^^holy crap, I agree with everything you've said in here the last few days. That's some kind of first.
6/26/2009 11:00:23 PM
6/27/2009 3:30:24 PM
You are mistaken. CO2 falls with rain, just not like some others. CO2 dissolves in falling water, making it slightly acidic, then seeps underground, and can get trapped in rocks. Also, it has been said repeatedly that human emitted CO2 is a tiny fraction of the CO2 that is emitted naturally on an annual basis. All that natural CO2 emitted by rotting plants, erupting volcanoes, exhailed by bacteria, animals, etc, goes somewhere. There are natural processes to remove it outside the normal plant growth mechanism. As such, it seems to me that CO2 emitted today will not stay there forever, being removed and returned in large quantities. According to wiki, the atmosphere contains 3.0×1015 kg (3,000 gigatonnes) of CO2 and humans alone emit 27 billion tonnes each year. As such, humans would replace all the carbon in the atmosphere in 111 years. That said, scientists say CO2 levels will double by 2050, so something else is going on as well.
6/27/2009 5:18:01 PM
Of course a tiny bit of carbon dioxide will ionize in the water vapor in the air, producing carbonic acid, and fall out of the sky when it rains. I should not have stated otherwise. However, this amount is almost negligible compared to aerosols that interact more directly with water and water vapor.Your math is fucked up. Carbon-releasing events, such as a huge volcano erupting, cause elevated CO2 levels for thousands of years. However, the sulfur dioxide, nitroxides and other particulate mass falls out of the atmosphere in a matter of months or years. This is why scientists have discovered temperature decreases immediately after massive volcano eruptions, followed by increases for many hundreds of years.[Edited on June 27, 2009 at 5:39 PM. Reason : 2]
6/27/2009 5:37:29 PM
Well, math is one of those magical things in that it can be universally proven. As such, if my math is fucked up, then fix it for me or at least show me my error. That said, maybe the negative feedback is slow to course, so increasing CO2 a whole bunch only slightly increases the rate CO2 is removed from the atmosphere. That would explain why humans have been able to have such an impact; but it also suggests that impact with shrink over time as the natural CO2 removal processes kick into gear at higher CO2 concentrations. [Edited on June 27, 2009 at 7:31 PM. Reason : .,.]
6/27/2009 7:25:30 PM
seriously... let's pump a bunch of shit into the upper atmosphere in the name of an unproven theory based on fraudulent numbers. Really, let's do that. What a fucking great idea
6/28/2009 12:26:03 AM
Well, considering that we are ALREADY pumping much more shit into the atmosphere, and given that it's patently obvious to anyone who doesn't have their head up their ass that it is contributing to the recent warming the Earth, maybe we should have a backup plan in place in case it starts to get REALLY hot.
6/28/2009 1:22:35 AM
Odd fact, there is no recent warming. Temperatures have flatlined since 2001. So, the shit must not have that much of an effect.
6/28/2009 9:42:37 AM
temperatures are not increasing at the rate they were in the late '90s, but they are still much higher than the average temperatures of the last century, so you could say that there has been "recent warming" or at the very least, elevated recent temperatures that can be attributed to the impact of greenhouse gases, among other factors.
6/28/2009 2:18:18 PM
two words for everybody talking about temperatures flatlining: phase change
6/28/2009 2:27:12 PM
Changing from a gas to a plasma...?
6/28/2009 2:44:12 PM
I was thinking more along the lines of quark-gluon plasma.
6/28/2009 6:37:49 PM
6/28/2009 9:46:41 PM
6/28/2009 10:10:20 PM
how do you take "temps are .5C higher than they were a century ago" to mean "temps are much higher than they were for the last century?" For one, those two statements are not analogous. For another .5C isn't "much higher" by almost any measure.
6/28/2009 10:18:46 PM
6/28/2009 10:26:49 PM
No solid to liquid. H2O takes in a lot of heat when melting or boiling and theres a lot less solid h2o with more gas liquid and vapor.
6/28/2009 10:27:14 PM
6/28/2009 10:32:51 PM
I edited my last post, but maybe you didn't see it so I'll repeat it:
6/28/2009 10:33:52 PM
the problem is that all of the reconstructions use practically the same methodology, which was proven to be faulty. As well, they use improper data sets. When you are trying to prove that X influences Y, you shouldn't use another factor Z as a proxy for Y when Z is directly influenced by X as well.
6/28/2009 10:36:09 PM
So that is what your argument boils down to. Scientists are producing faulty reconstructions based on incorrect methodology. Thousands of scientists. All using "improper data sets". ...Riiiiight. Nice arguing with you.*slowly backs out of this thread to avoid wasting any more time*
6/28/2009 10:43:31 PM
when you look at the studies, you see them, time and again, using these data sets. You also see, oddly enough, people who were a part of the original fraudulent hockey stick, putting their names on these further "reconstructions." yes, we should trust the "second tries" of fraudsters.But hey, I'm glad to see that you admit defeat.
6/28/2009 10:48:47 PM
6/29/2009 10:46:28 AM
what graph, exactly, does the "hockey stick" refer to anyway?
6/29/2009 10:46:44 AM
Regardless of your beliefs, can anyone agree with the EPA's refusal to agree to a public judicial hearing about the validity of their "global warming" scientific proof? If there is a consensus and the proof is so overwhelming it should be an open and shut case and remove all doubt from the climate realists. Instead, this lack of transparency (promised by Obama) is nothing but a massive expansion of government power, put in effect in an unconstitutional manner.
9/1/2009 9:58:44 AM
9/3/2009 1:16:58 PM
9/4/2009 12:18:59 PM
It's truly amazing how far we've come since 2009, earlier posts in this thread are....great(including myself in that too).http://www.wsj.com/articles/appeals-court-skeptical-of-case-against-epa-climate-rule-1429201275Its been a long time coming, but we are finally getting close to addressing (some) of our CO2 emissions.[Edited on April 22, 2015 at 4:31 PM. Reason : Also current debate in NC: Should we plan for the coming EPA rules or stick our heads in the sand]
4/22/2015 4:22:51 PM
ridiculous. obama wants to reduce CO2... guess what trees need to live? CO2. hey lets limit CO2 so that trees have less of the main atmospheric gas they need to live. THIS WILL BE GREAT FOR THE ENVIRONMENT.This man is a monster.
4/22/2015 5:49:00 PM
Well that's a pretty weak troll attempt
4/22/2015 7:45:02 PM
Hmm. seems US CO2 emissions are back where they were back in the sixties, all without any interference from the government. I think we should declare victory and stop trying to regulate CO2.
4/28/2015 10:26:33 PM
no government interference? CAFE standards, Stimulus investments, various subsidies, blah blah. we have a hodge podge right now, but I don't see how you can say the government hasn't nudged us toward lowering CO2 emissions.
4/29/2015 7:17:02 AM
But all that you list has had very little impact to our CO2 emissions. One might argue that they have actually increased our CO2 emissions through mal-investment. Government boondoggles tend to involve a lot of wasted construction, etc. The vast majority of our CO2 emissions reduction has come from private and state owned land in the form of natural gas. Our current CO2 emissions would be even lower if the federal government wasn't actively preventing drilling on federal lands.
4/29/2015 11:38:10 AM
The government is regulating me exhaling?!
4/29/2015 11:54:29 AM
I've said it before and i'll say it again, how can we possibly regulate CO2 emissions to an acceptable level, possibly increasing energy costs for people who can't really afford it, when you've got China and India who still have emerging middle classes, who can't wait to buy their first car. Until we can regulate CO2 emissions of other soveriegn entities, what's the point?
4/29/2015 2:05:40 PM
^^^There are more factors involved in the switch from coal to NG than just the glut of NG and its cheap price. More than half of all states have renewable portfolio standards and NG plants are better (and cheaper) at cycling up or down based on what renewables are contributing to the system. New mercury rules, SO2 and NOx rules were rolled out in 2010ish I believe, also making coal less competitive from a price point of view. Both of these greatly helped along the rush to NG. Besides, there is no indication that the price of NG can stay this low forever, ^China and India already have pilot carbon trading programs. That's more than we can say at this point.
4/29/2015 3:56:20 PM
I"m sure China's wink wink nod nod carbon trading system will work wonderfully. With China almost doubling coal energy production over the next 25 years the bottom line is their CO2 emissions are going nowhere but up up up.http://www.eia.gov/countries/cab.cfm?fips=CH[Edited on April 30, 2015 at 1:03 PM. Reason : link]
4/30/2015 1:02:45 PM
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-13/china-s-carbon-emissions-drop-for-the-first-time-since-2001
4/30/2015 1:17:00 PM
Not surprising given their economic slow down...which is most likely a short term affair.Hope springs eternal...I'm not hating on this (what benefit would that have) just being pragmatic about it.[Edited on April 30, 2015 at 1:20 PM. Reason : k]
4/30/2015 1:18:24 PM
I get the pragmatism, China is turning a huge ship and its going to take time and a lot of motivation on their part.But they are investing 10s of billions every year, there are a huge amount of efficiency changes they can still make relatively quickly. All signs seem to indicate them being pretty serious about this issue IMO. It's also important to keep their economic slowdown in perspective - they are still growing at 5-7% (maybe 2-3% if you really think they are cooking the books). That still indicate a decoupling of growth for CO2 emissions IMO.
4/30/2015 1:32:59 PM