I understand it much better after reading groggy and your posts in this threadYou should understand that well enough
I understand it much better after reading groggy and your posts in this threadYou should understand that well enough
I understand it much better after reading groggy and your posts in this thread
He also endorsed oil, coal and gas production.If Obama didn't care about the environment why did he make a decision that was quite unpopular regarding the pipeline?
expressed way more proficiently than Blackrock could ever capture his thoughts... Blackrock...take note....,,
Could he not have endorsed oils, gas, and coal? Doubt it. As I understand he endorsed responsible oil gas and goal, along with greener energy as are a number of states in the union. I understand he's not saying stop drilling. Hasn't the been more drill heads and pipe laid in his tenure than during Shrubs. The bottleneck in oil and gas is the refining, fires, explosions, maintenance and the like.He also endorsed oil, coal and gas production.
Indeed, there is a new story out today that has some Green groups wondering whether they should go after Obama for his "climate silence."
http://thehill.com/blogs/e2-wire/e2...ded-on-whether-to-hit-obama-on-climate-change
More barks from the kennel, lost your bong again?expressed way more proficiently than Blackrock could ever capture his thoughts... Blackrock...take note
http://www.thestar.com/columnists/article/1274904--cohn-mcguinty-resignation-is-a-mismanaged-retreatClean environment? Promises to eliminate coal-fired power plants had to be postponed twice; pledges to reduce global warming fizzled as enthusiasm waned.
I agree with this.But the key here is even if the effects of those gases are not as predicted we still need to think about the impact of burning of fossil fuels, deforestation and agriculture
As I figured, you aren't smart enough to know the answer or to be able to find it out.Thats what I thought. Groggy cant answer my simple question.
I'll repeat it again:
Can you explain the science behind this delay?? And can you also please tell us how many years/decades we have until the delay is over and the warming kicks in??
I'm waiting for a detailed response, groggy
Can you explain the science behind this delay?? And can you also please tell us how many years/decades we have until the delay is over and the warming kicks in??
He may not be able to, but I can give it a shot.^^^^^^ Nice try, groggy. You still havent answered my 2 questions
Answer my questions first, and then I'll answer yours.
Here they are again. And I want your personal words, not links to a website:
I gave you the answer in two words, but you aren't smart enough to understand that.^^^^^^ Nice try, groggy. You still havent answered my 2 questions
Answer my questions first, and then I'll answer yours.
Here they are again. And I want your personal words, not links to a website:
you aren't smart enough to understand
you would not be able to understand the science
I now feel fully justified in describing you as too stupid to understand the debate
I gave you the answer in two words, but you aren't smart enough to understand that
I've given you the answer three times now. Do you understand it yet?
I'll even give you one more link that has a bit easier language for you to understand
Right groggy, but a pot of water gets warmer and warmer before it reaches boiling point. So far earth is not warming, at least not statistically significant. The Met office and Phil Jones have admitted thislag time (though perhaps the term thermal inertia should have been used here)
The time delay between the introduction of CO2 into the atmosphere and the effects to take effect.
(answer in one sentence)
Similar in effect to the amount of time it takes a pot of water to boil once the stove has been turned on, also known as thermal inertia
Some scientists claim there is no relationship between rising CO2's and temperatures.
He may not be able to, but I can give it a shot.
A close examination of the CH4, CO2 and temperature fluctuations recorded in the Arctic ice core does in fact reveal that yes, the temperature moved first in what is, when viewed coarsely, a very tight correlation, but what it is not correct, is to say the temperature rose and then hundreds of years later the CO2 rose. These warming periods lasted for 5,000 to 10,000 years (the cooling periods lasted more like 100,000 years!) so for the majority of that time (90% and more) temperature and CO2 rose together. This means that this remarkably detailed archive of climatological evidence clearly allows for CO2 acting as a cause for rising temperatures while also revealing it can be an effect of them.
The current understanding of those cycles is that changes in orbital parameters (Milankovich) caused greater amounts of summer sunlight to fall in the northern hemisphere. This is actually a very small forcing, but it caused ice to retreat in the north which changed the albedo. This change, reducing the amount of white, reflective ice surface, led to increasing the warmth more in a feedback effect. Some number of centuries after that process started, CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere began to rise and this also amplified the warming trend even further as an additional feedback mechanism.
So, it is correct that CO2 did not trigger the warmings, but it definitely did contribute to them, and according to climate theory and model experiments, greenhouse gas forcing was the dominant factor in the magnitude of the ultimate change.
One warning that this gives us for the future is that we may well see additional natural CO2 come out of the woodwork as whatever process that took place repeatedly over the last 650K years begins to play out again. The likely candidates are out gassing from warming ocean waters, carbon from warming soils and methane from melting permafrost.
From 'How To Talk To A Skeptic' by Colby Beck.
Phil, you can also go to http://www.realclimate.org/index.php?p=13 for discussions by climate scientists of exactly this question, but with greater technical detail and full references to the scientific literature, but I though the Cole Notes version was more your level.
“CO2 Lags Not Leads” was first published here, where you can still find the original comment thread. This updated version is also posted on the Grist Website, where additional comments can be found, though the author, Colby Beck, does not monitor or respond there
Some scientists claim there is no relationship between rising CO2's and temperatures.
Watch this (pay attention to Piers Corbin):
Except there's more more scientists turning against global warming now, rockie.'Some' scientists also think that humans and dinosaurs lived on this earth at the same time. That doesn't make it true. You will always be able to find 'someone'
I hear you.'Some' scientists also think that humans and dinosaurs lived on this earth at the same time. That doesn't make it true.