btw, a large amount of the Sulfur emitted comes from the super big cargo ships and tankers. Why? Because they dump the sour cuts of petroleum into their fuel b/c it's not regulated as strongly as land based emissions.As people have talked about reducing the sulfur content for those ships, it's actually seriously entertained (by like high level people in China) that cleaning up our act will worsen global climate change.My position is that no one really understand the ramifications of geo-engineering yet. We affect the climate in so many ways today, not just through Carbon emissions. Ultimately if we decide to fix global warming (which we will have to), we will be irrevocably taking on the responsibility of managing climate. We have more tools than what people think. Even white roofs can have a stunning effect. I actually look forward to the day we can cool an entire city through energy storage and local climate manipulation tools, instead of the dumb method of using heat pumps that make the streets even hotter.
7/16/2011 7:38:23 PM
7/17/2011 11:13:00 AM
7/17/2011 12:44:28 PM
You're excused?
7/17/2011 11:20:29 PM
^^ Don't mind him, his egocentricity knows no bounds. It boggles the mind to fathom how someone could either be so myopic or simply obtuse to spout something as ridiculous as "humans are in equilibrium with their environment". There aren't rolly eyes big enough....More aptly, he should have said that humans are the only animals arrogant enough to think that they no longer depend on their environment nor the other creatures which inhabit it.
7/17/2011 11:41:06 PM
"Depend on" in what sense? Our environment does us no favors, it does tend to kill us at every turn. It seems your personification knows no bounds. The environment and the animals inhabiting it are mere clockwork. To suggest we depend upon them is akin to suggesting we depend upon tractors. While it is true we would be in quite a pickle if space aliens took away the natural environment, or if they took away all our tractors, but as that is not going to happen the statement is meaningless. But I have deduced your reasoning. You assume the natural environment is on the verge of collapse and therefore anyone suggesting mankind will be fine in the future must be suggesting humans are independent of the natural environment. As this last statement is absurd, then the speaker must be absurd. On the contrary, if a meteor struck the planet and wiped out the natural environment, we humans would suffer greatly. My belief on the matter was that, absent a meteor, Earth's biosphere as a whole is doing just fine and is more than robust enough to keep on ticking as it is for centuries to come.[Edited on July 18, 2011 at 12:31 AM. Reason : .,.]
7/18/2011 12:29:51 AM
7/18/2011 12:36:03 AM
It will continue on. Everyone is missing the point. This is CLIMATE CHANGE. Not the end of the environment, nature or mankind. Its simply climates moving, expanding and contracting. Sure this will cause the extinction of millions of species but the biosphere will move on and never be completely threatened. The problem is, it will be impossible for some organisms to follow the climate they are used to and even some humans will have trouble.
7/18/2011 12:45:43 AM
7/18/2011 12:59:30 AM
7/18/2011 1:09:07 AM
Stop? We've already stopped. Pretty much all the damage we are going to do, we've already done. While we have caused quite a few extinctions directly, the vast majority of them were due to invasive species which tend to fill in ecological niches just as often as they create them. As such, if the massive die-off you are referring to has not already occurred then I don't see how it is going to occur later. Land management is only going to get better as we move into the future. Barring a war of course.
7/18/2011 1:36:54 AM
Today:7 billion peopleabout an even mix of rich/developing/poor.Even out of the "rich", we're still talking like $30-40k gdp/capita.The future:9 billion people at peak, and likely moreimminently we're looking at 1/3 developing, 2/3 rich, but who knows? If the poor don't improve standard of living, the birth rate will still expand the population rapidly.The level of living that constitutes rich will probably change, and probably for the worst for the environment.We're not over the hump. It's good that we have some protected wild areas, but don't overestimate those. There's still a huge amount for us to pave over. We'll also see things like entering the age of jellyfish in the ocean. The impact of acidification change is no laughing matter.
7/18/2011 7:03:46 AM
Do you accept the position that the richer a society is the better treated its natural environment will be?
7/18/2011 9:41:34 AM
I wasn't saying it is acceptable I was just disginguishing the difference between climate change and "the world is not going to end" deniers. Nobody is saying the world is going to end because of climate change. I think we should do the type of things portrayed in that cartoon for several reasons. They fix our:energy problemhealthcare problemeconomy problemas well as the climate change problem.
7/18/2011 9:53:18 AM
7/18/2011 10:05:04 AM
lol at this thread[Edited on July 18, 2011 at 10:17 AM. Reason : fewer people believe that humans are to "blame" for the last 150 years of warming now every day]
7/18/2011 10:15:08 AM
Haha it would appear there's no subject Lonesnark won't shove his ignorance into
7/18/2011 10:17:14 AM
7/18/2011 10:17:57 AM
the sea level rise is nothing other than normal
7/18/2011 10:20:53 AM
Yes, when ice melts in polar areas and adds to the sum volume of the oceans, it is completely normal for the level of that body of water to rise.[Edited on July 18, 2011 at 10:34 AM. Reason : .]
7/18/2011 10:33:36 AM
7/18/2011 10:38:16 AM
7/18/2011 10:45:51 AM
7/18/2011 11:10:24 AM
7/18/2011 11:10:59 AM
7/18/2011 11:40:10 AM
Record setting high temperatures, killer tornadoes killing lots of people, the worst drought the US has ever had, and the most powerful hurricane to ever hit the US. Definitely signs of man made global warming!Too bad I just described the 1930s
7/18/2011 11:52:57 AM
7/18/2011 11:58:50 AM
7/18/2011 12:17:53 PM
7/18/2011 12:22:47 PM
7/18/2011 12:34:21 PM
We should probably divert our attention to more serious environmental matters, like toxic material pollution and helping to keep freshwater systems pollution free. After we've solved those then there will be plenty of time to chase around invisible boogey men.
7/18/2011 1:01:02 PM
7/18/2011 1:24:31 PM
Humm that graph of a 2 year span is very interesting, but[Edited on July 18, 2011 at 1:29 PM. Reason : /]
7/18/2011 1:27:56 PM
^but why would it stop now. I mean...all that CO2, it should be a run away spiral by now! And your temp chart makes me laugh. It starts at the end of the Little Ice Age and ends in 2000, right around when temps stopped rising.There's a reason fewer people believe global warming is anything to worry about. It's called common sense. Hell even Obama doesn't care otherwise he would have actually done something.[Edited on July 18, 2011 at 1:35 PM. Reason : this thread's dumb as it will just become Part II of the other Climate change thread][Edited on July 18, 2011 at 1:35 PM. Reason : nevermind that temp change is proof of nothing]
7/18/2011 1:34:38 PM
7/18/2011 1:35:58 PM
7/18/2011 1:38:32 PM
This is what drives me nuts about AGW skeptics. As soon as they hear a semi-plausible argument they go out and parrot it 1,000 times on every message board they can find, never devoting the 5 minutes it takes to google it and find it's total bullshit. Go on TKE, tell me it's the Sun now, and that Mars is experiencing warming.[Edited on July 18, 2011 at 1:45 PM. Reason : .]
7/18/2011 1:44:26 PM
Wikipedia has a version with the 2010 data point.I guess we can forgive them for not having the 2011 point yet.
7/18/2011 2:14:22 PM
^^I was taking liberties with the dates somewhat, excuse me. 1850 instead of 1880 ^nah, it's really not. why don't you just show me proof that CO2 is causing warming. You can't. But we could both make correlations all day long...that also wouldn't be true.Here's another graph, focusing on the more recent warming:Not much to really worry about.Of course, what we should really worry about are the pirates:[Edited on July 18, 2011 at 2:18 PM. Reason : pirates!]
7/18/2011 2:16:02 PM
^ Your graph gives monthly temperatures. It also screwed the text wrapping. wtg.Maybe if you presented data in the same format, as in yearly averaged and then 5 yr trailing average, then someone could compare what you present to the other data. But at this point, this text is beyond the right side of the screen and no one is reading b/c of your stupid graph.
7/18/2011 2:21:12 PM
7/18/2011 2:21:16 PM
TKE, even if you take El Nino out that graph still shows a warming trend overall, I don't know what you think it's proving.
7/18/2011 3:41:51 PM
7/18/2011 3:42:15 PM
Wow I don't think I can conceive of a more reckless plan than "Pump massive quantities of sulfur into the upper atmosphere at a constant rate for the rest of time or until magical future-technology saves us."
7/18/2011 3:44:28 PM
^^ Sounds like a terrible excuse to continue polluting. Instead addressing the cause, you merely mask it by artificially seeding the upper atmosphere with a material that will eventually fall as acid rain. Nice job. So what will the solution be down the road? More eventual acid rain to offset the increase in greenhouse gas emissions? But please, regale us with stories of how you think pollution is actually a good thing....
7/18/2011 4:54:05 PM
7/18/2011 5:09:52 PM
7/18/2011 5:42:04 PM
I like how it's one extreme or the other....
7/18/2011 5:51:54 PM
It is. If the rule is we must restrict carbon enough to eliminate the possibility of needing to seed the stratosphere with sulfur, then we must impoverish ourselves and the planet to at least a 19th century living standard. It is I offering the compromise position. Stop taxing labor and tax carbon to replace it, then in the event the planet warms too much to put up with we plan to pollute the stratosphere. Nice middle ground that doesn't kill anyone.
7/18/2011 7:14:38 PM
That doesn't kill anyone? Are you aware of how devastating acid rain already is? And yet you want to exacerbate that under the guise of "compromise"? As far as carbon goes, I am rather agnostic but your "solution" borders on calamity.
7/18/2011 7:54:51 PM