OT: Duke Climate Change Study

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sycasey
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Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88 said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88;842851510 said:

"Air pollution" was also the cause advanced to explain the global cooling from the 1960s-70s.









Back then, there was a scientific consensus that we were going to enter a new ice age, and that humanity should be mobilized to avoid man-made climate armageddon, with the usual assortment of global taxes and drastic global industrial curbs. Plus a change...


Prior to the 1990s, data showed that the 1930s-40s temperatures were about as high as today's. I would refer you to the chart for US temperature records I've posted above. Datasets like NASA's were "adjusted" by Hansen. Here's a good documentation of the evolution of NASA's history of tampering with its data:

https://realclimatescience.com/history-of-nasanoaa-temperature-corruption/


That Time magazine cover is a fake. Here's Time's comments about that photoshopped forgery:

http://science.time.com/2013/06/06/sorry-a-time-magazine-cover-did-not-predict-a-coming

So, if that was faked, what can we believe of the rest of it? We're not dealing with honest people.



The Time Magazine cover was a prop to illustrate the quote next to it, which is very real, and a prime example of the scientific consensus in the 1970s for global cooling:
Quote:

"The continued rapid cooling of the earth since WWII is in accord with the increase in global air pollution associated with industrialisation, mechanisation, urbanisation and exploding population."
- Reid Bryson, "Global Ecology; Readings towards a rational strategy for Man", 1971


Your disingenuous swiftboating exercice here consist of discrediting my whole argument, supported by literally dozens of proven quotes and published studies, because one magazine cover happened to be photoshopped.

It's both dishonest and lame.

I can't believe you felt the need to rant about a post I made in 2017. That's a long time to hold a grudge. I hope calling me names helped you feel better about yourself.


It's my fault. I had to dredge that up after Cal88 basically called me a liar for saying he had posted fake magazine stories, even though it's right there in black and white that he did.
TummyoftheGB
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Rushinbear said:

TummyoftheGB said:

Rushinbear said:

kal kommie said:

Rushinbear said:

kal kommie said:

Cal88 said:

swan said:


Cite for energy market estimates:

https://www.thebusinessresearchcompany.com/report/renewable-energy-global-market-report


Assuming that you are correct and CO2 from human activity is leading to a disaster, the management of climate change is a moot point, because the world is going to shift to alternative sources of energy, mainly solar and nuclear, with EVs supplanting ICE vehicles due to market forces alone as battery tech improves.

Even if the world does eventually fully shift to alternative energy sources, management of climate change is not moot because the shift is not happening fast enough, at least not according to the IPCC. It sounds great that carbon emissions growth has plateaued over the past few years until you realize that according to the IPCC we need an emissions trajectory which hits -25% by 2030, -35/40% by 2035 and net-zero by 2070 just to limit warming to 2C by 2100. Current IEA projections estimate emissions decrease of only about 0-5% by 2030, consistent with a trajectory that leads to a very bad 2.5 to 3C warming scenario.

But I understand this is just your backup position. The real bottom line is that you reject the overwhelming consensus within climate science regarding anthropogenic climate change. I don't begrudge you an opinion of your own but I would like to know what if anything would change your mind.

The "Warming" argument has been compromised ever since the 70's/80's when we were to believe that Global Cooling was caused by increases in atmospheric CO2 being released in increasing amounts through the use of fossil fuels. Then, atmospheric warming was proclaimed. What happened? Atmospheric scientists fell victim to the almighty dollar, in the form of mutual back-scratching, corrupted grant and salary sources, collusion with private, self-interested sources of wealth, and all the ancillary crimes that go with them (most having to do with theft of global assets). At its most basic, here are some of the sources and warning signs of the process:

- Fossil fuels have been in control of big business, which the Left hates.

- The vast, vast majority of the world population, especially the "educated", have no earthly clue about statistics and how they can be manipulated.

- This mass media principle works: when you want the population to believe a lie, keep repeating it consistently and often, and don't respond to counter arguments, no matter how cogent. Just change the subject.

- In response to a statement with which you disagree, silence equals consent.

- The collection of temperature data is unscientific, for example:

  • The Stevenson Screen - that contraption you've seen in white, wooden, shutter enclosures around parking lots and airports - could not be programmed and was, in effect, a simple mercury thermometer. It was replaced with a hi tech platinum-based device which could be programmed (e.g. don't record temps under a certain level).
  • In the early years, there were about 16,000 Stevenson screens distributed globally. They have been replaced by about 8,500 of those platinum devices. They have never been placed at scientific random, but often in areas called "urban heat islands."
  • About 2/3 of temperature sensing devices, both the old and the new, are placed in the northern hemisphere. Why is that, if we're trying to record global temps?
  • About 1,000 thermometers are placed on buoys in the oceans. About half of those are secured to the oceans' floors. The rest are free to float with ocean currents and congregate together in protected places.
  • Climate scientists try to bolster their claims by insisting that satellite data confirms data collected on the surface, but this is false. Satellite data are not collected directly from the earth's surface, but are derived from mathematical models which attempt to correlate the surface data with indirect, derived statistics.
It appears that the Global Warming argument is losing steam, as more scientists and thinking people stop the music and look hard at these and many other arguments. Even Bill Gates is looking elsewhere.


If you want to believe that the overwhelming consensus within the field of climate science regarding climate change is the product of an absurd conspiracy spanning two generations and involving God knows how many people from every major country on Earth for ridiculously uncompelling motives, then trying to argue you out of it is an order of magnitude more pointless than even the average internet argument.

$$$$$$ and power, as they always have. Just a different pretext.

Ok, I've resisted chiming in until now, but this latest bit of rage baiting has drawn me in! I'm a climate scientist, and yes, I know every single scientist mentioned in this thread personally (it's still a relatively small community.) The insinuation that we're corrupted by $$ and power, or otherwise acting in bad faith, is so patently absurd that I have to wonder how you arrived at your opinion, and what your source of such disinformation might be. Most of the falsehoods that you've cited bear the hallmark of the Heartland propaganda machine: 1.) no one was ever talking about global cooling in the 70's and 80's (this was when I was starting grad school); 2.) there are well-known changes to manner/distribution/technology of temperature observations over the 20th century and any global compilation MUST account for those changes statistically (in other words, it's not suspicious or corrupt statistical manipulation--the adjustments made are simply what has to be done to compile a meaningful and consistent global index); 3.) the number of ARGO floats in the global oceans that have been taking consistent temperature and salinity measurements at all depths of the ocean down to 3 km is well over 4000, and, while it's true that they passively ride the ocean currents, they don't congregate in protected areas--in fact, these floats provide the best and least biased way to understand how/where/when heat has gone in the ocean in the 21st century and provide unequivocal proof of net heat gain of the upper ocean (i.e. global warming) 4.) sea level in most coastal areas is the product of both geological and climate processes; for example, there are places like Canadian seaboard, where the coastline is coming up out of the ocean, despite the warming of the ocean and loss of polar ice, because the Earth is still responding to the loss of the load of the former Laurentide Ice Sheet; these are well-known effects, and, at least in North America, have been extensively-monitored by geodetic arrays. But as a result of the complexity of processes involved locally, sea level is easiest to cherry pick; however, for what it's worth, my colleagues who do the detailed satellite-based monitoring of polar ice sheets are, privately, even MORE worried about catastrophic ice loss than what they may let on through popular media channels (so these media statements are actually much less alarmist than they could be).
Anyway, if I'm correct that you've been indoctrinated by Heartland Institute gaslighting, I'm not going to convince you of anything. But I would at least request that you reconsider your perspective on scientists (like me) and the motivation for our work. Go Bears.


I do my own research, thank you very much.

Ok, I'm starting to see the problem now! Sorry for this internet joke--I couldn't resist. I can tell you're passionate about this subject, but would suggest that you're probably too many layers deep in decades-old Heartland propaganda--you do know who funded Steve McIntyre and John Christy, right? On the flip side, I know both Michael Mann and Phil Jones well. Can you specify how, exactly, they're corrupt? (the hacked email "scandal" was a total joke). I'm not looking for a reply--this is the Cal Football board!--but just some internal reflection on your part. For example, I don't happen to agree with all the details of the hockey stick compilation, but, even if that compilation was slightly off, how does that make Michael corrupt? And what essential conclusions about the climate system would change if he were slightly off? I will say that most of the community has moved on from "global average temperature" as a particularly diagnostic measure of the climate system--after all, no organism, ecosystem, community, or society ever feels "global average temperature", so the issue of how you compile a global average is an abstraction that's not really worth arguing over for many purposes. That's partly why I never weighed in on this thread previously. But again, being slightly wrong about the details of how to best compile a global average is a far cry from corruption. I'm sorry that you experienced it in your profession, but if there's any in climate science, I haven't seen it (that is, aside from the Heartland-funded would-be assassins.) One look at my bank statements will tell you that I'm not exactly wading in sweet, sweet global warming cash...
calumnus
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PAC-10-BEAR said:

calumnus said:

PAC-10-BEAR said:

stivo said:

Rushinbear said:

Ahem. A Duke study of 1,000 years of observed climate data and not climate models concluded temperature variance due to "natural variability" and that temperature shifts are because of "ocean-atmosphere interaction and other natural factors."

http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/global-warming-duke-warming-temperature/2015/04/24/id/640540/

I come here because I love Cal sports. I have no interest in reading lunatic, anti-scientific, ultra right-wing political nonsense linked to an article from newsmax designed to radicalize the stupidest people in our society into supporting the destruction of our planet so that billionaires can make more money.

Yes, it's off topic, so get rid of it!

Send this thread to OT.

Growls is for left wing nut jobs who watched the 2021 Cal football team play while coaches had masks on due to a lab virus.

Favorite game was a 3-10 loss at Arizona.


I have ten friends and family members that died of COVID in 2020 and 2021, all in their 40s and 50s, including a former Cal football player and my brother-in-law, a former Stanford basketball player. 1.2 million Americans died of COVID, Far more than any other country and more Americans killed than were killed in all the wars in history combined. Don't give me any nonsense about your opposition to mask wearing. Your and others opposition to mask wearing and other basic, long proven, public health measures caused hundreds of thousands of Americans to die needlessly. But yes, it was a test of our ability to deal with the impact we are having on the planet we will leave to our children and our grandchildren. So far we are failing thanks to the greed of the mukti-$trillion fossil fuel industry, the politicians they buy, and the idiots that believe their propaganda because it is packaged with hating minorities, especially LGBTQ.

No one on the Cal football team that I'm aware of died of Covid, even the LGBTQ ones.

I was not referring to current players, I was referring to alums in their 50s, which was too young.

Fortunately we kept my parents who were then in their 80s isolated until they could get vaccinated, so when they eventually contracted COVID, their immune systems were prepped and they are still with us.
calumnus
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Cal88 said:

kal kommie said:

Cal88 said:

calumnus said:

CNHTH said:

Cal88 said:

Climate change as an issue has taken a backseat the last few years, it is not nearly as present in the media as it was a few years ago. I think the reason for this is that the decarbonization agenda is completely incompatible with the AI agenda, which consumes a tremendous amount of energy, and accounts today for nearly all the economic growth, in addition to being a very strategic technology.

This being said, the EV revolution and renewables getting cheaper and more accessible (solar and nuclear) mean that we may have already reached peak fossil fuel consumption just through technology and market forces alone (with subsidies as an assist).

Global warming alarmism is becoming a niche cultural/political issue, superseded by the highly turbulent current geopolitical context.


What exactly are you arguing?
That the second and third laws of thermodynamics are invalid?

Good luck with that!

1.)
-earth was 30C in the carbiniforous period due to millions of years of heavy volcanic activity

-those temps allowed planktons to proliferate in warm oceans and remove co2 from the atmosphere

-over 10s of millions of years those planktons formed oil as they were partially subducted.

2.) we're re-releasing that co2 that took tens of millions of years to sequester in a geologic millisecond.


There is a reason the Carboniferous Period is called the Carboniferous Period. The other factor was plant life moving to the land ahead of animal life that could consume them. Giant tree ferns, etc. produced so much oxygen that insects could grow to huge size and when the plants died and were buried under successive growth they captured huge amounts of carbon that has only been released in the last 150 years by digging up and burning those fossil fuels.

It is amazing that we have a pretty good understanding of the atmospheres of other planets and moons in our solar system, now even planets in far distant solar systems, but there are people who discount our FAR greater understanding of our own atmosphere and geologic history.


The issue here is you haven't heard the scientific argument putting the current situation in context, such as:

  • the effect of higher CO2 levels on global agricultural output and the ongoing greening of the earth
  • the logarithmic, not linear relationship between increased CO2 concentration and temperature increase from the greenhouse effect
  • the observed lack of acceleration of sea level rise from dozens of tidal gauges across the world, directly contradicting alarmist predictions of accelerating sea level rise
  • the current CO2 levels are, on a geological scale, close to the lowest they have been in the last billion year.


1. The uncertain extent of enhanced agricultural output from higher C02 levels and the greening of some northern latitude regions doesn't offset the more certain loss of agricultural output and habitability in adversely affected regions. It doesn't reassure the billions of people who live in areas threatened by drought and desertification in subtropical regions that Greenland, Siberia and the Yukon may become much more habitable.


There is nothing uncertain about the relationship between CO2 levels and agricultural output. It is a most elementary aspect of photosynthesis. Yield curves for every plant class have been established. The first thing a commercial greenhouse plant operator will do is to pump CO2 to 2-4 times atmospheric levels, boosting output by as much as 100%.
https://www.hortidaily.com/article/9674492/co2-enrichment-can-lead-to-increased-yields-from-40-to-100-in-plants-like-tomatoes/

As well plants respond much more to higher CO2 levels in arid climates, as plants need less water to grow the higher the CO2 levels, because they will have fewer stomata and will exhale less water in the process of capturing atmospheric CO2.

Quote:

CO2 boosts plant productivity

Plants use sunlight, carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and water for photosynthesis to produce oxygen and carbohydrates that plants use for energy and growth.
Rising levels of CO2 in the atmosphere drive an increase in plant photosynthesisan effect known as the carbon fertilization effect. New research has found that between 1982 and 2020, global plant photosynthesis grew 12 percent, tracking CO2 levels in the atmosphere as they rose 17 percent. The vast majority of this increase in photosynthesis was due to carbon dioxide fertilization.

Increased photosynthesis results in more growth in some plants. Scientists have found that in response to elevated CO2 levels, above-ground plant growth increased an average of 21 percent, while below-ground growth increased 28 percent. As a result, some crops such as wheat, rice and soybeans are expected to benefit from increased CO2 with an increase in yields from 12 to 14 percent.

Under elevated CO2 concentrations, plants use less water during photosynthesis. Plants have openings called stomata that allow CO2 to be absorbed and moisture to be released into the atmosphere. When CO2 levels rise, plants can maintain a high rate of photosynthesis and partially close their stomata, which can decrease a plant's water loss between 5 and 20 percent. Scientists have speculated that this could result in plants releasing less water to the atmosphere, thus keeping more on land, in the soil and streams.

https://news.climate.columbia.edu/2022/01/27/how-climate-change-will-affect-plants


Contrary to your post above, it is not just northern latitudes that are most benefitting from increased CO2, but arid regions like the African Sahel. Over the last several decades, the Sahara Desert has shrunk by over 10%, an area the size of France and Germany combined, largely due to CO2 fertilizing effect greening. As I have described above, the drier the conditions, the more powerful is the CO2 fertilizing effect.

https://theweek.com/environment/sahara-desert-turning-green
https://e360.yale.edu/features/greening-drylands-carbon-dioxide-climate-change


Green areas saw a growth in foliage from 2000 to 2017, while brown areas saw a drop. Joshua Stevens / NASA Earth Observatory




Quote:

2. The logarithmic effect of radiative forcing is already accounted for in IPCC models.

I don't think you understand that part. The amount of heat trapped from going from 100ppm CO2 to 200ppm is the same as that going from 200ppm to 400ppm, and the same as from 400ppm to 800ppm. The alarmist models claim that the heat generated is many multiples that of the heat trapped by the greenhouse effect, and that aspect is debated in academic circles.



Quote:

3. According to the IPCC, both tide gauges and satellites show an accelerating rise in global sea level since 1993. Skeptics cherry pick local gauges which show no acceleration due to natural local variability to support claims of no global acceleration.


This is the part that really doesn't stand scrutiny. Fact is, sea water rise levels are universal and uniform. The oceans rise due to two factors, thermal expansion of water, and ice from the polar caps (mostly antarctic) melting. The tidal gauge measurement are the combined effect of that universal sea water rise coupled with land movements, and while these vary from place to place, land movements are very linear. So if there was an acceleration in sea level rise, that acceleration will be visible on most tidal gauge measurements. The data however clearly contradicts that notion of accelerating sea level rise.







These data sets are powerful and reliable, because they span the last two centuries, and have been built with a very consistent methodology, unlike nearly every other temperature measurement used to justify the alarmist case. They clearly show that there has been no drastic acceleration in the rate of sea level rise over the last several decades.


Quote:

4. It is irrelevant that CO2 levels or even global temperatures have been higher at many points in the last billion years. It is the temporally local increase that is important because it is causing the changes in living conditions that people today and in the coming generations are going to have to reckon with.


The single most important impact of climate change on the human race is in the effect of climate on agricultural output, by a wide margin. In that aspect, higher CO2 levels have ironically been demonstrably beneficial.

The only mass starvation events we see in the modern era are from political factors (wars etc) and very limited geographically. In the 20th century when CO2 levels were lower you had several mass starvation events due to global crop failures (ironically enough, mostly from bad weather), and this despite the fact that the world population was a lot smaller.
IHowever we were still at CO2 levels from 50 years ago, one billion plus would have been threatened by starvation, and the price of cereals and other staples would have been higher.


You are missing several factors: first heat does not equal temperature, especially air temperature. Tremendous amounts of heat energy are used to convert water from ice to liquid and liquid to water vapor and to warm the oceans. An ice chest, sitting in the sun at the beach, absorbs heat from the sun continuously, but keeps the air around your food cold as the ice melts. However, once all the ice melts, the temperature soars. The ocean, which covers most of Earth's surface, is a huge heat sink. Inceased CO2 leads to acidification of water, and with increased water temperatures, is having tremendous negative effects on coral reefs and sea life in general. It is a negative for agriculture too, even if initially, CO2 is a benefit for crops.

So initially, the increase in CO2 does not increase air temperature as greatly. However, water vapor is itself a greenhouse gas. Methane, trapped in frozen Arctic tundra, is being released and it is an even stronger greenhouse gas. This eventually becomes a vicious circle and "runaway" effect. Planetary scientists believe something similar happened on Venus. Science understands these things better than you give them credit for. It is just a huge gamble to cause these massive changes to our planet, ones that scientists predict have huge negative consequences, and "hope" that it turns out OK just because we can find some short term positive benefits like crop productivity.

The world will not convert to renewable resources magically. The biggest issue is that the cost to the world, the "externalities," are not included in the price of fossil fuels. Sure, prices of renewables are low, in many cases lower than fossil fuels, but US subsidies for oil and gas and huge 100%+ tariffs on the lowest cost solar and electric cars are moving us in the wrong direction.

If you look at Earth's past, during time periods with warmer temperatures and higher sea levels, life in extreme northern latitudes and even Antarctica, flourished. That is how Alaska and Russia got so much oil. As the Earth continues to warm, humans will continue to need to leave the less habitable tropical climes, especially the islands and arid regions, and relocate to the northern countries to survive. So humanitarian immigration policies will be necessary if we do not do anything to stop global warming.
Rushinbear
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calumnus said:

Cal88 said:

kal kommie said:

Cal88 said:

calumnus said:

CNHTH said:

Cal88 said:

Climate change as an issue has taken a backseat the last few years, it is not nearly as present in the media as it was a few years ago. I think the reason for this is that the decarbonization agenda is completely incompatible with the AI agenda, which consumes a tremendous amount of energy, and accounts today for nearly all the economic growth, in addition to being a very strategic technology.

This being said, the EV revolution and renewables getting cheaper and more accessible (solar and nuclear) mean that we may have already reached peak fossil fuel consumption just through technology and market forces alone (with subsidies as an assist).

Global warming alarmism is becoming a niche cultural/political issue, superseded by the highly turbulent current geopolitical context.


What exactly are you arguing?
That the second and third laws of thermodynamics are invalid?

Good luck with that!

1.)
-earth was 30C in the carbiniforous period due to millions of years of heavy volcanic activity

-those temps allowed planktons to proliferate in warm oceans and remove co2 from the atmosphere

-over 10s of millions of years those planktons formed oil as they were partially subducted.

2.) we're re-releasing that co2 that took tens of millions of years to sequester in a geologic millisecond.


There is a reason the Carboniferous Period is called the Carboniferous Period. The other factor was plant life moving to the land ahead of animal life that could consume them. Giant tree ferns, etc. produced so much oxygen that insects could grow to huge size and when the plants died and were buried under successive growth they captured huge amounts of carbon that has only been released in the last 150 years by digging up and burning those fossil fuels.

It is amazing that we have a pretty good understanding of the atmospheres of other planets and moons in our solar system, now even planets in far distant solar systems, but there are people who discount our FAR greater understanding of our own atmosphere and geologic history.


The issue here is you haven't heard the scientific argument putting the current situation in context, such as:

  • the effect of higher CO2 levels on global agricultural output and the ongoing greening of the earth
  • the logarithmic, not linear relationship between increased CO2 concentration and temperature increase from the greenhouse effect
  • the observed lack of acceleration of sea level rise from dozens of tidal gauges across the world, directly contradicting alarmist predictions of accelerating sea level rise
  • the current CO2 levels are, on a geological scale, close to the lowest they have been in the last billion year.


1. The uncertain extent of enhanced agricultural output from higher C02 levels and the greening of some northern latitude regions doesn't offset the more certain loss of agricultural output and habitability in adversely affected regions. It doesn't reassure the billions of people who live in areas threatened by drought and desertification in subtropical regions that Greenland, Siberia and the Yukon may become much more habitable.


There is nothing uncertain about the relationship between CO2 levels and agricultural output. It is a most elementary aspect of photosynthesis. Yield curves for every plant class have been established. The first thing a commercial greenhouse plant operator will do is to pump CO2 to 2-4 times atmospheric levels, boosting output by as much as 100%.
https://www.hortidaily.com/article/9674492/co2-enrichment-can-lead-to-increased-yields-from-40-to-100-in-plants-like-tomatoes/

As well plants respond much more to higher CO2 levels in arid climates, as plants need less water to grow the higher the CO2 levels, because they will have fewer stomata and will exhale less water in the process of capturing atmospheric CO2.

Quote:

CO2 boosts plant productivity

Plants use sunlight, carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and water for photosynthesis to produce oxygen and carbohydrates that plants use for energy and growth.
Rising levels of CO2 in the atmosphere drive an increase in plant photosynthesisan effect known as the carbon fertilization effect. New research has found that between 1982 and 2020, global plant photosynthesis grew 12 percent, tracking CO2 levels in the atmosphere as they rose 17 percent. The vast majority of this increase in photosynthesis was due to carbon dioxide fertilization.

Increased photosynthesis results in more growth in some plants. Scientists have found that in response to elevated CO2 levels, above-ground plant growth increased an average of 21 percent, while below-ground growth increased 28 percent. As a result, some crops such as wheat, rice and soybeans are expected to benefit from increased CO2 with an increase in yields from 12 to 14 percent.

Under elevated CO2 concentrations, plants use less water during photosynthesis. Plants have openings called stomata that allow CO2 to be absorbed and moisture to be released into the atmosphere. When CO2 levels rise, plants can maintain a high rate of photosynthesis and partially close their stomata, which can decrease a plant's water loss between 5 and 20 percent. Scientists have speculated that this could result in plants releasing less water to the atmosphere, thus keeping more on land, in the soil and streams.

https://news.climate.columbia.edu/2022/01/27/how-climate-change-will-affect-plants


Contrary to your post above, it is not just northern latitudes that are most benefitting from increased CO2, but arid regions like the African Sahel. Over the last several decades, the Sahara Desert has shrunk by over 10%, an area the size of France and Germany combined, largely due to CO2 fertilizing effect greening. As I have described above, the drier the conditions, the more powerful is the CO2 fertilizing effect.

https://theweek.com/environment/sahara-desert-turning-green
https://e360.yale.edu/features/greening-drylands-carbon-dioxide-climate-change


Green areas saw a growth in foliage from 2000 to 2017, while brown areas saw a drop. Joshua Stevens / NASA Earth Observatory




Quote:

2. The logarithmic effect of radiative forcing is already accounted for in IPCC models.

I don't think you understand that part. The amount of heat trapped from going from 100ppm CO2 to 200ppm is the same as that going from 200ppm to 400ppm, and the same as from 400ppm to 800ppm. The alarmist models claim that the heat generated is many multiples that of the heat trapped by the greenhouse effect, and that aspect is debated in academic circles.



Quote:

3. According to the IPCC, both tide gauges and satellites show an accelerating rise in global sea level since 1993. Skeptics cherry pick local gauges which show no acceleration due to natural local variability to support claims of no global acceleration.


This is the part that really doesn't stand scrutiny. Fact is, sea water rise levels are universal and uniform. The oceans rise due to two factors, thermal expansion of water, and ice from the polar caps (mostly antarctic) melting. The tidal gauge measurement are the combined effect of that universal sea water rise coupled with land movements, and while these vary from place to place, land movements are very linear. So if there was an acceleration in sea level rise, that acceleration will be visible on most tidal gauge measurements. The data however clearly contradicts that notion of accelerating sea level rise.







These data sets are powerful and reliable, because they span the last two centuries, and have been built with a very consistent methodology, unlike nearly every other temperature measurement used to justify the alarmist case. They clearly show that there has been no drastic acceleration in the rate of sea level rise over the last several decades.


Quote:

4. It is irrelevant that CO2 levels or even global temperatures have been higher at many points in the last billion years. It is the temporally local increase that is important because it is causing the changes in living conditions that people today and in the coming generations are going to have to reckon with.


The single most important impact of climate change on the human race is in the effect of climate on agricultural output, by a wide margin. In that aspect, higher CO2 levels have ironically been demonstrably beneficial.

The only mass starvation events we see in the modern era are from political factors (wars etc) and very limited geographically. In the 20th century when CO2 levels were lower you had several mass starvation events due to global crop failures (ironically enough, mostly from bad weather), and this despite the fact that the world population was a lot smaller.
IHowever we were still at CO2 levels from 50 years ago, one billion plus would have been threatened by starvation, and the price of cereals and other staples would have been higher.


You are missing several factors: first heat does not equal temperature, especially air temperature. Tremendous amounts of heat energy are used to convert water from ice to liquid and liquid to water vapor and to warm the oceans. An ice chest, sitting in the sun at the beach, absorbs heat from the sun continuously, but keeps the air around your food cold as the ice melts. However, once all the ice melts, the temperature soars. The ocean, which covers most of Earth's surface, is a huge heat sink. Inceased CO2 leads to acidification of water, and with increased water temperatures, is having tremendous negative effects on coral reefs and sea life in general. It is a negative for agriculture too, even if initially, CO2 is a benefit for crops.

So initially, the increase in CO2 does not increase air temperature as greatly. However, water vapor is itself a greenhouse gas. Methane, trapped in frozen Arctic tundra, is being released and it is an even stronger greenhouse gas. This eventually becomes a vicious circle and "runaway" effect. Planetary scientists believe something similar happened on Venus. Science understands these things better than you give them credit for. It is just a huge gamble to cause these massive changes to our planet, ones that scientists predict have huge negative consequences, and "hope" that it turns out OK just because we can find some short term positive benefits like crop productivity.

The world will not convert to renewable resources magically. The biggest issue is that the cost to the world, the "externalities," are not included in the price of fossil fuels. Sure, prices of renewables are low, in many cases lower than fossil fuels, but US subsidies for oil and gas and huge 100%+ tariffs on the lowest cost solar and electric cars are moving us in the wrong direction.

If you look at Earth's past, during time periods with warmer temperatures and higher sea levels, life in extreme northern latitudes and even Antarctica, flourished. That is how Alaska and Russia got so much oil. As the Earth continues to warm, humans will continue to need to leave the less habitable tropical climes, especially the islands and arid regions, and relocate to the northern countries to survive. So humanitarian immigration policies will be necessary if we do not do anything to stop global warming.


One last thing from me. The earth may be warming...it may be cooling...it may be staying the same. Whatever variations we are seeing is weather and the changes in it. It takes decades, even centuries, of consistent patterns to define a climate.

There are so many factors that contribute to the formation of climate that a small increase in CO2 can hardly override the major ones. The Sun, oceans, earth's core and magnetic field, intergalactic rays, among others, are so strong an influence that it seems arrogant of humans to think that our activities can override them. Sure we play a role, but only an insignificant one, certainly not one so powerful that justifies spending quadrillions in bankrupting money to force a half-degree, if that, and if we can discern it. But, a few very wealthy and very power-hungry people seem intent on persuading us to try.

Let us return our attention to what really matters - The Golden Bears.
stivo
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Rushinbear said:

calumnus said:

Cal88 said:

kal kommie said:

Cal88 said:

calumnus said:

CNHTH said:

Cal88 said:

Climate change as an issue has taken a backseat the last few years, it is not nearly as present in the media as it was a few years ago. I think the reason for this is that the decarbonization agenda is completely incompatible with the AI agenda, which consumes a tremendous amount of energy, and accounts today for nearly all the economic growth, in addition to being a very strategic technology.

This being said, the EV revolution and renewables getting cheaper and more accessible (solar and nuclear) mean that we may have already reached peak fossil fuel consumption just through technology and market forces alone (with subsidies as an assist).

Global warming alarmism is becoming a niche cultural/political issue, superseded by the highly turbulent current geopolitical context.


What exactly are you arguing?
That the second and third laws of thermodynamics are invalid?

Good luck with that!

1.)
-earth was 30C in the carbiniforous period due to millions of years of heavy volcanic activity

-those temps allowed planktons to proliferate in warm oceans and remove co2 from the atmosphere

-over 10s of millions of years those planktons formed oil as they were partially subducted.

2.) we're re-releasing that co2 that took tens of millions of years to sequester in a geologic millisecond.


There is a reason the Carboniferous Period is called the Carboniferous Period. The other factor was plant life moving to the land ahead of animal life that could consume them. Giant tree ferns, etc. produced so much oxygen that insects could grow to huge size and when the plants died and were buried under successive growth they captured huge amounts of carbon that has only been released in the last 150 years by digging up and burning those fossil fuels.

It is amazing that we have a pretty good understanding of the atmospheres of other planets and moons in our solar system, now even planets in far distant solar systems, but there are people who discount our FAR greater understanding of our own atmosphere and geologic history.


The issue here is you haven't heard the scientific argument putting the current situation in context, such as:

  • the effect of higher CO2 levels on global agricultural output and the ongoing greening of the earth
  • the logarithmic, not linear relationship between increased CO2 concentration and temperature increase from the greenhouse effect
  • the observed lack of acceleration of sea level rise from dozens of tidal gauges across the world, directly contradicting alarmist predictions of accelerating sea level rise
  • the current CO2 levels are, on a geological scale, close to the lowest they have been in the last billion year.


1. The uncertain extent of enhanced agricultural output from higher C02 levels and the greening of some northern latitude regions doesn't offset the more certain loss of agricultural output and habitability in adversely affected regions. It doesn't reassure the billions of people who live in areas threatened by drought and desertification in subtropical regions that Greenland, Siberia and the Yukon may become much more habitable.


There is nothing uncertain about the relationship between CO2 levels and agricultural output. It is a most elementary aspect of photosynthesis. Yield curves for every plant class have been established. The first thing a commercial greenhouse plant operator will do is to pump CO2 to 2-4 times atmospheric levels, boosting output by as much as 100%.
https://www.hortidaily.com/article/9674492/co2-enrichment-can-lead-to-increased-yields-from-40-to-100-in-plants-like-tomatoes/

As well plants respond much more to higher CO2 levels in arid climates, as plants need less water to grow the higher the CO2 levels, because they will have fewer stomata and will exhale less water in the process of capturing atmospheric CO2.

Quote:

CO2 boosts plant productivity

Plants use sunlight, carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and water for photosynthesis to produce oxygen and carbohydrates that plants use for energy and growth.
Rising levels of CO2 in the atmosphere drive an increase in plant photosynthesisan effect known as the carbon fertilization effect. New research has found that between 1982 and 2020, global plant photosynthesis grew 12 percent, tracking CO2 levels in the atmosphere as they rose 17 percent. The vast majority of this increase in photosynthesis was due to carbon dioxide fertilization.

Increased photosynthesis results in more growth in some plants. Scientists have found that in response to elevated CO2 levels, above-ground plant growth increased an average of 21 percent, while below-ground growth increased 28 percent. As a result, some crops such as wheat, rice and soybeans are expected to benefit from increased CO2 with an increase in yields from 12 to 14 percent.

Under elevated CO2 concentrations, plants use less water during photosynthesis. Plants have openings called stomata that allow CO2 to be absorbed and moisture to be released into the atmosphere. When CO2 levels rise, plants can maintain a high rate of photosynthesis and partially close their stomata, which can decrease a plant's water loss between 5 and 20 percent. Scientists have speculated that this could result in plants releasing less water to the atmosphere, thus keeping more on land, in the soil and streams.

https://news.climate.columbia.edu/2022/01/27/how-climate-change-will-affect-plants


Contrary to your post above, it is not just northern latitudes that are most benefitting from increased CO2, but arid regions like the African Sahel. Over the last several decades, the Sahara Desert has shrunk by over 10%, an area the size of France and Germany combined, largely due to CO2 fertilizing effect greening. As I have described above, the drier the conditions, the more powerful is the CO2 fertilizing effect.

https://theweek.com/environment/sahara-desert-turning-green
https://e360.yale.edu/features/greening-drylands-carbon-dioxide-climate-change


Green areas saw a growth in foliage from 2000 to 2017, while brown areas saw a drop. Joshua Stevens / NASA Earth Observatory




Quote:

2. The logarithmic effect of radiative forcing is already accounted for in IPCC models.

I don't think you understand that part. The amount of heat trapped from going from 100ppm CO2 to 200ppm is the same as that going from 200ppm to 400ppm, and the same as from 400ppm to 800ppm. The alarmist models claim that the heat generated is many multiples that of the heat trapped by the greenhouse effect, and that aspect is debated in academic circles.



Quote:

3. According to the IPCC, both tide gauges and satellites show an accelerating rise in global sea level since 1993. Skeptics cherry pick local gauges which show no acceleration due to natural local variability to support claims of no global acceleration.


This is the part that really doesn't stand scrutiny. Fact is, sea water rise levels are universal and uniform. The oceans rise due to two factors, thermal expansion of water, and ice from the polar caps (mostly antarctic) melting. The tidal gauge measurement are the combined effect of that universal sea water rise coupled with land movements, and while these vary from place to place, land movements are very linear. So if there was an acceleration in sea level rise, that acceleration will be visible on most tidal gauge measurements. The data however clearly contradicts that notion of accelerating sea level rise.







These data sets are powerful and reliable, because they span the last two centuries, and have been built with a very consistent methodology, unlike nearly every other temperature measurement used to justify the alarmist case. They clearly show that there has been no drastic acceleration in the rate of sea level rise over the last several decades.


Quote:

4. It is irrelevant that CO2 levels or even global temperatures have been higher at many points in the last billion years. It is the temporally local increase that is important because it is causing the changes in living conditions that people today and in the coming generations are going to have to reckon with.


The single most important impact of climate change on the human race is in the effect of climate on agricultural output, by a wide margin. In that aspect, higher CO2 levels have ironically been demonstrably beneficial.

The only mass starvation events we see in the modern era are from political factors (wars etc) and very limited geographically. In the 20th century when CO2 levels were lower you had several mass starvation events due to global crop failures (ironically enough, mostly from bad weather), and this despite the fact that the world population was a lot smaller.
IHowever we were still at CO2 levels from 50 years ago, one billion plus would have been threatened by starvation, and the price of cereals and other staples would have been higher.


You are missing several factors: first heat does not equal temperature, especially air temperature. Tremendous amounts of heat energy are used to convert water from ice to liquid and liquid to water vapor and to warm the oceans. An ice chest, sitting in the sun at the beach, absorbs heat from the sun continuously, but keeps the air around your food cold as the ice melts. However, once all the ice melts, the temperature soars. The ocean, which covers most of Earth's surface, is a huge heat sink. Inceased CO2 leads to acidification of water, and with increased water temperatures, is having tremendous negative effects on coral reefs and sea life in general. It is a negative for agriculture too, even if initially, CO2 is a benefit for crops.

So initially, the increase in CO2 does not increase air temperature as greatly. However, water vapor is itself a greenhouse gas. Methane, trapped in frozen Arctic tundra, is being released and it is an even stronger greenhouse gas. This eventually becomes a vicious circle and "runaway" effect. Planetary scientists believe something similar happened on Venus. Science understands these things better than you give them credit for. It is just a huge gamble to cause these massive changes to our planet, ones that scientists predict have huge negative consequences, and "hope" that it turns out OK just because we can find some short term positive benefits like crop productivity.

The world will not convert to renewable resources magically. The biggest issue is that the cost to the world, the "externalities," are not included in the price of fossil fuels. Sure, prices of renewables are low, in many cases lower than fossil fuels, but US subsidies for oil and gas and huge 100%+ tariffs on the lowest cost solar and electric cars are moving us in the wrong direction.

If you look at Earth's past, during time periods with warmer temperatures and higher sea levels, life in extreme northern latitudes and even Antarctica, flourished. That is how Alaska and Russia got so much oil. As the Earth continues to warm, humans will continue to need to leave the less habitable tropical climes, especially the islands and arid regions, and relocate to the northern countries to survive. So humanitarian immigration policies will be necessary if we do not do anything to stop global warming.


One last thing from me. The earth may be warming...it may be cooling...it may be staying the same. Whatever variations we are seeing is weather and the changes in it. It takes decades, even centuries, of consistent patterns to define a climate.

There are so many factors that contribute to the formation of climate that a small increase in CO2 can hardly override the major ones. The Sun, oceans, earth's core and magnetic field, intergalactic rays, among others, are so strong an influence that it seems arrogant of humans to think that our activities can override them. Sure we play a role, but only an insignificant one, certainly not one so powerful that justifies spending quadrillions in bankrupting money to force a half-degree, if that, and if we can discern it. But, a few very wealthy and very power-hungry people seem intent on persuading us to try.

Let us return our attention to what really matters - The Golden Bears.

No! The science is clear. You don't get to pretend that it isn't because of your conspiracy theories. My children's and grandchildren's future depend on our planet's climate, and anyone who attacks climate science is complicit in making the earth unsustainable for them and future generations. My feeling of connection with someone for being a fellow Cal Bear does not override my loyalty to my children and humanity in general.
Cal88
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sycasey said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88 said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88;842851510 said:

"Air pollution" was also the cause advanced to explain the global cooling from the 1960s-70s.









Back then, there was a scientific consensus that we were going to enter a new ice age, and that humanity should be mobilized to avoid man-made climate armageddon, with the usual assortment of global taxes and drastic global industrial curbs. Plus a change...


Prior to the 1990s, data showed that the 1930s-40s temperatures were about as high as today's. I would refer you to the chart for US temperature records I've posted above. Datasets like NASA's were "adjusted" by Hansen. Here's a good documentation of the evolution of NASA's history of tampering with its data:

https://realclimatescience.com/history-of-nasanoaa-temperature-corruption/


That Time magazine cover is a fake. Here's Time's comments about that photoshopped forgery:

http://science.time.com/2013/06/06/sorry-a-time-magazine-cover-did-not-predict-a-coming

So, if that was faked, what can we believe of the rest of it? We're not dealing with honest people.



The Time Magazine cover was a prop to illustrate the quote next to it, which is very real, and a prime example of the scientific consensus in the 1970s for global cooling:
Quote:

"The continued rapid cooling of the earth since WWII is in accord with the increase in global air pollution associated with industrialisation, mechanisation, urbanisation and exploding population."
- Reid Bryson, "Global Ecology; Readings towards a rational strategy for Man", 1971


Your disingenuous swiftboating exercice here consist of discrediting my whole argument, supported by literally dozens of proven quotes and published studies, because one magazine cover happened to be photoshopped.

It's both dishonest and lame.

I can't believe you felt the need to rant about a post I made in 2017. That's a long time to hold a grudge. I hope calling me names helped you feel better about yourself.


It's my fault. I had to dredge that up after Cal88 basically called me a liar for saying he had posted fake magazine stories, even though it's right there in black and white that he did.



You have been/are engaging in dishonest behavior with this characterization.
sycasey
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Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88 said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88;842851510 said:

"Air pollution" was also the cause advanced to explain the global cooling from the 1960s-70s.









Back then, there was a scientific consensus that we were going to enter a new ice age, and that humanity should be mobilized to avoid man-made climate armageddon, with the usual assortment of global taxes and drastic global industrial curbs. Plus a change...


Prior to the 1990s, data showed that the 1930s-40s temperatures were about as high as today's. I would refer you to the chart for US temperature records I've posted above. Datasets like NASA's were "adjusted" by Hansen. Here's a good documentation of the evolution of NASA's history of tampering with its data:

https://realclimatescience.com/history-of-nasanoaa-temperature-corruption/


That Time magazine cover is a fake. Here's Time's comments about that photoshopped forgery:

http://science.time.com/2013/06/06/sorry-a-time-magazine-cover-did-not-predict-a-coming

So, if that was faked, what can we believe of the rest of it? We're not dealing with honest people.



The Time Magazine cover was a prop to illustrate the quote next to it, which is very real, and a prime example of the scientific consensus in the 1970s for global cooling:
Quote:

"The continued rapid cooling of the earth since WWII is in accord with the increase in global air pollution associated with industrialisation, mechanisation, urbanisation and exploding population."
- Reid Bryson, "Global Ecology; Readings towards a rational strategy for Man", 1971


Your disingenuous swiftboating exercice here consist of discrediting my whole argument, supported by literally dozens of proven quotes and published studies, because one magazine cover happened to be photoshopped.

It's both dishonest and lame.

I can't believe you felt the need to rant about a post I made in 2017. That's a long time to hold a grudge. I hope calling me names helped you feel better about yourself.


It's my fault. I had to dredge that up after Cal88 basically called me a liar for saying he had posted fake magazine stories, even though it's right there in black and white that he did.



You have been/are engaging in dishonest behavior with this characterization.

Nothing I said was untrue. You want to argue that it's not material to your larger point? Fine. But don't call me a liar.
Cal88
How long do you want to ignore this user?
sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88 said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88;842851510 said:

"Air pollution" was also the cause advanced to explain the global cooling from the 1960s-70s.









Back then, there was a scientific consensus that we were going to enter a new ice age, and that humanity should be mobilized to avoid man-made climate armageddon, with the usual assortment of global taxes and drastic global industrial curbs. Plus a change...


Prior to the 1990s, data showed that the 1930s-40s temperatures were about as high as today's. I would refer you to the chart for US temperature records I've posted above. Datasets like NASA's were "adjusted" by Hansen. Here's a good documentation of the evolution of NASA's history of tampering with its data:

https://realclimatescience.com/history-of-nasanoaa-temperature-corruption/


That Time magazine cover is a fake. Here's Time's comments about that photoshopped forgery:

http://science.time.com/2013/06/06/sorry-a-time-magazine-cover-did-not-predict-a-coming

So, if that was faked, what can we believe of the rest of it? We're not dealing with honest people.



The Time Magazine cover was a prop to illustrate the quote next to it, which is very real, and a prime example of the scientific consensus in the 1970s for global cooling:
Quote:

"The continued rapid cooling of the earth since WWII is in accord with the increase in global air pollution associated with industrialisation, mechanisation, urbanisation and exploding population."
- Reid Bryson, "Global Ecology; Readings towards a rational strategy for Man", 1971


Your disingenuous swiftboating exercice here consist of discrediting my whole argument, supported by literally dozens of proven quotes and published studies, because one magazine cover happened to be photoshopped.

It's both dishonest and lame.

I can't believe you felt the need to rant about a post I made in 2017. That's a long time to hold a grudge. I hope calling me names helped you feel better about yourself.


It's my fault. I had to dredge that up after Cal88 basically called me a liar for saying he had posted fake magazine stories, even though it's right there in black and white that he did.



You have been/are engaging in dishonest behavior with this characterization.

Nothing I said was untrue. You want to argue that it's not material to your larger point? Fine. But don't call me a liar.



The quote I have used about a scientist claiming that the world climate was becoming colder due to human activity is 100% real and you know it. The Time Magazine cover that was used, which turned out to be photoshopped, is just a prop to illustrate that real scientific quote, so it is inconsequential.

You have used this graphic prop to smear me personally, and done that repeatedly, over a dozen times since. It's not only disingenuous, but also pathetic.

If you want to answer, I would suggest you start your own thread in OT, because people are a lot more interested in discussing climate change than about your annoyingly repetitive personal squabble.
Cal88
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TummyoftheGB said:

Rushinbear said:

kal kommie said:

Rushinbear said:

kal kommie said:

Cal88 said:

swan said:


Cite for energy market estimates:

https://www.thebusinessresearchcompany.com/report/renewable-energy-global-market-report


Assuming that you are correct and CO2 from human activity is leading to a disaster, the management of climate change is a moot point, because the world is going to shift to alternative sources of energy, mainly solar and nuclear, with EVs supplanting ICE vehicles due to market forces alone as battery tech improves.

Even if the world does eventually fully shift to alternative energy sources, management of climate change is not moot because the shift is not happening fast enough, at least not according to the IPCC. It sounds great that carbon emissions growth has plateaued over the past few years until you realize that according to the IPCC we need an emissions trajectory which hits -25% by 2030, -35/40% by 2035 and net-zero by 2070 just to limit warming to 2C by 2100. Current IEA projections estimate emissions decrease of only about 0-5% by 2030, consistent with a trajectory that leads to a very bad 2.5 to 3C warming scenario.

But I understand this is just your backup position. The real bottom line is that you reject the overwhelming consensus within climate science regarding anthropogenic climate change. I don't begrudge you an opinion of your own but I would like to know what if anything would change your mind.

The "Warming" argument has been compromised ever since the 70's/80's when we were to believe that Global Cooling was caused by increases in atmospheric CO2 being released in increasing amounts through the use of fossil fuels. Then, atmospheric warming was proclaimed. What happened? Atmospheric scientists fell victim to the almighty dollar, in the form of mutual back-scratching, corrupted grant and salary sources, collusion with private, self-interested sources of wealth, and all the ancillary crimes that go with them (most having to do with theft of global assets). At its most basic, here are some of the sources and warning signs of the process:

- Fossil fuels have been in control of big business, which the Left hates.

- The vast, vast majority of the world population, especially the "educated", have no earthly clue about statistics and how they can be manipulated.

- This mass media principle works: when you want the population to believe a lie, keep repeating it consistently and often, and don't respond to counter arguments, no matter how cogent. Just change the subject.

- In response to a statement with which you disagree, silence equals consent.

- The collection of temperature data is unscientific, for example:

  • The Stevenson Screen - that contraption you've seen in white, wooden, shutter enclosures around parking lots and airports - could not be programmed and was, in effect, a simple mercury thermometer. It was replaced with a hi tech platinum-based device which could be programmed (e.g. don't record temps under a certain level).
  • In the early years, there were about 16,000 Stevenson screens distributed globally. They have been replaced by about 8,500 of those platinum devices. They have never been placed at scientific random, but often in areas called "urban heat islands."
  • About 2/3 of temperature sensing devices, both the old and the new, are placed in the northern hemisphere. Why is that, if we're trying to record global temps?
  • About 1,000 thermometers are placed on buoys in the oceans. About half of those are secured to the oceans' floors. The rest are free to float with ocean currents and congregate together in protected places.
  • Climate scientists try to bolster their claims by insisting that satellite data confirms data collected on the surface, but this is false. Satellite data are not collected directly from the earth's surface, but are derived from mathematical models which attempt to correlate the surface data with indirect, derived statistics.
It appears that the Global Warming argument is losing steam, as more scientists and thinking people stop the music and look hard at these and many other arguments. Even Bill Gates is looking elsewhere.


If you want to believe that the overwhelming consensus within the field of climate science regarding climate change is the product of an absurd conspiracy spanning two generations and involving God knows how many people from every major country on Earth for ridiculously uncompelling motives, then trying to argue you out of it is an order of magnitude more pointless than even the average internet argument.

$$$$$$ and power, as they always have. Just a different pretext.

Ok, I've resisted chiming in until now, but this latest bit of rage baiting has drawn me in! I'm a climate scientist, and yes, I know every single scientist mentioned in this thread personally (it's still a relatively small community.) The insinuation that we're corrupted by $$ and power, or otherwise acting in bad faith, is so patently absurd that I have to wonder how you arrived at your opinion, and what your source of such disinformation might be. Most of the falsehoods that you've cited bear the hallmark of the Heartland propaganda machine: 1.) no one was ever talking about global cooling in the 70's and 80's (this was when I was starting grad school); 2.) there are well-known changes to manner/distribution/technology of temperature observations over the 20th century and any global compilation MUST account for those changes statistically (in other words, it's not suspicious or corrupt statistical manipulation--the adjustments made are simply what has to be done to compile a meaningful and consistent global index); 3.) the number of ARGO floats in the global oceans that have been taking consistent temperature and salinity measurements at all depths of the ocean down to 3 km is well over 4000, and, while it's true that they passively ride the ocean currents, they don't congregate in protected areas--in fact, these floats provide the best and least biased way to understand how/where/when heat has gone in the ocean in the 21st century and provide unequivocal proof of net heat gain of the upper ocean (i.e. global warming) 4.) sea level in most coastal areas is the product of both geological and climate processes; for example, there are places like Canadian seaboard, where the coastline is coming up out of the ocean, despite the warming of the ocean and loss of polar ice, because the Earth is still responding to the loss of the load of the former Laurentide Ice Sheet; these are well-known effects, and, at least in North America, have been extensively-monitored by geodetic arrays. But as a result of the complexity of processes involved locally, sea level is easiest to cherry pick; however, for what it's worth, my colleagues who do the detailed satellite-based monitoring of polar ice sheets are, privately, even MORE worried about catastrophic ice loss than what they may let on through popular media channels (so these media statements are actually much less alarmist than they could be).
Anyway, if I'm correct that you've been indoctrinated by Heartland Institute gaslighting, I'm not going to convince you of anything. But I would at least request that you reconsider your perspective on scientists (like me) and the motivation for our work. Go Bears.




First of all, it would be helpful to use paragraphs when making long posts.

Quote:

Most of the falsehoods that you've cited bear the hallmark of the Heartland propaganda machine: 1.) no one was ever talking about global cooling in the 70's and 80's (this was when I was starting grad school)


Not true, there was a scientific consensus about global cooling in the 1970s, mostly attributed to human activity. I can prove that you are wrong about this.



Quote:

4.) sea level in most coastal areas is the product of both geological and climate processes; for example, there are places like Canadian seaboard, where the coastline is coming up out of the ocean, despite the warming of the ocean and loss of polar ice, because the Earth is still responding to the loss of the load of the former Laurentide Ice Sheet; these are well-known effects, and, at least in North America, have been extensively-monitored by geodetic arrays. But as a result of the complexity of processes involved locally, sea level is easiest to cherry pick


You've missed my basic point, I will lay is out in a bit more detail once again:

Say M is the tidal gauge measurement at time T, it is merely the result of two movements, the rise or fall of sea level S, and of land rise/fall L.

M = S + L

Here's the deal, L, the rise or fall of land at a given station is a local phenomenon (though there are some wider global phenomena like the "rebound" of northern land masses after the melting of the ice sheet). The changes in L vary from location to location, but they are mostly linear, barring discrete events like earthquakes or sudden, punctual movements.

However, the changes in sea level S are almost exclusively global, ie, if ocean levels are rising at one pt on earth, they will be rising everywhere else. So if sea level rise was accelerating, you should be able to see that acceleration at almost every tidal gauge station.

M = S + L

L is linear
If S was not linear (ie accelerating sea rise), then M would not be linear.

We observe that the overwhelming majority of measurements of tidal gauges is linear.



Therefore, the rise in sea level is linear, and not accelerating.
sycasey
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Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88 said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88;842851510 said:

"Air pollution" was also the cause advanced to explain the global cooling from the 1960s-70s.









Back then, there was a scientific consensus that we were going to enter a new ice age, and that humanity should be mobilized to avoid man-made climate armageddon, with the usual assortment of global taxes and drastic global industrial curbs. Plus a change...


Prior to the 1990s, data showed that the 1930s-40s temperatures were about as high as today's. I would refer you to the chart for US temperature records I've posted above. Datasets like NASA's were "adjusted" by Hansen. Here's a good documentation of the evolution of NASA's history of tampering with its data:

https://realclimatescience.com/history-of-nasanoaa-temperature-corruption/


That Time magazine cover is a fake. Here's Time's comments about that photoshopped forgery:

http://science.time.com/2013/06/06/sorry-a-time-magazine-cover-did-not-predict-a-coming

So, if that was faked, what can we believe of the rest of it? We're not dealing with honest people.



The Time Magazine cover was a prop to illustrate the quote next to it, which is very real, and a prime example of the scientific consensus in the 1970s for global cooling:
Quote:

"The continued rapid cooling of the earth since WWII is in accord with the increase in global air pollution associated with industrialisation, mechanisation, urbanisation and exploding population."
- Reid Bryson, "Global Ecology; Readings towards a rational strategy for Man", 1971


Your disingenuous swiftboating exercice here consist of discrediting my whole argument, supported by literally dozens of proven quotes and published studies, because one magazine cover happened to be photoshopped.

It's both dishonest and lame.

I can't believe you felt the need to rant about a post I made in 2017. That's a long time to hold a grudge. I hope calling me names helped you feel better about yourself.


It's my fault. I had to dredge that up after Cal88 basically called me a liar for saying he had posted fake magazine stories, even though it's right there in black and white that he did.



You have been/are engaging in dishonest behavior with this characterization.

Nothing I said was untrue. You want to argue that it's not material to your larger point? Fine. But don't call me a liar.



The quote I have used about a scientist claiming that the world climate was becoming colder due to human activity is 100% real and you know it. The Time Magazine cover that was used, which turned out to be photoshopped, is just a prop to illustrate that real scientific quote, so it is inconsequential.

You have used this graphic prop to smear me personally, and done that repeatedly, over a dozen times since. It's not only disingenuous, but also pathetic.

If you want to answer, I would suggest you start your own thread in OT, because people are a lot more interested in discussing climate change than about your annoyingly repetitive personal squabble.

I didn't say anything about the quote. I said you posted magazine covers/articles that turned out to be fake. Then you accused me of slander. It was not slander, because what I said was true.

This whole exchange could easily be avoided if you would just admit your own mistakes rather than accusing me of lying. You can still post whatever you want about climate change and I can't stop you. I just don't like being accused of something I didn't do.
Cal88
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sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88 said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88;842851510 said:

"Air pollution" was also the cause advanced to explain the global cooling from the 1960s-70s.









Back then, there was a scientific consensus that we were going to enter a new ice age, and that humanity should be mobilized to avoid man-made climate armageddon, with the usual assortment of global taxes and drastic global industrial curbs. Plus a change...


Prior to the 1990s, data showed that the 1930s-40s temperatures were about as high as today's. I would refer you to the chart for US temperature records I've posted above. Datasets like NASA's were "adjusted" by Hansen. Here's a good documentation of the evolution of NASA's history of tampering with its data:

https://realclimatescience.com/history-of-nasanoaa-temperature-corruption/


That Time magazine cover is a fake. Here's Time's comments about that photoshopped forgery:

http://science.time.com/2013/06/06/sorry-a-time-magazine-cover-did-not-predict-a-coming

So, if that was faked, what can we believe of the rest of it? We're not dealing with honest people.



The Time Magazine cover was a prop to illustrate the quote next to it, which is very real, and a prime example of the scientific consensus in the 1970s for global cooling:
Quote:

"The continued rapid cooling of the earth since WWII is in accord with the increase in global air pollution associated with industrialisation, mechanisation, urbanisation and exploding population."
- Reid Bryson, "Global Ecology; Readings towards a rational strategy for Man", 1971


Your disingenuous swiftboating exercice here consist of discrediting my whole argument, supported by literally dozens of proven quotes and published studies, because one magazine cover happened to be photoshopped.

It's both dishonest and lame.

I can't believe you felt the need to rant about a post I made in 2017. That's a long time to hold a grudge. I hope calling me names helped you feel better about yourself.


It's my fault. I had to dredge that up after Cal88 basically called me a liar for saying he had posted fake magazine stories, even though it's right there in black and white that he did.



You have been/are engaging in dishonest behavior with this characterization.

Nothing I said was untrue. You want to argue that it's not material to your larger point? Fine. But don't call me a liar.



The quote I have used about a scientist claiming that the world climate was becoming colder due to human activity is 100% real and you know it. The Time Magazine cover that was used, which turned out to be photoshopped, is just a prop to illustrate that real scientific quote, so it is inconsequential.

You have used this graphic prop to smear me personally, and done that repeatedly, over a dozen times since. It's not only disingenuous, but also pathetic.

If you want to answer, I would suggest you start your own thread in OT, because people are a lot more interested in discussing climate change than about your annoyingly repetitive personal squabble.

I didn't say anything about the quote. I said you posted magazine covers/articles that turned out to be fake. Then you accused me of slander. It was not slander, because what I said was true.

This whole exchange could easily be avoided if you would just admit your own mistakes rather than accusing me of lying. You can still post whatever you want about climate change and I can't stop you. I just don't like being accused of something I didn't do.


I've never posted articles that turned out to be fake, so you are actually lying here. I posted a quote that was real, from a 1970s scientific article, which was illustrated by a photoshopped Time Magazine cover, and that was a post from 2017, that you have dug up, and used well over a dozen times to claim that I was some kind of a forger.

This is not only dishonest, it's borderline neurotic.
Cal88
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calumnus said:

Cal88 said:

kal kommie said:

Cal88 said:

calumnus said:

CNHTH said:

Cal88 said:

Climate change as an issue has taken a backseat the last few years, it is not nearly as present in the media as it was a few years ago. I think the reason for this is that the decarbonization agenda is completely incompatible with the AI agenda, which consumes a tremendous amount of energy, and accounts today for nearly all the economic growth, in addition to being a very strategic technology.

This being said, the EV revolution and renewables getting cheaper and more accessible (solar and nuclear) mean that we may have already reached peak fossil fuel consumption just through technology and market forces alone (with subsidies as an assist).

Global warming alarmism is becoming a niche cultural/political issue, superseded by the highly turbulent current geopolitical context.


What exactly are you arguing?
That the second and third laws of thermodynamics are invalid?

Good luck with that!

1.)
-earth was 30C in the carbiniforous period due to millions of years of heavy volcanic activity

-those temps allowed planktons to proliferate in warm oceans and remove co2 from the atmosphere

-over 10s of millions of years those planktons formed oil as they were partially subducted.

2.) we're re-releasing that co2 that took tens of millions of years to sequester in a geologic millisecond.


There is a reason the Carboniferous Period is called the Carboniferous Period. The other factor was plant life moving to the land ahead of animal life that could consume them. Giant tree ferns, etc. produced so much oxygen that insects could grow to huge size and when the plants died and were buried under successive growth they captured huge amounts of carbon that has only been released in the last 150 years by digging up and burning those fossil fuels.

It is amazing that we have a pretty good understanding of the atmospheres of other planets and moons in our solar system, now even planets in far distant solar systems, but there are people who discount our FAR greater understanding of our own atmosphere and geologic history.


The issue here is you haven't heard the scientific argument putting the current situation in context, such as:

  • the effect of higher CO2 levels on global agricultural output and the ongoing greening of the earth
  • the logarithmic, not linear relationship between increased CO2 concentration and temperature increase from the greenhouse effect
  • the observed lack of acceleration of sea level rise from dozens of tidal gauges across the world, directly contradicting alarmist predictions of accelerating sea level rise
  • the current CO2 levels are, on a geological scale, close to the lowest they have been in the last billion year.


1. The uncertain extent of enhanced agricultural output from higher C02 levels and the greening of some northern latitude regions doesn't offset the more certain loss of agricultural output and habitability in adversely affected regions. It doesn't reassure the billions of people who live in areas threatened by drought and desertification in subtropical regions that Greenland, Siberia and the Yukon may become much more habitable.


There is nothing uncertain about the relationship between CO2 levels and agricultural output. It is a most elementary aspect of photosynthesis. Yield curves for every plant class have been established. The first thing a commercial greenhouse plant operator will do is to pump CO2 to 2-4 times atmospheric levels, boosting output by as much as 100%.
https://www.hortidaily.com/article/9674492/co2-enrichment-can-lead-to-increased-yields-from-40-to-100-in-plants-like-tomatoes/

As well plants respond much more to higher CO2 levels in arid climates, as plants need less water to grow the higher the CO2 levels, because they will have fewer stomata and will exhale less water in the process of capturing atmospheric CO2.

Quote:

CO2 boosts plant productivity

Plants use sunlight, carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and water for photosynthesis to produce oxygen and carbohydrates that plants use for energy and growth.
Rising levels of CO2 in the atmosphere drive an increase in plant photosynthesisan effect known as the carbon fertilization effect. New research has found that between 1982 and 2020, global plant photosynthesis grew 12 percent, tracking CO2 levels in the atmosphere as they rose 17 percent. The vast majority of this increase in photosynthesis was due to carbon dioxide fertilization.

Increased photosynthesis results in more growth in some plants. Scientists have found that in response to elevated CO2 levels, above-ground plant growth increased an average of 21 percent, while below-ground growth increased 28 percent. As a result, some crops such as wheat, rice and soybeans are expected to benefit from increased CO2 with an increase in yields from 12 to 14 percent.

Under elevated CO2 concentrations, plants use less water during photosynthesis. Plants have openings called stomata that allow CO2 to be absorbed and moisture to be released into the atmosphere. When CO2 levels rise, plants can maintain a high rate of photosynthesis and partially close their stomata, which can decrease a plant's water loss between 5 and 20 percent. Scientists have speculated that this could result in plants releasing less water to the atmosphere, thus keeping more on land, in the soil and streams.

https://news.climate.columbia.edu/2022/01/27/how-climate-change-will-affect-plants


Contrary to your post above, it is not just northern latitudes that are most benefitting from increased CO2, but arid regions like the African Sahel. Over the last several decades, the Sahara Desert has shrunk by over 10%, an area the size of France and Germany combined, largely due to CO2 fertilizing effect greening. As I have described above, the drier the conditions, the more powerful is the CO2 fertilizing effect.

https://theweek.com/environment/sahara-desert-turning-green
https://e360.yale.edu/features/greening-drylands-carbon-dioxide-climate-change


Green areas saw a growth in foliage from 2000 to 2017, while brown areas saw a drop. Joshua Stevens / NASA Earth Observatory




Quote:

2. The logarithmic effect of radiative forcing is already accounted for in IPCC models.

I don't think you understand that part. The amount of heat trapped from going from 100ppm CO2 to 200ppm is the same as that going from 200ppm to 400ppm, and the same as from 400ppm to 800ppm. The alarmist models claim that the heat generated is many multiples that of the heat trapped by the greenhouse effect, and that aspect is debated in academic circles.



Quote:

3. According to the IPCC, both tide gauges and satellites show an accelerating rise in global sea level since 1993. Skeptics cherry pick local gauges which show no acceleration due to natural local variability to support claims of no global acceleration.


This is the part that really doesn't stand scrutiny. Fact is, sea water rise levels are universal and uniform. The oceans rise due to two factors, thermal expansion of water, and ice from the polar caps (mostly antarctic) melting. The tidal gauge measurement are the combined effect of that universal sea water rise coupled with land movements, and while these vary from place to place, land movements are very linear. So if there was an acceleration in sea level rise, that acceleration will be visible on most tidal gauge measurements. The data however clearly contradicts that notion of accelerating sea level rise.







These data sets are powerful and reliable, because they span the last two centuries, and have been built with a very consistent methodology, unlike nearly every other temperature measurement used to justify the alarmist case. They clearly show that there has been no drastic acceleration in the rate of sea level rise over the last several decades.


Quote:

4. It is irrelevant that CO2 levels or even global temperatures have been higher at many points in the last billion years. It is the temporally local increase that is important because it is causing the changes in living conditions that people today and in the coming generations are going to have to reckon with.


The single most important impact of climate change on the human race is in the effect of climate on agricultural output, by a wide margin. In that aspect, higher CO2 levels have ironically been demonstrably beneficial.

The only mass starvation events we see in the modern era are from political factors (wars etc) and very limited geographically. In the 20th century when CO2 levels were lower you had several mass starvation events due to global crop failures (ironically enough, mostly from bad weather), and this despite the fact that the world population was a lot smaller.
IHowever we were still at CO2 levels from 50 years ago, one billion plus would have been threatened by starvation, and the price of cereals and other staples would have been higher.


You are missing several factors: first heat does not equal temperature, especially air temperature. Tremendous amounts of heat energy are used to convert water from ice to liquid and liquid to water vapor and to warm the oceans. An ice chest, sitting in the sun at the beach, absorbs heat from the sun continuously, but keeps the air around your food cold as the ice melts. However, once all the ice melts, the temperature soars. The ocean, which covers most of Earth's surface, is a huge heat sink. Inceased CO2 leads to acidification of water, and with increased water temperatures, is having tremendous negative effects on coral reefs and sea life in general. It is a negative for agriculture too, even if initially, CO2 is a benefit for crops.

So initially, the increase in CO2 does not increase air temperature as greatly. However, water vapor is itself a greenhouse gas. Methane, trapped in frozen Arctic tundra, is being released and it is an even stronger greenhouse gas. This eventually becomes a vicious circle and "runaway" effect. Planetary scientists believe something similar happened on Venus. Science understands these things better than you give them credit for. It is just a huge gamble to cause these massive changes to our planet, ones that scientists predict have huge negative consequences, and "hope" that it turns out OK just because we can find some short term positive benefits like crop productivity.


CO2 is hugely beneficial to agriculture and biomass on earth. Increases in CO2 have been the difference between mass starvation for the bottom 10-20% of humanity and crops being so abundant and productive that we have already reached peak farmland, meaning that the land needed to feed the world today is declining, even as demand for food and meat has skyrocketed due to China and other developing nations being able to afford meat today.

The baseline we use for CO2, levels from the 18th-19th century, were from a time when CO2 levels were dangerously low, in the high 200ppm. These levels were some of the lowest in the entire history of the planet, to give you an idea of how low these were, a drop in CO2 concentration to below 200ppm would crash most crops, and at around 150ppm photosynthesis would cease altogether and life of earth would end! The planet was starved of CO2 before the industrial age.



Life and the planet thrived in periods where CO2 concentration were orders of magnitude higher than they are today.




Quote:

The world will not convert to renewable resources magically. The biggest issue is that the cost to the world, the "externalities," are not included in the price of fossil fuels. Sure, prices of renewables are low, in many cases lower than fossil fuels, but US subsidies for oil and gas and huge 100%+ tariffs on the lowest cost solar and electric cars are moving us in the wrong direction.


The world is converting to renewables, not magically but due to market forces alone and technological improvements in fields such as solar panels, batteries and EVs. Nuclear is back in favor, and new advances in thorium NPP will likely translate in a new global boom in the 2030s. 10 years from now the majority of cars in Europe will be EV, and in China, in less than 5 years. The ongoing war of choice on Iran and ensuing oil shock is also going to prompt consumers in places like Thailand, Australia, Japan or S Korea to switch to EVs.

I agree about subsidies to fossil fuels being bad policy, especially when there is a deliberate effort to stand in the way of renewables.


Quote:


If you look at Earth's past, during time periods with warmer temperatures and higher sea levels, life in extreme northern latitudes and even Antarctica, flourished. That is how Alaska and Russia got so much oil. As the Earth continues to warm, humans will continue to need to leave the less habitable tropical climes, especially the islands and arid regions, and relocate to the northern countries to survive. So humanitarian immigration policies will be necessary if we do not do anything to stop global warming.

Conditions are actually improving in most arid regions, consider the African Sahel or the Asian Gobi deserts, these deserts have been shrinking and greening. See my post above.

The IPCC and UN reports which have claimed that there would be hundreds of million of "climate refugees" have turned out to be wrong, over and over again, decade after decade. The main source of mass emigration is war, explosive population growth mostly in sub-saharan Africa, and people seeking better economic conditions. But this has very little to do with climate change.


Big C
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Prediction: By the time I wake up tomorrow morning, go to 7-11 and buy a lottery ticket to save California Basketball, grab a coffee and a cheese danish and come home, this thread will be banished to the Off Topic forum. Can't wait!
sycasey
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Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88 said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88;842851510 said:

"Air pollution" was also the cause advanced to explain the global cooling from the 1960s-70s.









Back then, there was a scientific consensus that we were going to enter a new ice age, and that humanity should be mobilized to avoid man-made climate armageddon, with the usual assortment of global taxes and drastic global industrial curbs. Plus a change...


Prior to the 1990s, data showed that the 1930s-40s temperatures were about as high as today's. I would refer you to the chart for US temperature records I've posted above. Datasets like NASA's were "adjusted" by Hansen. Here's a good documentation of the evolution of NASA's history of tampering with its data:

https://realclimatescience.com/history-of-nasanoaa-temperature-corruption/


That Time magazine cover is a fake. Here's Time's comments about that photoshopped forgery:

http://science.time.com/2013/06/06/sorry-a-time-magazine-cover-did-not-predict-a-coming

So, if that was faked, what can we believe of the rest of it? We're not dealing with honest people.



The Time Magazine cover was a prop to illustrate the quote next to it, which is very real, and a prime example of the scientific consensus in the 1970s for global cooling:
Quote:

"The continued rapid cooling of the earth since WWII is in accord with the increase in global air pollution associated with industrialisation, mechanisation, urbanisation and exploding population."
- Reid Bryson, "Global Ecology; Readings towards a rational strategy for Man", 1971


Your disingenuous swiftboating exercice here consist of discrediting my whole argument, supported by literally dozens of proven quotes and published studies, because one magazine cover happened to be photoshopped.

It's both dishonest and lame.

I can't believe you felt the need to rant about a post I made in 2017. That's a long time to hold a grudge. I hope calling me names helped you feel better about yourself.


It's my fault. I had to dredge that up after Cal88 basically called me a liar for saying he had posted fake magazine stories, even though it's right there in black and white that he did.



You have been/are engaging in dishonest behavior with this characterization.

Nothing I said was untrue. You want to argue that it's not material to your larger point? Fine. But don't call me a liar.



The quote I have used about a scientist claiming that the world climate was becoming colder due to human activity is 100% real and you know it. The Time Magazine cover that was used, which turned out to be photoshopped, is just a prop to illustrate that real scientific quote, so it is inconsequential.

You have used this graphic prop to smear me personally, and done that repeatedly, over a dozen times since. It's not only disingenuous, but also pathetic.

If you want to answer, I would suggest you start your own thread in OT, because people are a lot more interested in discussing climate change than about your annoyingly repetitive personal squabble.

I didn't say anything about the quote. I said you posted magazine covers/articles that turned out to be fake. Then you accused me of slander. It was not slander, because what I said was true.

This whole exchange could easily be avoided if you would just admit your own mistakes rather than accusing me of lying. You can still post whatever you want about climate change and I can't stop you. I just don't like being accused of something I didn't do.


I've never posted articles that turned out to be fake, so you are actually lying here.

https://bearinsider.com/forums/2/topics/66429/replies/1380719
(A lot of these links are broken now, but I'm showing my work where I found that the articles you posted were not what you said they were.)

As to these being from 2017: yes, they are. I'm happy to let it drop, but if you keep calling me a liar I will keep refuting that claim.
Cal88
How long do you want to ignore this user?
sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88 said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88;842851510 said:

"Air pollution" was also the cause advanced to explain the global cooling from the 1960s-70s.









Back then, there was a scientific consensus that we were going to enter a new ice age, and that humanity should be mobilized to avoid man-made climate armageddon, with the usual assortment of global taxes and drastic global industrial curbs. Plus a change...


Prior to the 1990s, data showed that the 1930s-40s temperatures were about as high as today's. I would refer you to the chart for US temperature records I've posted above. Datasets like NASA's were "adjusted" by Hansen. Here's a good documentation of the evolution of NASA's history of tampering with its data:

https://realclimatescience.com/history-of-nasanoaa-temperature-corruption/


That Time magazine cover is a fake. Here's Time's comments about that photoshopped forgery:

http://science.time.com/2013/06/06/sorry-a-time-magazine-cover-did-not-predict-a-coming

So, if that was faked, what can we believe of the rest of it? We're not dealing with honest people.



The Time Magazine cover was a prop to illustrate the quote next to it, which is very real, and a prime example of the scientific consensus in the 1970s for global cooling:
Quote:

"The continued rapid cooling of the earth since WWII is in accord with the increase in global air pollution associated with industrialisation, mechanisation, urbanisation and exploding population."
- Reid Bryson, "Global Ecology; Readings towards a rational strategy for Man", 1971


Your disingenuous swiftboating exercice here consist of discrediting my whole argument, supported by literally dozens of proven quotes and published studies, because one magazine cover happened to be photoshopped.

It's both dishonest and lame.

I can't believe you felt the need to rant about a post I made in 2017. That's a long time to hold a grudge. I hope calling me names helped you feel better about yourself.


It's my fault. I had to dredge that up after Cal88 basically called me a liar for saying he had posted fake magazine stories, even though it's right there in black and white that he did.



You have been/are engaging in dishonest behavior with this characterization.

Nothing I said was untrue. You want to argue that it's not material to your larger point? Fine. But don't call me a liar.



The quote I have used about a scientist claiming that the world climate was becoming colder due to human activity is 100% real and you know it. The Time Magazine cover that was used, which turned out to be photoshopped, is just a prop to illustrate that real scientific quote, so it is inconsequential.

You have used this graphic prop to smear me personally, and done that repeatedly, over a dozen times since. It's not only disingenuous, but also pathetic.

If you want to answer, I would suggest you start your own thread in OT, because people are a lot more interested in discussing climate change than about your annoyingly repetitive personal squabble.

I didn't say anything about the quote. I said you posted magazine covers/articles that turned out to be fake. Then you accused me of slander. It was not slander, because what I said was true.

This whole exchange could easily be avoided if you would just admit your own mistakes rather than accusing me of lying. You can still post whatever you want about climate change and I can't stop you. I just don't like being accused of something I didn't do.


I've never posted articles that turned out to be fake, so you are actually lying here.

https://bearinsider.com/forums/2/topics/66429/replies/1380719
(A lot of these links are broken now, but I'm showing my work where I found that the articles you posted were not what you said they were.)

As to these being from 2017: yes, they are. I'm happy to let it drop, but if you keep calling me a liar I will keep refuting that claim.


It's not about a difference in interpretation of the many articles I have posted in 2017, you have claimed that I have "posted fake magazine stories", a broad characterization based on one illustrative magazine cover on a quote being photoshopped among a series of 15-20 articles whose authenticity is beyond dispute.

Those kind of tactics are common in court but they are disingenuous.
Cal88
How long do you want to ignore this user?
The current oil and gas shock from Trump's war of choice in the Gulf is going to accelerate the adoption of renewables and EVs.





^That estimate of EV sales is very conservative, made before the Iran war energy crisis, you're going to see much faster adoption in Europe, Japan, SE Asia etc, cutting 10%-20% in the consumption of oil for transport. We will reach peak oil consumption this decade.

"Electric vehicles are increasingly cost-competitive with gasoline cars. Oil volatility means EVs are a common-sense choice for countries wishing to insulate themselves from future shocks." Dan Walter, analyst at Ember.
sycasey
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88 said:

Eastern Oregon Bear said:

Cal88;842851510 said:

"Air pollution" was also the cause advanced to explain the global cooling from the 1960s-70s.









Back then, there was a scientific consensus that we were going to enter a new ice age, and that humanity should be mobilized to avoid man-made climate armageddon, with the usual assortment of global taxes and drastic global industrial curbs. Plus a change...


Prior to the 1990s, data showed that the 1930s-40s temperatures were about as high as today's. I would refer you to the chart for US temperature records I've posted above. Datasets like NASA's were "adjusted" by Hansen. Here's a good documentation of the evolution of NASA's history of tampering with its data:

https://realclimatescience.com/history-of-nasanoaa-temperature-corruption/


That Time magazine cover is a fake. Here's Time's comments about that photoshopped forgery:

http://science.time.com/2013/06/06/sorry-a-time-magazine-cover-did-not-predict-a-coming

So, if that was faked, what can we believe of the rest of it? We're not dealing with honest people.



The Time Magazine cover was a prop to illustrate the quote next to it, which is very real, and a prime example of the scientific consensus in the 1970s for global cooling:
Quote:

"The continued rapid cooling of the earth since WWII is in accord with the increase in global air pollution associated with industrialisation, mechanisation, urbanisation and exploding population."
- Reid Bryson, "Global Ecology; Readings towards a rational strategy for Man", 1971


Your disingenuous swiftboating exercice here consist of discrediting my whole argument, supported by literally dozens of proven quotes and published studies, because one magazine cover happened to be photoshopped.

It's both dishonest and lame.

I can't believe you felt the need to rant about a post I made in 2017. That's a long time to hold a grudge. I hope calling me names helped you feel better about yourself.


It's my fault. I had to dredge that up after Cal88 basically called me a liar for saying he had posted fake magazine stories, even though it's right there in black and white that he did.



You have been/are engaging in dishonest behavior with this characterization.

Nothing I said was untrue. You want to argue that it's not material to your larger point? Fine. But don't call me a liar.



The quote I have used about a scientist claiming that the world climate was becoming colder due to human activity is 100% real and you know it. The Time Magazine cover that was used, which turned out to be photoshopped, is just a prop to illustrate that real scientific quote, so it is inconsequential.

You have used this graphic prop to smear me personally, and done that repeatedly, over a dozen times since. It's not only disingenuous, but also pathetic.

If you want to answer, I would suggest you start your own thread in OT, because people are a lot more interested in discussing climate change than about your annoyingly repetitive personal squabble.

I didn't say anything about the quote. I said you posted magazine covers/articles that turned out to be fake. Then you accused me of slander. It was not slander, because what I said was true.

This whole exchange could easily be avoided if you would just admit your own mistakes rather than accusing me of lying. You can still post whatever you want about climate change and I can't stop you. I just don't like being accused of something I didn't do.


I've never posted articles that turned out to be fake, so you are actually lying here.

https://bearinsider.com/forums/2/topics/66429/replies/1380719
(A lot of these links are broken now, but I'm showing my work where I found that the articles you posted were not what you said they were.)

As to these being from 2017: yes, they are. I'm happy to let it drop, but if you keep calling me a liar I will keep refuting that claim.


It's not about a difference in interpretation of the many articles I have posted in 2017, you have claimed that I have "posted fake magazine stories", a broad characterization based on one illustrative magazine cover on a quote being photoshopped among a series of 15-20 articles whose authenticity is beyond dispute.

Those kind of tactics are common in court but they are disingenuous.

It's one that was a completely fabricated cover and three that were "real" articles but were not actually about climate change or "global cooling" as you had claimed. My links make this clear.
smh
How long do you want to ignore this user?
> My links make this clear.

yet another reminder of living with alzheimers..
can't always tell what obviously sarcastic meaning most respected posters are shooting for
sighned, not dead yet # funk trunk
 
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