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Stop making fire? what do you mean? Like burning wood? Or you think we can't stop burning fossil fuels? Why?
But imagine the same thousands of meters thick glaciers over north America and Europe. This is what severe climate change means and I'm not sure you can count on the opposite warming to be beneficial. At the very least it won't be for everyone.
And you can make it as large as you wish because it won't stop until we stop.
People got matches and want to stay warm.
Cancel the Alarm, nothing to see here.
Burning wood alone wouldn't cause global warming.
200, 300 yrs? A blink in the history of mankind.
HEYYOU saysEveryone in this country should be required to spend one day in a landfill each month,
not at the entrance gate but in close proximity to the trash.
Had a classmate that worked at the local landfill. He died of some strange cancer at the age of 35.
We are poisoning the world. Imagine the carbon footprint of an aircraft carrier group?
This consumer driven debt and death economic paradigm has to shift before we will ever "save" the world.
Time may not change the minds of the holdouts, but time has and will continue to refute their apocalyptic predictions of exponential temperature and sea rise.
There won't be anything dramatic in the near term.
No one says there will be. It's just catastrophic in the longer term,
you don't care about.
replacing fossil fuels with renewables, building better solar panels and batteries, etc...and nuclear!
and ignore the barking dogs.
Sure it didn't bother humans too much back then. But imagine the same thousands of meters thick glaciers over north America and Europe. This is what severe climate change means and I'm not sure you can count on the opposite warming to be beneficial. At the very least it won't be for everyone.
And you wouldn't say we are there at 7 billions going toward 9 billions in the next 30 yrs? With most of the increase in the warmest areas?
We will get 8C eventually if we don't stop burning fossil fuels. And I don't see where this number came from. The episodes I mentioned before were much more mild and still had huge impacts.
What I'm saying is, the path to getting off fossil fuels is Nuclear power.
What I'm saying is, the path to getting off fossil fuels is Nuclear power. Instead of billions for solar, we should be rapidly building Gen 3+ and Gen 4 Test Reactors left and right. And of course, the car must go, because batteries are far, far, far from being viable and we can't both go to renewables/zero CO2 emissions while switching to electric vehicles, not to mention the horrific pollution from refining rare earth metals.
Arguing about the solution means accepting that there is a problem.
Solar and wind power are poised to become the cheapest forms of new electricity across large swaths of the globe.
Onvacation saysPeople got matches and want to stay warm.
Burning wood alone wouldn't cause global warming.
building better solar panels and batteries,
Heraclitusstudent saysSolar and wind power are poised to become the cheapest forms of new electricity across large swaths of the globe.
And they give off reliable power, with no need for very expensive and environmentally hazardous-to-produce batteries?
CO2 greenhouse effect in details
" However, many other chemicals are produced when wood is burnt, including one of the most potent greenhouse gases, nitrogen dioxide; although the amounts may be small (200 g of CO2 equivalent per kg of wood burnt), the gas is 300 times more potent as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide and lasts 120 years in the atmosphere."
https://www.transitionculture.org/2008/05/19/is-burning-wood-really-a-long-term-energy-descent-strategy/
Does the process of manufacturing them give off pollution and greenhouse gases?
However, many other chemicals are produced when wood is burnt, including one of the most potent greenhouse gases, nitrogen dioxide;
No one is trying to power the world by burning wood.
I know very few people heating their homes by burning wood.
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https://scienceofdoom.com/roadmap/co2/
"What is interesting is seeing the actual values of longwave radiation at the earth’s surface and the comparison 1-d simulations for that particular profile. (See Part Five for a little more about 1-d simulations of the “radiative transfer equations”). The data and the mathematical model matches very well.
Is that surprising?
It shouldn’t be if you have worked your way through all the posts in this series. Calculating the radiative forcing from CO2 or any other gas is mathematically demanding but well-understood science."
"Measurements of longwave radiation at the earth’s surface help to visualize the “greenhouse” effect. For people doubting its existence this measured radiation might also help to convince them that it is a real effect!"