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All IPCC definitions taken from Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Working Group I Contribution to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Annex I, Glossary, pp. 941-954. Cambridge University Press.

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Comments 93251 to 93300:

  1. Glenn Tamblyn at 10:29 AM on 8 March 2011
    Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    Sphaerica's comment about precipitation is critical, and it is unclear wheter this model includes that. It is relevent that the crop that does best at high temps is rice, which is the highest water user.
  2. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    ...oh, & actually thoughtful is dead right. Seems you-like most denialists-want to have your cake & eat it too. You're usually first in line to tell us that global warming isn't real-or isn't the result of burning fossil fuels (oh no, its all the fault of that relatively tiny waste heat effect). Yet here you're claiming the opposite. So which is it?
  3. ClimateWatcher at 09:30 AM on 8 March 2011
    The Climate Show Episode 8: Kevin Trenberth
    This is polemic not science. How about actually asking Trenberth what he meant by the 'Travesty'? How about asking him why there is so much difference from Trenberth 97 to Trenberth 2009 energy budget? How about asking him about certainty of AGW when the measurements of solar, albedo, and output LW are all greater than CO2 forcing? These are science questions but not asked here. And "Turn around the null hypothesis?" Great advancement for science.
  4. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    Generally, agriculture is an 'artificial' system that can be manipulated to a certain extent by humanity to mitigate climate change, largely by planting different crops as climate changes, or 'engineering' new varieties. A bigger problem is crop migration to the point where some areas may not be suitable any more for any agriculture. SO it isn't a case of less productivity from a crop, but elimination of some land from the agriculture 'bank'. This has nothing to do with traditional agriculture cycles and seasons, posed by Camburn. It is more to do with a complete break down of such cycles in certain areas of the world. Another big problem is the capacity of wild/natural species to adapt. People do not depend solely on agriculture, we are dependent on a wide bio-diverse environment. As that bio-diversity reduces, as one species is lost, it knocks out a whole chain of other species. Alternatively, you can get a massive destructive increase in a species if it's 'predator' is eliminated. Effectively warming is one massive hard to predict experiment, with many risks.
  5. actually thoughtful at 09:00 AM on 8 March 2011
    A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    Gilles, I have seen you make the same point on a few blogs - that our actions to reduce fuel use will only hasten the 3rd worlds use of fuel (by lowering the price, and making it affordable). And you analysis is OK, as far as it goes. Which is not far enough. Your analysis misses the key point - that fossil fuels are NOT the only way to improve your lot in life. For example, my customers lower their bills and their carbon footprint by investing in renewable energy. Now will their unused fuel be used by citizens of 3rd world countries? I suggest you look at telephones. It used to be, in Guatemala, that each town would have one phone and people would line up to use it. In more remote sections, the people would walk over to the next town. The problem was the fixed cost of running telephone lines. Now these communities are served by multiple cell phones. It turns out it is cheaper to throw up cell towers than it is to run thousands of miles of copper wire. That is a better analogy, and what the right wing in the US doesn't understand. We can create solutions that are BETTER than fossil fuel. We can lead the world and make serious money, or we can sit on our hands and say "well if we don't use it someone else will." It is a logical fallacy, pure and simple.
  6. actually thoughtful at 08:53 AM on 8 March 2011
    A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    RSVP - you seem to be a good candidate for solar space heating. That would minimize your costs & minimize your CO2 footprint. Don't you sometimes argue that winters are getting worse? But here you say you are paying more for less fuel, meaning that winters are less severe? (Or did you invest heavily in conservation?)
  7. actually thoughtful at 08:50 AM on 8 March 2011
    A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    Dana - I said "over 60%" You said "90%" both are correct. My point stands, that the majority of us could, in fact, power our transportation needs with a Nissan Leaf (or equivalent) and 8 solar PV panels.
  8. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    Marcus #79 "Also, try living here in Australia where every Summer we're getting increasing number of nights that are *above* 20 degrees C-thus forcing us to consume more electricity to keep our homes cool at night." The more people use air conditioners, the warmer it gets. You are in fact saying that more and more energy is going into "cooling", when in reality it is going into heating the ambient temperature (i.e., urban heat island, waste heat problem, etc.)
    Moderator Response: [muoncounter] As you will no doubt recall, we have a waste heat thread and UHI threads here and here.
  9. Timothy Chase at 07:05 AM on 8 March 2011
    Blaming the Pacific Decadal Oscillation
    When quoting (82) from the webpage that nofreewind (76) had referred us to:
    However, the Hadley Centre's real-world plot of radiosonde temperature observations shown below does not show the projected CO2 induced global warming hot-spot at all. The predicted hot-spot is entirely absent from the observational record. http://www.friendsofscience.org/assets/documents/The_Saturated_Greenhouse_Effect.htm
    ... I pointed out that the Friends of Science claim that "the predicted hot-spot is entirely absent from the observational record" is at best cherry-picking the studies, and gave two examples of studies that claim to have found the "hot-spot" where the warming trend is higher in the mid-troposphere than on the ground. However, I appear to have missed the bit where they referred to the hot-spot as being the "projected CO2 induced" global warming hot-spot. Such words are strongly suggestive of the often-repeated claim that the hot spot is a signature of CO2 induced warming -- and if the temperature profile don't fit you must acquit. Chris Colose reminds us that the hot spot is actually the signature of any global warming, whatever the forcing. Please see:
    Tropospheric warming in the tropics is a signature of greenhouse warming, but it is more accurate to say that it is not a unique signature (i.e., you get this "hotspot" with all types of forcings). The 'hotspot' arises due to the moist adiabat. In the extra-tropics you do not don't expect the lapse rate changes to be so dominated by moist convective effects. Skeptics/Denialists Part 2: Hotspots and Repetition Posted on December 20, 2008 http://chriscolose.wordpress.com/2008/12/20/skepticsdenialists-part-2-hotspots-and-repetition
    He also points out that it is part of a negative feedback, and if the "hot spot" isn't there then global warming will actually be somewhat stronger than we expect. More evidence that Friends of Science should not be regarded as a trusted source of science news... In any case my apologies for not getting this in the first time around.
    Moderator Response: Also see the Skeptical Science Argument "There’s no tropospheric hot spot."
  10. The Climate Show Episode 8: Kevin Trenberth
    It sounds like the science is "Mixed" on hacking or leaking....so are those that insist on hacking then "deniers" ? If they were leaked then that would be a team member who for whatever reason didn't like what was going on. The topic is HidetheDecline, thus the source is part of the topic.
    Moderator Response: [muoncounter] Perhaps you should listen to the show; there are many topics. The flap over "ClimateGate" has a number of existing threads.
  11. Icing the Medieval Warm Period
    Moderator @#22, "For posterity and context, current northern hemisphere temps greatly exceed those of the MWP." I suggest you can only come to that conclusion by using current instrumental temperatures and then comparing them with 1000-year old proxies. This methodology can be incorrect. The correct methodology should be to compare current proxies with past proxies. Let me explain further by utilising Ljungqvist's (2010) reconstruction which is shown in Figure 1 below. Figure 1: 2000-Year NH Temperature Reconstruction (after Ljungqvist, 2010) I have plotted the MWP peak temperature as the red line and the modern proxy peak as the blue line on the reconstruction in Figure 1. The instrumental data are deleted for clarity. It is evident from Figure 1 that the MWP peak is 0.11 °C warmer than the modern proxy peak decadal mean (1980-1989). However, Tom Curtis in #136 @ SkS Hockey Stick Own Goal pointed out that the GISS data show that 2000-2009 mean temperature to be 0.18°C higher than 1990-1999 decadal mean. Therefore, I show Ljungqvist's data in greater detail for the modern instrumental period in Figure 2. The data for Figures 1 and 2 is available from NOAA (here). Figure 2: Modern NH Temperature Reconstruction 1860-1999 (after Ljungqvist, 2010) I have restored Ljungqvist's instrumental data in Figure 2. I have also added 0.18°C as an estimate of the 2000-2009 instrumental decadal mean. This is shown as the dashed red line. Several features are evident from Figure 2, the most important of which are as follows:
    1. There is a very good correlation between Ljungqvist's proxy temperatures and the whole of the pre-1990 instrumental data. Thereafter, they diverge. This is a good illustration of the aptly-named "divergence problem."
    2. The MWP is approximately 0.11°C warmer than the modern-day proxy temperatures, including the 1980-1989 decadal peak.
    3. The modern instrumental data for 1990-1999 of 0.39°C and 2000-2009 of 0.57°C exceed the MWP proxy peak temperature by 0.19°C and 0.37°C respectively.
    4. Notwithstanding item (3), the MWP peak is 0.14 °C higher than the 1990-1999 proxy temperature. Therefore, it is possible to infer that an "instrumental" MWP peak would be approximately 0.14°C higher than the 1990-1999 instrumental temperature, if there were a linear response between proxy and instrumental data. However, to be safe, it may be better to use the 0.11°C difference between the MWP and modern proxies. This would correspond to a MWP peak "instrumental" temperature anomaly of 0. 39 + 0.11 = 0.50°C.
    From (4) above the difference between the MWP "instrumental" temperature and the 2000-2009 actual temperature would be 0.57 - 0.50 = 0.07°C. This is hardly unprecedented warming and is about one-seventh of the 0.5 °C value stated in SkS Hockey Stick Own Goal. However, my assumption that proxies would increase linearly from the 1990's to the 2000's is questionable because,"…recent proxy data does not emulate the recent instrumental data" (Ljungqvist, 2010). However, my assumption is no less questionable than adding modern-day instrumental temperatures to proxies that are based on a 1961-1990 mean when the proxies did emulate Ljungqvist's instrumental record. Consequently, what we need urgently are up-to-date proxies so that we can compare their data with the current warm period. If these proxies were below the MWP then we can conclude that the MWP was warmer than today. Alternatively, if the proxies were above the MWP then our conclusion would be that the MWP was cooler than today. I contend that the only prudent conclusion that we can make from the current data is that it is likely that current temperatures are higher than MWP. However, we cannot accurately determine by how much. Statements such as that in SkS Hockey Stick Own Goal that current temperatures exceed the MWP by 0.5°C are not supported by current proxy temperatures.
  12. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    Rob: "how is all that coal going to be extracted from the ground and transported?" I'd be happy to leave coal exactly where it is; in the ground. There are LPG-powered vehicles in use; school buses, light-duty trucks, even a 5.9L big rig engine. What about biodiesel, which could stretch dwindling fuel stocks for some years? All I'm saying is that the sum total of what Gilles seems to favor results in a do-nothing attitude. It is born out of the pre-conception that atmospheric CO2 is not an urgent problem, so we can get by on fossil fuels as long as they last. That is unfortunately a path we are taking, but not one we should be taking. Counter the argument 'we can't afford to reduce emissions' with 'we can't afford what will happen if we don't'.
  13. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    Camburn, "I was not surprised to see a rise in production from more warmth. That is pretty much a given." Yes, because we've all seen how the increased warmth in Russia lead to higher yields last year. On a more serious note, I'm curious to know if the model accounts for precipitation shifts. I'm guessing not really, but I would expect that changes in the pattern of precip would have a more dramatic affect that changes in mean temperature. For instance, this year China is having a drought that will affect their wheat production. There are good indications from the field lately that rain bands are on the move in response to higher temperatures.
  14. Icing the Medieval Warm Period
    Re: comment #78 - moderator response. Many thanks for the warm welcome! Yes, I did mean the Spielhagen et al paper. I mistakenly copied from my recent urls list the one above Spielhagen. The link I mistakenly posted is a paper suggesting the possibility of sea ice recovery in 2 years after an ice free summer. I have been 'lurking' here for far too long and thought it was about time I signed on/in/up. Best regards, Patrick Lockerby http://www.science20.com/chatter_box
    Moderator Response: [DB] Patrick, I think your html for the no follow code string in your SkS Sign-on ID is hashed (plus I'm not sure that the no follow string will work there anyway, but it's worth a try; for some reason it shows up as logicman w/ no link in the Recent Comments window, but it's hashed up on the actual threads). Between the left-arrow symbol and the right-arrow symbol should be this string: a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.science20.com/chatter_box"
  15. Rob Painting at 05:56 AM on 8 March 2011
    A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    Muoncounter @ 83 - According to World coal: "there is enough coal to last us around 119 years at current rates of production." Not going to be exhausted any time soon. Probably not, but if oil runs out, how is all that coal going to be extracted from the ground and transported?.
  16. Rob Painting at 05:53 AM on 8 March 2011
    A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    Dana 1981 @ 82 - No it's not. Transportation can be accomplished with electric vehicles to a large degree Personal transport?. Yes. Heavy machinery?. No. We still have a long way to go, and better get cracking in creating something to replace it.
  17. Climate sensitivity is low
    http://www.barrettbellamyclimate.com/page17.htm
    Moderator Response: Please provide some context for links. Link-only comments will be deleted.
  18. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    Gilles #66: "Even if they halved their energy consumption ... I'm just saying this will not reduce the overall consumption. And it won't either reduce the total amount of fossil fuels that we can extract" I don't follow that reasoning at all. Gilles#72 "I am arguing that we MUST do anything we can to spare FF, first because they are being exhausted ... " According to World coal: "there is enough coal to last us around 119 years at current rates of production." Not going to be exhausted any time soon. Add in (from USEIA): "The combustion of coal, however, adds a significant amount of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere per unit of heat energy, more than does the combustion of other fossil fuels" and your argument reduces to one of failure to act.
  19. Bob Lacatena at 04:57 AM on 8 March 2011
    Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    I think one major failing in the model, one which can make climate change seem good by increasing crop yields, is the question of appropriate precipitation ("appropriate" as in how much, how often, and at what time of year from the crop's perspective). That is probably part of the difference in the low/mid/high latitude setting, but since precipitation changes aren't entirely governed by latitude, I'd rather see something just a little more elaborate... either a "precipitation gauge" which responds in concert to altering temperature (i.e. not a control itself -- you change temperature, and that changes precipitation) with a range of changed values, and therefore a range of expected crop yield due to the precipitation range, or else perhaps more simply 3 or 4 separate "crop yield" boxes (zones), to represent various general climate zones ("wet", "arid", etc.), perhaps each with a percentage to show how much of the world will fall into that category in various scenarios. I guess my main point is that I think that changes in precipitation are a far more important and damaging factor in the long run, and it's the intersection of the two (temperature and precipitation changes) that are going to really hurt crop yields... you have to get better temperatures and better precipitation to increase crop yields, while only one of those two needs to drop to greatly reduce crop yields. And in fact, in some circumstances what would otherwise be a productive increase in temperature but combined with a reduction in precipitation, even if only for a several week span during an important part of the growing season, could exacerbate the precipitation problem and make things worse. That is, the effects of changes in temperature and moisture aren't simply additive, but interact in a complex way.
  20. Climate sensitivity is low
    http://www.gfdl.noaa.gov/blog/isaac-held/2011/03/05/2-linearity-of-the-forced-response/ hat tip to: http://scienceblogs.com/stoat/2011/03/dr_roy_spencer_is_sad_and_lone.php
  21. Climate sensitivity is low
    > what's next, redefining the laws of physics ....? Chuckle. Yep. http://www.google.com/search?q=%2Bspencer+%2Bpoptech+%2Brefute
  22. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    Camburn, I would think the model is based on normal agricultural conditions with temperature being the primary variable. In that respect it would be useful. However, I think the danger with a warming and changing climate is that agricultural zones will also change; therefore, migrate. With growing global population and urbanization, there is are few places left where they can migrate were agriculture is possible.
  23. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    Gilles #72 -
    "Oil is needed for transportation, heating"
    No it's not. Transportation can be accomplished with electric vehicles to a large degree, and there are alternatives to heating with oil.
    "mainly because climate is hotter, maybe ?"
    No, because California has implemented energy efficiency technologies. Our per capita energy consumption has barely increased over the past 30 years. The rest of the country's has increased significantly.
    "without carbon, there is nothing but the poorest life you can imagine."
    First of all, nobody is saying we're going to eliminate all carbon, and secondly, claiming that we can't have a high tech lifestyle without massive carbon emissions is utterly absurd.
  24. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    Rick: Grains crops benifit from higher levels of co2 during the growing season. As you can see from your chart the level of co2 is now higher than in the recent past. If you were to look at world vegitation maps/health you would see that there is a trend to increased health worldwide of plants. This is in reponse to higher levels of co2. I don't have the studies at hand, but there have been field studies done in the US as to what happens to corn growth and grass growth with higher levels of co2, everything else remaining constant. The response is quit good. My main point is to the usefullnes of the application presented. There are so many variables that affect plant health that using temperature as the metric does not produce a meaningful result. If everything else is constant, then one could surmise that the results of the graph show that more heat is good for ag output.
  25. The Climate Show Episode 8: Kevin Trenberth
    stevee - what has your comment got to do with the topic? This is a site to discuss the science of global warming - plenty of other places for raves about it. Since you are obviously skeptical, why dont you pick the argument against (one per post), that you find most convincing, look at up in the "Arguments" list, and then tell us why you think the debunk is wrong.
  26. The Climate Show Episode 8: Kevin Trenberth
    Stevee: Has it been determined, scientifically, if the ClimateGate (Hide the Decline) emails were hacked, or leaked ? I doubt they were leaked but it has been scientifically determined that they were deliberately misrepresented.
  27. The Climate Show Episode 8: Kevin Trenberth
    Has it been determined, scientifically, if the ClimateGate (Hide the Decline) emails were hacked, or leaked ?
    Moderator Response: [muoncounter] There are a variety of existing ClimateGate threads. Try the Search function.
  28. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    Camburn: I was not surprised to see a rise in production from more warmth. That is pretty much a given. The added co2 also contributes to a rise in production. One thing to consider is that a number of fruit trees require a minimum number of days below a certain temperature during winter or they will not produce in the spring/summer. As for annual crops, are you familiar with the Keeling curve? See graph below: peaks in the curve are winter while valleys are summer. Crops and other vegetation take up CO2 during the summer but release it during the winter through decay. Any extra CO2 intake by plants will be released after the growing season.
  29. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    It is a very simple model. Yet it provides answers to a tenth of a percent. Soil types, soil status, diseases, fertilizers, timing of moisture and weather, seed types, temperate zones all play a role. As I side note, I plant 1,000 trees every spring. In Northern Minnesota the limiting factors are summers to short and too cool, and winters too long and too cold.
  30. michael sweet at 02:53 AM on 8 March 2011
    Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    We need to keep in mind that this is a simple model. As Camburn pointed out, CO2 fertilization might further increase production while lack of rain, or floods, would lower prduction. On the other hand, this model gives a starting point so we know what we need to deal with. Perhaps more irrigation would be enough to adapt if water is the main limiting factor. If no irrigation water is available we might need to move. If heat alone is the limiting factor we need new cultivars that are heat resistant or we must switch to other crops. This model is not the final word, it is a learning exercise.
  31. Philippe Chantreau at 01:50 AM on 8 March 2011
    Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    "The added co2 also contributes to a rise in production." There is little to no evidence showing this to be true in the fields. Commercial greenhouses using enhanced CO2 to increase yields have to use 800 to 1200 ppm concentrations to see any results, with all other factors being optimized.
  32. Icing the Medieval Warm Period
    Gilles, everyone - might I suggest taking the models conversation to the Models are unreliable thread, where this topic is relevant? I don't believe it's a core part of a MWP discussion.
    Moderator Response: [Dikran Marsupial] Agreed, further discussion of models should be conducted on that thread.
  33. Blaming the Pacific Decadal Oscillation
    johnd - I'm not certain I can follow your logic there. Water vapor rising into the atmosphere reaches a point where the air is cool enough to condense it; cooler than the water vapor. When it cools and condenses the energy involved in that transition is given over to the air, which warms. That heat energy is not inconsiderable - the updrafts in thunderstorms and hurricanes are driven by the heat from condensing vapor. The downdrafts are considerably cooler. Thunderstorms end when there is insufficient moist air drawn in, hurricanes weaken when they get over land and lose the warm moist air over the oceans as an energy source.
  34. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    Yes, I have something to add Daniel. The timeing of any heat units is critical to how plants respond. Without knowning the underlying metrics that this model is based on, the model us quit useless. The IPCC model is not temperature specific. I will use one crop as an example: Wheat. Wheat likes cool weather when it is tillering. Once tillering has completed, it likes warm weather. Flowering wheat, which is the reproductive period, likes dry weather as any moisture contributes to leaf disease and fusarium. Once wheat has finished flowering, a shot of rain is good and warmer temps once again are desired. It is about timing of heat units. I was not surprised to see a rise in production from more warmth. That is pretty much a given. The added co2 also contributes to a rise in production. Without more information on how this program was constructed it is impossible to see if the results are credible. As a side note, I am a farmer. Hence, I recognize what is required.
    Moderator Response: For some scientific studies of the effects of CO2 and heat, see the summary by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, and other studies, linked in the comments of the thread "CO2 is not a pollutant."
  35. The Climate Show Episode 8: Kevin Trenberth
    The problem with 'super microbes' is that they're very hard to turn off when you've reached your target CO2 concentration, whereas industrial plants you just flick the switch... Well, I stayed up well past my bedtime to watch/listen to the show, and it was well worth it, thanks. I did note with interest, however, the discussion of the new process for capturing atmospheric CO2 using a solid amine structure, with low temperature release. This sounds ideal for a solar-powered carbon capture factory (in fact the New Scientist article quotes a figure of perhaps a million tons per day from a commercial plant - that's almost enough to capture the entire CO2 emissions from Australia, from just one plant!) The other part of the equation would then be doing something with that CO2. There are solar thermal methods to combine it with H2O to form CO + H2 + O2, to give a hydrogen feed, and the CO can be further fed into other processes to produce hydrocarbon fuels. But if the aim is to sequester the carbon, you'll still need to find something to do with the CO or subsequent hydrocarbons. It would be somewhat ironic if we ended up synthesising heavy oils, only to pump them deep underground into deplete oil reservoirs... Expensive? Sure. But what adaptation measure isn't?
  36. Arkadiusz Semczyszak at 01:14 AM on 8 March 2011
    A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    I, as a resident of a country whose huge areas were destroyed by the coal mines - I - the "great enemy” of fuel industry based on coal and petroleum - would that it disappeared as quickly as possible. However, energy-saving technologies and renewable energy sources requires time and large financial outlays. Even - a relatively modest effects - was founded in Kyoto - but require very fast action. Beyond a certain amount of CO2 in the atmosphere, the need for several thousand. years to the biosphere can remove the surplus. Loss of Carbon from the Deep Sea Since the Last Glacial Maximum, Yu et al., 2010..: “Combined benthic δ13C and [CO3 2-] results indicate that deep-sea-released CO2 during the early deglacial period (17.5 to 14.5 thousand years ago) was preferentially stored in the atmosphere, whereas during the late deglacial period (14 to 10 thousand years ago), besides contributing to the contemporary atmospheric CO2 rise, a substantial portion of CO2 released from oceans was absorbed by the terrestrial biosphere.” Rapid reductions in CO2 are achievable only through widespread application of CCS - global CO2 emissions growing rapidly - especially in China. CCS will surely raise the cost for energy - this is not possible that improved energy efficiency. This is after all only a mere storage of CO2. CCS "will take" a large part of investment in renewable energy sources. Even more (and more) will make us from the fuel concerns - energy supplies based on fossil fuels. Corporations such as Statoil and Shell - has for many years - in Europe - the fund's most "alarming" researches on current and future GW. CCS will give preference position - particularly in the U.S. - the big oil corporations (this is the expensive technology - that she was a fully secure.) Their leaders already argue that the large-scale introduction of CCS - that gives you the quasi-monopoly position - will be able to run a cost-effective production of energy from methane clathrates (including liquid fuels production - their price at CCS will have to be higher.) Methane clathrates will be "sufficient" for USA on 3,000 years ... At the CCS we can (for a long time), forget about "peak oil" and "clean energy" ...
  37. The Climate Show Episode 8: Kevin Trenberth
    Bern: “I'm talking about plants to capture CO2 from the atmosphere to reduce concentrations to a "safe" level.” Bern, of course, is talking about industrial plants. Living biological plants do this all the time; it’s where the fossil fuels came from originally. Might we someday genetically engineer some super microbe to accomplish the desired task? Hopefully it won’t entail covering our oceans in a green slime.
  38. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    Gilles, "health and welfare are POSITIVELY correlated with the use of fossil fuels, and that without carbon, there is nothing but the poorest life you can imagine." Well apart from general well being index and mental health of course.
  39. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    Of course, it is also critical to notice that the temperature change in the thermometer is *local*, which means that my earlier reading was not actually so misleading after all! A *global* temperature rise of 1ºC is probably sufficient in most areas to push *local* land-based temperature rises above the point of where crop effects are positive or neutrality and into deficit, since (a) local temperatures over land increase faster than over oceans and (b) local temp rises generally increase relative to the global average for higher latitudes (especially in the Northern Hemisphere). So in terms of the big picture, going much beyond a 1ºC global rise would likely mean net crop losses, even with adaptation.
  40. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    (When I speak of crops going well, I meant in comparison to my impression from having read a bit on this topic previously. Obviously, after a certain point things are grim no matter how well we adapt. It was just that that point was a little higher than I had previously thought.)
  41. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    What surprised me was how well crops did, especially at higher latitudes. I was under the impression that almost any temperature rise was bad for agricultural output in the tropics and almost anything much above 1ºC was bad in temperate regions. It would be useful to know the percentage of global production found in each of the two regions, in order to be able to calculate the global effect of different temperature changes. Also, is this only for the Northern Hemisphere? Or is the graphic simply misleading?
  42. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    "If I am getting latent heat from the environment that allows me to turn my furnace off, I am now emitting less CO2". Wow, so its OK to mess with the atmosphere just so you can claim you're consuming less fuel in winter? Here's an idea-try insulating your home or-heaven forbid-where a jumper indoors, that'll cut your fuel bills more than milder winters. You are also aware that you can heat your home with an A/C or with relatively clean landfill gas? Also, try living here in Australia where every Summer we're getting increasing number of nights that are *above* 20 degrees C-thus forcing us to consume more electricity to keep our homes cool at night. As I said above, RSVP, you've long since reached the point where you actually *detract* from the debate, rather than contribute anything meaningful. Personally, I think you should refrain from posting until such time as you're prepared to say something....I don't know....moderately *intelligent*?
  43. Blaming the Pacific Decadal Oscillation
    johnd at 16:37 PM on 7 March, 2011. You appear to be giving yourself contradictions by thinking of water droplets as not part of the air - surely what is crucial is that they are there in the atmosphere, and probably at equilibrated temperature with the air. The water vapour forming droplets releases heat into the atmosphere, which necessarily increases the atmosphere's temperature. That heat has been carried from the surface liquid water into the atmosphere by the evaporation-condensation cycle. So the bottom line is that it warms the atmosphere.
  44. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    rsvp, but that's where you live. Try it in a city which regularly has several days in succession over 35C. All you need to do is look at how a "heat wave" is defined in different locations. Here it's 5+ days over 35C or 3+ days above 40C. Other places have other definitions. I can assure you that a summer with no heat waves can still rack up an impressive total of weeks requiring a lot of air conditioning unless the household has done some serious work on passive cooling. And it is much, much easier to warm people (at least enough to maintain life) during cold weather than it is to protect from life-threatening heat.
  45. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    RickG #74 "You have data showing global fuel consumption is decreasing? Or am I asking an inconvenient question? " Global fuel consumption may be increasing, but it is not due to warming. The inconvenient answer is that my personal winter bill has increased while consumption has actually gone down. Marcus #75 If I am getting latent heat from the environment that allows me to turn my furnace off, I am now emitting less CO2. My air conditioner on the otherhand happens to run off of electricity (maybe yours is different). I also only have to turn on this airconditioner about three days in the summer at most, whereas heating is big deal and must be going for at least four months.
  46. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    I should have said in 4 that the temperature can be set to zero temperature change, rather then zero temperature.
  47. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    "OK Marcus, so how is the electric car of your friends working ? " Man, this is such a pointless question Gilles-it seems to imply that the "wrong" answer will invalidate my basic premise-which is that our current transport network represents a massively inefficient use of a rapidly declining resource. Or are you trying to suggest that people sitting in bumper-to-bumper traffic, consuming 1/5th of the petrol in their cars to go *nowhere* is a good thing? As it happens, most of my friends either use buses/trains like me-or get around by bike. Those friends of mine who do have electric cars are very happy with their purchase, as they've seen a significant reduction in their maintenance & "fuel" costs.
  48. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    Come on Rick, we all know that RSVP has nothing of value to add to this debate. He seems to forget that the flip-side is too much heat in Spring & Summer, & reduced rainfall too-which will of course hurt agriculture. Hotter Summers will also result in greater fuel consumption as people try & keep cool. Given that its harder to get cool than warm up, this will have definitely lead to a net *increase* in fuel consumption over the course of any given year. So not only is RSVP's question totally pointless, it's also based on a total *falsehood*.
  49. A Real-World Example of Carbon Pricing Benefits Outweighing Costs
    @ 73 RSVP Really! You have data showing global fuel consumption is decreasing? Or am I asking an inconvenient question?
  50. Interactive animation of the climate change impact on agriculture
    DIkran: "Nobody thinks that model output is data. Models exist to demonstrate the consequences of a set of assumptions." I'm stealing that sentence for my thesis! Seriously, no-one *should* mistake model output for data but you'd be amazed (or maybe you wouldn't) how muddled people's thinking is on this.
    Moderator Response: [Dikran Marsupial] Glad to hear I have done something useful this morning! ;o)

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