is that we have no idea because the amount of heat we're talking about is so small (compared to the size of the earth). The claim is that the heat isn't being seen because it's being absorbed by the oceans. If that is correct, then it means that the effects of global warming will not be seen for centuries because the oceans are really big compared to the very small amounts of heat.
I get my numbers from an article that is peer reviewed, and which is more recent than your not peer reviewed informal talk by a famous alarmist:
The Global Annual Mean Energy Balance
Stephens, Li, Wild, Clayson, Loeb, Kato, L'Ecuyer, Stackhouse, Lebsock and Andrews
Nature Geoscience Volume 5, pp 691-696, September 23, 2012
This small imbalance is over two orders of magnitude smaller than the individual components that define it and smaller than the error of each individual flux. The combined uncertainty on the net TOA flux determined from CERES is ±4 Wm−2 (95% confidence) due largely to instrument calibration errors12, 15. Thus the sum of current satellite-derived fluxes cannot determine the net TOA radiation imbalance with the accuracy needed to track such small imbalances associated with forced climate change11.
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