Woah there, Tex: dangerous generalisation spotted. You've just bagged a whole lot of branches of science and scientific research into a biodegradable disposal container because of a scandal in one institute in one country. The ecological strategy of countries doesn't revolve solely around climatology and surely climatology doesn't revolve around the CRU of the UAE of the DEFRA of the UK.
That's not a political goal - that's an economic goal at best.
Many of the ecotaxes are not just emission-based. However, being the way corporate logic works they are just dealt with as an extra cost and not an incentive to actually take a shot at devising a more sustainable (to use the trendy word for "not such a ****ed up mess") method of production.
you might want to try with an insult that hasent been overused to the point where it has lost all its meaning and undermines your own credibility more than it does mine
calling someone a hypocrite in the forum and blog days of the interweb is the same a invoking godwin in the usenet days
again try reading next time
it was just to poiint out that i wont have seen his non cospiracy theory posts in there and a slight pointing out that even acknowledging the existence of these theories enough to write about them shows a certain propensity to conspiracy theories in general
at any rate the world eco strategy (whatever thats supposed to be considering how ununited the world is... even to a degree that some in here are apparently worried about buying energy from other eu members) would be based on the most cautious inducing predictions
i fail to see how caution is a bad thing considering no one really knows what exactly is going to happen
lets not forget the most important part
based on the weather ie short term climate (which as our fellow karting expert has pointed out is often near impossible to predict) water vapour can both act as a greenhouse gas or form clouds which being white reflect radioation as im sure you guys being british and all that will know that cloudy days are cool
to my knowledge the discussion which will be the stronger effect is still ongoing
and as i said previously that certainly implies that increasing our water vapour output dramatically is a bad idea (as are hydrogen cars in general but thats a different matter)
I correct: "it's now evident that some of the science that has been performed is not the robust thing that you believed it was"
A large part of the public didn't react to this new 'scandal' because it wasn't a surprise to them.
You are extrapolating from one group of scientists to all scientists in the same field.
An analogy: If I said "Gravity exists" based on the way my last cup of coffee tasted that does not invalidate proper scientists who said the same thing based on very profound and correct science.
Sorry for the harsh example, but that point was raised before. Please don't take offense.
It's true the SO2 and other aerosols will produce a certain amount of cooling, either naturally via volcanic activity, or even anthropogenically, as emmited by industry. There's a fair chance that the Montreal Clean Air Act and other clean air laws have actually played their part in warming up the planet, by decreasing the amount of atmospheric aerosols being emitted. What's really ironic is that after all the acid rain scares and demonisation of SO2, that massive geo-engineering schemes are now being dreamed up which would aim to counter the observed warming by spewing enormous amounts of sulphur aerosols directly into the atmosphere again. It seems we have come full circle. Or as you say, it depends on context.
This seems to me one of the very negative effects of unabated climate change alarmism. When people are scared enough, they tend to do very stupid things. History confirms this time and time again.
BTW, if we could actually control the temperature of the earth, where would we set the thermometre? It's a big question. One of the things that annoys and frustrates me about the climate change thing is how a warming planet can only do 'bad things'. For the full list, see here!
I read something the other day where the researchers stated that a warming planet will make us all obese because we'll be eating more icecreams! This is how silly this is all getting. No-one's being funded to see what beneficial things may happen in a warming climate. It's all pure alarmism. But again history has shown that the warmer periods were the ones where civilization flourished, and the colder ones were the 'bad news' periods of starvation/wars etc. But we're being coaxed into believing that the 'proper' temperature we should be aiming for is around about ice age levels.
Agreed it's just getting laughable now. We only ever hear the bad things because that is what sells papers, this year apparently is the 5th hottest on record (?!?) yet we wouldn't hear anything about it if it turned out not to be.
If the planet does warm up, in the UK heat-related deaths will increase by 2000 but cold-related deaths will decrease by something like 12000.
while this may all be well and true ponder this
the only places where warmer period civilisations were recorded were in the colder regions of the planet not the allready arid ones
Then what you are saying is that CO2 is a more harmful 'greenhouse gas' yet you say water vapour contributes more to a global warming ideal?.... Something isn't ticking in your brain man.
Actually, no. If I'm doing anything, I'm celebrating the fact that the field is likely to be widened to encompass the wider community of scientists in the climatological field, including those who have previously been marginalised as "denialists", despite their presentation of solid analysis of recorded data.
I'm not thinking this is the end of climatology at all. I'm thinking this is the beginning of some proper and rational research in climatology, with much more emphasis on actual data and much less emphasis on casting runes.
Conceded in part. You're right about ecology and climatology being separated. My error. But I do think it's important not to understate the significant contribution to the current broad trend of political acceptance of AGW that the UEA CRU has made. Because it has boasted the largest and most comprehensive climate data mesh, and (it seems) overstated its accuracy and integrity, its conclusions - even though they haven't supported them with data - have been broadly accepted as current thinking, and are the basis for the assertions made by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
At the level of government that we're talking, I don't think you can distill economic and political goals so easily. All governments enjoy revenue generation, but it's the politics that drive the methods of achieving it. Politically, climate change policies are divisive, most especially in the US right now.
The problem seems to be that the science of climatatology relies heavily on statistics, but climatologists don't seem to be interacting with the statistical community. Climatologists seem to be bumbling idiots at statistics. And that's where people like Steve McIntyre and others come in who are very good at statistical analysis, and that's why there's been such terror on the part of UEA CRU and others about letting these people in.
Whenever I go to the East coast, the horrizon is full of them (or them under construction), so it looks like we're heading that way too. Of course if you werent so ignorant of such things you'd know that.
Because they have lots of them, a ton of feathers weighs the same as a ton of bricks, but you have to have a lot more feathers than bricks to make a ton, just like how you have to have a lot more wind turbines than coal fired power stations to make up 20% of a nation's energy consumption. Just because its a sizeable portion dosen't mean its efficient.
Even if they do prove to be inefficient, they are at least clean.
Ideal? Anyway, yep. That's exactly what I'm saying. Water vapour is a feedback contributor to warming. Since its concentration is almost exclusively tied to the temperature and it reacts to changes in temperature very quickly (within days), it does not cause changes in temperature in and of itself. It simply reacts to changes in temperature caused by other, slower, sources and exaggerates their effects.
So when we add CO2 to the atmosphere, CO2 that will stay around for up to 200 years, the greenhouse effect increases and the temperature goes up. This allows the air to hold more water vapour (which quickly evaporates from the oceans). This increases the greenhouse effect and causes the temperature to go up even more. A feedback of the initial CO2 release.
If we were to (artificially) add even more vapour at this point the air would not be able to hold it, and it would quickly fall to the earth as rain. Add more CO2 at this point and it would just add to the existing concentration, stay around for up to 200 years, increase the greenhouse effect, increase the temperature and add even more water vapour. Round we go.
Hence, CO2 causes warming, water vapour makes it worse.
Are you going to back up your claims wrt. volcanoes then? I got all excited when I saw you posted again.
I was contesting the argument that windmills don't make back the energy they cost to produce and erect until 14 years have passed. That is obviously ludicrous when countries like Denmark manage to get 20% of the energy they produce from windmills. You'd have to be seriously deluded to think most of that energy went towards producing and erecting wind turbines.
I didn't say a bloody thing about the relative efficiency of windmills compared other sources of energy, so why you felt the need to bring that up I have no idea.
and don't forget France is busy developing new nuclear reactors which is exactly what we should be doing...all this fannying about with wind turbines will leave us hopelessly underpowered when coal, gas and that lot eventually run dry and we will be left grovelling to the French for a cup of electricity.
I wouldn't under-estimate the greenhouse effect, one can take a look at our neighbor planet Venus to see what it can cause. Even if it's further away from sun compared to Mercury, it's the hottest planet in our system (+460C) thanks to greenhouse gases. It has very thick atmosphere that consists mostly CO2 (carbon-dioxide) with small amounts of nitrogen. Planet itself is covered in clouds which reflect back most of the sunlight and daylight is much darker than on Earth, but radiation that gets through is not easily reflected back to space and thus results in high temperatures.
they would do something like that to spite us, yes
With regards to sea-level increases, it's yet another arm of the man-made global warming lobby that has been severely overstated. Simple fact is there will be no major sea level rises, period. We in the UK should be more worried about the rate at which the south of the country is sinking into the Earth's crust, which, coincidentally over a century comes to almost exactly the lower estimate of how high sea levels could rise
Nah, you have the wrong end of the 'bargepole', what Becky meant is that wind turbines produce energy which can be sold, but when you build wind turbines, it takes quite a while for the money made from selling the energy they produce to recoup the cost it took to build them in the first place.
For anyone new to Michael Mann and his work, here's a great intro (entitled Caspar and the Jesus paper, by Bishop Hill). It's a long story (and lots of fun in a geeky, gossipy kind of way), but well worth reading as it parallels and re-inforces many of the findings now being revealed in the current email controversy.
Mann is the original author of the famous 'hockeystick' graph which the IPCC has been using as their main visual symbol to show that the late 20th C is the warmest period over the past 1000 years. The basic shape of the hockeystick has over time undergone slight revisions since the original, in various papers authored again by Mann and other researchers (including Keith Briffa, of the now Yamal controversy, another juicy story).
edit: It appears that Google has just censored the word 'climategate' from its autocomplete search feature. It used to be there (it was there today), now it's gone!