6/29/2008 5:24:01 PM
It's probably plenty to justify saving trillions of dollars by making as little impact as possible.
6/29/2008 5:29:56 PM
Saving trillions? Or spending trillions? The economics of climate change is quite complex, but the costs of proposed "solutions" all far outweigh the losses we might avoid in the short term. Long term is a different story, but by then we'll be living on asteroids and shit.[Edited on June 29, 2008 at 5:38 PM. Reason : 2]
6/29/2008 5:35:07 PM
How damage did Katrina cause? A hundred billion dollars at least, right? I'm not saying that Katrina wouldn't have happened anyway, but I don't think it's unreasonable to assume that coastal devastation, property loss, and insurance costs could easily run into the tens of trillions of dollars in the next 30 years or so if global warming prophecy comes to fruition.Think of all the coastal cities that would be susceptible to flooding/storms. New York, San Francisco, Miami, San Diego, Los Angeles, the Outer Banks, Washington DC, Boston, Tampa... That's just in the US and not even counting regular coastal properties in non-major cities which is still some of the most valuable real estate in the country. Around the world, countries like Bangladesh, Japan, China, the Netherlands, Italy, France, Portugal, Spain... All these countries could experience massive flooding/storm destruction/loss of land. Have you actually stopped to think about how much economic loss would really take place if global warming predictions turn out to be true? That's not even talking about the humanitarian crises that would also result from millions of people being displaced from their homes. I just think it's stupid to bet on it not happening when there is a lot of evidence that suggests it is happening.
6/29/2008 5:56:43 PM
Whoa, take a deep breath. New Orleans is at the mouth of a river delta, and large parts of it are below sea level. It is in the path of typical atlantic hurricanes, and it was protected by inferior, aging, under-engineered levees. Now tell me which of the other cities you named have those characteristics. Flooding, storm damage and loss of land? In Los Angeles and San Diego? What are you talking about? It's easy to blame natural disasters on global warming, but it's also somewhat of a red herring at times. There have always been natural disasters. Regardless of what Al Gore thinks, scientists have not conclusively linked warmer ocean temperatures to increased hurricane activity. And sea levels are not rising at an alarming pace. They might go up about 1 foot over the next century (IPCC estimates), which is in line with their historical rise. That is not something we need to worry about in light of all the real problems in the world.[Edited on June 29, 2008 at 6:16 PM. Reason : 2]
6/29/2008 6:10:59 PM
Basically any coastal city would be susceptible to flooding if the ice caps suddenly started to melt. Any city built around a bay would be in danger of losing a lot of land or being damaged pretty bad economically if shit gets out of hand.
6/29/2008 6:15:15 PM
What is this nonsense? The Arctic is all sea ice. Whether it is frozen or not really doesn't have any impact on sea levels. The Antarctic, which is actually a land mass, has been increasing it's ice cover over the last few decades. Sea levels have been rising at a consistent, but slow pace for the last several thousand years.
6/29/2008 6:20:19 PM
6/29/2008 6:21:24 PM
We might not have enough oil, but we definitely have enough coal to keep emissions up. Especially if we can turn it into fuel for cars or something.
6/29/2008 6:25:29 PM
6/29/2008 6:28:10 PM
Even a 7-23 inch rise would create a lot more problems than you might think.
6/29/2008 6:30:02 PM
So was that low scenario for 2050 or for RIGHT NOW?And no, this is not the "consistent, but slow pace for the last several thousand years" you were referring to. That's a few order of magnitudes slower.
6/29/2008 6:30:21 PM
So according to that graph, sea levels have risen approximately 20 cm in a little over 100 years.You are gonna tell me with a straight face that they are suddenly going to rise 1000 cm over the next 52 years? Really?
6/29/2008 6:32:52 PM
I said 10 m because that's what the quote was for. I've heard fairly varied positions on the sea level rise. Wikipedia was giving 110 to 770 mm, for the third report, but I'm trying to track that down, as I think it's likely wrong, and it was probably closer to your numbers.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_level_rise#cite_note-409.htm-20All the IPCC things were 1990 to 2100 numbers I think.Still, it's HARD to find stuff in those reports! I just want the score, I don't want to watch the game!--How on Earth could the 4th report have given 18 to 54 cm? I'm just baffled by that. If the rise in the last century was ~20 cm, then it seems obvious that the next century, which we have a near consensus will be much hotter, should be much greater, like a few times more.I don't know, I'm still trying to hunt down the 3rd report numbers, but from the talks I've heard, they didn't stop at any measly 54 cm for worst case.[Edited on June 29, 2008 at 6:53 PM. Reason : ]
6/29/2008 6:47:36 PM
6/29/2008 6:53:36 PM
I would just like to say I appreciate Prawn Star's open-mindedness and reasonable arguments in his criticism of global warming. It's nice to be able to actually debate this rather than have some people just spouting off their own stupid opinions.
6/29/2008 6:58:50 PM
Thanks, appreciate it.I've argued with both sides in this thread. I tend to think that the theory and data is there, and there is no doubt that we are causing what could be potentially catastropic warming. I usually object to fearmongering techniques such as those employed by Gore, however, and I think it's unfortunate that his absurd projections of global sea rise have caught on. If I recall correctly, he talked about 80 feet of sea level rise, which won't happen for a few thousand years.
6/29/2008 7:05:19 PM
yeah, okay, 10 m is absurd. But 310 mm claimed, large pdf:http://www.pol.ac.uk/psmsl/author_archive/church_white/GRL_Church_White_2006_024826.pdfbut that was by 'acceleration' and experimental data, not something I'd believe.Here's something that I think is directly a summary of the 3rd report:http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/409.htmIt sure is 110 to 770 mm increase for 2100. I don't believe this either, but it was sort of the 'official' consensus for a time (I think). That would be a little uncomfortable mind changing if this really was the 3rd report stuff. In fact, 770 mm in general, looks pretty uncomfortable.if 10 m is absurd, then the 3rd report may well have had some pretty absurd data itself. 80 m is not absurd, it's ridiculous. But there are some really big problems for humanity even if it doesn't change that fast. If temperature stays consistently high, ocean rise is only a matter of rate before Greenland melts. Plus, Greenland is in that area is super high temperature increase due to the N. Pole extreme feedback.
6/29/2008 7:11:15 PM
Now I'm confused. We're talking about millimeters, not decimeters, right?110 mm - 770 mm = .11 to .77 meters, which is pretty close to the 4th assessment projection of .18-.59 meters.Where are you referencing 80 meters?[Edited on June 29, 2008 at 7:26 PM. Reason : 2]
6/29/2008 7:16:23 PM
ooooh, I did mess up the use of cm. It should be 11 to 77 cm.
6/29/2008 7:32:55 PM
6/30/2008 12:42:27 AM
6/30/2008 5:21:06 PM
You still never gave any reason the graph was irrelevant to my claim. Which it still isn't.And you still can't even present so much as a representitive guess as to the short list of parameters that affect the validity of global warming. Let's say you had said "I think century-wise averaged world temperatures normally vary a few degrees Celsius, meaning AGW probably won't significantly disrupt life on Earth", then that would have actually refuted something.No, you have no answers, and your only commentary on the subject is parroting criticism that was randomly shotgunned wherever convenient for the sole purpose of discrediting regardless of reality, which is far more destructive than even ignorance.
6/30/2008 9:11:46 PM
^ agreed.There is skepticism, and then there is blatant ignorance in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. aaronburro is clearly in the latter category. Don't be That Guy. But hell, who am I talking about here? The same guy that threw a flag at our football team during the Walk of Champions. He takes pride in being a douche.[Edited on June 30, 2008 at 9:27 PM. Reason : 2]
6/30/2008 9:25:44 PM
I thought I remembered having good discussions with aaronburro before. Honestly, I was kind of surprised here.But anyway, content takes president.I'll admit, I don't know this stuff as well as a lot of people. But on this issue, knowledge is about as equally distributed as equally as wealth. Those who really think that nothing serious could or probably happen from this (I don't even think anyone posting here would take that stance) are despotically knowledge poor. And then not helping the issue, politicians will bold face lie on both sides of the issue when it fits their agenda.Bioengineering, we need you fast to save the world from resource depletion and climate destruction. No joke.[Edited on July 1, 2008 at 12:49 AM. Reason : ]
7/1/2008 12:48:48 AM
7/1/2008 10:02:52 AM
Pointing out spelling errors is the new Hitler comparison.
7/1/2008 10:54:49 AM
clearly we can take his word on the ins and outs of climate change when he doesnt know the difference in president and precedent...i think he's a teacher as well? speaks volumesbtw we've all been waiting 51 pages now for you to make one post thats relevant to climate change instead of just trolling this thread like a fucking faggot who likes to politicize science since he understands politics but not science...maybe finally take the hint and GTFO of this thread?]
7/1/2008 10:57:54 AM
Unreal, I go away from the site for nearly 7 months, and in this thread of 51 pages (extending back almost 2 years now), you're still bagging on Boone for being a teacher.[Edited on July 1, 2008 at 11:06 AM. Reason : thats all Im gonna say]
7/1/2008 11:06:00 AM
Shhhhh...It makes him feel good about himself.
7/1/2008 11:07:47 AM
at least i bag on him for his actual profession instead of inventing a fake profession to make me feel good about myself...oh yeah, and on top of that, at least i actually understand science and don't treat it like a political issue...funny how that works]
7/1/2008 11:12:55 AM
7/1/2008 11:32:28 PM
7/2/2008 12:01:12 AM
I love it. Their methodology was completely wrong, but we can still trust their conclusions. Really?REALLY!!!?It's fucking obvious that you are a history teacher.Generally, at least in science that is worth a damn, when you find out that your methodology is wrong, you automatically throw out your conclusions. That's why in high school chemistry class, when the teacher found out you added the wrong chemicals together, she ignored the rest of your lab and told you to do it again. Either that, or she gave you an F.
7/2/2008 12:18:10 AM
7/2/2008 12:32:17 AM
7/2/2008 9:01:30 AM
http://www.charlotte.com/news/story/695929.html
7/2/2008 10:09:51 AM
http://climate.jpl.nasa.gov/ClimateTimeMachine/climateTimeMachine.cfmPfft! NASA.What do they know about real science?
7/2/2008 10:11:24 AM
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/368892_weather30.html
7/2/2008 10:15:39 AM
^my article is from today, yours is from 3 days ago...clearly global warming has stopped in the last 3 days as is evidence by my article
7/2/2008 10:21:43 AM
I lol'd
7/2/2008 10:35:21 AM
7/2/2008 6:22:38 PM
7/2/2008 9:34:18 PM
apparently sea level rise is a little more complicatedhttp://environment.newscientist.com/article/dn14264-greenland-meltwater-will-take-slow-wave-around-globe.html?DCMP=ILC-hmts&nsref=news7_head_dn14264
7/8/2008 10:56:07 AM
7/8/2008 11:01:31 AM
I was thinking about making a sarcastic comment to that effect, but I figured it'd be too asinine.
7/8/2008 11:09:58 AM
hasnt stopped you in the past, especially not in this thread]
7/8/2008 11:11:38 AM
So, this development did not affect the previous position of the last 5-years other than specifying how it will happen, and yet somehow it further justifies the position that AGW is a crock?how?Oh no, they're improving the detail of their predictions... this surely must invalidate something, right?
7/8/2008 2:06:46 PM
they just reevaluated some data and figured they might be off by 50 years in their pacific sea level predictionsyet people continue to take this week's hypothesis as absolute fact?
7/8/2008 2:09:13 PM
but yet the shittyness of the consequences remains the same. Tuvalu's complete and utter sinking is staved off a few decades (I doubt it will be any 50 years from what I've heard of their current situation), but in return the Atlantic coasts get ass-raped earlier than planned.The net amount of water we expect to see dumped into the ocean remains the same. As long as that's constant, the human cost remains the same. A general evaluation of the human cost of AGW has never changed significantly with new reports.
7/8/2008 2:32:44 PM