Re: "so the Bbc's 'climate misinformation' team can spread more doom. "
I think that gives us a pretty clear idea of your views, in case we were in any doubt.
Depressingly enough, it's in their job title. It's also in articles like these-
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c1vd1d9r1wxo
Tuesday has become the hottest day of the year so far as a heatwave continues to affect large parts of the UK.
Met Office measuring stations in both Heathrow and Kew Gardens, south-west London, reached 32C (90F) earlier - exceeding the 31.9C recorded in the centre of the city on 19 July.
Scientists say that climate change makes hotter days more likely and more intense.
With $100b-$3tn a year at stake, they would say that, wouldn't they? But the 'hottest day of the year' was not from large parts of the UK, only very small parts of the UK. One a very busy airport where thousands of people are jetting off to holiday in even hotter places, the other from another urban heat island in London.
I'm sure other readers will treat them with the seriousness which they deserve.
Sure. You could go read the Climate Audit articles I left showing how climate modelling actually works. Or you could explain what you thought you meant by 'random'. LionelB had a go, but reverted to mean with this-
As a working scientist I would be (and occasionally am) severely pissed-off by clueless people from outside my field implying that I and/or my colleagues are incompetent/dishonest/corrupt. There is only one good old Anglo Saxon response to that. Don't be that <del>dic...</del> person.
Which is a combination of confimation bias, appeal to authority and wishful thinking. He is not incompetent/dishonest/corrupt, therefore his peers outside his field must be the same. Even though I provided a couple of examples where the incompetence was clear, and actually was his field. But that's climate science for you. It's the history, or future of average weather and relies very heavily on statistics.. Which is often wrong. And again, when actual statisticians point this out, they're generally branded as 'deniers.
But despite not being their field, some clue may be finally dawning with this comment-
You're missing my point by a country mile. Firstly, as regards weather, you don't know what the exact initial conditions are (that would be the precise state of the entire atmosphere, oceans, land masses, and probably also the sun and moon). All you have is a sparse and noisy sample of that initial state.
Except for both weather and climate forecasts, you do know the initial conditions. And you certainly don't start a forecast with random conditions, run an ensemble and then compare to the drying seaweed hanging up on the office door. It's why there are weather stations, weather balloons, sounding rockets, ocean bouys, satellites and more all feeding near real-time data to weather forecasting sites like ECMWF and the Met Office so they know what those initial conditions are, and can revise forecasts based on the data updates.
Climate modelling is much the same, just again average weather. They don't use random numbes either because CMIP is an attempt to standardise model characteristics to aid in comparing them. Which is where this comes in-
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representative_Concentration_Pathway
The pathways describe different climate change scenarios, all of which were considered possible depending on the amount of greenhouse gases (GHG) emitted in the years to come..
...In RCP 8.5 emissions continue to rise throughout the 21st century.[8]: Figure 2, p. 223 Since AR5 this has been thought to be very unlikely, but still possible as feedbacks are not well understood. RCP8.5, generally taken as the basis for worst-case climate change scenarios, was based on what proved to be overestimation of projected coal outputs. It is still used for predicting mid-century (and earlier) emissions based on current and stated policies
So RCP 8.5 grossly overestimated coal consumption, thus CO2 production, and thus warming. So rather than changing the scenario to more closely reflect objective reality, it continues to be used because Global Warming is such big business. Other climate models have previously been run based on only CO2 and the known physics and show a little over 1C per doubling. It's those pesky 'feedbacks' that can't be found reflected in reality.. Especially when most have been assumed positive, and amplifying the effects of CO2. But then you have to do that to convince people CO2 is a threat. Even though in our past, CO2 levels have been 5-10x higher than present, and life thrived in those conditions.
But such is politics. Don't ask awkward questions like "What happened to the MWP, or LIA?" or why climate 'scientists' chose 1850 as a start date for temperature 'anomalies'. The answer to that is connected, ie if you pick the end of the LIA, you're pretty much guaranteed to produce a warming trend that has no, or extremely weak correlation with CO2.