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To Bored Chemist,It would be really nice to know what it would take in your case.
BTW, Alan, Maggie destroyed the mining industry because the unions were a strong voice opposing hers. It had nothing to do with climate change.
Also, speaking out in favour of a century old technology that's 97% inefficient is "interesting".
Given it has not caused any trouble so far
Quote from: Tim the Plumber on 05/06/2016 09:19:02To Bored Chemist,It would be really nice to know what it would take in your case.As I have said before, The first step would be to explain how adding CO2 didn't cause warming.It's a greenhouse gas.You would need to explain how it somehow didn't raise the temperature.Nobody yet has got close to doing that.BTW, Alan, Maggie destroyed the mining industry because the unions were a strong voice opposing hers. It had nothing to do with climate change.Also, speaking out in favour of a century old technology that's 97% inefficient is "interesting".If you find that fluorescent lights are toxic, I suggest that you stop eating them.
I think your question is based on a false premise.- In our part of the world, coral bleaching is a problem.
- In the Champagne valley, their climate has moved to the south of England (but they won't tell you that).
- There are a number of species that are being pushed to extinction by being pushed to the edge of their habitat.
- There have been some rather destructive hurricanes in coastal USA.
Climate is changing - fact. Climate always has changed - fact. Most of these changes occurred long before industrialisation - fact. Which makes the hypothesis of significant anthropogenically-driven change just a teeny bit unlikely.
Nevertheless we press on and create models based on recent data. The only reliable global data is from 1970 onwards though we have some reasonably good urban data from 1930. Then it turns out that the only way we can make this recent historic data fit the anthropogenic model is to "correct" the data, and even then, the model isn't usefully predictive - fact.
All of which suggests that climate change is real (which we knew already) but probably not significantly anthropogenic. That's science, not faith.
One of the clearest signs of the greenhouse effect is that the upper levels of the atmosphere are cooling as the atmosphere near the surface warms.
Which of course is entirely different from the measurements you made 400,000 years ago. Or even 500 years ago.
The atmosphere may be a chaotic system but we've been modeling chaotic systems with high degrees of precision for awhile now.
Hansen's Scenario B projected a global warming trend from 1984-2009 of 0.26°C per decade. The actual trend as measured by surface temperature stations over that period was about 0.2°C per decade.
When corrected for the 10% smaller radiative forcing than Scenario B and the higher climate sensitivity in Hansen's models, his study projected the global warming over the ensuing 25 years almost perfectly.
Except for the atmosphere, where IPCC has admitted that the behavior of the water system is too complex to model, and no model has yet had any useful predictive value.
If I made a 30% error in my work, people would die and I would lose my job. But who cares about 30% when politics is involved?
"Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future" Nobody doubts Mr Berra's famous truism. Prediction about the past, however, is ridiculously easy. If I had enough data, I could tell you what you had for breakfast yesterday. But would that convince anyone that I had the authority to tell you what to eat tomorrow?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 05/06/2016 20:12:06Quote from: Tim the Plumber on 05/06/2016 09:19:02To Bored Chemist,It would be really nice to know what it would take in your case.As I have said before, The first step would be to explain how adding CO2 didn't cause warming.It's a greenhouse gas.You would need to explain how it somehow didn't raise the temperature.Nobody yet has got close to doing that.BTW, Alan, Maggie destroyed the mining industry because the unions were a strong voice opposing hers. It had nothing to do with climate change.Also, speaking out in favour of a century old technology that's 97% inefficient is "interesting".If you find that fluorescent lights are toxic, I suggest that you stop eating them.So data from the world showing that it was not warming would not do it.If it got colder would that do it?If the IPCC's predictions were narrowed down to the low end of the range at which there is almost no cause for concearn would you then think there was nothing to worry about?You see I am not trying to disprove the science of IR absorption I just want to know what level of warming is OK and how you would get to that position.
We know that, but the trick is to get the population to believe that what she did was a Good Thing. The UK now sits on about 200 years' supply of coal that cannot be mined safely or economically, ever. If were was no mitigating factor, the Conservative party would be unelectable, and we can't have that, can we? QuoteAlso, speaking out in favour of a century old technology that's 97% inefficient is "interesting".I used to heat my kitchen with 500W of tungsten lighting. When I replaced the bulbs with CFLs, I had to install bigger radiators to make up the deficit. Trouble is that the radiators heated the walls and windows, whereas the lamps used to heat the people, so the net efficiency decreased. I've no objection to CFL and LED lighting where heating is undesirable and long life is essential, but it would be nice to have an efficient ceiling-mounted radiant heater again! Apropos your main point, however, the earth's climate is such a complex system that, even though it is scientifically obvious that CO2 is not a significant driver, it would be very difficult to produce a realistic and predictive model based on water, the major greenhouse gas. The only way to convince anyone who isn't impressed by simple physics (i.e. most people) is to wait until the temperature starts to decrease whilst CO2 remains constant or increases. By that time, however, I'm sure everyone will have lost interest and a bigger bogeyman will be foisted upon the taxpayer.. It's worth remembering that income tax, believed by most people to be as essential as DNA, was actually introduced as a temporary measure to pay for the Napoleonic Wars. How short the public memory....