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The problem is wider than merely the total water content of the atmosphere,[...]
It's a Christmas Miracle!Mikewonders has got Petrochemicals and me to agree on something.
the currently fashionable consensus only discusses (at considerable expense to the taxpayer) the color of the mahout's turban.
You two made the same wrong assumptions
...assumption is that it is essential and inevitable to double the human population by the end of the century.
If it wasn't considered essential to increase the population, why do we spend so much money and effort on fertility treatments, neonatal medicine, and elder care?
How can property developers make a profit if there's nobody to live in their shoddy new houses?
Economics is...
The "We" who do that are the rich West. Our birth rate is less than our death rate.
As you say, the houses are shoddy. So they won't last a a generation.So the new ones will be bought by those whose current ones are falling apart.
I think the birth rate of 1.65 per woman is less than the death rate of (very close to) 2 per woman.
If the women in a group have less than 2 children on average, the population of the group will fall in the long term.
If increased water in the air caused climate change, what caused the increased water in the air?
While nobody is spraying large amounts of water into the atmosphere, humans are spraying large amounts of CO2.
it's a convergent series.
Then please explain where my arithmetic, based on your statistic of 1.65 children per woman, is wrong.
Your error is in assuming that the "group" is static when it is obviously dynamic. If every woman produces more than one child in her lifetime, and lives long enough to see her grandchildren, the population will increase.
That's a lot of water vapor from the combustion of octane.