4/4/2009 2:04:46 AM
This thread is full of morons.
4/4/2009 10:03:51 AM
4/5/2009 11:01:34 PM
Just so y'all know, last week was the kick off for the North Carolina Sea Level Rise Risk Assessment Study.http://www.ncsealevelrise.com/North Carolina has been identified by NOAA as one of three states that would be significantly vulnerable to a rise in sea levels. Therefore, NC has received some funding to try and figure out exactly what the economic/health/societal/environmental costs associated with various sea rise scenarios would be.[Edited on April 6, 2009 at 6:32 AM. Reason : ``]
4/6/2009 6:32:16 AM
While I'm posting, here is a cost of sea level changes I never considered: the loss of the human historical record.http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30014339/I think these types of costs might be relatively significant in North Carolina, considering how much history is on our coasts.
4/6/2009 6:35:24 AM
4/6/2009 1:22:53 PM
WATCH OUT AL GORE WANTS YOUR CARBON MONIES!!!!!!
4/6/2009 1:31:20 PM
^ OMG!!! HUR CONTINUES BEING AN ASSHOLE!!! OMG!!!\^^ not only have they been rising, but they have been rising at *gasp* the exact same rate for the past thousand years!!! OMG!!!
4/6/2009 2:35:21 PM
So, just buy some land close to the beach. When you get ready to retire, you can sell it as beach front property. WIN!
4/6/2009 6:15:39 PM
probably not. by then some hippie will have labeled it wetlands in order to completely destroy the value of it so they can pick it up at a substantial discount
4/6/2009 6:16:53 PM
4/6/2009 6:34:14 PM
i know, right? nevermind that even with all of the OMFG warming we've had, the sea-level rise has still been a mm a year. what's 30 times 1mm? 30mm? yeah, that sounds like 7 inches
4/6/2009 6:36:52 PM
4/6/2009 6:45:15 PM
yes, but at least he will have paid me for it
4/6/2009 6:49:32 PM
Prawn Star,Actually, they will probably just use a range of the IPCC projections so that we can actually understand what the distribution of risks are. And that's kinda what this study is about.John Whitehead (the App State economist who is leading up the socioeconomic workgroup on this latest study) published a study last year about climate change's impact on NC's coastal resources where he also used a range of IPCC projections (and did not include a 55 foot scenario).
4/7/2009 8:01:45 AM
What's next? Are we going to try and stop the forces of plate tectonics?
4/7/2009 4:54:10 PM
Funny you should mention that. This isn't plate tectonics, but it is rather . . . um . . . unorthodox:http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,513242,00.html
4/8/2009 8:14:13 PM
4/8/2009 8:21:06 PM
^^lol, yeah I know tell me about it. I don't put a lot of stock in whatever Holdren says though.Of course they could just ban CFCs, I believe they made some areas colder.
4/8/2009 9:38:01 PM
4/9/2009 2:35:22 AM
^ thanks for the info on the CA study. I had not heard about that before, but after doing so I can understand your concern with how the NC study will be conducted.
4/9/2009 7:58:05 AM
^^^I apologize. I meant to say unban CFCs. Also, of Holdren really wants to do that instead he could just remove the scrubbers off all the coal plants. Just deregulate the industry. You'll definitely get that sun blocking haze he so craves.
4/9/2009 12:28:01 PM
meh, what does a geologist know about science that the messiah doesn't?
4/9/2009 8:28:52 PM
something something dinosaurs noah's ark
4/9/2009 10:11:36 PM
Oh look, the California Energy Commission wants to regulate what type of TV you can buy. Never would have seen that coming!
4/14/2009 7:21:18 PM
I'll bet this has the support of Hollywood, since HD and bigger TVs brings out imperfections a whole lot better
4/14/2009 10:51:27 PM
^^ Because the people who are willing to voluntarily lower the quality of their life for the sake of the environment have already done so, and apparently its not enough for California. Instead of setting limits for power consumption, I would prefer they tax the purchase of the TV set when its bought, based on its power consumption. Maybe thats more bureaucreatic work?
4/15/2009 9:52:23 AM
I'd prefer if they didn't try to exert control over people's lives in the name of a great hoax.
4/15/2009 2:19:35 PM
^ I agree with that, for sure. But, I could certainly get behind that ^^, too
4/16/2009 12:23:20 AM
4/16/2009 12:28:21 AM
So the Sun has apparently been very quite the last few years and if the trend continues we could be entering a (compared to last 100 years) very cold period.
4/16/2009 8:50:53 PM
4/16/2009 10:20:12 PM
4/16/2009 10:31:12 PM
no, but "frivolous" consumption makes up a lot of our consumption today. Like people who open a window while they have their a/c on.^^^ you know those guys were paid off by the oil industry.Besides, it's obvious that natural climate variability is causing this, but as soon as that passes, we'll be in the throws of global climate change for real!
4/16/2009 11:19:55 PM
^^Uh, exactly what point are you trying to make?
4/16/2009 11:29:29 PM
I would think my point would be obvious, but whatever. Instead of deciding what's "frivolous" and what's not (especially given that this is both subjective and resource-intensive), one can simply discourage frivolous behavior by raising the cost of waste on the margin. However, given that our point is to reduce the impact of electricity usage, it seems more prudent to simply do this overall, rather than to police just who exactly is being "frivolous" and who is not. Because, once again - somehow I doubt pollution is produced only when electricity gets used "frivolously."
4/17/2009 2:11:53 AM
Hey, check out the result of "adjustments" to the urban-heat-island adjustment that USED to be used in GISS data (you know, Hansen's department). Notice anything odd?And wow. just... fucking... wow...March 30th, 2009: maybe the day Global Warming died.http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/images/stories/papers/reprint/markey_and_barton_letter.pdfWhile the first page is damning in its own right, check this out:
4/17/2009 3:33:26 AM
Uh, I was willing to read until I got to here, where it's obvious he's distorting the available scientific evidence:
4/17/2009 11:20:22 AM
4/17/2009 11:31:33 AM
4/17/2009 11:43:54 AM
4/17/2009 11:56:35 AM
WTG with the reading comprehension, there. As we've seen in the last several posts, now.
4/17/2009 11:57:29 AM
EPA says greenhouse emissions endanger human health
4/17/2009 2:44:51 PM
No, it means that the EPA overreached in an attempt to regulate as they see fit. The wording of that ruling leaves it very vulnerble to future challenges.[Edited on April 17, 2009 at 3:08 PM. Reason : I]
4/17/2009 3:03:33 PM
It is terrible to see all the people out there asphyxiating on all that CO2 in the atmosphere. Sure am glad the EPA is gonna do something about that. While they are at it, they should do something about all that DiHydrogen-Monoxide, too.And, chaos, I'm glad you can dismiss an entire article based on one thing you disagree with. I understand very much the havoc that a rapid change in water parameters can have. But such a rapid change should be considered as occurring on a daily or weekly time-scale. NOT a decadal one. The point is that these creatures have survived, even THRIVED in environments where there was almost 20 times the CO2 in the air. In that time, why wasn't the ocean almost entirely acidic?
4/17/2009 4:42:37 PM
4/17/2009 7:00:37 PM
4/17/2009 7:24:18 PM
4/17/2009 7:49:11 PM
haha, I read that as .1, not 1, lol >.<that notwithstanding, his number is still .1. You'll also note that he does not disagree that CO2 can lead to pH changes. However, he HAS noted that there are new discoveries showing *gasp* that the environment adapts to the CO2 change in a myriad number of ways to reduce the effect. I would, again, posit that it must be amazing that these creatures have fully evolved away from their original ability to handle the conditions in which they emerged. Seems a bit absurd, if you ask me. it would be akin to saying that humans could somehow evolve to point that oxygen is poisonous to them in an oxygen-rich environment.I mean, honestly, how is it that such a calcifying organism is going to even be able to survive, let alone evolve, in an environment that kills it so quickly?]
4/17/2009 8:31:45 PM
At which point, I go back to my original point:
4/17/2009 8:39:08 PM