Forecasting the Economic Impact of a Changing Climate (arstechnica.com) 249
An anonymous reader writes: Academic research has been busily trying to pin down how a changing climate will affect our planet over the long- and short-term. But a new study in the journal Nature attempts to forecast not the changes in weather, but the changes in our economy as a result of climate change. "The study (abstract) finds that climate change can be expected to reshape the global economy by reducing average global incomes roughly 23 percent by the year 2100. This study is important because it solves a problem that has existed in prior models of climate change effects on economics: discrepancies between macro and micro level observations." Notably, the paper provides evidence that regional economies can be linked to global climate effects. "This modeling allowed them to examine whether country-specific deviations from growth trends were related to country-specific differences in temperature and precipitation trends, while accounting for any global shifts that would be experienced to affect all countries."
Call your local Ferengi for advice (Score:3)
Per the Ferengi Rules of Acquisition, in war, someone always turns a profit. Also, in peace, someone always turns a profit.
A shifting wind (if you'll pardon the turn of phrase) will always result in profit for someone.
Re: Call your local Ferengi for advice (Score:2)
That doesnt preclude the prediction though. If only the already very rich profit from it tge average will still go down hugely as the non rich outnumber them so much that the average wont be altered much.
If anything, assuming your hypotheses is correct it means poor and middle class incomes will go down by more than 23% to get the same change in the average.
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That noise you don't hear is the sound of a starship in space flying over your head.
Last time I try to make a Star Trek joke when a new series is being announced on the same day. Sheesh.
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"They can't all be gems, you have to expect that once in a while." - Groucho Marx
Is it National Give an Anoymous Coward a hug day again? Come on over, ya big galloot!
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Look out. You're a female. AC will almost certainly cop a feel.
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By the way, the reply notification I got that points to this message is, apparently from "silentcoder".
If you aren't silentcoder, I apologize for falsely attributing you.
If you are, how pathetic are you that you couldn't step up, be a man and call me a stupid bitch using your username?
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Because I thought it would be funny?
Money, sorry to say (Score:4, Interesting)
It's time a climate superPAC be formed to create an NRA-like political entity with teeth. Science, math, and logic just don't work on the dumb and the greedy. You gotta bribe politicians with campaign money (or lack of) to get action in our society. That's just the ugly truth.
The other side will say the existence of a superPAC is evidence of political motivation over science, but they say that anyhow now. Sometimes you have to fight fire with fire.
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Science, math, and logic just don't work on the dumb and the greedy. You gotta bribe politicians with campaign money (or lack of) to get action in our society.
The bigger question is figuring out what action should be taken. If we're going to get our CO2 levels back to 350ppm, we're going to need to get all the (non-electric) cars off the road. We're going to need to shut down all coal and natural gas power plants (getting rid of natural gas means also getting rid of wind, because natural gas provides the backup).
Who is going to agree to that? Nobody, and that's the real reason nothing gets done about AGW (apart from subsidizing alternative energy, and other sma
Even bigger question (Score:2)
is to ask is what is magical about CO2 levels at 350ppm when in Earth's past CO2 has been much higher and life flourished?
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False [grist.org].
The rest of your arguments are irrelevant. Your choice to post as AC was a wise one.
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What would it take to convince you that anthropogenic global glimate change is real?
What it would take to convince me that it is not real is a contiguous 14 year period (2 full El Nino cycles) of increasing CO2 without increasing global average temperatures.
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Openly published research that can convince truly great scientists.
Not fudged data using hidden methods and "just trust the smart people because 100% of them are in agreement." Because, you know, there are many smart people not in agreement.
The person who convinced the rest of the smart people that a couple of other smart people were onto something with this quantum stuff is definitely a smart man and he says that AGW is bullshit.
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And a "truly great" scientist is one who agrees with your preconceptions, otherwise they're not "truly great", amirite?
Who says so, and on what basis? Also, quantum physics is around a century old at this point, with all its pioneers in their graves
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Chernobyl (Score:2)
Life also flourishes in Chernobyl, but that doesn't necessarily mean it'd be nice to live there.
What action should be taken? Stop burning oil (Score:2)
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Hey if it's t
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And what makes 350ppm the correct level? Did you find it written in the earth's owner's manual or its maintenance manual?
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The other side will say the existence of a superPAC is evidence of political motivation over science
And they would be correct.
Science, math, and logic just don't work on the dumb and the greedy.
Why don't you try first rather than just an endless stream of fallacies?
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From this content, it's impossible to tell which side you'
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While you are at it, fix the brush fires from lightning in Africa, which account for about 26.3% of annual CO2 being dumped into the atmosphere.
Even if that were true, where do you think the brush came from? Digging carbon out of the ground and burning it is going to have a different net effect than extracting carbon from the atmosphere into a plant and releasing it back into the atmosphere.
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You realize the U.S. is ~4.5% of the population... right?
Even if we went completely arboreal, and genetically engineered our children to have green skin and photosynthesize, it really wouldn't change the vector, regardless of which side you are on, and which way you think it points.
Fix the problems in China and India first. While you are at it, fix the brush fires from lightning in Africa, which account for about 26.3% of annual CO2 being dumped into the atmosphere.
Bushfires are part of the natural carbon cycle, that carbon was all already in the biosphere, and will become a part of vegetative matter again when the plants regrow. The CO2 the US produces is mostly from fossil fuels, which are not currently part of the active carbon cycle, unless you count time on long geological scales. Furthermore, the US is ~17% of global output. The disparity between population size and current pollution output is worrying, not just because of the magnitude, but moreso because othe
Re: You realize the U.S. is ~4.5% of the populatio (Score:2)
Re:You realize the U.S. is ~4.5% of the population (Score:5, Insightful)
True American exceptionalism at its best! Can't someone else do it? You can tell America is a world leader because the government knows how to back down from a problem when another country might disagree in some way.
The "but China pollutes" argument is about the same as a 3 year-old whining that they have to walk when the 18 month old sibling gets to be carried by mommy. If America thinks its a world leader than perhaps we should fucking lead something other than pet wars where we supply ~95% of the "coalition" soldiers. If we put some effort into reducing emissions, China can just steal it fixing the two biggest CO2 polluters in one shot.
And you realize the US accounts for ~15% of yearly gobal emissions and something like 40% of all CO2 emissions since 1970 right?
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So you think the USA should be a follower and not a leader?
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So you think the USA should be a follower and not a leader?
Environmental policy in the U.S. is generally led by California, and the rest of the nation adopts their standards.
So do I think they should lead the way by not using natural gas to produce almost 50% (49.3%) of their electricity? Yeah, I think it'd be *great* if they'd get off their asses and build more nuclear plants, and use the night reduction on load to desalinate water for the Southern Californians who insist on living in a freaking desert, and growing food there for export to other countries.
And do
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So many issues associated with the impact of global climate change, that forecasting the economic impact, sort of makes not sense. The real question will be the socio-political impact based upon the consequences and the impact on the lives of people living in at risk locations either through flooding or adverse changes in localised weather patterns. We are talking something like a billion people being severely affected.
So a billion people going nuts and reacting violently, how will that impact the econom
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The US is the ONLY country which has reduced their Co2 emissions.
Company 2 emissions? Joint 2 (wouldn't that be redundant?) emissions?
23% more taxes? (Score:2, Troll)
>> climate change can be expected to reshape the global economy by reducing average global incomes roughly 23 percent by the year 2100
OK, I can see my taxes easily going up 23% in the next 2100, but how else will my income be reduced?
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Can you see, they are linked! Government needs MOAR taxes to fight global climate change!
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Can you see, they are linked! Government needs MOAR taxes to fight global climate change!
Step 1: Raise more money
Step 2: Cut down a bunch of trees to make paper
Step 3: Print carbon credits on the paper, so there are more carbon credits
Step 4: Send the carbon credits to the worst polluters
Step 5: Global disaster averted!
Wrong Term. (Score:2, Interesting)
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C02 is neither poisonous nor a pollutant since without it (or if it drops below 150 ppm), all plant life would die followed by the rest of us all.
That is a specious argument. Almost any substance, in sufficient concentration, can be poisonous or a pollutant. That holds for CO2. It even holds for O2.
That said, nobody in the AGW crowd is saying that human-driven levels of CO2 are poisonous in the sense of being toxic. But human-produced CO2 is a pollutant, insofar as it has an environmental impact. Specifically, it increases the Earth's temperature through the greenhouse effect.
Sea Ports (Score:2)
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Normal seaport docks today adjust using floats for tidal changes with as much as 30-40 foot differences between low and high tide in some places. Any "climate change" adjustments to sea level will be lost in the noise.
conclusions not supported by data (Score:4, Interesting)
Even if the correlations that the paper identifies are actually meaningful, they in no way support that conclusion. The relationship between temperature and economic productivity the paper finds only exists after normalizing for "cultural difference", "contemporaneous shocks", "country-specific trends in growth rates", and "non-linear effects of temperature and rainfall". That is, the "23 percent estimate" only applies if all these factors remain unchanged for a century and if there is no migration in response to climate change. Those assumptions are, of course, utterly bogus.
Of course, the correlations are likely not even related to causation, but simply reflect historical accidents and the preferences of European settlers and the agricultural technologies they developed. If other cultures had become globally dominant, or if you had done the same analysis at different points in human history, you would have reached different conclusions.
In addition, even if all the assumptions of the paper were satisfied (they are not) and even if the 23 percent estimate was well-justified (it is not), then from a policy point of view, the comparison that you need to make is not climate change vs. no climate change, it is climate change vs climate change mitigation, and climate change mitigation itself has a profound negative effect on these normalizing variables.
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In addition, even if all the assumptions of the paper were satisfied (they are not) and even if the 23 percent estimate was well-justified (it is not), then from a policy point of view, the comparison that you need to make is not climate change vs. no climate change, it is climate change vs climate change mitigation, and climate change mitigation itself has a profound negative effect on these normalizing variables.
Here, the drop in economic activity from the study is a bit less than 1% per year. You would also have to include harm from rising sea levels and acidifcation of oceans, which wasn't part of the study. OTOH, similar studies of climate change mitigation have forecast a 1% (Stern Review) to 10% reduction in GDP from mitigation measures. In other words, the minimum estimated costs from mitigation measures here are about the same as the minimum estimated costs of not mitigating things. Once you get to higher es
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One might add that the IPCC report pretty much comes to the same conclusion, and that is under its pessimistic assumptions.
Note also that many of these estimates fail to properly discount over time; properly calculated, a dollar spent/lost today needs to mitigate about $100 worth in damage (in constant dollars) in 2100 for mitigation even to start making sense.
Questionable accuracy (Score:2)
I'm sure I saw an article just last week where analysis of published economics papers revealed a prediction hit ratio of barely past 50%.
So it's just pseudo-science rambling.
Model Uncertainties are understated (Score:4, Insightful)
So we have a very abstracted estimate of future economics that is derived from already abstracted estimated models of temperature. Sounds compelling...
According the IPCC's 5th assessment report in Chapter 9 [www.ipcc.ch] models have problems with the TOA energy balance. Specifically if you look in Box 9.1 they say:
maintaining the global mean top of the atmosphere (TOA) energy balance in a simulation of pre-industrial climate is essential to prevent
the climate system from drifting to an unrealistic state. The models used in this report almost universally contain adjustments to parameters
in their treatment of clouds to fulfil this important constraint of the climate system
They follow up with a half dozen citations verifying this.
Read that closely because it is telling. Read the cited articles, and it's even more so. Climate models still can NOT predict TOA energy imbalance. To even get hindcasts correct, requires manual corrections to unknown or poorly understood processes like clouds. Let me observe that long term climate change driven by the greenhouse effect works ENTIRELY through the TOA energy imbalance and trapping more or less energy as gas concentrations change.
Forgive me if I believe we lack sufficient evidence and understanding to justify carbon taxations and other economic controls to try and rectify something we still can't even quantify,
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"Contingencies", there's the rub (Score:2)
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So we have a very abstracted estimate of future economics that is derived from already abstracted estimated models of temperature. Sounds compelling...
According the IPCC's 5th assessment report in Chapter 9 [www.ipcc.ch] models have problems with the TOA energy balance. Specifically if you look in Box 9.1 they say:
maintaining the global mean top of the atmosphere (TOA) energy balance in a simulation of pre-industrial climate is essential to prevent
the climate system from drifting to an unrealistic state. The models used in this report almost universally contain adjustments to parameters
in their treatment of clouds to fulfil this important constraint of the climate system
They follow up with a half dozen citations verifying this.
Read that closely because it is telling. Read the cited articles, and it's even more so. Climate models still can NOT predict TOA energy imbalance. To even get hindcasts correct, requires manual corrections to unknown or poorly understood processes like clouds. Let me observe that long term climate change driven by the greenhouse effect works ENTIRELY through the TOA energy imbalance and trapping more or less energy as gas concentrations change.
Forgive me if I believe we lack sufficient evidence and understanding to justify carbon taxations and other economic controls to try and rectify something we still can't even quantify,
The only things this demonstrates is your lack of understanding. You then take that ignorance and formulate it into something that fits your rather obvious bias and hand-wave away any troubling things like "context".
In addition, you an others like you treat the model runs as the end all be all of climate science. They're not. Models are just one tool that is used, just like any other branch of science that you care to name. All models have errors since all models are imperfect representations of reality, an
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So we have a very abstracted estimate of future economics that is derived from already abstracted estimated models of temperature. Sounds compelling...
According the IPCC's 5th assessment report in Chapter 9 [www.ipcc.ch] models have problems with the TOA energy balance. Specifically if you look in Box 9.1 they say:
maintaining the global mean top of the atmosphere (TOA) energy balance in a simulation of pre-industrial climate is essential to prevent
the climate system from drifting to an unrealistic state. The models used in this report almost universally contain adjustments to parameters
in their treatment of clouds to fulfil this important constraint of the climate system
They follow up with a half dozen citations verifying this.
Read that closely because it is telling. Read the cited articles, and it's even more so. Climate models still can NOT predict TOA energy imbalance. To even get hindcasts correct, requires manual corrections to unknown or poorly understood processes like clouds. Let me observe that long term climate change driven by the greenhouse effect works ENTIRELY through the TOA energy imbalance and trapping more or less energy as gas concentrations change.
Forgive me if I believe we lack sufficient evidence and understanding to justify carbon taxations and other economic controls to try and rectify something we still can't even quantify,
The only things this demonstrates is your lack of understanding. You then take that ignorance and formulate it into something that fits your rather obvious bias and hand-wave away any troubling things like "context".
In addition, you an others like you treat the model runs as the end all be all of climate science. They're not. Models are just one tool that is used, just like any other branch of science that you care to name. All models have errors since all models are imperfect representations of reality, and they never ever have perfect data. That's why any non-trivial scientific model has numerous parameters and settings that can be set and tweaked, and why a EXPERT is required to run them and analyze the results. Otherwise you'd have Joe Sixpack claiming he developed an infiniglider since he changed a parameter in an aerodynamic model and the airfoil generates lift even at rest.
You are the one using a waving of your hands to dismiss things. Providing anything like a concrete reason you or anyone else believes that the problems with projecting TOA energy imbalance is not a problem is ignored. Meanwhile I very specifically point out a summary of the current scientific literature that clearly states that hindcasting historic climate REQUIRES manual corrections for accurate TOA energy. My link even references more than a half dozen peer-review journals verifying this.
Heck, you couldn'
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Helllllloooooooooo Fred Singer.
No, I will not and cannot forgive you. Your insistence that pandering to your doubts is more important than restricting air pollution makes me want to punch you in the face, honestly. Your doubts really don't and shouldn't matter to anyone but you, yourself.
So put another way, you don't need to prove yourself and are willing, almost eager, to use violence to enforce your will on others. How reasonable.
I never said anything against restricting air pollution, I just have this crazy notion that CO2 is one of the least nasty things we are dumping into our environment. We might want to focus more on all the carcinogens and radioactive isotopes dumping out of coal plants than the CO2.
Honestly, if you want to promote massive economic and industrial changes targeting
Nonsense study, more FUD from the AGW crowd (Score:3, Insightful)
The link to TAFA to RTFA is http://www.nature.com/nature/j... [nature.com]
Essentially they took the 'productivity' of countries, mapped them against average temperature, and then turned it around making that predictive. Utter nonsense.
According to their method, since the most productive industrial countries are all temperate, then warming will turn Germany economically into Italy and Italy into, I guess, Somalia?
Sure, THAT is likely to happen. How is this substantially different from the "warmer latitudes evolve lazier people" meme from the early 20th century? I thought we'd moved on from deterministic racism like that, or is it ok as long as it's cloaked in Global Warming fear?
Any purported 'economic' analysis of warming that doesn't see ANY mitigatory factors is more religion than science. To wit:
- even warming-convinced climatologists admit that the impact of warming on rainfall patterns is nearly impossible to anticipate. Warming will most certainly increase the evaporate take-up into the atmosphere from the 70%+ surface that's water, and that water has to fall somewhere.
- warming will shift optimal growing belts toward the poles, and vegetation growth has a warmth-bias; that is, there is a temperature floor for farming, but (as long as there's adequate water) not really a ceiling. So contraction of the too-cold biomes around the poles will net-increase the arable productive farmland on earth (not that we're actually short of food today anyway, but that's another point). Plants prefer warmth, and more CO2 is also beneficial for them. Not to mention that optimal-agri-zones will shift poleward, into 'fresh' farmland that wasn't previously as intensively farmed.
- on a more human scale, melting will open the arctic to regular transit, significantly reducing shipping costs from E Asia to Europe and all but obviating the Panama Canal chokepoint, this will likely cut transport costs for a host of goods.
I'm NOT saying that warming won't be a net-bad; inundation will badly affect a humanity that largely sited its preferable living places along coasts. (Of course, given a long enough timeframe they were doomed anyway.) But I see nothing in that study that recognizes or attempts to calculate *any* beneficial countereffects of warming. To deny that there will be *some* is at best histrionics, at worst simple mendacity.
Breaking even in the cold... (Score:3)
So how much do people expend on cold weather in temperate regions? I doubt it's 25% but it's not trivial. Think about seasonal clothing, transportation, heating and heating infrastructure, insulation, snow removal etc.....
This Should Tell You all You Need to Know (Score:2)
French Weatherman Fired After Slamming Climate Conference
http://www.nytimes.com/aponlin... [nytimes.com]
It's too late (Score:3)
It's already too late to do anything. Millions of years ago, the Earth was covered by forests. The trees died, as plants and animals do, and this was before mushrooms. If a tree falls in the forest, do mushrooms eat it? These days, yeah, but back then, no. So millions of years ago a lot of plant material turned into coal. We've dug up almost half of it and burned it. All that CO2, sequestered for hundreds of millions of years, has been released into the atmosphere. It took literally millions of years for all that CO2 to be sequestered, and we've released it in 150 years. No, there's no going back. Get used to it.
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It's too late to put things back to where they used to be. Our decisions are going to influence how much more CO2 is going into the atmosphere each year, and the rate at which things warm up, and I'd say that slowing these things would be a good idea.
Begin the Inquisition (Score:2)
More alarmist BS (Score:2)
There is not significant enough climate change to worry about at this time according to the data. We do have more significant things to worry about that are far more likely to chew us up in this century. And what does this have to do with slashdot anyway?
Shill Chill (Score:2)
Definition: Shill Chill
The attempt by paid accomplices of the fossil fuel industry to freeze out discussion and cool concerns about global warming due to human-caused greenhouse gas emissions.
Relative impact? (Score:2)
23% sounds like a lot, but relative to the economic growth that will occur in the same period, it is tiny:
Worse Yet (Score:2)
Bad news for robot and AI workers everywhere (Score:2)
Their income is going to go down by 23% ! And that of their robo-industrial-complex-baron owners I suppose.
The actual people, most of them, won't have to worry about this, because their income-earning jobs will long have been replaced by automation.
I wonder what the effect of bands of neo-luddite anarchists, roving across the flooded or parched lands in angry desperation, will be on the global economy.
But wait, what about the upsides? (Score:2)
2. No more batshit crazy North Korea issues, now it's 70% underwater.
3. The change in weather patterns will make some places a whole lot more pleasant. Greenland for instance...is actually turning green as we speak.
4. The inevitable Nuclear winter should really take the edge off of this whole 'global warming' thing.
Re: Global warming is a joke (Score:5, Interesting)
ExonMobil believes it. In fact they have believed it since the 1980s. We have proof. Thats why they are now facing criminal charges in California for lying to the public when we have conclusive proof that their internal documents contradicted their public statements. In fact they not only believe it, they are counting on it. When they first started planning arctic drillimg they counted on global warming to reduce the arctic ice and make the arctic oil cheaper to reach first.
Good Lord!!!! (Score:2)
Thats why they are now facing criminal charges in California for lying to the public when we have conclusive proof that their internal documents contradicted their public statements.
Good Lord!!!!
Where will we end up, if the politicians ever got a hold of Exxon's "lying to the public" technology?!?
Thank you, Jesus, that we are nipping this in the bud by strongly enforcing the "it's illegal to lie to the public" laws already on the books!
Re: Good Lord!!!! (Score:2)
Ever heard of "fraud" and "false advertising" ? Free speech does not apply to profit by deception.
Re: Good Lord!!!! (Score:2)
It's a neat trick to define 'free speech' as that which is 'legal'...
Remember that. You'll use that excuse later.
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Actually, it's defined as all freedoms are: by that which does not intrude on the rights and freedoms of others.
These laws merely exist to protect those freedoms.
It's the same principle that dates back to long before America even existed (but which informed it's founding fathers). You're right to swing your fist ends where my nose begins. Your freedom of speech ends where my freedoms begin.
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Ever heard of "fraud" and "false advertising" ? Free speech does not apply to profit by deception.
Yes. I've also heard of Smurfette and chicken wire.
I'm not seeing how or whom against Exxon is committing fraud, or against whom, nor the product which they are making false claims about in advertising (I honestly haven't even *seen* and Exxon advertising in pretty much forever).
Can you provide a link to the court documents, so I can make sure that this is not just another Greenpeace filing "on behalf of Mother Earth", because if it is, they'd be pretty easy to distract by showing them a World Heritage Sit
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It's not a lawsuit, it's criminal charges brought by the district attorney after journalists uncovered the evidence.
By publicly denying that fossil fuels cause global warming they have been making false claims about their primary product - fossil fuels. You are generally required to disclose to customers any potential (and definitely any guaranteed) risks or negative side effects that your product has so they can make an informed decision.
Here is a sampling of the news reports that followed the work of two
Who believes this? Only everyone... (Score:5, Informative)
African Academy of Sciences
American Geophysical Union
American Chemical Society
American Institute of Physics
American Physical Society
Australian Institute of Physics
Australian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society
European Physical Society
American Association for the Advancement of Science
American Meteorological Society
European Academy of Sciences and Arts
European Federation of Geologists
European Geosciences Union
European Science Foundation
Federation of Australian Scientific and Technological Societies
InterAcademy Council as the representative of the world’s scientific and engineering academies
International Council of Academies of Engineering and Technological Sciences
United States National Research Council
Royal Society of New Zealand
Royal Society of the United Kingdom
American Society of Agronomy (ASA),
Crop Science Society of America (CSSA),
Soil Science Society of America (SSSA)
Well, the list goes on and on... It would be much easier to list dissenting organizations: NONE - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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CAGW extremists are well known to lie consistently on wikipedia. Just like Cook's 97% consensus, they include anyone and anything that mentions humans and climate.
http://www.climatechangedispatch.com/97-articles-refuting-the-97-percent-consensus.html
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The way you refute a peer-reviewed study is with better peer-reviewed studies. A spam list of unreviewed opinions all written by the same handful of dissenters refutes nothing. Provide better data, or take your unfounded opinions and baseless accusations elsewhere.
The way you confirm a peer-reviewed study is with more peer-reviewed studies, conducted independently and using different lines of evidence, to see if they arrive at similar results. Like this one [sciencemag.org], this one [usnews.com], this one [coastalatlas.de], this one [uic.edu], and this one [pnas.org], to ci
Re: Who believes this? Only everyone... (Score:2)
The GP claimed only idiots believed the science. Pointing out that scientiffic experts in every remotely related field deems tge evidence overwhelming is basically the exact opposite of an appeal to authority, especially in this context.
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Wow, impressive. You can really turn a phrase.
Oh wait, something about it looks familiar. [wikipedia.org]
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Re: Global warming is a joke (Score:5, Informative)
ExonMobil's internal memos specifically cite global warming caused by burning fossil fuels as the key to making arctic drilling profitable.
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natural warming doesn't happen on such a short time-scale.
It most certainly does.
Until a few decades ago it was generally thought that all large-scale global and regional climate changes occurred gradually over a timescale of many centuries or millennia, scarcely perceptible during a human lifetime. The tendency of climate to change relatively suddenly has been one of the most suprising outcomes of the study of earth history, specifically the last 150,000 years (e.g., Taylor et al., 1993). Some and possibly most large climate changes (involving, for example, a reg
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How can one ignore one the greatest propaganda artists on the side that everyone keeps pointing to, until it becomes an Inconvenient Truth?
Here's the part that gets me. People love to spout off the incredible claims this guy makes, and then like a defunct prophet, discards him until it is convenient to call upon his name again.
This isn't science, it is religion. Pure Religion. They use scientific sounding terms and make bold predictions that have failed repeatedly, only to have the next round of prophets wa
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Re:Is Al Gore redistributing his wealth??? (Score:4, Insightful)
I know right, its not like 9 of the 10 hottest years on record have come in the past 10 years. Only 7 of 10 have been in the past 10 years, to get the other two you'd have to go back a full 13 years ago! Clearly those predicting warming have failed because they underestimated how much everyone likes to split hairs.
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What would you call Al Gore, if not Propagandist? False Prophet?
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So, being the biggest, loudest most outspoken "Global Warming" alarmist means nothing to you? Or you just saying that because he has said provably wrong predictions in the past?
Re: Is Al Gore redistributing his wealth??? (Score:2)
You would have to duck to miss that. Even you
Re:Enough Already (Score:4, Insightful)
If you want to see how well any given group or individual can predict events or outcomes 100 years into the future, just go 100 years into the past and ask yourself if anyone was predicting a future that looked even remotely like the one that actually happened.
Here is a hint, the answer is always "no".
And even when a lucky prognosticator does get occasionally get something right, it's usually either something pretty obvious or they got its context completely wrong. For example, a lot of idiots cite the Star Trek communicators as a "prediction" of modern cellphones. But this is way off:
1) The communicators used in Star Trek were more akin to military walkie-talkies, which had been in use for some time by the 1960's, than cellphones.
2) They were only used by the military. There is no evidence that civilians carried them.
3) They were short range. You couldn't use a communicator to just "call" someone anywhere.
4) Like walkies-talkie transmissions, communicator transmissions were apparently overheard by everyone (it's why Kirk always had to announce who he was and who he was talking to at the beginning of each communication). There is no evidence of characters making actual private one-to-one "calls" with communicators.
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3) They were short range. You couldn't use a communicator to just "call" someone anywhere.
"Beam me up, Scotty" ...it could call a space ship in orbit, wouldn't that be on par with a satellite phone with similar line of sight problems? It's not like there are cell phone towers on an alien planet.
Re:Enough Already (Score:4, Interesting)
Always? Tripe. Given that they didn't all predict the same thing at least some of them would have been close.
Now it might be down to pure dumb luck, and of course the difficult part would be - without hindsight - to work out which.
Still, your assertion that ALL predictions are wrong is a bag of knackers.
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Still, your assertion that ALL predictions are wrong is a bag of knackers.
Sure, occasionally people get little things right. But there are VERY few predictions of any real significance, and certainly nothing systematic. Sure, some wanker in 1915 may have made small predictions that were based on things they already knew about ("There will be more automobiles in the future" or "They will still use dollars" or "They will have better aircraft" etc.), or obvious ("They will still elect a President" or "Congress will still bicker"). and occasionally some writer would get lucky and pre
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So, the long term forecast is that it will be worse, the same or better than it is now. Got it.
The fact that you can make a prediction that over the long-term, a coin toss will be a 50/50 proposition means absolutely nothing to predicting a future economic state.
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Yes but that's not a climate/energy policy problem.
Re: What about expenses? (Score:3)
If we continue to pursue economic growth as a goal they will all increase. Economic growth is only possible if there is inflation as Adam Smith proved 300 years ago.
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(should be soon)
Well, that's the thing. They're predicting moderate effects by the end of the century. That's plenty of time to relocate any agriculture you need to relocate and upgrade any cities you need to upgrade against sea level rise.
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Plants LOVE CO2. If you take any modern plant and put it in a CO2 rich environment, it'll grow faster. Ask any pot grower.
Plants evolved when there was more CO2 in the atmosphere than now. We're going back to that era, because we've burned all the coal and oil that was laid down over millions of years back then. LISTEN: it took millions of years for that CO2 to be removed from the air, and we've put it all back in 100 years. THERE WILL BE CONSEQUENCES. It's too late to do anything. Politics be damned. Unles
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Your motives are showing (Score:2)
Whatever spouting of denialist delusions gets you through your massively over-consuming day without crushing guilt and self-loathing...
God forbid we might have to actually lift a finger and adjust something in our lives.
Aye there's the rub. To accept the truth and have to shift one's butt by a few centimetres uncomfortably.