Roy Clark is a retired engineer with over 30 years of experience in new product and process development, including optical and spectroscopic measurements in adverse environments. He received his MA in chemistry from the University of Oxford University and his Ph.D. in chemical physics from Sussex University (UK; 1976).
He started his own independent research on climate change in 2007. His particular interest is time-dependent or dynamic-surface energy transfer and the calculation of surface temperatures from first principles. He has published several technical articles on climate change and co-wrote the book ‘Finding Simplicity in a Complex World – The Role of the Diurnal Temperature Cycle in Climate Energy Transfer and Climate Change’ with the late Prof. Arthur Rörsch.
00:00 Introduction and Guest Introduction
00:01 Background on Climate Modeling Errors
01:31 Manabe's 1967 Climate Model and Its Impact
03:42 Historical Context of Climate Models
08:07 Modern Climate Models and Their Flaws
12:47 NASA's Role in Climate Modeling
20:09 DOE and National Labs' Involvement
29:20 Critique of Global Mean Temperature Record
35:44 Radiative Forcing and Surface Temperature
53:16 Conclusion and Final Thoughts
Slides for this podcast: https://tomn.substack.com/p/podcast-summaries
A Nobel Prize for Climate Model Errors: https://scienceofclimatechange.org/wp-content/uploads/Clark-2024-Nobel-Prize-Errors.pdf
About Roy Clark: https://co2coalition.org/teammember/roy-clark/
Reject NCA5: https://venturaphotonics.com/research-page-23.html
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