The Paris Climate Talks: Negotiating With the Atmosphere 130
Lasrick writes: The Paris climate change talks are in December, but what negotiators plan to propose will only be part of non-legally-binding pledges—and they represent only what is achievable without too much difficulty. 2009's Copenhagen Accord say 114 countries agree that global temperature increases should be held below 2 degrees Celsius. "Paradoxically, an accord that should have spurred the world to immediate action instead seemed to offer some breathing room. Two degrees was meant to be a ceiling, but repeated references to an internationally agreed-upon “threshold” led many people to believe that nothing really bad could happen below 2 degrees—or worse yet, that the number itself was negotiable." Dawn Stover writes about alternatives to the meaningless numbers and endless talks: 'The very idea that the Paris conference is a negotiation is ridiculous. You can't negotiate with the atmosphere."
What is there to 'negotiate'? (Score:1, Insightful)
Nobody cares about the climate, aside from the opportunities each disaster presents. In business, profit is the prime, if not the only, motive to be in business at all. Just make it more profitable to be clean.
Re:What is there to 'negotiate'? (Score:4, Insightful)
Nobody cares about the climate, aside from the opportunities each disaster presents. In business, profit is the prime, if not the only, motive to be in business at all. Just make it more profitable to be clean.
This will only happen by appropriately regulating businesses. Unfortunately our governments at best don't have balls to do it and at worst are in the pockets of the businesses they're supposed to be regulating. So instead they give us bullshit arguments about how regulation hurts our freedoms and nothing is done.
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It doesn't matter at this point anyway. Stopping global warming is a lost cause. The only thing left is to adapt.
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This will only happen by appropriately regulating businesses. Unfortunately our governments at best don't have balls to do it and at worst are in the pockets of the businesses they're supposed to be regulating.
Umm...more to the point in the United States at least the government doesn't have the right or the authority to "appropriately regulate business". At least not to the level you seem to want.
What do you propose as a solution to the problem you are perceiving?
Secondarily you know of course that other nations don't have the restrictions the United States is fortunate to have. What's stopping them from taking those actions you believe they need "the balls" do do?
Feret
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Umm...more to the point in the United States at least the government doesn't have the right or the authority to "appropriately regulate business".
It does, actually, both through interstate commerce and the treaty clause.
Rick Perry may want to get rid of the EPA, pandering fool that he is, but an honest argument against it? Would never pass through a sane court.
Secondarily you know of course that other nations don't have the restrictions the United States is fortunate to have. What's stopping them from taking those actions you believe they need "the balls" do do?
You must have missed this bit:
Unfortunately our governments at best don't have balls to do it and at worst are in the pockets of the businesses they're supposed to be regulating.
So that would be the things stopping them.
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Umm...more to the point in the United States at least the government doesn't have the right or the authority to "appropriately regulate business". At least not to the level you seem to want.
Of course it has the ability. There are countless things that businesses can not do because they are against the law. New laws can be passed to limit what business can do. Businesses may not like it, but it s possible. The Glass-Steagall act is an example of restrictions placed on large businesses. It's also an example of what goes wrong when you take away the restrictions and allow said large businesses police themselves using the power of the so-called free market.
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This will only happen by appropriately regulating businesses.
If anybody actually wanted to live in a state where success and failure were decided by the government, who your friends were in government we could have just not fought the cold war.
Here's a little hint for the past 25 years "appropriate government" regulation has done nothing but increase.
The result smaller middle class, wage stagnation, greater concentration of wealth, and greater income inequality.
Good job
Re:What is there to 'negotiate'? (Score:5, Funny)
While in "free market" Russia and China, the rising tide is lifting all boats, from the oligarch to the oil worker? Say what you like about excessive regulation in the US (which clearly exists and we should work on minimizing it), letting businessmen have free reign is anything but a panacea.
In fact, it's fucking disaster.
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The people in China would certainly disagree while Putin is hardly a free marketeer.
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Actually, the average Chinese guy is far wealthier today than he was before economic liberalization. It's come at a cost to the environment in China, to be sure, but that's sort of the natural progression developing countries go through. There used to be rivers in the US that would actually burn, and even as late as the mid '60s when you got up to go to work in Pittsburgh there would be a layer of coal dust on your car.
The older Chinese people still remember when the government ran everything. That's wh
Re:What is there to 'negotiate'? Industrialization (Score:1)
The economic liberalization is the result of technology adoption.
China has had an industrial revolution.
The reason old Chinese people know the government ran everything because most old civilizations have an authoritarian structure.
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Actually, the average Chinese guy is far wealthier today than he was before economic liberalization. It's come at a cost to the environment in China, to be sure, but that's sort of the natural progression developing countries go through. There used to be rivers in the US that would actually burn, and even as late as the mid '60s when you got up to go to work in Pittsburgh there would be a layer of coal dust on your car.
The older Chinese people still remember when the government ran everything. That's when 30 million of them starved to death.
China still contains a billion subsistence farmers lurking underneath that thriving industrial revolution.
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A billion? No, more like 300k. But that's half the number you would have found a generation ago.
OK, let's split the difference and call it 750k. http://www.atimes.com/atimes/C... [atimes.com]
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This will only happen by appropriately regulating businesses.
If anybody actually wanted to live in a state where success and failure were decided by the government, who your friends were in government we could have just not fought the cold war.
Here's a little hint for the past 25 years "appropriate government" regulation has done nothing but increase.
The result smaller middle class, wage stagnation, greater concentration of wealth, and greater income inequality.
Good job
Nice try at obfuscation. Of course, we know that smaller middle class, wage stagnation, greater concentration of wealth, and greater income inequality have been on the increase SINCE YOUR BIRTH!!!! Don't try to palm responsibility off on "appropriate government" regulation. We know it's you.
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wow.
that is Jane Q Public levels of bullshit, admitting the truth of things like "smaller middle class, wage stagnation, greater concentration of wealth, and greater income inequality" but completely missing the mark on their actual cause.
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wow.
that is Jane Q Public levels of bullshit, admitting the truth of things like "smaller middle class, wage stagnation, greater concentration of wealth, and greater income inequality" but completely missing the mark on their actual cause.
Your carefully constructed reasoning is as always devastating in it's impact.
Please call me a poopy head next, it saves me the trouble of taking apart thoughts other people have put in your head.
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This will only happen by appropriately regulating businesses.
So far the big reductions, such as the switch from coal to gas, LED lights, variable speed DC motors, more efficient HVAC, better insulation, have all been driven by the market, not "government regulation". So far, government imposed "solutions" such as carbon credits, shuttering nukes, and subsidy schemes, have accomplished little, or been counter-productive.
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actually that's totally untrue. Much of the efficiency improvements were driven by collaborative approach between government and business
The efficiency improvements in our vehicle fleet have been directly due to government demanding them, and have slacked off as soon as the government mandates relaxed.
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> So far the big reductions, such as the switch from coal to gas, LED lights, variable speed DC motors, more efficient HVAC, better insulation, have all been driven by the market, not "government regulation".
Look again, and look more carefully, please. The restrictions on building new coal fired plants with less pollution, coupled with many other factors, have raised electricity prices: that is one of the market forces" involved. Government support of the switch and numerous projects at every level of go
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So far, government imposed "solutions" such as carbon credits, shuttering nukes, and subsidy schemes, have accomplished little, or been counter-productive.
Exactly. Because they're for show, not real solutions.
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So far, government imposed "solutions" such as carbon credits, shuttering nukes, and subsidy schemes, have accomplished little, or been counter-productive.
Exactly. Because they're for show, not real solutions.
Because any party having the honesty to remove the direct and indirect subsidies for fossil fuels and adding a surcharge for the externalized costs (just include the adverse effects on health and agriculture) would be voted out instantly and never see the light of day again.
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This will only happen by appropriately regulating businesses.
So far the big reductions, such as the switch from coal to gas, LED lights, variable speed DC motors, more efficient HVAC, better insulation, have all been driven by the market, not "government regulation". So far, government imposed "solutions" such as carbon credits, shuttering nukes, and subsidy schemes, have accomplished little, or been counter-productive.
Abraham Lincoln was a big proponent of government backing high-speed rail, and that turned out pretty well for the country.
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'Appropriately regulating businesses' is a concept diametrically opposed to the way capitalism works, though, and the organism of the genus capitalism,
Capitalism, like democracy, is not a single thing. There are different ways we can structure capitalism just like there are different ways we can structure democracies. The capitalism we have ended up with is is virulent, but it doesn't need to be that way. You don't need to resort to "communism" to achieve this. The cries of "communism" that we hear from right wingers is just a way of diverting the discussion.
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'Appropriately regulating businesses' is a concept diametrically opposed to the way capitalism works, though, and the organism of the genus capitalism, like any life-form, will fight tooth and nail to it's dying breath trying to preserve itself -- and it doesn't care how much collateral damage it causes in the process. We'd have to do away with capitalism entirely. But doing that starts people pointing fingers and yelling 'socialism!' or 'communism!', which while they're not terrible concepts on paper, they, like most all things involving humans, overlooks a fundamental fact: Humans can't be trusted with the sort of power that leading a socialist or communist society gives them; power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. We need to evolve further as a race before many of the problems we have as a race will be solved. I fear that won't happen before it's too late, though.
there are plenty of european countries which have neither done away with capitalism entirely, nor become absolutely corrupt.
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That's nonsense. Businesses already have a strong incentive for reducing energy consumption because energy is already expensive, even without regulation.
Given the regulatory binge that the US governm
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That's only a tiny part of it. Public enthusiasm for CO2 reduction wilts pretty quickly when the public is asked to make sacrifices.
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That's only a tiny part of it. Public enthusiasm for CO2 reduction wilts pretty quickly when the public is asked to make sacrifices.
that's why you point out to them after 9/11 that stopping our dependency on oil would get us out from being stuck with the Middle East, and they see that the "sacrifice" is worth it. Instead, in typical Republican fashion, we double down on the bad idea, recommit to fossil fuels, and send troops into the Middle East.
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And have mommy bring you more Doritos while you play WoW in the basement:
Mommy is in another galaxy far far away, and I really don't have the talent to play anything more complex than Pong. And my house doesn't have a basement. I have to sit outside! On the patio! With a bunch of flowery plants and noisy animals flying around crapping on my keyboard, yuck! Do you have any idea what that's like?!
I have a simple message. Don't pollute. Hardly merits all the criticism it gets. But without a profit motive, it m
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Since energy is probably the single largest input into most products, businesses already have a strong incentive to reduce energy usage, and have had that incentive since long before carbon taxes and government subsidies for "clean energy".
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Since energy is probably the single largest input into most products, businesses already have a strong incentive to reduce energy usage, and have had that incentive since long before carbon taxes and government subsidies for "clean energy".
Sure, but that usage isn't zero...
The trick is, clean energy costs more than dirty energy... that is what he was talking about...
I can get clean power for my business, but it costs about 3 cents more per kWh than dirty energy.
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Indeed, it does. And that's what I'm getting it. Fustakrakich said "Just make it more profitable to be clean.", as if everybody wins: businesses make more profits, we all get clean energy, and nothing else changes. But in reality, since you observe that "clean energy" is 3 cents more expensive per kWh, imposing the requirement to use "clean" energy through regulation raises prices, reduces demand, and probably reduces profits. It also reduces actual ec
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The war in Syria is a contemporary example of those (admittedly difficult to quantify) costs. The unprecedented "once in 10,000 years" drought in the fertile crescent prior to the "arab
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Traditional economists are quite aware that externalities exist; they are simply honest enough to admit that they can't quantify them or who is actually bearing those costs. Progressive economists delude themselves into believing that they can quantify these costs, but in the end, they just end up being crony capitalists, forcefully extracting money from the population and giving it to politicall
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Since energy is probably the single largest input into most products, businesses already have a strong incentive to reduce energy usage, and have had that incentive since long before carbon taxes and government subsidies for "clean energy".
Sure, but that usage isn't zero...
The trick is, clean energy costs more than dirty energy... that is what he was talking about...
I can get clean power for my business, but it costs about 3 cents more per kWh than dirty energy.
\ clean energy costs more, if you don't count the externalized costs of dirty energy. it's like saying crapping on my neighbor's lawn is cheaper than using my toilet and paying the water and sewer bills. if you count the costs of pollution simply on human health and agricultural production, the costs of coal in particular would make it prohibitive.
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clean energy costs more, if you don't count the externalized costs of dirty energy. it's like saying crapping on my neighbor's lawn is cheaper than using my toilet and paying the water and sewer bills. if you count the costs of pollution simply on human health and agricultural production, the costs of coal in particular would make it prohibitive.
That is a fair point, one that I don't actually have a big problem with.
What doesn't work is the "carbon credits" or "cap and trade" nonsense that just allows people to go on polluting and creating a marketplace for "carbon".
What DOES make sense is a straight carbon tax. You can burn all the gas, coal, and oil you want, but there is a cost to that, paid to the government in the form of taxes. This compensates everyone for the mess you're making.
That is how you instantly make clean energy make sense, witho
Commons Tragedy (Score:2)
Unfortunately, like each nation that would like to see crude production restricted in OPEC, it would be better for them if the other members could make the sacrifice(s).
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Most politicians are at an age where AGW simply isn't an issue to them at all, since they are going to be long dead by the time it matters.
So, the questions they are asking are: (1) does this issue bring me votes (or political support in non-democratic nations), and (2) will history remember me for taking on this issue.
As far as (1) is conce
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The lack of political will, the courage to do the right thing despite negative personal consequence, is the hallmark of the modern, career politician.
Don't you think term limits could fix that quite rapidly?
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I don't see why. With term limits, politicians simply are going to shift their motivations from getting votes to getting cushy private sector jobs when they get out.
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Imagine my property values
Um, no. That will become a saltwater swamp when the ground water rises.
Politics Feh (Score:4, Interesting)
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Look at the name of the editor that posted this.
If that isn't a giant warning sign what is ?
Re:Politics Feh (Score:4, Informative)
I remember when nobody posted politics on Slashdot.
No you don't. Slashdot has always had some articles with a political slant.
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Re:Politics Feh (Score:5, Insightful)
And people have always complained about it and wished it didn't happen.
Some people complain. Others have figured out that if an article doesn't interest them, they can NOT CLICK ON IT. Others, including me, think it is interesting to read about politics from a nerdy point of view.
it's not uncommon to have 20-50 comments when there used to be 150-300.
Slashdot is dying, but I am not sure that is because of "politics". Political stories tend to have the most comments.
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While the level of political discourse usually is just a tad better than on Fox News or Slate, it is probably a good idea that the technologically inclined start thinking about something more relevant than the next processor tick or the personal hygiene of free software zealots.
The real work is complicated and ugly, frustrating and annoying but it is there and most of us will have to deal with at some point.
Re:Science Feh (Score:2)
There's too much science here. Who really cares about 2 degrees? Lots of predictions, statistical projections, meaningless numbers and scientific papers... I want blood and gore! I want great debates and powerful forces aligned with questionable business practices. Face it people, there is no life in science, the life is in the arguments that come after. More politics, please!
And no, facetious is not the same as feces.
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Ever notice how people wanting to hector other people think that arguing about politics/policies 24/7/everywhere wants everyone to think that's a grownup adult activity?
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It does seem that any article related to "global warming" tends to results in the same endless arguments by both sides being posted yet again - "the 10 hottest years in history were within the last 18 years", "there has been no warming trend over the last 20 years", "yeah, but, a lot of the heat is going into the ocean", etc., etc.
Everyone appears to have divided up into camps on this issue and no one is going to change their "beliefs" and switch sides, so any "discussion" is about on the level of 2 gr
Re: Politics Feh (Score:1)
Are you fracking kidding me? You're equating the group of people refuting the nonsensical anti-AGW claims with science ( "10 of the hottest years occured in the last 18", "oceeans are absorbing some of the heat") with the camp that trots out the same fracking tired arguments that have been refuted over and over again in every fracking thread? Science isn't a "camp", it's the conclusion you reach after looking at the data.
The problem with these threads is there are too many idiot trolls who think themselve
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Why not rename it 'Climatedot' and have done with it?
There is no such thing as 'catastrophic man-made global warming', .... There has been no warming for 18 years!
I keep seeing that [slashdot.org] same [slashdot.org] response [slashdot.org] posted as AC to climate stories - here on "stuff that matters". Complete with a link for further info:
http://www.climatedepot.com...
Which is partially funded by the ExxonMobil foundation http://www.sourcewatch.org/ind... [sourcewatch.org]
Maybe this would be a lot easier if we went back to a dialogue on "pollution", which more folks could easily see value in limiting.
Goodness gracious, it's gonna be 2 degrees waaama! (Score:1)
I don't mean to suggest that global warming is no big deal, but before we do much more shocked swooning, let's compare this to the "existential crisis" fears of previous generations. That's a nice way to remind ourselves of the fact that never before in the history of humanity have our biggest problems been smaller. The levels of peace, prosperity, human health, human happiness, and every other measurable indicator are at historical highs. Yes, we will eventually need to build some new sea walls and levies,
Controlling climate change and losing weight (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't know what the hell to do about this any more than I have a solution for, say, the problem that the homeless represent here in the United States. What I do know is that the solutions to these problems has to come from the top, down, to start with, not from the bottom, up, but getting the people at the 'top' to give a damn enough to actually do something about it, while also getting people on down from there to go along with it, is tougher than herding caffeine-enhanced ferrets.
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"Sadly short-sightedness on everyone's part is what's going to turn the Earth into a clone of what Venus looks like right now: a searing black calm, devoid of life."
Total mass of atmosphere: ~4.8 x 10^20 kg
http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/venusfact.html
Total mass of atmosphere: 5.1 x 10^18 kg
http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/earthfact.html
The earth's has 1% the atmosphere of Venus. Where is that other 99% going to come from? I'm not saying your wrong, but if your theory requires
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Sadly short-sightedness on everyone's part is what's going to turn the Earth into an approximation of what Venus looks like right now: a searing black calm, devoid of life.
There, is that better? Please, don't be pedantic. Nit-picking choice of single words is precisely that; the meaning being conveyed is what counts, k?
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Furthe
The reality of the situation... (Score:3)
negotiators plan to propose will only be part of non-legally-binding pledgesâ"and they represent only what is achievable without too much difficulty.
^ This right here is the key point to take away from all this...
For all the hot air our "leaders" are giving this issue, the reality is they don't intend to do anything about it. Notice the "without too much difficulty" part of that.
Non-binding, not too hard, not too expensive...
To actually stop the rise of CO2, we need to take drastic measures, and the fact is, while people SAY they care about global warming, what they really mean is "I care about global warming so long as it doesn't impact my lifestyle".
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Its simple.
They don't actually believe its a problem.
Not many people do.
They just follow the bandwagon, because its the IN thing to do now, and say "Oh that climate change thing, baaaaad! We should do something about it."
No one likes being the odd one out at the table, so they lie.
Why is this crap on slashdot all the time? (Score:2, Insightful)
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For comparison (Score:1)
Familiar headline (Score:1)
How to fix the problems (Score:1)
What we need is for someone to invent an energy source that is cheaper than coal and can scale to tens of TW (current use is around 15 TW).
Power satellites will certainly scale to that size, and at a high rate of production it looks like they could undercut coal.
But the powers that be have forgotten what engineers are good for.
Re: It doesn't matter (Score:5, Insightful)
I think everyone does in fact believe it - of course belief is irrelevent when AGW is a fact.
There is so much inertia with the World's economy and the fact that people do not want to change their lifestyles and others want an overconsumption Western lifestyle.
The only way humanity is going to change is when there is a catastrophic climate change. When crops fail en mass. When coastal cities are flooded.
A person is smart. People are stupid.
So, I agree; it doesn't matter.
I am doing what I can. Lowering one's environmental and consumptive footprint saves A LOT of money. And I feel a part of the solution instead of an entitled bald ape.
1/3 of all CO2, but no warming (Score:2, Interesting)
About 1/3 of all CO2 produced by humans in all of history has occurred in the last 18 years and yet there is no statistical warming during that time. CO2 is logarithmically challenged, as discovered by Arrehnius, the demi-god of the AGW movement who first proposed that CO2 is a greenhouse gas. It's funny that the AGW crowd only ever cites his first paper on the subject and its ridiculous sensitivity. It is tragic that after all these years of doom and gloom from the AGW crowd that they are finally b
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The facts disagree with your first statement. The 10 hottest years in history (since record keeping began in 1880) have occurred in the last 18 years. 2015 will break all of those records.
Even if you ignore history. Even if you ignore science. Even if you ignore the facts. Ask anyone over the age of 40 about the heat this summer.
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Hottest decade for the 20th century was the 1930s. That break all of those models. Nice try though.
Hint - CO2 isn't causing it. It's a symptom.
Warming versus Warm (Score:2)
Dictionary would come in handy, I'm thinking.
Other words you might want to look up:
Logarithmic
Inter-Glacial
Ice Age
"Even if you ignore the facts. Ask anyone over the age of 40 about the heat this summer."
Pretty mild summer here. I heard it is hot in Mumbai.
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Most so-called deniers only deny that there is a run-away effect, that all feedbacks are positive, that you can retroactively alter the temperature records to compensate for time of day and siting issues, that you can splice one proxy temperature record with another and put it on the cover of an official IPCC document and that you can continue to cite models and studies based on those models when CO2 is following the worst case scenario and the actual temperature is below the best case scenario.
Most scientists would not say there is a run-away effect (at least not in the way you mean it) or that all of the feedbacks are positive. The temperature records are what they are. You can't go back and redo them in a more ideal manner. If you have actual scientific objections to the compensations they make for less than ideal data publish your paper.
As far as temperatures "below the best case scenario" the 10 hottest years in the record have all been since 1998 and 2015 is easily going to be a new hotte
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there is no statistical warming during that time
You have been misled. Also it was Fourier who predicted CO2 GHG properties in 1824, Arrehnius was the first to suggest human CO2 emissions could be warming the Earth (1890's). The climate sensitivity [wikipedia.org] number of 3degC for a doubling of CO2 commonly used today was determined during the 1970's and has changed very little since then,it was derived from geological evidence and has nothing to do with Arrehnius.
You can't scream anti-science at people
I for one don't think you are anti-science, but it obvious your sources are.
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all things you said have been disproven several times already.
please do try to be original.
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There is so much inertia with the World's economy and the fact that people do not want to change their lifestyles and others want an overconsumption Western lifestyle.
People love to say "I care about the environment and global warming".
But what they really mean is, "I care about the environment and global warming so long as it doesn't impact my way of life".
The fact is, world leaders aren't stupid, they are aware that we can't stop this without drastic change that will be unacceptable to the population as a whole. Not at least until "bad things" happen. Then people will accept change.
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We are likely heading into a cooling period in the earths climate as the tendentious computer models drift farther and farther from the real earth's temperature. The surface temperature records are being heavily adjusted to create the appearance of more warming (cooling pas records, warming recent ones with fake adjustments and homogenization tricks).
Actually adjustments to the surface temperature records do the opposite of what you say. In general before about 1960 the adjusted data is warmer than the raw data.
Graph [blogspot.com]
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Ferret
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No, he's not right. CO2 emissions aren't down because of the switch to natural gas. They're down because of the recession.
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/... [smithsonianmag.com]
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Which is exactly what the linked article says.
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I dunno, it all seems like a bunch of hot air to me.