Sunday, August 4, 2013

A New Low in Solar Flare Alarmism

If you're a regular reader here, you know I have little tolerance for the too-frequent "solar-geddon" articles that keep cropping up, predicting another massive solar CME like the Carrington Event is going to destroy us.  Like here.  Or here.  Or here.  We happen to be in the lowest solar activity cycle in the last century and it's likely to get lower next cycle.  While flares and CMEs are always possible, the probability of a Carrington type event, has to be lower now than it has been for the last century.  Considering that it was once in recorded history - the chances already seem rather low.  

So when the Mail (UK) ran a story last week saying we just missed a Carrington level event destroying life as we know it, it was a new low in alarmism.  It's one thing to exaggerate and another to fabricate; this is making up a story entirely out of thin air.  But it isn't the Mail's story, at least not exclusively. 

The mail, in turn, is quoting the Washington Examiner, who quoted some dood named Peter Vincent Pry:
"There had been a near miss about two weeks ago, a Carrington-class coronal mass ejection crossed the orbit of the Earth and basically just missed us," said Peter Vincent Pry, who served on the Congressional EMP Threat Commission from 2001-2008. He was referring to the 1859 EMP named after astronomer Richard Carrington that melted telegraph lines in Europe and North America.
The folks at Watts Up With That, though, reviewed the Space Weather in the period two weeks prior, and as NASA's Dr. Tony Phillips said,
Many readers are asking about a report in the Washington Examiner, which states that a Carrington-class solar storm narrowly missed Earth two weeks ago. There was no Carrington-class solar storm two weeks ago. On the contrary, solar activity was low throughout the month of July.
Mr. Pry is probably lying like this for one of two reasons: either to get funding for a program to protect the grid (not a bad idea at all) or to soften the battlespace so that if bad forces shut down the power grid and millions die, it can look natural.  In other words, he's either deceitful or completely evil.  Not a good introduction, Mr. Pry.

It seems every few months someone is trying to warn us another bad flare is imminent and we're all going to die because of it.  The ironic thing is I'm sympathetic to the cause, although more from an EMP standpoint than the solar flare/CME side.  I just can't stand the exaggeration or outright lying.  If I owned a power company, I'd invest in protecting my infrastructure and serving my customers, but I don't think we should drop everything else to do it.  Do it in with the regular maintenance.  Order replacements for vulnerable equipment.  Spares.  "Two is one, one is none".  To quote myself from one of those prior posts:
So what do you think the chances of another one are? [edited to add: another Carrington level event] According to someone quoted by Reason, the chances of another one between now and 2020 are 12% - 1 in 8.  So something that hasn't happened since 1859, through all those solar cycles, including the strongest cycles on record, has a 1 in 8 chance of happening now?  In this weak, erratic solar peak - in the next 8 years?  Really, dude, you don't have to say between now and 2020.  The next 2 or 3 years should locate the peak pretty well.

I don't buy it.


8 comments:

  1. I think a long cold spell is far more likely to happen before another Carrington event. In addition, modern power lines are much better protected than telegraph lines 150 years ago. I wouldn't be surprised to see billions of dollars in damage, but not the collapse of civilization.

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  2. Well said. I was disappointed one of the major survival blogs reported it as fact with the usual warnings.
    Terry
    Fla.

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  3. Agent Orange was investigated inside out and there was no illness that resulted from it's use or exposure to it. It was all heresay as in "I had a friend who got cancer 20 years later must have been the agent orange in Viet nam". But the studies found no increase in any diseases for Vietnam vets either those who were directly exposed or simply from being in Vietnam. It is all about the money/free health care. Years after the scientific studies and negative results congress voted to simply give any vietnam vet the benefit of the doubt so na matter what disease they come down with the VA covers it. This was a political decision not a scientific one. But one result of that decision is that today most people believe agent orange causes cancer or whatever disease you want to blame on it. But it doesn't. The use in Vietnam was the "perfect" opportunity to prove dioxin (or agent orange) was toxic and the irrefutable result was that it is not.

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  4. Yeah, I saw the scare post, too.

    I then went to several different space weather/radio propagation sites, and they were all "Oh, yeah, we had a flare last week".

    I am so freaking sick of these "ZOMG!! Solar Flares!! ZOMBIES!!!" stories getting my non-technical friends all spun up.

    Even if that CME did clobber us, it would NOT be TEOTWAWKI.

    PERIOD!

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  5. This guy Ben, https://www.youtube.com/user/Suspicious0bservers, has great sun and weather coverage daily, I recommend visiting his channel.

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    1. I watch him more days than not. He seems a bit melodramatic to me, but maybe that's just me.


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    2. I watch him also and agree on the melodramatic but he does a good job aggregating. Kind of like the Drudge of solar news. :)
      Terry
      Fla.

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  6. Another source for information is spaceweather.com which you can sign up for and they send you email alerts on developing solar flares and other space trivia.

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