Global Carbon Emissions Jump To All-Time High in 2018 (theguardian.com) 399
Global carbon emissions will jump to a record high in 2018, according to a report, dashing hopes a plateau of recent years would be maintained. It means emissions are heading in the opposite direction to the deep cuts urgently needed, say scientists, to fight climate change. From a report: The rise is due to the growing number of cars on the roads and a renaissance of coal use and means the world remains on the track to catastrophic global warming. However, the report's authors said the emissions trend can still be turned around by 2020, if cuts are made in transport, industry and farming emissions. The research by the Global Carbon Project was launched at the UN climate summit in Katowice, Poland, where almost 200 nations are working to turn the vision of tackling climate change agreed in Paris in 2015
into action. The report estimates CO2 emissions will rise by 2.7% in 2018, sharply up on the plateau from 2014-16 and 1.6% rise in 2017.
Almost all countries are contributing to the rise, with emissions in China up 4.7%, in the US by 2.5% and in India by 6.3% in 2018. The EU's emissions are near flat, but this follows a decade of strong falls. "The global rise in carbon emissions is worrying, because to deal with climate change they have to turn around and go to zero eventually," said Prof Corinne Le Quere, at the University of East Anglia,who led the research published in the journal Nature. "We are not seeing action in the way we really need to. This needs to change quickly."
Almost all countries are contributing to the rise, with emissions in China up 4.7%, in the US by 2.5% and in India by 6.3% in 2018. The EU's emissions are near flat, but this follows a decade of strong falls. "The global rise in carbon emissions is worrying, because to deal with climate change they have to turn around and go to zero eventually," said Prof Corinne Le Quere, at the University of East Anglia,who led the research published in the journal Nature. "We are not seeing action in the way we really need to. This needs to change quickly."
WTF USA? (Score:5, Insightful)
I can understand under-developed countries like China and India, which are still in their growing years, but the USA 2.5%? There we have the real environmental criminals.
You have all the nuclear, solar, and wind, and policies, and programs, and abilities to stear the environmental situation, but you just keep burning gas and blowing fumes like nothing.
Re: WTF USA? (Score:5, Informative)
A Chinese apologist. China is adding more than 250 GW of new coal plants in China, and another 250 GW in other nations before 2021. And yet, you point to America as being horrible. America has been declining for the last 10 years. A 2.5 on 14% is much smaller than a 4.7 rise on 33%.
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A stronger economy creates higher carbon. Also normally whatever energy savings we find, we will use the excess into an other area, so the net energy use is increased.
We build more fuel efficient engines, we buy bigger cars and trucks. A company who saves 40% in fuel, will grow their company 80%.
Now it is political suicide for the leaders to tell their whole population that they need to sacrifice for the greater good, unless there is an opposing army knocking on its borders. And giving our politicians th
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I can understand under-developed countries like China and India, which are still in their growing years, but the USA 2.5%? There we have the real environmental criminals.
The simple fact is we have real environmental criminals everywhere. However, they are a minuscule percentage of the population everywhere. Whether that's due to a lack of opportunity is a matter for masturbatory debate. The simple fact is that today, a tiny percentage of the population derives the majority of the profit from the pollution which is occurring.
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1) Because we can. You don't think Trump pulled out of the Paris Agreement for nothing did you.
2) Cheap gas. With a gallon or 3.79 liters of gas selling for $1.97 it's hard to wean off the petrol titties.
3) size of country and population density. Since we have such a shit national public transport system. Well we don't even HAVE one except private but anyway. We have grown up relying on our cars to get us everywhere. Most city's public transport sucks and that is compo
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Oi vey. You DO understand that you can't simply "forgive" carbon emissions simply based on "they're growing/modernizing" right?
Shit like this is why global compacts simply won't work. Because you'll get countries like China/India who will sign on, and then simply continue outputting whatever the hell they feel like.
And any "carbon trading" system will simply be gamed.
Now, I'm not saying the US's results are in any way "desirable". They're n
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But nobody is expecting US to cover all 3.7E6 square miles. How about you cover 13 most densely populated states. The is going to cover area of size of Germany with more population than has Germany. Deal?
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We already have solar farms larger than that. The largest solar farm on the planet is currently over 13,000 acres (53 square kilometers).
And it's nameplate output is 2GW.
The world's largest multi-reactor nuclear plant is above 8GW. And it provides that in just over 1000 acres.
The US grid needs around 1000 GW total capacity to maintain a stable service environment at absolute peak demand.
Solar PV farms weigh in at about $750,000-1,000,000 per MW.
That's without any sort of storage whatsoever. And, even wit
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It is not about Trump, it is about every asshole in US\CAD driving SUV because it is "Safer" than driving small car... It is about every asshole eating MCdonald that comes with pile of garbage with every meal. It is about every asshole eating 75ml of vegan yogurt packed in individual plastic bottle. It is about every asshole drinking coffee in double cups because it is hot....That is what is all about, not Trump, Obama, Macron or other pupets
Re: WTF USA? (Score:5, Insightful)
It isn't about us necessarily being an asshole, but conditions in our lives that direct us to make such decisions.
US/CAD we have strict rules when we are late for work. Normally within 5 minutes of the prescribed time, if we are late a lot, our living income can be cut, because you would get fired.
So we rush to work, Grabbing prepared fast food along the way, or picking up something from your fridge, while on the run you will need energy, so we have coffee at hand.
The 9:00 to 5:00 has became 8:30 - 5:30 with that 1/2 hour lunch break only being a loophole for the lazy who doesn't want to do work.
In America our way of life and our place in society is based on your job and what you do. When meting someone new, it is common for a person to ask what is their job is. (Or in college what their major is, so we can figure what their job will be) We do this to try to figure out the persons status in America. In other countries this is taboo or just rude, but they will use other criteria to figure out the persons class, such as where they live, who is their family, your religion...
This cultural normal, which was once just part of our culture, is now causing environmental impact, to change that would be very difficult. It isn't about just being jerks, we may care deeply for the environment, but we are stuck in a culture where to prosper you will need to make choices that may not be environmental.
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The 9:00 to 5:00 has became 8:30 - 5:30 with that 1/2 hour lunch break only being a loophole for the lazy who doesn't want to do work.
Not sure where you're working but there are actual employers out there who value their talent and don't treat them like chattel. Granted they seem more and more difficult to come by as unbridled capitalism continues unabated.
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It isn't the employer They say you should work 9-5 with a 1/2 hour lunch break (or even a full hour). It is we employees who decide that we should be working these extra hours and judging those who don't.
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Hey, if you work someplace that doesn't give a shit when you wander in the door, more power to you.
Just don't bitch when you're replaced by automation, because it's more reliable.
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The difference is just... money, mostly. You could wake up earlier, make your own coffee and breakfast (which would be c
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I definitely don't agree with him on that the wealth of those owning fossil resources is worth more than the earth itself.
I'd like to think their wealth will decrease when the truth finally hits but of course it won't. It'll be the taxpayer picking up the bill (as usual).
Re:WTF USA? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Love it!
My $30K geothermal heat/cool system is saving me a pile of money!!! Maybe. Payments for the initial cost are in a 30 year loan about $180 a month, and the electricity to run the entire place including heating and cooling ranges from about $85 to $160 / month for 1700 sq. ft. where, in Virginia, winters are moderate. Add the 2, and the entire cost of energy for the place runs around $400 / month. However, I now don't have to worry about getting a heating oil bill for exactly 1 month of $630. A
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It's not just the equipment. It's laying the fields / drilling the wells for the loops and all the labor.
It adds up fast.
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Meanwhile, in Minnesota, on an admittedly quite small, but also quite old house, my gas + electric bill hit over $100 and I thought it was too much. :p I think it tops out at $150/mo or so dur
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Well, its $400 a month for the entire energy expense, not just heating and cooling, and oil heat is insaner, so I'm not worried about saving or not saving money. I do like not having to deal with oil heat.
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Well, its $400 a month for the entire energy expense, not just heating and cooling, and oil heat is insaner, so I'm not worried about saving or not saving money. I do like not having to deal with oil heat.
Yeah. It's not just the equipment. It's laying the fields / drilling the wells for the loops and all the labor.
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Yeah but the sun is nuclear power. ... and it causes cancer.
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Re:WTF USA? (Score:5, Insightful)
The cheapest energy also emits CO2.
That's not true. Even if you ignore the externalized costs (e.g. healthcare) from coal and gas, on-shore wind is now cheaper than coal and going to overtake gas in the next few years.
The real problem is that powerful people are invested in dirty generation and don't want to see their assets become worthless. Plus nuclear is a massive welfare programme for energy companies and they will cling to it for as long as they can.
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Wind might be "cheap" but hydro delivered to my door is $.14/kwh. Whereas natural gas is so cheap these days it's almost free. The carbon tax here is literally more than the price of the gas and the total cost is still cheaper than heating with electricity (by like 300%). So yeah we burn gas.
Re:WTF USA? (Score:4, Insightful)
Cheaper is not the same thing as more profitable. In fact it's quite often the exact opposite.
There is a lot of money sunk into generating CO2. Mines, wells, refineries, transport, storage, power stations... And they are all quickly becoming worthless thanks to cheaper renewables. Battery storage is making peaker plants uneconomical too.
The absolute worst thing for them is that renewables are democratizing energy production. Instead of being the preserve of big businesses with hundreds of millions to invest now individuals can generate their own power. Communities can get together and buy a turbine or a battery pack. Farmers can install some panels on the craggy land they can't grow on, or in an unused field.
This happens every time there is a big disruption to an industry.
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Cheaper is not the same thing as more profitable. In fact it's quite often the exact opposite.
There is a lot of money sunk into generating CO2. Mines, wells, refineries, transport, storage, power stations... And they are all quickly becoming worthless thanks to cheaper renewables. Battery storage is making peaker plants uneconomical too.
That doesn't matter, because there are plenty of wealthy people who have no money invested in any of that and therefore no reason to maintain it. We see other industries where the old entrenched players who refused to modernized get toppled all the time. Being able to do something at less expense than the competition means there's more profit available. If the existing market refuses to seize it, someone else will and the consumers really don't care about much beyond the price.
Only when you have strong g
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Oh of course they will fail to hold back the tide eventually. But for now they are resisting, slowing down adoption.
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Some places have done, at least for on-shore. Of course to be fair we need to drop the subsidies on other stuff too. Every nuclear plant will have to close I'm afraid, they can't afford their own meltdown insurance. Coal is obviously gone, gas might survive.
Re:WTF USA? (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless the global warming alarm is well-placed. You seem willing to bet the future of the planet on a view that over 95% of climate scientists say is wrong. Errmmm...what have you got on your side to counter the scientists...other than you do not wish to believe them?
standard of living must fall (Score:3)
Re: standard of living must fall (Score:3)
Conservative Fiscal Responsibility is a Deception (Score:4, Insightful)
The tragedy of the commons is real, and has come up again, and again and again in economics. This time it is the atmosphere, and those who prosper most from the commons are responding to calls from the people for taxing the commons with "be REASONABLE!"
Basic. Fucking. Economics.
The obvious first step.... (Score:2)
Global Stupidity (Score:4, Insightful)
Global stupidity seems a constant factor on this planet. In some social groups denial of reality is most prominent, because reality challenges their believe and there behavior.
Re:Global Stupidity (Score:4, Insightful)
Global stupidity seems a constant factor on this planet. In some social groups denial of reality is most prominent, because reality challenges their believe and there behavior.
This is an example: https://www.greenpeace.org/usa... [greenpeace.org]
So after a brief pause gained from a move from coal to gas in major countries, the upward march of carbon resumes.
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We have one or two gas powered electricity plants here in the Netherlands that are switched off because coal is cheaper. And we recently (5 years ago or so) switched on a brand new coal powered one.
Our government keeps telling us that we are the greenest country in Europe and soon we will be world-leading, but reality tells us we do worse than the US.
Re:Global Stupidity (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually no, it's not due to a lack of nuclear power. Coal use isn't even increasing, it's decreasing because gas and renewables are cheaper. Even Japan didn't jump up that much after the force 100% nuclear shutdown, only around 10%: https://ycharts.com/indicators... [ycharts.com]
The reason we are seeing this increase now is twofold.
1. Some countries are still on the upward part of the curve, e.g. China. Expecting them to immediately start reductions would be insane, it would destroy their economy. But they are on track for their Paris target, which is aggressive to say the least.
2. Many developed countries are finally recovered from the 2008 financial crash that caused an exceptional fall in emissions due to reduced economic activity. I'm sure someone will start screaming about European emissions increasing any moment now, but in reality they are falling as planned if it were not for that artificial depression.
The problem with nuclear is that it's way too expensive for what it provides. There is simply no way to justify spending money on it would be much better spent on renewables. Spending on renewables will have a much greater effect on emissions per Euro/Dollar/Yuan spent, and will lessen the economic impact of making the change.
Re: Global Stupidity (Score:2)
Re: Global Stupidity (Score:4, Informative)
China hit peak coal years ago and has been in decline ever since:
http://ieefa.org/ieefa-update-... [ieefa.org]
https://www.brookings.edu/2018... [brookings.edu]
The "new" capacity is replacing old plants with more efficient, cleaner ones. Same thing happened in Germany.
Re: Global Stupidity (Score:3)
Then you have China and India. Both of these continue to lots of coal, but the real problem is that as they switch to EVs, they will use loads more coal to power them.
Until society is willing to say no more fossil fuel electric plants, we will continue to get worse
Caffeinated Bacon/crimson tsunami, you lie (Score:2)
Secondly, these vehicles are as efficient as any from Europe esp since they are the same. Europe buys smaller cars because of small roads and families but same efficiency.
Third, when America/europe buys a new car, it typically replaces a car. When China buys a new car, it adds to their total. Iow, a car is typically not junked. As such, which 98% of China's vehicle bring fossil fuels, it adds lot
China does not buy cleaner cars (Score:3)
Even China buys cleaner cars....
Stop accepting the bullshit statistics China feeds you and try visiting sometime. China DOES NOT have cleaner cars, as you can tell from the cars themselves, but especially from the hellacious pollution they have in many cities, even worse than LA in the heyday.
I find it amusing you also believe them about percentage of electricity from coal.
Re: China does not buy cleaner cars (Score:2)
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I've got news for ya bunkie...
Cars in the US are primarily the same as cars everywhere else in the world.
A Nissan Sentra in the US is nominally identical to a Nissan Sentra in Japan.
Same for Kia.
Same for Jaguar.
Same for Ford.
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Hey, if you can convince our crazed "no nukes" lobby that they're in error, you'll see a slight bump in carbon emissions as we build new plants, followed by a long, sustained dropoff.
Areas like California will still maintain higher emissions, mainly due to it being a Bad Idea to build nuclear reactors in quake country, but...
Re: If gas was replacing it 1:1... (Score:2)
Blaming others. (Score:5, Insightful)
Everybody blames the next guy.
We are all responsible.
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Yes, we are all responsible. However, some people want change, while others hinder change. Therefore, it is necessary to point that out and to try to understand why these people do not want to change. then we can develop narratives which allow them to change. So we all can address the issue.
Re: Blaming others. (Score:2)
to make this work, need a fair precise means of looking CO2. That would be using satellites like OC2. With a few more SATs, w
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Re: Blaming others. (Score:2)
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Global stupidity seems a constant factor on this planet. In some social groups denial of reality is most prominent, because reality challenges their believe and there behavior.
Some people don't even know what reality is.
Proof: I've seen "Reality TV" shows.
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The notions of groups, societies and countries are all made up and in the end each person usually thinks only about him/herself and maybe his/her close relatives. People usually couldn't care less about the long term prospects of human kind survival on the planet and life in general and unless we enact the laws which have very direct impact on each soul, AGW will continue unabated. Most people are very primitive and we have to take that into account. Failure to do so could lead to the end of our civilizatio
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Classic example...
"their believe" should be "their beliefs".
"there behavior" should be "their behavior".
The really appalling thing was that you got "their" right once, but managed to lose it within five words. Which tells me you got it right the one time by pure luck, which applies even to "global stupidity"....
We Need To Stop Trying... (Score:2, Interesting)
...stuff that doesn't work, like emitting less CO2. We can't. We continue to show it, over and over.
Instead, put efforts toward something like this:
https://www.technologyreview.c... [technologyreview.com]
Make that work, put our money in that, build 'em maybe $750 million worth a year all over the globe, and in 100 years we'll be where we need to be maybe. Certainly the world together could afford $750 million a year?
Trying to limit CO2 just makes the prices of everything go up, which punts a bunch more people into poverty, wh
Re:We Need To Stop Trying... (Score:4, Interesting)
If the learning for various low-carbon alternatives hadn't fallen drastically in the past few years, then I'd say you were correct, but as it is, this rise is just lag in the system I think...
Wind and solar generation LCOE are now lower than fossil energy generation in much of the world, and their prices are still falling. Fossil generation plant commissioning has dropped dramatically (see GE's profits forecast for their fossil turbine division - for example). TCO of a new electric car is now lower than that of fossil fuelled cars. TCO of heat pumps is lower than gas heating in many parts of the world too.
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The law of entropy is real and not negotiable, you know that, right?
Re:We Need To Stop Trying... (Score:5, Interesting)
See also Lazard's annual analysis of costs for power generation 2018 [lazard.com] and check out the graph on page 7. Coal and gas peaker plants aren't coming back from those sort of price drops, and solar costs are still dropping. Yes, I know this isn't dispatchable generation, but demand-response, and long-distance transmission, will largely get you around that...
You don't really start needing a lot of storage until renewables are over 50% of the generation mix, and costs are falling for storage rapidly, so that there's a reasonable chance that solar + storage will be the cheapest form of generation by the time we get to 50% renewables (by just replacing generation plant on the usual replacement cycles i.e. without added cost) too.
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...stuff that doesn't work, like emitting less CO2. We can't. We continue to show it, over and over.
Instead, put efforts toward something like this:
How will they power those plants? They need electricity, just saying.
that's fucking stupid (Score:2)
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...stuff that doesn't work, like emitting less CO2. We can't. We continue to show it, over and over
No. We need to *start* trying. The only thing we continue to show is that we don't give a shit. It's the "I'm all green and ecofriendly but man my house is 22degC OMG, why isn't the AC running" attitude.
Quick summary (Score:5, Informative)
If you look at their data (download the PDF - it has the overview graphs), it's what you expect: CO2 emissions from fossil fuels in the West are declining. China, following massive rises, has plateaued at a high level - on a per capita basis, the same as the EU (shocking, given the number of Chinese living essentially pre-industrial lives).
On a per capita basis, the US is still far higher than anyone else. However, this has been declining at an impressive pace, and there is no obvious basis for the claim that US consumption will increase in 2018. In fact, that would be a huge trend reversal, and (imho) is likely a politically motivated claim.
Meanwhile, emissions from India and other Asian countries are increasing rapidly. In fact, they are driving *all* of the global increase, plus compensating for declining emissions everywhere else.
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And while you're quick to criticism those two also spend far more money on green initiatives in the USA. Point the finger all you want, but what the future is likely to hold is a case study in how you can lift your people out of poverty without emitting what the USA does.
The first mover advantage works just as much for innovation and technology as it does for crimes, legal loopholes, and industrialising a nation.
Stop effing flying (Score:2)
I people paid the real costs of flying, a lot of problems would be solved. Amsterdam, London and the like would have a LOT less tourists messing up the cities, Uber and Airbnb would go bust and the local would finally get some room to breathe in their own city. Tourists are fine but the maximum number has been crossed a long time ago. Oh, and we also would have an enormous amount less CO2 in the air. Only winners here!
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They're a big part. Seriously. Our 'extremely clean' country is building an extra airport just for them.
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It is a non-negligible part, yes. Airplanes have lower CO2 emissions per person and mile than cars, but people fly long distances. One trip from the US to Europe causes roughly a quarter of the CO2 emissions that a car emits in a year of average driving.
I'm sorry to harp on ... (Score:2)
... about this but the data on this problem is pretty clear: If we don't get a handle on this problem and make it snappy, humanity and the ecosystem as we know it is pretty much screwed.
Just saying.
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Yup. But I'm tired of talking and trying to make the world "a better place". I stopped worrying and trying for just long enough to ask "why the fuck?".
I have no kids.
I have about 30 years to live.
Screw the planet and humanity.
Something is missing from this article... (Score:2)
The statement is that carbon emissions are higher across the globe. It's posited that its due to more cars on the road. However, I suspect that the metrics of newly added cars has not sky-rocketed. And many electric cars have been added. While some use of coal has returned. A lot of renewable energy has been added as well.
But surely, there wasn't a big trend across the globe. So what is not being said equates to one of two things...
a) We have been in a global recession and economic decline, and this wa
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It's not stupidity, it's tactics (Score:2)
It's countries behaving according to actual beliefs in CO2 being a problem for global warming, instead of the rhetoric they put forth.
For many countries, CO2 reduction is just another tool of economic war to the extent they can convince other countries to play along reduces their economic output and prosperity chasing the goal of CO2 reduction instead. That is certainly why China constantly promotes CO2 reduction despite doing essentially nothing to reduce it themselves.
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You ARE a hoax.
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I liked the joke.
Re:I feel it in my gut that this is a hoax (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, that definitely wouldn't explain Exxon's internal science team predicting a 2C warming by 2060 back in 1982 [theguardian.com]?
Do you think those involved in that internal study thought that would help them keep their jobs at Exxon?
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Don't you think you could make a lot more money by saying the opposite? I mean, who do you think offers the fatter paychecks, the government (you know, the one that got its environment budget de facto axed) or multinational oil and gas corporations trying to avoid legislation that would cost them a LOT more than any climate scientist claiming that anything they do is a-ok with the environment?
Science (Score:2)
Yeah. It's this newfangled religion called "Science"
Who believes this kind of nonsense ?
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As a side note, is there still room on the spare planet you apparently have available?
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War isn't an act of nature.
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Why you gotta be hating on Taco Tuesday like that?
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So ... you want the US to become like Europe?
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No...because they're XSUVS (Score:2)
Crossover SUVs are not the same SUVs of old.
They are a) built on car frames, b) using car engine and drive platforms, c) with next to zero towing capacity.
80% of SUVs sold today are nothing more than mid-sized hatchbacks with AWD. They are NOT SUVs. They're more akin to the old Subaru AWD station wagons than anything else. But marketing....
No one wants to drive a station wagon, and few guys want to drive hatchbacks. So they call them "Crossovers".
They are NOT built on truck frames, nor do they contain tr
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It was even a million times higher than today back during the late heavy bombardment.
You know what both eras have in common?
No humans.
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Responsible? Not really, I mean, who'd be able to call us out for it.
Basically it comes down to whether you want to live, and whether you have children you want to live. Other than that, it's pretty much "do as you please", it's not like we have any accountability for the planet to anyone else but yourself and your descendants.
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Terrible troll: "Heartland Institute"? Really? (Score:2)
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Problem is that people have been saying that for decades... and the oceans have risen a few CM.
Sea levels were much lower 10,000-20,000 years ago when 2 miles of ICE covered most of north america.
Good thing the ocean levels rose and the temperatures rose then or you would not be here complaining.
Humans were not involved in that great melting ... so there are obviously forces you do not understand affecting climate.