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Comments 13301 to 13350:
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Eclectic at 23:12 PM on 18 October 2018Venus doesn't have a runaway greenhouse effect
Correction to last paragraph :-
N&Z/V&R
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Eclectic at 23:09 PM on 18 October 2018Venus doesn't have a runaway greenhouse effect
MAR@261 , my concern with Zeller / Rellez and his partner Nikolov / Volokin was more to do with the accuracy of the data they provide.
Since the retraction of their 2015 paper (a jocular scandal, at minimum) and pointed criticisms from Gavin Schmidt, as well as by David Grinspoon [re some fudging of Mars temperature and pressure data], it casts even more of a shadow on their 2014 paper ~ which in one sense was a re-run of the unphysical ideas of Gerlich & Tscheuschner.
I am not sure how much of the N&Z/V&Z business was an elaborate leg-pull. Or perhaps they have simply "gone emeritus" and become denialist.
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MA Rodger at 20:49 PM on 18 October 2018Venus doesn't have a runaway greenhouse effect
Eclectric @260,
My personal position is that I do not recall reading Nikolov & Zeller before. There are certainly within it some worrying constructions within their model, that is worrying for a science faced by deluded AGW contrarians. (It may be diferent if you are researching exoplanetry climate.) Particularly worrying is the idea of the density of an atmosphere being a (or indeed 'the') contributing factor to the greenhouse effect. There is also the acceptance of the 37% result from Volokin & ReLiez which I consider to be badly wrong. (That is the idea that all airless rocky planets, if without an atmosphere like our Moon would have an average surface temperture 37% less-than a temperature calculated globally using the S-B equation j=σT^4.)
But Nikolov & Zeller do present good accounts of the literature of lunar and Martian temperatues and also calculate a Martian temperature in a reasonable manner, something I've not seen elsewhere.
Volokin & ReLiez I do remember as I did some simplistic calculations to unpack their 37%. I can repeat these with more confidence since Williams et al (2017). What I don't recall is their use of the Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment data (as used by Williams et al) to check their Moon calculations. That is a useful calculation.
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Setting out the simplistic calcs that show the 37% value is misused for the Earth (& Mars as well):-
The 37% does occur on the Moon. Thus using S-B to calculate the lunar average temperature yields 270K, an over-estimation of some 70K. Only a small portion of this 70K is due to the zonal temperature range (hot tropics, cold poles), perhaps 5K of the 70K. The rest is due to the diurnal range. The Moon with a 708 hour 'day' has a very large diurnal range. Averaged across all zones, the range is 90K to 360K. It is this diurnal range that drops the remaining 65K below the S-B estimate. An Earth stripped of its atmosphere with a 24 hour day will have a smaller diurnal range (perhaps 40% of the lunar range). This is the point where Volokin & ReLiez "briefly explore" the issue. They examining the heat storeage of the planet surface thro the night, feeding conclusions back into their simplified modelling and find hardily any difference (0.3K) due to the 24 hour day. Somewhere they have forgotten Hölder’s Inequality (errors due to averaging a non-linear function) from which that 65K derives. The Moon's temperature between any single 29½ hour period (those used by Williams et al) varies up to a maximum of 114K while the Moon over the full 708 hours varies 267K, thus the 114/267=40%. If the Earth's 24 hour 'day' waggles temperature by only 40% of the Moon's 708 hour 'day', the Hölder’s Inequality shrinks massively, back-of-fag-packet perhaps from 65K to 10K.
Now, magically, add on the zonal 5K and subtract the 15.7K non-greenhouse zonal-heat-transfer effect (this value from Volokin & ReLiez) and the Earth non-GHG temperature returns to the S-B estimated value. This then magically returns us to a 255K non-GHG Earth and thus the 33K GH-effect we all know & love.
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Art Vandelay at 13:56 PM on 18 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
nigelj@23,
From what I've read there would need to be annual injections during the northern spring, but injecting into the lower stratosphere or tropopause would still be an effective solution, because over the poles the stratosphere falls to roughly half the average height of the tropical stratosphere, and aerosols would be mostly washed out by polar cells during northern fall & winter. Similarly, much of the soot and pollution coming out of tropical developing nations ends up on the ice caps.
My guess is that getting the aerosols up there at a reasonable cost would be the hard part.
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nigelj at 13:17 PM on 18 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Nigelj, Art Vandelay @18 just to clarify, my understanding is sulphate aerosols from coal fired power stations tend to be regional in their effects, because they affect the lower atmosphere, but they are short lived because they get washed out pretty quickly. According to the link I posted, to provide a powerful effect that lasts years sulphates would have to be injected right up in the stratosphere and this means they tend to disperse globally with all sorts of global effects and problems. So to confine an effect to the arctic would require injection of aerosols into the troposphere, but they would have to be replenished constantly, and possibly permanently.
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nigelj at 11:52 AM on 18 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Art Vandelay @18, yeah I do recall reading that sulphate aerosols tend to be regional in their effects. The following research is interesting and highlights some of the problems with the whole strategy. I mean I do see a certain inevitability that technical fixes like may be used, and could buy time, but I prefer not to tak about it too much, because it takes the focus off doing the number one priority which is to reduce emissions.
Yes population is on track to head towards about 10 billion before stabilising. If the world adopted more procative policies it could be lower.
But my point was that meat eating is a very inefficient use of land, and if we all changed to a vegetarian diet, or even just a low meat diet then there would probably be enough land to sustain a larger population without needing massive levels of deforestation. In an ideal world of course. However the case for adopting a vegetarian or low meat diet is becoming quite strong in terms of more efficient use of land, the methane problem, and also general health and longevity. So the population / food problem could I think be largely solved by more efficient use of land with a more vegetarian diet, so your argument that "CO2 is plantfood" is not a justifiable solution to this particular problem.
I agree however that 10 billion looks like it is pushing the worlds carrying capacity to the limits such that any problem will spread and become critical. I think thats a really interesting observation. There will be no slack in the system. You see it already in the way the global financial crash became "global".
Its also painfully obvious that we are already using resources at a prodigious rate, and this will leave a depleted stockpile for future generations that cannot be fully resolved by recycling. Population growth will make this so much worse, and reduced population growth is a relatively pain free solution.
The climate implications of population growth are interesting. Most of the population growth is in the third world like Africa, and they have the lowest per capita use of fossil fuels, something likely to continue, so population growth is not quite as large a climate problem as it first seems.
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nigelj at 11:30 AM on 18 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Jef @17
"Having said that it is obvious that we can not eleminate or even reduce FFs in the economy and not expect extreme economic repercussions."
I would question this. I suppose it depends on how you define extreme economic repercussions. This wording has rather a negative connotation. There will be a dislocation but I would challenge the contention that such repercussions have to be extremely negative.
For example various reports have found most countries can completely transition from fossil fuel to renewable electricity generation at a cost of 1% of a countries yearly gdp output, spread over approximately 25 years. The maths is actually pretty simple. For comparison purposes most western countries spend considerably more on just the old age pension each year, so I cannot see that such an energy transition could really be cause extreme economic repercussions and certainly not significantly negative ones. Yes theres more to it than electricity generation, but this puts it into perspective.
Another example. Transitioning to a low meat diet would achieve a lot, and yes it would be a dislocation for farmers and consumers, but I don't think you could accurately call it some extreme economic problem, and its not as if crop farmers don't make plenty of money. In fact converting farms from one product to another often happens rather quickly as food preferences and market opportunities change. Its more of a motivational problem.
Moderator Response:[PS] Jef is so far just make vague and unjustified assertions. Unless he can show the basis for his belief and quantify expected economic loss for transition, this is little more than FF propoganda regurgitated. Further sloganeering from him without evidence will be deleted.
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nigelj at 11:17 AM on 18 October 2018Republican lawmakers react to the IPCC report – ‘we have scientists’ too!
John Hartz @4, thanks and interesting, but if "the free market" was going to solve the climate problem, it would have done so by now, or at least have had a discernable effect, but pretty much all the evidence I have seen is that any climate progress of any significance has come from government subsidies, cap and trade schemes, regulations, taxes, and the like.
I think the problem is the profit motive and vested interests in fossil fuels are just too strong, leading to pollution, and the whole trajedy of the commons problem. No doubt some corporations do act responsibly on their own initiative, without having to be pushed by the state, but they are clearly in a minority.
I think the "eco rights" dogma about a true level playing field goes along the lines of "if all government influence was removed from the economy, we would have some economic paradise" like the Ayn Rand school of thought. I don't believe it for a second, and never have, and historical examples of laissez faire capitalism or something close to it do not support the contention that laissez faire is an optimal system. Having said that, I think government interventions should be sparing, and evidence based and time limited.
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Art Vandelay at 11:17 AM on 18 October 2018Republican lawmakers react to the IPCC report – ‘we have scientists’ too!
Interestingly, just published today was a report on falling CO2 emissions.
Noting that the recent emissions reductions are to a great extent linked to the price of gas relative to coal, but moving forward as renewables become increasingly price competitive it will be natural market forces that drives emissions reductions in the energy sector, so the administration's views on climate change will become increasingly less important.
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Art Vandelay at 10:31 AM on 18 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Micheal Sweet@ 19,
No, not just a feeling. I defer to higher authorities and published studies such as: rsta.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/366/1882/4007
Injecting aerosols at high latitudes gives best bang for buck and limits side effects eslewhere, because they're flushed more radiply naturally from the atmosphere. Bear in mind that sulphate or similar aerosol injections could be restricted to northern summer months.
Ftr, I'm not advcocating geoengineering but it's my personal belief that it will eventually become a component of climate change mitigation strategy.
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michael sweet at 10:06 AM on 18 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Art Vandelay,
Adding sufate aerosols to the atmosphere is well known to cause severe drought. Reducing sunlight reduces evaporation from the ocean. This is observed after vocalnic eruptions. Do we really want to cause world wide drought?
I doubt that any significant effect can be kept over the poles. Can you provide a citation to support your claim this is possible or is it just a feeling that you have?
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Art Vandelay at 09:27 AM on 18 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
nijelj@14, I think it might be possible to geoengineer with atmospheric aerosols at high latitudes , reducing polar amplification, without significant climate impacts at lower latitudes. Sure there are risks but at some point the risk of not doing something will become even greater, so I think it's inevitable.
Global population is expected to rise by 30% before levelling off, and that itself will necessitate further extensive land clearing which will release lots more carbon stores from the biosphere above and beyond per capita fossil fuel emissions, so it's unlikely that emisisons growth will be constrained until population growth is very close to zero.
Changing to a vegan diet may help to reduce methane emissions though more likely is the development of livestock feeds that achieve similar, because global consumption of beef is still accelerating, due mostly to increasing demand in the developing world.
Life will indeed be interesting post 2050 with a global population of >10 billion. That's pretty much the earth's carrying capacity, so every significant natural disaster, which includes droughts, floods, fires, storms, earthquakes etc will have an immediate global impact.
I think we're in for some radical societal changes too, and that probably includes the end of the laissez faire economic model.
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jef12506 at 09:25 AM on 18 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
I know that this comment is way late to get any viewing but I respectfully submit it in response to moderators of my comments.
If you read my comment you understand that FFs are the global economy. There is no aspect of the global economy that is not completely dependent on FFs at some level and the largest % of the global economy is FF related. Having said that it is obvious that we can not eleminate or even reduce FFs in the economy and not expect extreme economic repercussions.
The number 1 problem with AGW/climate change understanding and effective response is the willful ignorance of this simple fact.
Its like focusing on the cancer cells of lung cancer and completely misunderstanding the part that cigaretts plays in that dynamics. A weak analogy I admit but please try and understand.
This can be extrapolated out to just about every aspect of earths biospheres degredation. The global economy, the thing that supposably we need to increase in order to keep people from suffering and dying is 100% reliant on FFs, mining, deforestation, industrial ag, global distribution, etc. Please stop perpetuating the lie that we can keep doing all these things but in a "green" way.
Moderator Response:[JH] You are now skating on the thin ice of excessive repetition which is prohibited by the SkS Comments Policy. Please read the Comments Policy and adhere to it.
[PS] Again, I pointed you to peer-reviewed research pointing to exactly how renewables can replace FF. In contrast you have simply repeated your assertion without any supporting evidence. This is a science-based site - if you want to make an argument you need to back it with evidence.
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John Hartz at 08:50 AM on 18 October 2018Republican lawmakers react to the IPCC report – ‘we have scientists’ too!
nigelj: Check out this website: http://www.republicen.org/
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John Hartz at 08:48 AM on 18 October 2018Republican lawmakers react to the IPCC report – ‘we have scientists’ too!
Recommended supplemental reading:
Trump: My ‘Natural Instinct for Science’ Tells Me Climate Science Is Wrong by Jonathan Chait, Intelligencer, New York, Oct 17, 2018
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One Planet Only Forever at 08:47 AM on 18 October 2018Republican lawmakers react to the IPCC report – ‘we have scientists’ too!
"Rounds is right. Republicans ought to be looking for policies to address climate change that will maintain a strong economy."
The problem with that statement is that the best chance to do that was 'starting in the 1970s'.
The over-development in the wrong direction that has occurred instead of correction has set up the challenging current reality for those who resisted being corrected - It is likely impossible to maintain the unsustainably developed perceptions of prosperity (and superiority relative to others).
The likes of Republicans should indeed be looking for 'answers from their perspective'. But until they actually come up with something better, they should get out of the way of people who actually want to develop a sustainable better future for humanity, and they should accept their deserved loss of status due to their stubborn refusal to be corrected.
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nigelj at 08:17 AM on 18 October 2018Republican lawmakers react to the IPCC report – ‘we have scientists’ too!
Excellent article. I'm wondering what is the best approach to convincing The Republicans to do more about climate change? Some advocate being inclusive and nice and polite, and trying to frame issues in ways that appeal to their world view, (me included in the main) but this has been tried and isn't working too well.
For example, Obama reached out to the Republicans, and had his hand torn off (figuratively speaking), and he kept doing it with the same result. Being nice or conciliatory, and seeking consensus doesn't seem to be working too well. If people, or entire political movements are being plainly idiotic, how much should we try and sugar coat our response?
I'm not advocating blatant personal abuse or nastiness, because I deplore that, but it seems that strong and simple words can be effective political tools at times.
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Evan at 07:08 AM on 18 October 2018SkS Analogy 15 - Ice Tea and Temperature Rise
nigelj@5, if you put the stones it at the same temperature as the wine it will be no more effective at keeping the wine cool than replacing the stones with wine. If the stones are put in colder than the wine, then they will cool the wine. The real point, of course, is that a phase change (from solid to liquid) soaks up a lot of energy without the temperature increasing. The temperature of rocks will always increase as they soak up heat.
Sorry if I am confusing the issue by using rocks. I will put them back in my head. :-)
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nigelj at 07:01 AM on 18 October 2018SkS Analogy 15 - Ice Tea and Temperature Rise
Sunspot @3, I would agree that the IPCC are a little too conservative or understated, but not to the extent you and the arctic news website claim. The difference is important, because wild claims attacking the IPCC will undermine trust in it.
I have just had a read of your arctic news website including the 12 points where it claims the IPCC is misleading. I just think most of this is wrong. Theres no obvious acceleration thus far in global temperatures in recent decades, if you look at the hadcrut or nasa data, although the IPCC project there will be in coming decades and with good reason. The IPCC does consider all the things you claim it doesn't consider, such as the water vapour feedback and methane clathrates, but doesn't reach your conclusions. It doesn't see this as leading to quote your website to " a potential global temperature rise (from 1750) of more than 10ºC by 2026, as illustrated in the image at the top."
Its also absurd of this website to claim the IPCC understate the problem for humanity, given the strident wording of this latest report on 1.5 degrees - and its good to see a sense of urgency in this report.
This is not to suggest the IPCC are perfect. This media article from the Guardian claims evidence that the summary for policy makers gets watered down, for example language gets changed from highly likely to likely etcetera. This would not be surprising as this document is signed off by politicians and bureaucrats from sceptical countries, but there's no evidence that the detailed science is watered down. Just consider this: The IPCC projet that if we continue to burn fossil fuels global temperatures could possibly hit over 10 degrees celsius by the year 2300. This would be totally catastrophic and should be enough to scare the pants off anyone with a functioning brain! So this is hardly the IPCC playing risks down.
There are recently emerging concerns and evidence about melting permafrost and some excellent science on the history of hothouse earth and various tipping points here in this article, that are cause for considerable concern, but this is new material, and so clearly wasn't in the last IPCC report. I would expect it to be in the next report and would be very concerned if it wasn't highlighted.
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nigelj at 06:04 AM on 18 October 2018SkS Analogy 15 - Ice Tea and Temperature Rise
Excellent article and analogies, but surely if you add cold stones to a glass of wine, heat energy will flow from the wine to the colder stones so cooling the wine? Obviously the stones warm up fast so the effect is much more limited than ice.
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william5331 at 05:01 AM on 18 October 2018SkS Analogy 15 - Ice Tea and Temperature Rise
Interestingly, the latent heat of evaporation is 540 calories per gram or over 6 times as much as the latent heat of melting. If warm moist air flows from the Arctic Ocean over Greenland, the heat from one gram of water vapor condensing on the ice will give up enough heat to melt over 6 grams of ice. This is in addition to whatever 'sensible heat' the air contains.
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Sunspot at 04:00 AM on 18 October 2018SkS Analogy 15 - Ice Tea and Temperature Rise
At the Arctic Blogspot they have been talking about this for a long time. Over there it's fearmongering. Here it's science. As for "One Planet's" comment - there is no cold mug to put the Arctic Ocean into. There are no cold rods to insert into it. And we are not going to refreeze it using frozen plastic balls or rocks from the freezer. So I fail to see any relevance to your points...
But back to the article - doesn't this seem in contradiction to the IPCC notion that the Arctic Ocean can go ice-free, but then re-freeze magically and not be ice-free again for another 9 or 99 years. That is what the IPCC claims! In a warming world, with surges of warm water into the Arctic becoming more frequent, they think this is possible, even likely. Amazing.
Science is all about looking at all possibilities. Even the watered-down IPCC report says that the human race is going to be in big trouble in less than 20 years. The Arctic Blogspot says we are in worse trouble sooner than that. Yet the IPCC, which tries to strike an acceptable balance between science and political reality, is considered pure science, while the latter is dismissed as hysterical. And that dismissal is not science. It just isn't.
Oh, and for those who believe the future temp rise will be linear - do you really think that it will happen that way when this, and other, feedbacks start to seriously bite? Because that conclusion would also fly in the face of long-established science. Nature isn't big on linear change. She loves those exponentials! Ask Albert Bartlett...
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Evan at 03:57 AM on 18 October 2018SkS Analogy 15 - Ice Tea and Temperature Rise
Agree that a really cold rock would work to cool a drink. I should have written that if you place a rock at 0C into a drink, it will warm up with the drink and do nothing to keep the drink cool, whereas if you place ice at 0C into a drink, it will keep it cool while it melts. That is, the main point is that during a melting substance will keep the surrounding liquid cool because it absorbs heat while it melts.
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One Planet Only Forever at 02:37 AM on 18 October 2018SkS Analogy 15 - Ice Tea and Temperature Rise
Perhaps the title could be revised to “Iced Tea and Temperature Rise - Tipping Points”, with the term 'tipping points' mentioned regarding the phase transition examples that are presented (balloon starting to lift-off or, finally getting air-borne using wings).
Adding enough CO2 to the atmosphere to result in the elimination of year-round ice in any region is a tipping point for that region. And that CO2 level will be reached before the actual observation of the end to year-round ice. A related concern that could be added in the section discussing how regions without year-round ice will warm more rapidly is: When glaciers completely melt before the end of a summer season they will fail to deliver water downstream through an entire summer season, which can be a disastrous result that will suddenly occur at some time after the tipping-point level of CO2 has been forced into the atmosphere.
Another concern could be added regarding reduction of arctic ice extent. There is increased solar energy absorbed in the Arctic waters that are no longer covered by ice during the northern hemisphere summer, that time of the year when the sun shines on the Arctic. That amplifies the concern about the amount of warming of Arctic waters. Arctic waters that are not near surface ice will get warmer than waters near or under sea ice.
I think that the part about rocks in a drink is not a great example for this very relevant technical point. Many cold things, other than ice successfully help keep beverages cold:
- Cold mugs are often used. A&W Root Beer in Frosted Mug comes to mind. And I often use chilled beer steins.
- Cold rods are inserted into wine bottles to keep white wine chilled.
- And reusable frozen blocks or balls that float are used to keep drinks cool rather than have the drink watered down by melting ice.
Also, a cold rock could do a lot of beverage chilling. The lower the initial temperature of the rock the more cooling it can do. The disadvantage of a cold rock in a drink, other than it potentially being dirty in its many crevices, is that it will be at the bottom of the drink. A floating cooling element is better. As the drink warms up the warmer contents rise to top. With a rock in the bottom, each sip from the top will be warm unless the drink is stirred before each sip.
Other people may come up with points like that which would be a distraction from the validity of the technical points being made.
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Eclectic at 22:21 PM on 17 October 2018Venus doesn't have a runaway greenhouse effect
MAR@259 , the Nikolov & Zeller / a.k.a. Volokin & ReLlez joke is getting a bit old these days. Is it still considered to have some instructive elements to it?
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MA Rodger at 21:11 PM on 17 October 2018Venus doesn't have a runaway greenhouse effect
JC @258,
Thank you for finding Nikolov & Zeller (2015). These exoplanet scientists often come up with interesting work but it is not an area I follow. You will note their Appendix B providing a calculation of the Martian average global temperature based on measurements taken from Martian probes.
The lunar temperature they use is reliant on Volokin & ReLlez (2014) who check their modelled value against the Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment data which is also the data presented by Williams et al (2017) which I mention @257 as the source of my calculated average lunar temperature.
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One Planet Only Forever at 06:09 AM on 17 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
jef@10,
"The issue is how do we do less, stop what we are doing and still take care of 7+ billion people in a humane way?"
Promote altruistic leadership that responsibly pursues the achievement of all of the Sustainable Development Goals (and strives to improve on them). The Climate Action Goal is particualrly important because achieving it quicker makes it easier to achieve the others.
Note that many right-wing groups, like the Republicans in the USA, have policy desires that are contrary to achieving many of the SDGs not just the Climate Action Goal (at least they are consistently anti-altruistic).
The Future of Humanity is in Question - Altruism is the Answer
Altruism! What is it Good For? - The Future of Humanity -
One Planet Only Forever at 06:01 AM on 17 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
jef@10,
"There is no solution where we make a change of this magnitude and still all make money."
I agree. Unsustainable unjustified developed perceptions of superiority, prosperity and opportunity will have to be scrubbed out of the economy. It is already happening to coal barons. It is startig to happen to oil sands barons. And it will have to happen to oil and natural gas barons. Everyone else on the sustainable development path will make more money forevermore.
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nigelj at 05:47 AM on 17 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Art Vandelay @8
I'm sceptical about solar geoengineering because of the risks. CO2 levels of 600ppm might encourage plant growth but various articles on this website has pointed to research that this will be overwhelmed by the negative effects on crops of higher temperatures, droughts and heatwaves.
In fact I agree population growth is a problem in many respects, for example energy and resource use, however simply changing to a vegetarian diet would solve the food scarcity problem.
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nigelj at 05:42 AM on 17 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
jef @10
"Nigel said,"during WW2 as production was geared up for the war effort. Economic output also doubled, and wages increased." Yes and CO2 and many other toxic destructive doubled too."
Come on you are deliberately missing the point. The point was surely obvious that humanity has made massive economic transformations in the past so could do so again. What is lacking now is motivation, due to a range of pshychological and political issues, and a campaign to spread climate denialism and pessimism, the later which appears to be what you are hell bent on doing :)
"Any talk of ramping up means ramping up total energy use and resource extraction which guarantees runaway destruction of the biosphere."
I never said anything about ramping up total energy use. I simply referred to transitioning to renewable energy.
For the record I agree with comments by others that it would be wise to reduce population growth and I would add that we should try to reduce our per capita energy use. These things are in the commonsense basket.
There is a problem with resource extraction but you have to think past the slogans. Most materials can be recycled or are abundant. Metals can be recycled indefinitely, including the metals used in renewable electricity generation and batteries. Where I would agree with you is we have a problem with non renewable resources ,which ironically includes fossil fuels, so once they are gone they are effectively gone and this has implications for plastics and fertiliser manufacture. However if we stopped burning fossil fuels, they would provide many centuries of use for other applications.
"Fossil fuels (FFs) are the most traded commodity in the world."
So what?
"Virtually every business in the world is dependent on FFs."
Yes, and this has to change, and can change. We already know alternatives are possible for most things. The last IPCC Report had an entire section devoted to climate change mitigation policies.
"Global food production is 100% dependent on FFs."
Not really. Many third world farmers make no or little use of fossil fuels, fwiw.
"There is no water without FFs, and no FFs without water."
This doesn't make a lot of sense to me. Water could easily be pumped using electricity from renewable generation.
"There has never been a transition away from an energy source only additions."
Theres a first time for most things. We used to cook food over open fires.
"There is no alternative energy source that isn't 100% reliant on FFs."
This is total nonsense! If the grid becomes entirely based on renewable electricity then by definition it is clearly not reliant on fossil fuels.
"There is no solution where we make a change of this magnitude and still all make money."
Empty unsubstantiated slogan. Theres no logic that says an energy transition means we stop making money. The worst case scenario is we are replacing infrastructure, so might make slightly less money in the short term, but good long term outcomes require up front investments thats nothing new. But go back to my example of WW2. Although huge sections of industry were turned over to war production, wages acutally increased and the supply of consumer goods increased. I think its quite possible transitioning to new energy sources will make us wealthier.
"The issue is how do we do less, stop what we are doing and still take care of 7+ billion people in a humane way?"
I think thats a very good point, but it is a separate issue to the climate problem. Right now the solution to the climate problem is renewable energy. The climate issue is a consumption issue, and you are not going to convince people to cut their consumption of energy in half or more, especially poor people. The most we can hope for is to substitute renewable energy and perhaps get people to make some modest reductions to their total energy use. I'm being a realist.
Eventually its obvious humanity is going to have to reduce its per capita use of minerals and energy but I doubt you will solve that problem by Paris time frames of 2050. I agree entirely that we have to look after the global population in a humane way, and I would hope we eradicate poverty, or at least ensure everyone has good opportunities to improve their situation. However I dont think you will convince people to radically reduce their consumption of materials and energy. The best you can hope for is reducing waste and inefficiency and promoting smaller houses etcetera. The principal and ultimate solution to resource scarcity is going to have to be smaller global population by encouraging low birth rates. So this is demand reduction which enables us to still have a reasonable standard of living.
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JC16932 at 05:05 AM on 17 October 2018Venus doesn't have a runaway greenhouse effect
Here page 11 you have an estimate of the average temperature of the Moon: 197,35 +/- 0,9 ° K. This corresponds to your 200 ° K!
I think for the rest of your remarks (review the value of the Moon albedo ?).
Moderator Response:[DB] Shortened and hyperlinked URL breaking page formatting. Please learn to do this yourself using the Insert/Edit Link tool.
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One Planet Only Forever at 01:07 AM on 17 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
The current generation of humanity has a clear responsibility to remove CO2 from the atmosphere starting now, as well as dramatically reduce the creation of new CO2 by burning fossil fuels.
The only ones who can help the future generation are the current generation. The current generation should never believe it is OK to do harm to the future generation, no matter how appealing the harmful activity appears to be, no matter how regionally popular or profitable.
Understanding that changes everything. That could be understood decades ago, especially by leaders and winners who have little excuse to not 'know better' that others. But the global leadership (winners) at the time chose to maintain and maximize their popularity and profitability any way they could get away with. They kicked that responsibility further down the road, but also down a hill.
The result of that irresponsible behaviour by the supposed deserving leaders and winners has been like a landslide or avalanche. The problem has just gotten bigger, and will continue to grow unless responsible actions by leaders correct the unjustified developed perceptions of superiority relative to others.
There are existing technologies that can remove CO2 with vary little negative future consequences. But the methods that will be truly sustainable and not potentially create other problems for future generations are not profitable and may never be profitable. Other riskier or more harmful ways are cheaper and potentially profitable.
If the socioeconomic-political systems are not corrected to keep the undeserving harmful selfish from getting away with the advantages they can personally get from behaving less acceptably, then the 'solutions' that are implemented (if they get implemented), will be less effective than they need to be and could potentially be more damaging than the problem they are claimed to be a 'solution' to.
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jef12506 at 00:52 AM on 17 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Nigel said,"during WW2 as production was geared up for the war effort. Economic output also doubled, and wages increased." Yes and CO2 and many other toxic destructive doubled too.
Any talk of ramping up means ramping up total energy use and resource extraction which guarantees runaway destruction of the biosphere.
Fossil fuels (FFs) are the most traded commodity in the world.
Virtually every business in the world is dependent on FFs.
Global food production is 100% dependent on FFs.
There is no water without FFs, and no FFs without water.
There has never been a transition away from an energy source only additions.
There is no alternative energy source that isn't 100% reliant on FFs.
There is no solution where we make a change of this magnitude and still all make money.
The issue is how do we do less, stop what we are doing and still take care of 7+ billion people in a humane way?
Moderator Response:[PS] This post is walking a very fine line on sloganeering. You are making a large no. of assertions and provide no sources to back any of them.
In particular "There is no solution where we make a change of this magnitude and still all make money" flies in face of published plans and many countries roadmaps. Please provide sources to justify this assertion.
The assertion "There has never been a transition away from an energy source only additions.?" doesnt seem supported by EIA data.
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Sunspot at 20:47 PM on 16 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Jef, not only is Trump not right, he is lying again. The US contribution to the UN Global Warming fund was going to be $3 Billion. Which was cancelled. We spend almost $2 Billion A DAY on our military adventures, I think we could have afforded that. Anyway, "trillions and trillions" is bull. And every study shows that ramping up alternative energy creates a lot more jobs than coal mines do.
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One Planet Only Forever at 15:00 PM on 16 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Art Vandelay @8,
I agree that the total global population is a concern. But the issues identified by climate science are regarding the total impact of all humans, not the number of humans.
The highest impacting portion of the population changing their minds and behaving less harmfully will have to happen to achieve the required limiting of impacts on the future generations.
A significantly smaller total global population with the highest impacting people still as numerous is almost no improvement. Of course, a reduction of population that eliminated the highest impacting people would make a big difference, but my preference is for those people to change their minds and behave more altruistically.
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One Planet Only Forever at 14:49 PM on 16 October 20182018 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #41
nigelj,
The following may be a better way to explain my comment @7.
In 2013 there was a major flood event in southern Alberta. All kinds of people did all kinds of things to help those affected. The ones in need of help were helped. Nobody asked what the political ideology of anyone else was. And all the help was done in ways that did no harm to anyone else. And the helping did no harm to the future of humanity. That 'local' helping was altruistic.
In Alberta (and Canada) today, many people claim they want to be helpful regarding jobs for 'others in Alberta (and Canada)' and want tax revenue to help pay for public health insurance, public education, and other social assistance program, which makes them oppose efforts to 'make burning fossil fuels more expensive or more difficult to profit from'. Their opposition to efforts to support the required climate impact corrections is because trhey 'want to help others'. That is just appeals to tribalism (group selfishness) and promotion of anti-altruism.
Ayn Rand said that capitalism and altruism could not coexist, probably because the likes of her do not like the extra effort and resulting limitations of options that Altruism requires.
Naomi Klein's "The Shock Doctrine - The Rise of Disaster Capitalism" includes information about what conservative leaders actually did after Katrina hit New Orleans to try to make New Orleans more like what they wanted it to be (not so full of those "Others").
And more recently we all know how the conservative leadership in the USA 'helped' Puerto Rico.
Individual conservatives may be nice people. But gathered into a group, especially the United Greedier and Less Tolerant claiming to be Right, they can be very different. The Unite the Right objective is to give those still thinking they are conservatives only one voting choice - supporting the collective of unacceptable interests United and claiming to be Right.
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Art Vandelay at 14:12 PM on 16 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
@Ted Franklin, agreed, but if it's able to halt or reduce polar amplification then it will also reduce some of the related impacts, such as jet stream related weather events and coastal innundation. It also buys some time to develop methods and technology to remove CO2 from the atmosphere, and inevitably, for the world to reduce its population to more sustainable levels. The effect of 600ppm+ CO2 in the atmosphere does at least have the effect of amplifying the carbon cycle, and with so many mouths to feed by 2070 it might be an almost necessary evil.
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John Hartz at 13:53 PM on 16 October 2018Medieval Warm Period was warmer
Recommended supplemental reading:
How A Viking Swimming With A Sheep Led To Climate Change Denial by Matthew Gabriele, Forbes, Oct 14, 2018
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Ted Franklin at 11:13 AM on 16 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
@Art Vandelay - Geoengineering will certainly be proposed but the schemes that have been the subject of speculation so far are deeply flawed. Take, for instance, spraying sulfates into the atmosphere to increase the Earth's albedo. This will do nothing to halt acidification of the oceans. And whenever the program comes to a halt (as indeed all things come to an end), ia future generation will be doomed to suffer the immediate global warming effect of all the CO2 that has accumulated in the atmosphere while sulfates produced a false sense of security. There is no proven technology to get around the need to stop burning fossil fuels if we wish to limit global temperature anywhere near 1.5 degrees C. This report is the first IPCC report to consider a pathway that does not depend on the BECSS technogy that is not now and may never be economically viable.
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Ted Franklin at 10:59 AM on 16 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
@Nigelj - You say <> I appreciate your effort to look beneath the surface, but what is capitalism if not a system in which private corporations are obliged to maximize profits rather than solve problems in the generalized interest of humanity. The IPCC's latest report calls for a rapid, unprecedented, far-reaching transformation of major sectors of the economy. As I understand the rules, this exceedingly useful website does not allow us to discuss how that might be accomplished in political terms so I will leave it at that.
Moderator Response:[PS] Thank you. Discussion of technical solutions is fine. Political mechanisms (eg carbon tax versus ETS etc) can be discussed on appropriate threads but other sites eg https://thinkprogress.org/climate/ probably do this better. Partisan bickering and overly political comments are generally ruled out.
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Art Vandelay at 09:53 AM on 16 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Probably inevitable now that some sort of geoengineering response will be required to slow northern hemisphere climate change.
It's difficult to imagine that the world will come remotely close to meeting the emissions reductions required, even if the global energy sector manages to significantly transition away from fossil fuels, and noting that the transition itself is an emissions intensive exercise. Population growth and resulting emissions from land clearing and agriculture pretty much cancels out those emissions reductions.
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One Planet Only Forever at 09:43 AM on 16 October 20182018 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #41
nigelj,
Helping the local community in need is behaviour that is likely irrelevant of right-left, conservative-liberal leanings. But it can be a way for a person to claim they are altruistic when what they really are is tribally or selfishly motivated. I am pretty sure the conservatives in New Orleans did not go out of their way more than liberals to help those in desperate need after Katrina.
Limiting helpfulness in ways that are harmful to others, including future generations, is not 'being governed by altruism'. It is selective helpfulness for a sub-set, and it can actually be harmful to others.
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One Planet Only Forever at 09:30 AM on 16 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Any socioeconomic-political system that includes competition for perceptions of superiority relative to others (so ... all socioeconomic-political systems), can be expected to devolve into damaging egoism (selfishness) winning unless the leaders-winners constantly successfully do the harder work of ensuring that none among them are anti-altruistic.
And the people below the higher status people need to want to be more correctly aware and be willing to penalize those above them for failing to set more-altruistic examples. And that requires those lower status people to not want to benefit from excusing less acceptable behaviour.
Things would be so much better today if the global community had more altruistically responsible leaders 30 years ago. Instead, undeserving winners have been able to protect their undeserved perceptions of prosperity and opportunity. They succeed through misleading marketing appeals to people who are easily impressed into voting for the irresponsible likes of Trump (to try to preserve undeserved perceptions of superiority relative to others).
Have things changed since 30 years ago? Seems the Unite the Right crowd are more determined to be as incorrect and harmful to the future of humanity as they can get away with for as long as they can get away with.
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John Hartz at 05:25 AM on 16 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Recommended supplemental readings:
GOP shrugs off dire study warning of global warming by Miranda Green & Timothy Cama, The Hill, Oct 10, 2018
Senators concerned as Trump official disputes UN climate change warning by Michael Burke, The Hill, Oct 14, 2018
'It'll change back': Trump says climate change not a hoax, but denies lasting impact by Emily Holden, Guardian, Oct 15, 2018
‘I Don’t Know That It’s Man-Made,’ Trump Says of Climate Change. It Is., Fact Check by Lisa Friedman, Climate, New York Times, Oct 15, 2018
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nigelj at 05:14 AM on 16 October 20182018 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #41
Conservatives are altruistic towards their local communities, with charities, efforts by Churches and philanthropy. However conservatives / right wingers tend to be suspicious of altruism extended to other countries, the efforts of the UN, and government wealth transfer programmes. This is pretty common knowledge, so I dont think I need a page of research links on this one.
However these sorts of altruistic programmes have huge benefits to both receiver and also the giver. The obvious example is the Marshall Plan after WW2. These things get forgotten among the problems we have had with global terrorism, free trade hurting some groups of people, and the minority of people who abuse altruism, that has basically made some people suspicious of altruism and its related philosophy of globalisation. But its not globalisation that is wrong, its how its implemented that can always be improved.
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nigelj at 05:03 AM on 16 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Trump is being far too pessimistic. Renewable energy is not a threat to jobs. Massive economic transformations create jobs. Look at how unemployment rates plumetted during WW2 as production was geared up for the war effort. Economic output also doubled, and wages increased.
The problem is not capitalism. The problem is a lack of desire to direct capitalism to solve problems, rather than at mindless materialism for the sake of it.
The problem is not globalisation. Look at how the Marshall Plan after WW2 helped the world and ultimately America by creating a market for Americas products.Nationalism and turning inwards is understandable, but is not the answer.
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John Hartz at 02:56 AM on 16 October 2018Hurricanes aren't linked to global warming
Recommended supplemental readings...
How to talk about hurricanes now by John D Sutter, Health, CNN, Oct 10, 2018
The Hurricanes, and Climate-Change Questions, Keep Coming. Yes, They’re Linked. by Henry Fountain, Climate, New York Times, Oct 10, 2018
Is climate change making hurricanes worse? by Daniel Levitt & Niko Kommenda, Weather, Guardian, Oct 10, 2018
Yes, Hurricane Michael is a climate change story by Pete Vernon, Columbia Journalism Review (CJR), Oct 12, 2018
Note: The Daniel Levitt & Niko Kommenda article include outstanding graphics.
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MA Rodger at 02:39 AM on 16 October 20182018 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #40
Sunspot @7,
Your comment is rather confusing but you do appear to be saying that, rather than global temperature "is accelerating" (as that web-page you linked to @3 says) but "will be accelerating." The difference between "is" and "will be" is not trivial.
Beyond that, you appear to be linking the delays between a climate forcing and the resulting temperature rise with some unspecified feedbacks which you say are well known but ignored by the IPCC. That is a strong accusation to make.
It is possible to accuse the IPCC of not properly accounting for certain slow feedbacks. But that doesn't seem to be what youy re saying.
You seem to be saying that the IPCC ignores the most basic of feedbacks. And you do seem to misunderstand the reason why it takes time for a climate forcing to impact temperatures. The reason is the thermal inertia of the oceans. The surface waters take about a decade to warm with further warming taking a century or so as the deep ocean reacts that-much-more slowly to the cilmate forcing.
And all the time this decadal/century-long warming will involve feedbacks. So with today's level of increase in AGW forcing pretty-much at the same level it has been since the mid-1970s, or forty years ago, there has been plenty of time for feedbacks to kick in and start your alleged acceleration mechanism.
I hope this demonstrates why your accusations against the IPCC are too confused to be taken seriously. I suggest you need to be more specific as to what feedbacks you are referring to.
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jef12506 at 02:28 AM on 16 October 2018There’s one key takeaway from last week’s IPCC report
Trump stated; "I don’t wanna give trillions and trillions of dollars. I don’t wanna lose millions and millions of jobs. I don’t wanna be put at a disadvantage.”
This the general consensus around the world and he is right. Unless and until this is addressed nothing will get done. And we will not solve the problems that industrial consumer capitalism has wrought on the world by ramping up industrial consumer capitalism.
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Sunspot at 23:58 PM on 15 October 20182018 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming Digest #40
The IPCC ignores feedbacks. The past temp change is linear because the feedbacks are just starting to kick in. We also know that it takes at least ten years for added CO2 to have its full effect. So warming has to continue just from the CO2 we have put there in the past decade. Every Climate Scientist knows about this effect. Yet it is ignored in the IPCC report.
Moderator Response:[JH] You assert:
Yet it is ignored in the IPCC report.
Please specify which IPCC report you are referring to.
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