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Earth

How To Get To Net Zero Carbon Emissions: Cut Short-Lived Superpollutants (thebulletin.org) 184

Dan Drollette writes: We absolutely, positively, must tackle climate change speedily. Or as the authors of this article put it: 'By 'speed,' we mean measures — including regulatory ones — that can begin within two-to-three years, be substantially implemented in five-to-10 years, and produce a climate response within the next decade or two.' (Quick aside: one of the authors, Mario Molina, won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1995, for his work on holes in the ozone layer.)
From the article: Rapid warming over the near term threatens to accelerate self-reinforcing feedbacks in which the planet starts to warm itself in a Hothouse Earth scenario — vicious cycles which could lead to uncontrollable warming as these feedback mechanisms become the dominant force regulating the climate system. These feedbacks would then set off a domino-like cascade that triggers tipping points in the Arctic and elsewhere, many of them irreversible and potentially catastrophic.
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How To Get To Net Zero Carbon Emissions: Cut Short-Lived Superpollutants

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  • by AndyKron ( 937105 ) on Sunday April 05, 2020 @09:47AM (#59910192)
    Reduce population, it's the only solution. Everything else is just a stop-gap measure.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      Great! Lead by example, please - you and yours first! Oh, you mean OTHER people?
      • I'm leading by example. I haven't had any kids. That's the only change needed, no need to kill anyone.

    • So get back to work and let Coronavirus do its thing then?

      And by the way... population reduction policies is stupid and population bomb theories have never been proven to show any merit.

      Logistics confronted by greedy people... that is the problem.
      We will solve overpopulation when we all stop viewing things with perceived value and look at them from the prospect of actual value. Food has a low value during most time... now it has high value... so does toilet paper. But until we get rid of "perceived" valu

      • All value is inherently perceived/subjective. If you don't understand that, you certainly don't know enough to be giving advice.

        • Most value is subjective, as "I think this is of value to me." However, some things are objectively valuable because they're necessary to your life, such as food, water, and air. Closely related, some things have objective value because they improve your life, such as sleeping on a bed in a house in comparison to sleeping in a gravel pit. If you live your life well, the subjective category tends to align with the objective category.

          Value is a floating concept. It must be nailed down if it's to be meaningful

    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      Sure, let's start by offering free birth control, sterilization, and first trimester abortions. Nobody needs to die despite what unimaginative people would have you believe.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by aqui ( 472334 )

      Reduce the population:

      "Any Volunteers" ??

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday April 05, 2020 @10:02AM (#59910230)
    until we do something about the economy. Specifically we need to address how fragile it is. Nobody is going to let you spend one red cent fighting climate change when they're living paycheck to paycheck. They're terrified that anything you do will push them over the edge into homelessness.

    Bernie Sanders had the right idea, which is a massive federal jobs program to address climate change. That hits two birds with one stone, e.g. it makes sure workers have economic stability while fighting climate change.

    Anything else is just pissing into the wind by trashy Neo-liberals.
    • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Sunday April 05, 2020 @10:35AM (#59910336)
      Centrally planned economies have such a great track record. I suppose they do limit climate change in that they're so terribly ineffective that don't produce as much. If the types of jobs that Bernie were proposing were viable, the private sector would already be rushing to provide them. But every job that gets created by some make-work federal program is one job that can't be filled elsewhere and no doubt needs to be supported by all of the other productive jobs that people are willing to pay to support without coercion.

      If you really want to fight climate change create economic incentive to do so. Give companies tax breaks for lowering energy use or for any inventions which result in less pollution or fewer emissions. Implement a market-based system for pollutants so that inefficient industries and processes are replaced faster, just like we did with sulfur dioxide to reduce acid rain.

      I think it really says something about how bad Bernie's policies are when the Democrats would rather get behind someone with dementia or some other form of severe cognitive decline. I'll gladly take the trashy neo-liberals pissing into the wind over the Marxists huffing their own farts.
      • Strawman (Score:5, Insightful)

        by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday April 05, 2020 @11:18AM (#59910450)
        who said anything about centrally planed economies? FDR did a jobs program. Did that turn the US into a dictatorship?

        And no, these would _not_ be make work jobs. Do you have any bloody idea how much work it's going to take in order to get America off fossil fuels as our primary source of energy and onto renewables? It's not just building out wind and solar + batteries. We've got to transform our buildings to be more energy efficient. Same for our cars. And we're gonna screw it up because it's complicated. Meaning yes, a lot of money is going to be wasted and we're going to have to change gears a lot. This is bigger than WWI & II combined for God's sake. It's _hard_.

        Tax breaks do nothing for the reasons I gave above. Voters won't push to have them actually enforced out of fear of losing their jobs if they are. The phrase "Job Killing Regulations" is powerful to somebody with $400 in the bank.

        As for why the DNC is fighting Bernie they're corrupt. They've been bought out by billionaires. Go look into the election. 7 hour waits at the polls. Biden won every district in Texas where there isn't a paper trail. And the exit polls were off 8-11%. They cheated.

        Bernie let them cheat because he will do anything to prevent Trump from being re-elected. Trump's DOJ is going to bring a challenge to the ACA that will strike it down and it is clear Trump has no plan to replace it. Hope you or your family don't have any pre-existing conditions....
        • (wish /. would let me edit comments).

          When you get a chance go look into how our food supply is run. Using subsidies, tax breaks and general government arm twisting it's basically a centrally planned economy. We don't talk about it because it's not polite, but this is how we prevent farmers from crap like overplanting or using shoddy methods.

          The problem with China & the USSR is they didn't listen to multiple experts [youtu.be] and instead did a risky experiment on their entire food supply based on 1 (not th
          • Using subsidies, tax breaks and general government arm twisting it's basically a centrally planned economy.

            So fscking stop stop subsidizing and tax breaking oil. https://www.fuelfreedom.org/oi... [fuelfreedom.org]

            • because it'll just raise prices at the pump. Then paycheck-to-paycheck voters go to the polls to demand the subsidies get put back in place.

              The only way we're going to dig ourselves out of this is by getting off fossil fuel as our main source of energy (and doing it fast). Private industry won't do that because private industry follows short term profits.

              Think about how many trillions and trillions of dollars in assets there are in fossil fuel. Now ask yourself what those assets would be worth if we
        • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

          the simplest solution is making cleaner energy cheaper or easier. People pay more for easy, companies make decisions based on cost. This is the oldest law of physics, as well as taoism there is. Everything flows toward the path of least resistance. Right now, facing about $3T in proposed bailouts, in just the US alone, nobody is going to vote for yet another increase in taxes, you havent even seen the fallout of how much this is going to eat your taxes and you already want to spend more. Your fiscal respons

        • by _xeno_ ( 155264 )

          Biden won every district in Texas where there isn't a paper trail. And the exit polls were off 8-11%. They cheated.

          Oh bullshit they cheated. Bernie lost to Hillary in 2016 and he's losing to Biden in 2020. He's actually polling worse against Biden than he did against Hillary, which really shouldn't be unexpected at all. In head-to-head polls against Trump, Bernie ties him, while Biden clearly wins. There's no cheating. Bernie just isn't as popular as his supporters think he is.

          Here's the thing about exit polls: you expect some of them to be off. I've seen nothing that shows any systematic cheating or any exit polls bein

  • >short-lived so-called “super-pollutants”—black carbon, methane, tropospheric ozone, and hydrofluorocarbons

    Sources of bad stuff:
    black carbon - mostly from cooking and heating
    methane - mostly natural sources
    tropospheric ozone - mostly methane and transportation
    hydrofluorocarbons - mostly from cooling

    Obviously we all need to stop cooking, stop driving to the store, and unplug the fridge. If we could all just sustainably forage native plants from our own property for food then we could en

  • https://www.bbc.com/news/scien... [bbc.com]

    "Cheap and non-flammable, SF6 is a colourless, odourless, synthetic gas. It makes a hugely effective insulating material for medium and high-voltage electrical installations. It is widely used across the industry, from large power stations to wind turbines to electrical sub-stations in towns and cities. It prevents electrical accidents and fires.

    However, the significant downside to using the gas is that it has the highest global warming potential of any known substance. It

    • No serious person thinks that solar power is the magic bullet to solve climate change. Solar power helps though. There isn't going to be one magic bullet, but many different technologies and regulation changes which will be necessary.
    • Sulfur hexafluoride [wikipedia.org] is 5x denser than air (as opposed to about 1.7x for CO2). Its potency as a greenhouse gas is irrelevant because if there were enough of it in the atmosphere to matter, it would pool at the bottom [youtu.be], and suffocate every living thing by displacing all CO2 and O2 (and N2 and Ar) in a layer just above the ground.
      • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )
        I don't think you understand how powerful the effect of some trace gasses can be on the climate at very low concentrations.
        • I don't think you understand how powerful the effect of some trace gasses can be on the climate at very low concentrations.

          Please explain it to me, because I don't understand.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by agaku ( 2312930 )
      The planet was in balance before humankind started polluting the atmosphere with greenhouse gases coming from fossil fuels. So we have to get back to this stage rapidly, if we want to survive. A carbon tax of $650 per ton CO2 would cover for the costs of the pollution and would be a first step. Whoever polluts has to pay for the damage it does, and not the taxpayer in general. Subsidies have to stop.
      • The planet was in balance before humankind started polluting the atmosphere with greenhouse gases coming from fossil fuels.

        No it wasn't. It was coming out of an Ice Age and warming fairly rapidly on its own, by geological timescales. The last glacial period ended just 11,700 years ago. Yes, that recently. Humans had been recognizable as humans for at least the previous 100,000 years. Humans watched ice that had completely covered Canada and the northern US retreat. Humans watched ice that had mostly covered Germany, Poland, and western Russia retreat. Each year, any of those humans who might have been paying attention wo

        • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )
          Over the last 8000 years sinks have been slightly more powerful than sources, but the CO2 concentrations fell only slightly, so it was almost in balance. The shift in the last 200 years has been huge, and CO2 levels have increased rapidly - i.e. very much not in balance.
    • Humans produce orders of magnitude more co2 than volcanism.

      Your idea is dumb

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Your whole argument is fundamentally idiotic because it doesn't matter whether nature or man creates more CO2, period. What matters is whether too much CO2 is produced.

          But my point was that we already know that CO2 from volcanism affects climate, and we produce way more.

          Either way, you're wrong.

  • There was no real activity besides window dressing in the 30 or so years this has been known and solid science said it will be catastrophic. There is no way anything even remotely approaching what will be needed will happen in the next decade or two. Instead, the people accelerating this catastrophe will continue to make mountains of money and will not care at all about the damage they cause. And the general public will wake up when the catastrophe becomes personal, i.e. 50-100 years too late to really do a

    • Humans have survived multiple catastrophic climate events before- including a full blown ice age, a mini-ice age, and a decade of darkness caused by the eruption of a super-volcano which resulted in world-wide famine and killed huge swaths of the population.

      There is zero chance that even in the worst of the worst case scenarios of global warming that it wipes out human civilization.

      Alarmist language with no basis in reality like what you use here are one reason so many people are dismissive about the *real*

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Humans have survived multiple catastrophic climate events before-

        All with very slow changes and a non-tech society to begin with. This time is different.

      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        There is zero chance that even in the worst of the worst case scenarios of global warming that it wipes out human civilization.

        The scientifically understood climate change phenomenon? No, of course not.

        The apocalyptic climate change religion? Predictions need not follow physical rules, nor match the geological climate record, nor be consistent with biological or anthropological understanding. Zealous belief is enough. They're saving the planet. You know they, personally, are the heroes of the planet, don't you? You should learn to be more obedient and reverential.

  • When anyone says "We must do X now or Y will happen ten years from now" and that "must" involves government, I snort in derision.

  • about this pandemic, it puts the word "crisis" into much better perspective. Climate change activists have been going on for decades about how millions are gonna die, someday, eventually. Well guess what, now we get to see what a scenario really looks like when millions of people may actually die. Verifiable rather than theoretical deaths.

    When (if) life gets back to some semblance of normal and people start screaming about the climate crisis again, at least everyone will be able to give it a more appropr

    • You can have a slow moving crisis. All it takes is a tipping point.

      Guess what? Climate can work that way.

      HTH, HAND

  • When you have this ROADMAP that shows WHAT, WHERE, WHEN and precisely HOW to get to 2C, HOW is that not LAW already?

    What person in their right mind doesn't elevate, project and enforce such a 2C ROADMAP.

    I've waited for AGW science to get a handle on 2C and now that we have it...IT IS TIME TO ACT. Failure to act on 2C is the equivalent to ignoring SARS-nCOV-2.

    https://www.americanprogress.o... [americanprogress.org]

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      You know, those with power do not care or do not understand. The others cheer them onward because they do not care or do not understand.

      As a group, humanity is exceptionally stupid and cannot really look beyond the next meal. The minority that can does not have the power to change anything.

    • by swilver ( 617741 )

      Judging from America's response to Corona virus, I suspect we'll see some action when we reach 3 or 4 C.

      The only plus I see of the current pandemic is that the same idiots which dismiss our current climate experts are likely also dismissing our current situation as "just another flu".

    • I read through your link, and I didn't see a roadmap.
  • These are people that are adamantly opposed to any form of nuclear power as they claim any nuclear power reactor is a risk for proliferation of weapon grade material. Tell me something, "scientists", what do you propose we do with the existing stockpile of weapon grade material? If you do in fact know your nuclear science then you know that there's only two ways for such material to be destroyed. We can wait it out, which can take millions of years, or we can destroy this material by fission.

    We can do th

  • "Rapid warming over the near term threatens to accelerate self-reinforcing feedbacks"

    This is the problem with the alarmists: they insist on spouting BS.

    Is the planet warming? Yes. Is spouting massive amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere a good idea? No. Are there dangerous positive-feedback cycles waiting to create runaway warming and turn the planet into Venus? Um...no. There aren't. No one seriously even supposes that there are, except people desperate to get headlines. Even the IPCC reports, as politically

    • by swilver ( 617741 )

      There definitely are positive feedback cycles. Will they turn Earth into Venus? Of course not, we're not close enough to the sun for that. Could it increase average temperature enough to melt a significant portion of the icecaps and permafrost areas? Definitely.

      Will those events cause additional warming? Sure, ice reflects heat much better than land or oceans, melting tundra will release additional green house gasses on scales that may even dwarf our own contributions. Expanding deserts and oceans wil

  • One thing that has not been widely reported on, is that we have dropped CO2 levels to an unthinkable low because of the lockdown. Why do we have to expend further effort and expense on a solved problem when we are going to ned every resource civilization has to essentially reboot the world?

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