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Climate Data Re-examined (updated)

An anonymous reader writes "An important paper that re-examines historical climate data was published on 28 October in the respected journal Energy & Environment. (The paper is also available here.) According to an article in Canada's National Post, the paper shows that a "pillar of the Kyoto Accord is based on false calculations, incorrect data and an overtly biased selection of climate records." (USA Today also has a story.) This paper will undoubtedly be controversial and should stir a vigourous data review." Update: 11/05 14:54 GMT by T : newyhouse points out a similarly contrarian 2001 Economist article by Bjorn Lomborg, author of The Skeptical Environmentalist .

784 comments

  1. Biased environmentalists? by Dancin_Santa · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nooooooo!

    1. Re:Biased environmentalists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes, environmentalist really just want to be evil. They don't care about the environment, they are just jealous of your SUVs.

      I'm sick of hearing this bull. I also didn't think this article or journal are anything but oil funded. Just reading the first page makes it clear it's not a peer reviewed.

    2. Re:Biased environmentalists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking of bias, the multi-science publishing company that puts out this journal publishes most of it's books about oil. The other "sciences" they publish on are all related to finding oil

    3. Re:Biased environmentalists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh boy. A "article" attacking one five-year-old paper. Sounds a lot like the creationist attacking Darwin, but forgetting about all the more accurate science that came later. Good for waving in peoples face that science doesn't "agree", but worthless in a real debate.

    4. Re:Biased environmentalists? by mevets · · Score: 1

      The "national post" is not a credible news source; it is a mouthpiece similar to "Fox News" or "USA today".

      [http://www.davidappell.com/archives/00000372.ht m]

      Energy and Environment's editor, Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen, admits that her political biases--which are anti-Kyoto (see below)--influence what papers she publishes. This is from a Sept. 5, 2003 article in the Chronicle of Higher Education by Rich Monastersky:

      The two researchers [Soon and Baliunas], with three additional co-authors, published a longer version of the paper this spring in Energy and Environment, a journal geared mainly to social scientists. The journal's editor, Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen, a reader in geography at the University of Hull, in England, says she sometimes publishes scientific papers challenging the view that global warming is a problem, because that position is often stifled in other outlets. "I'm following my political agenda -- a bit, anyway," she says. "But isn't that the right of the editor?"

    5. Re:Biased environmentalists? by Archie+Steel · · Score: 1

      Indeed! Ross McKitrick, one of the authors, can hardly be considered an "uninterested" researcher. He belongs to the Competitive Enterprise Institute, which has ExxonMobil as a major funder. For that matter, Bjorn Lomberg isn't such a reliable source himself, having been condemned by the Danish Committee on Scientific Dishonesty for misrepresenting or misinterpreting the scientific studies of others.

      The good news is that fossil fuel reserves may run out before we cause irreparable damage to our environment. In any case, it makes sense to begin the transition towards renewable sources of energy ASAP (as well as put lots of funding back into energy research). Critics say that will cost too much to be feasible, as if the money would be thrown down a black hole - while in fact this money will go to corporations, associations and workers who develop the new energy economy. Sure, the oil cartels will lose money. But, really, who cares about the oil barons losing a few billions? :-)

      --

      Reminder: find a new sig
    6. Re:Biased environmentalists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excuse me, but haven't the scientists of the original paper already debunked the debunking? Like last week???

      Oh sorry, didn't mean to bring up reality - keep wishing and I'm sure Tinkerbelle will rise from the grave!

    7. Re:Biased environmentalists? by _xen · · Score: 1

      Except in this case it's the anti-environmental critics that have been caught out censoring data to fake their results.

    8. Re:Biased environmentalists? by penguin7of9 · · Score: 1

      And do you suppose corporations and politicians with billions of dollars at stake are not "biased"?

      I prefer the folks who are biased for the safe, conservative thing to do: to reduce greenhouse gas emissions until we can be certain that they are safe in the long term.

  2. A Bunch of shills by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "just about the only journal which gives a platform to all sides of the global warming debate, especially on the policy issues".
    Check out the funding behind this.

    1. Re:A Bunch of shills by kfg · · Score: 2, Funny

      Check out the funding behind this.

      Noted, as a potential source of bias.

      You seem, however, to have left out your scientific criticism of their methodology and results.

      As that criticism will comprise 99% of your final grade it looks like you have some work to do if you expect to pass this course.

      KFG

    2. Re:A Bunch of shills by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, no. Extraordinary claims ("completely changes the debate over man-made global warming") demand extraordinary evidence. These folks have no credible reputation as environmental scientists that I am aware of, and their publisher appears to be entirely biased. ("Greenhouse Delusion" indeed.) I will believe that news organizations have been trolled and respond appropriately, unless credible scientists and scientific organizations support their claims. To do otherwise is to just waste my time and misdirect my effort.

    3. Re:A Bunch of shills by kfg · · Score: 1

      Ah, and you were off to such a good start too (although pointing out some other potential sources of bias might have earned you a bonus point).

      You seem, however, to have slept through the lecture on claims and proofs and merely cribed notes which you don't understand and thus fail to be able to distinguish an extraordinary claim ("I did my homework, but an Alien stole it from me after the anal probe") from a perfectly normal claim ("A clerical error fucked up the data").

      Both require proof, of course, but the later proof can be handled through the simple expediant of comparing data sets and methodolgies. (Frankly, we haven't the stomach at this hour to review an anal probe proof)

      But then you seem to be unable to distinguish between a publishers blurb and the actual paper, let alone the work the paper is based on.

      Better luck next term.

      KFG

    4. Re:A Bunch of shills by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      Well, you seem to have left out your logical criticism of the way this is being presented, such as (from the Post article):

      "removes the foundation for claims of 20th-century uniqueness"

      "groundbreaking studies continue to be published that pull the rug out from under Kyoto's shaky edifice."

      "environmentalists had every reason to believe that few climate experts would dare continue to publicly oppose Kyoto's science"

      "Supporters of the GHG-induced warming hypothesis desperately needed a "smoking gun" to prop up the need for Kyoto." ...and on it goes, in a totally unbalanced manner, doing the very thing it claims those evil environmentalists have been doing all this time.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    5. Re:A Bunch of shills by kfg · · Score: 1

      I made no claim. To do so without solid review of the work would be foolish.

      And if I'm going to begin critcising the popular press for how they report science we're going to be here a long, loooooooooong time.

      It is important, however, to distinguish between how the press reports science and the science itself. Criticism of such reporting is a valid task for the scientist and one often overlooked, but one should not fall into the trap of believing that if one has critcised the reporting that one has critcised the work.

      They are two logically seperate issues.

      KFG

    6. Re:A Bunch of shills by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      Ok, good points.

      I guess it just bothers me that a lot of people (including me apparently :) will be getting their opinions from 'sources' like this article.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    7. Re:A Bunch of shills by kfg · · Score: 1

      In point of fact, if you review carefully, you'll find that was much the point of my original post. :)

      The press has a responsibility to report responsibly. They generally fail miserably. But the reader has a responsibility to read responsibly as well and do his/her own thinking.

      Your first post to me would not have engendered the response I gave to the first poster. You claimed bullshit on the article on the grounds that your own thought process set off the bullshit alarms based on its content.

      As it happens I think you have good instincts in that regard. Keep it up. But use it as an indication that you have to find other sources on the subject. They're out there, just a bit harder to track down than a copy of the Post.

      (And don't get me going on the Post or we'll be here all week. Blech.)

      KFG

  3. Sounds familiar! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
    pillar of the Kyoto Accord is based on false calculations, incorrect data and an overtly biased selection of climate records
    Sounds a lot like what's been happening here in the US... Rejection of the Kyoto treaty is based on false calculations, incorrect data and an overtly biased selection of cabinet members ;)
    1. Re:Sounds familiar! by kpansky · · Score: 1

      Actually, the Kyoto treaty was rejected by congress. Treaties such as this require congressional approval before they can be considered as entered by the US. Pres. Clinton "signed" the agreement, but CONGRESS VOTED NOT TO EVEN TAKE A VOTE on the ratification of Kyoto. Cabinet members nothing. Congress -- both houses if I recall -- were so opposed to Kyoto that they refused to even remotely consider ratifying. It wasn't even a close vote -- not in any sense of the word.

      --

      --Kevin
  4. Biased statisticians and economists? by isfuglen · · Score: 0
    Noooooooooooooooo!!!

    --
    When life hands you lemons, grab the salt and pass the tequilla...
    1. Re:Biased statisticians and economists? by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      So, when's the correction coming out, now that the original authors and others have demostrated that these "biases" were artifacts created by the re-examiners importing a 159-collumn spreadsheet into a 112-collumn Excel document?

  5. I know what will happen now... by Zog+The+Undeniable · · Score: 2, Interesting

    GWB will use this as an excuse to drop the whole hydrogen economy thing and further increase America's dependence on Middle Eastern oil. Whether the climate gurus are right or wrong, this is a Bad Thing.

    --
    When I am king, you will be first against the wall.
    1. Re:I know what will happen now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So: terrible catastrophes causing trillions of dollars in damage and hundreds of millions of deaths may be averted, and this is "a Bad Thing?"

      Gee, thanks Zog.

    2. Re:I know what will happen now... by eheien · · Score: 1
      Out of curiosity, what dependence on Middle Eastern oil?

      If you look at the Department of Energy statistics (older statistics also available here), you'll see that the Middle Eastern countries which the US imports crude oil from (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Algeria are the only ones in the top 15) comprise less than 20% of the US imports. Canada and Mexico together are over 30% of imports. Despite what most people think, the US imports oil from a wide variety of places. Please take a look at this before making more statements like that.

    3. Re:I know what will happen now... by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      This is a troll, right? You're purposely ignoring the whole 'the first car a child today learns to drive could run on hydrogen' initiative to troll people like me, right? You're ignoring the administration's doubling of spending on renewable-resources research in its first budget so I'll get mad and respond, right?

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    4. Re:I know what will happen now... by larsl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'll bet you a dollar that Europe would start competing for 'our' Mexican and Venezuelan oil supplies if Gulf production shut down.

      reckon?

    5. Re:I know what will happen now... by helix400 · · Score: 1

      GWB will use this as an excuse to drop the whole hydrogen economy thing and further increase America's dependence on Middle Eastern oil.

      Nice troll.

      It's strange to hear you argue that we shouldn't be dependent on foreign oil...and then rip on GWB, one of your strongest allies for that cause. Anybody who follows the news knows Bush wants to decrease dependence on foreign oil to such a degree that he's willing to drill in Alaskan nature reserves.

    6. Re:I know what will happen now... by tm2b · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It's strange to hear you argue that we shouldn't be dependent on foreign oil...and then rip on GWB, one of your strongest allies for that cause.
      Right. Because the easiest way to end dependence on foreign oil is to annex some places that have oil, making it not-so-foreign any more...
      --
      "It is our blasphemy which has made us great, and will sustain us, and which the gods secretly admire in us." - Zelazny
    7. Re:I know what will happen now... by doktor-hladnjak · · Score: 1

      Maybe 20% doesn't seem like a lot, but that doesn't mean that the US and Europe are not dependent on middle eastern oil. Just look at the 1973 Arab Oil Embargo. If I recall correctly, back then the US relied *less* on middle eastern oil than it does today.

    8. Re:I know what will happen now... by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "GWB will use this as an excuse to drop the whole hydrogen economy thing and further increase America's dependence on Middle Eastern oil."

      Huh? As it stands, it's the "hydrogen economy" itself that is going to increase our dependence on oil. You need energy to separate hydrogen out of compounds, and unless we start building more nuclear power plants (you know, like GWB is pushing for) that energy will come from the fossil fuel burning plants that make up the majority of the power plants in this country.

    9. Re:I know what will happen now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Iraqsylvania?

    10. Re:I know what will happen now... by 1010011010 · · Score: 1

      Coal. Coal and be processed and burned cleanly. And, to quote Leo on The West Wing, we're the Saudi Arabia of coal.

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    11. Re:I know what will happen now... by InsaneGeek · · Score: 1

      Nope the easiest & cheapest way to get at foreign oil would be to continue with the status quo. The price was what 1 loaf of bread for 10 barrels of crude? Keeping Iraq under the oil for food program is cheaper than any war period.

    12. Re:I know what will happen now... by wayward_son · · Score: 1

      "further increase America's dependence on Middle Eastern oil"

      God forbid we drill for it in the frozen wasteland.

      Caribu Rights, everyone!

    13. Re:I know what will happen now... by Mindbridge · · Score: 1

      Petrol has an extremely inelastic demand. A 10% drop in global oil supplies tends to double the price of oil. Hence the OPEC policies (which have been quite successful -- a few years ago the price fell to $10 per barrel, now it is around $25).

      The fact that only 20% of the US petrol comes from the other end of the world means nothing -- we live in a global economy. If OPEC wanted, they could easily raise the oil price to $50 per barrel and that will apply to ALL of the oil used by the U.S. We are fortunate that they have a much lower price target (to minimize the long term migration from oil dependency).

    14. Re:I know what will happen now... by son_of_asdf · · Score: 1

      Had I a few mod points, I would give your +1 insightful based on your sig alone......

      --
      Don't Panic!
    15. Re:I know what will happen now... by ThisIsFred · · Score: 1

      GWB will use this as an excuse to drop the whole hydrogen economy thing and further increase America's dependence on Middle Eastern oil. Whether the climate gurus are right or wrong, this is a Bad Thing.

      If I understood the reports correctly, the corrected data shows that the 20th Century has not been a record century for temperature rise, but is still in the "top two". One thousand years is still a pretty limited snapshot, and I still don't see the characteristic jump and holding of temperature of the 20th Century anywhere else on the chart. However, my interpretation is subject to my own ignorance of the exact science behind it. Someone may still come along and say, "we have other historical data that corrects inaccuracies" in this data (in measurement not calculation), so I'm not ready to advocate back-yard oil rigs and oil-burning lightbulbs yet.

      The dependance on foreign oil is another issue. My personal feeling is that third-world countries which export a single resource are bad for global stability, because they usually gravitate toward internal chaos, and that leads to protracted war with neighboring nations. It's just too easy to suck the oil out of the ground and hand it over to someone in exchange for cash, and it seems those countries never bother to develop beyond the requirements for doing that. Heaven forbid there's a burp in oil demand, where the entire country's economy suddenly falters. Single-export economies are very bad, and our relentless pursuit of dirt-cheap oil is only worsening the situation. The solution isn't as simple as drilling in Alaska, either.

      Think of it this way: Would the US be the economic powerhouse it is today if we only had let England/Holland/France come in and collect raw materials to pay off our war debts? Probably not. The US was forced to produce something of value on the global market in order to pay those debts, and it required organization and education on a national level. And that led to a technically-advanced nation of well-educated people. Now take a look at Nigeria. Many different tribes and very cheap natural resource that the global market wants. It doesn't take a whole lot of organization or education on a national level to let some foreign power come in and take a natural resource out of the ground. Nigeria's literacy rate is something like 68 per cent. Their exports have all dropped off in favor of oil export. Their other major export, food, has dropped down to subsistence levels. In Nigeria, you're either getting money from the oil industry, or you're poor or a thief. Sure they've had tribal warfare in the past, but lowest-cost oil production has aggravated the situation by creating haves and have-nots, and an ignorant populace is a catalyst for class-warfare (in a literal sense, with weapons).

      So even without global warming, there are strong arguments for licking our addiction to cheap oil, or at the very least, changing our policies so that instead of just stepping into a developing nation sucking out the crude oil, there is a requirement for aiding the development of that country to counteract the damage we do.

      --
      Fred

      "A fool and his freedom are soon parted"
      -RMS
    16. Re:I know what will happen now... by snake_dad · · Score: 1

      1 loaf of bread, three rpg-7's and 10 kalashnikovs.

      --
      karma capped .sig seeking available Slashdot poster for long-term relationship.
  6. Only in Canada by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now I don't want to respond to the article's claims, since that'll only spark a flame war I don't want to fight but:

    Only in Canada does one see a graph with a flat line then sharp spike and instantly think "Oooo, a hockey stick!"

    This just cracks me up because it is absolutely true of most of my Canadian relities, they are just nuts over hockey and I'm sure this doesn't strike any of them as the least bit odd comparison.

    1. Re:Only in Canada by fiftyfly · · Score: 2, Funny
      Man I, for one, sure ain't thinkin' aboot hockey. It's fricken cold

      So yeah, it's 2am and I'm checking a little weathernetwork just in case it's not too nasty out to go to the timmy's for a little coffee. The news is not good. Very not good. Ok, so -28 is bad but surely there's other people suffering bad weather too eh? So I check Calgary and it's -20. Hrmpf. weenies. Maybe Edmonton? -22. Well goodness... There's gotta be _somebody_ out there a little colder then hicksville^H^H^H^H^H^HOlds....

      • Grande Prairie: -18
      • High Level: -10
      • Whitehorse: -7
      WTF?!?! What ever happened to simple arctic weather fronts? It's getting warmer the farther north I check...
      • Yellowknife: -15
      • Anchorage: +3
      • Rankin Inlet: -14
      OMG. What is this? Anybody else feeling like the big guy upstairs slapped a 'kick me' sign on you back? Obviously this isn't just a cold front - all the damned cold got fed up with the north and came here. Man it's even only -7 in Winterpeg and only -17 in Churchill. They get polar bears in churchill. And it's 4 deg warmer in Rankin, more then 500km north.

      All I can say is there's gonna be on pissed off guy if it doesn't hit the forecasted +6 on sunday.

      I wish I could say the above is a little satire, but it's NOT . It's not even like I'm really far north either, being smack inbetween Edmonton & Calgary. Expedia says only 906km from Bozeman.

      <sigh/>

      --
      "Sanity is not statistical", George Orwell, "1984"
    2. Re:Only in Canada by Demolition · · Score: 1

      Does it make you feel any better knowing that it's about -35 in Blue River, B.C., right now? :-)

      D.

    3. Re:Only in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note to readers from USA: fiftyfly is using the degrees Celsius temperature scale. So although he or she is absolutely correct that fricken cold up there, it's at least not bad as a naive Fahrenheit-user might think.

    4. Re: Only in Canada by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Now I don't want to respond to the article's claims, since that'll only spark a flame war I don't want to fight

      Shit or get off the pot!

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    5. Re:Only in Canada by fiftyfly · · Score: 1

      Why, as a matter of fact... :)

      --
      "Sanity is not statistical", George Orwell, "1984"
    6. Re:Only in Canada by commodoresloat · · Score: 0, Troll
      Now I don't want to respond to the article's claims, since that'll only spark a flame war I don't want to fight

      Right. Much easier to start a flame war by bashing Canadians than by reading and responding to the actual article.

    7. Re:Only in Canada by Zocalo · · Score: 1

      You are talking about hockey and *don't* want a fight? What kind of freak are you??? ;)

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    8. Re:Only in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only in the USA do they use Fahrenheit!

    9. Re:Only in Canada by tkg · · Score: 1

      Given that were discussing global warming here, I'd be interested to know how much warmer these temps are than the seasonal averages?

    10. Re:Only in Canada by IamGarageGuy+2 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I fail to see any point to this. I don't see how you could look at this chart and not see a hockey stick. If you don't then you are simply lying to yourself or you are just a freak. Most Canadians are scared of the (non-existent) threat of global warming because of the large investment in outdoor rinks without which we would be continually fighting for indoor icetime. If that ever happens the USA should be very scared. Imagine Canada without enough rinks for the population and the ensuing carnage. It would immediately spill over to the US and Iraq would look like a minor penalty compared to the stick swinging, crazed canadians invading the borders and taking over all the arenas north of Boston. The only safe place for a peace loving American would be in the local breweries (a canadian invasion would surely be equipped with their own beer) Be afraid, be very afraid.

      --
      Stay tuned for new sig...
    11. Re:Only in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a Canadian, I'm more worried about the glaciers melting away (it's where our summer water supplies come from), the permafrost not being perma anymore, and the potential invasion that'll come when GWB demands our water supplies (after he wins the next election, thanks to Diebold/Sequoia/ES&S) to cover the shortages caused by the non-existant phenomena of global warming.

    12. Re:Only in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you = fucktard. please report to the nearest Seppuku Club and/or Happy Fun Time Suicide Booth.

    13. Re:Only in Canada by fiftyfly · · Score: 1

      They're not, for the most part. It's just that the local weath is much colder then average.

      --
      "Sanity is not statistical", George Orwell, "1984"
    14. Re:Only in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hint: this might be why the grandparent post started with "Note to readers from USA"

    15. Re:Only in Canada by leifw · · Score: 1

      So why the mention of Bozeman? Are you refering to the Bozeman, MT, USA in which I now sit? (I know no other Bozeman.) It was a balmy -15F (-26C) here this morning. fiftyfly, why Bozeman?

    16. Re:Only in Canada by fiftyfly · · Score: 1
      So why the mention of Bozeman? Are you refering to the Bozeman, MT, USA in which I now sit? (I know no other Bozeman.) It was a balmy -15F (-26C) here this morning. fiftyfly, why Bozeman?

      It's the closest state capital

      --
      "Sanity is not statistical", George Orwell, "1984"
    17. Re:Only in Canada by leifw · · Score: 1

      No it's not. Helena is the capital of MT. :-) See http://www.officialusa.com/stateguides/capitals/

    18. Re:Only in Canada by fiftyfly · · Score: 1


      you're right, and I should def take a little more time posting.

      --
      "Sanity is not statistical", George Orwell, "1984"
    19. Re:Only in Canada by kchayer · · Score: 1
      Anchorage: +3

      It should be noted that Anchorage sits on the coast upstream from some nice warm ocean currents, so our weather is much milder than other northern locations. In the Alaskan interior, cities such as Fairbanks get both colder in the winter and hotter in the summer than we do.

      --

      "I say consider this day seized!" -Hobbes
      "Tomorrow we'll seize the day and throttle it!" -Calvin
    20. Re:Only in Canada by leifw · · Score: 1

      It's terribly hard to when you're shivering...

    21. Re:Only in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha
      I slept under a highway overpass near Olds one summer. It was probably 28 above that night.

      It's about 4 in Vancouver

  7. It's possible, after all by mirko · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It however doesn't mean that we should not pollute.
    A friend of mine is prepairing a PHD in geology.
    He often climbs on top of the Mont Blanc (4807m) where he analyzes the ice cap.
    He found out that ther chemicals that impregnated the ice are similar only to the ones which emanates from the General Motors factories, in Detroit, US.
    There is a serious issue, there.
    It is not because it won't make rain more that it is not a bad thing.

    --
    Trolling using another account since 2005.
    1. Re:It's possible, after all by erik+umenhofer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      agreed, polluting is bad, but making huge policy changes and other expensive modifications without probable cause is also bad. I don't want to make changes because of some bad data, I want to make changes to better the planet. Not to advert some mythical killing of the planet which some said would happen at the "alarming rate" at which our temp was rising.

    2. Re:It's possible, after all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whew. That's a relief. I was worried that all those chemicals on Mont Blanc originated from Kim Park's dry cleaners over on Center Street.

    3. Re:It's possible, after all by pe1rxq · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The temperature is rising in an alarming rate....
      Current earth models predict that at this rate around 2050 there will be a critical point reached where the greenhouse sink holes will break down and become greenhouse sources (breakdown of the amazon rain forest and far worse the release of methanhydrates from the ocean floor). At that point the process will accelerate itself and climate will change drasticly.

      What this study shows is that it might not be man's fault but have a natural cause.
      Fact remains that our current behaviour is driving this in some degree. It might be the main force or completly negligable. It might be the last little push to disaster.

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    4. Re:It's possible, after all by TheTreeFrog · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What I never hear discussed is why global warming is supposed to be a bad thing. Look at what global warming is supposed to do: slight increase in average atmospheric temperature, melting polar ice caps, increase in tropical climate zones, decrease in polar climate zones, and increasing sea levels.

      From the point of view of every other species on the planet, aren't these good things? More shallow ocean area (where most marine organisms live), more tropical areas (where most land organisms live), and a return to the warmer temperatures more prevalent throughout most of the richer periods of Earth's evolutionary history. For the animals it's win win win.

      For humans isn't it really just a straight cost/benefit analysis? Benefits of industrial CO2 emissions versus the costs from rising sea levels (Holland anyone?) and costs from having to relocate crop lands due to shifting weather patterns (remember melting polar caps means MORE overally rainfall - not worldwide deserts). It's a question to be answered but the problem with Kyoto was always that it crippled the First world economies (why no first world nation, not even signatories is even pretending to implement it) to very little actual effect.

      I wouldn't be surprised to find out that for the cost of Kyoto we could wall in all the coastal cities of the world, provide agricultural assistance to affected areas and still come out ahead.

      But I guess straight economics isn't PC...
      Seriously, why isn't Canada pumping out CO2 as fast as possible?

    5. Re:It's possible, after all by MisterMook · · Score: 1
      Seriously, why isn't Canada pumping out CO2 as fast as possible?
      Funny. I kinda thought that was the point of Celine Dion, but then again I might have just based my perceptions on biased data.
    6. Re:It's possible, after all by pacman+on+prozac · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Surely anyone who can remember more than the last 10 years knows that the temperature is rising?

      Its so blatent, every year here in the UK we get more and more extreme weather. The "hottest day on record" has happened just about every summer for at least the past 5 years running, each time a little hotter.

      Also people who normally would avoid the tin-hat brigade by miles now believe that the UK govt is covering something up because they have seen how much the weather has changed over the last 30+ years.

      I'm not saying pollution is the cause, but the effect is definately real. It does seem fairly obvious that if we screw with the atmospheric balances we are going to have big effects, however the warming *could* be down to variations in the Earths spin etc. It would be nice to see some real studies not funded by either the oil companies or Mr Murdoch tell us wtf is happening (is there anything global not under the thumb of these 2 parties?).

      Whats it going to take? Is being efficient really going to kill our ecomonies that much? Or is it just not going to fill some fatcat directors pockets with cash quite so quickly.

    7. Re:It's possible, after all by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      you know what's kinda funny too?

      doing those changes often make the processes more effective, and in the long run end up SAVING money.

      you know, unnecessary big fuel consumption cars & etc don't only pollute too much, they WASTE ENERGY(which is why they pollute too but that's another thing..). same goes for processes in industry(making them cleaner usually makes the processes more effective as well as things are boosted to this millenium).
      .

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    8. Re:It's possible, after all by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      around here(finland) they could just as well be normal changes, and the records are usually last been made 100y ago, so the weather still could be totally 'natural'. anyways, we should be getting warmer winters and colder summers actually, NOT hotter summers and colder winters as there has been for the last 2 years(2years however means _nothing_).

      anyways, what's scary is the devastating speed at which they're cutting down rainforests(and they don't grow back either) and their long term effects.

      and being _efficient_ saves the ecosystem.
      destroying the possibilities which enable your business to make money isn't that efficient, and being from a country that largely depended(and still depends) on forest industry and associated chemical processes i should know that things are better off when you don't fuck up the environment(the industry didn't care jack back in the day, now they're starting to because local pollution really sucks, for everyone, at least if they like fishing).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    9. Re:It's possible, after all by olderchurch · · Score: 1

      The cost from rising sea levels are pretty big for us (yes holland), but very minor compared to coutnries like bangladesh. We have a big enough GDP to get ourselfs prepared for the rising sea levels. Bangladesh however faces a serious problem. They don't have the money to take preventive measures so they loose (a part of) their country and probably a lot of lives as well.

      That said, I always like the climate people. First of all they get more funding when they predict Bad News (tm). Second of all, almost all the data I see goes back for 200 years, 1000 years max (the data in the article goes back 500 years). This is peanuts compared to the earths lifespan. Before the year 3000 BC a lot of climate changes happenend, why can't the global warming we are facing today be a part of the regular climate change?

      Don't get me wrong, I support the Kyoto protocol and think we should live ecologically friendly. And warning about a climate change is probably the easiest way to get the John Doe to pay attention.

      --
      Disclaimer: This opinion was created without the use of any facts
    10. Re:It's possible, after all by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It however doesn't mean that we should not pollute.

      But that's the problem. Kyoto isn't about pollution, it's about greenhouse gases, most notably CO2. The argument I hear from many scientists is that the efforts to enforce Kyoto will take away from efforts to reduce actual pollution -- that is, chemicals that are harmful to humans, animals, and plants. CO2, and other greenhouse gases, do not fit this description.

      Enforcing Kyoto could actually make pollution worse. That's why it's paramount that it be clearly demonstrated that:

      Global warming be demonstrated as a real phenomenon. (This appears to be true, but it hasn't been shown this isn't a natural cycle.)

      Global warming is shown to be caused by greenhouse gases. (This definitely hasn't been shown to be true.)

      Damage from global warming is a higher priority than other polluting chemicals that harm living organisms. (This definitely hasn't been shown to be true.)

    11. Re:It's possible, after all by RevMike · · Score: 1, Informative

      Surely anyone who can remember more than the last 10 years knows that the temperature is rising?

      Its so blatent, every year here in the UK we get more and more extreme weather. The "hottest day on record" has happened just about every summer for at least the past 5 years running, each time a little hotter.

      Actually, the climate models that I have seen predict that Ireland, Great Britain, and Northern Europe will become much colder due to global warming. The reason is that Gulf Current currently pumps tremendous amounts of heat from the Carribean to Northern Europe. Global Warming actally "shuts off" this flow, making the climate there much more like the Canadian Maritime Provinces. Some scientists have claimed to see evidence of this occuring in prior hot cycles.

      The more we study climate, the more we find evidence of cycles of various duration. The one year cycle of the seasons is most obvious, and the 7 year cycle of El Nino is well known, but there are also 20-30 year cycles, 60 year cycles, 100 year cycles, 500 year cycles, etc. Don't forget that in Tudor England, there were high quality vineyards. Then a cooling trend kicked in and drove that industry south. A thousand years ago Lief Ericson settled Greenland and explored some of the coast of North America, but a cooling trend destryed the farms he had settled and Europeans wouldn't be back until 1492.
    12. Re:It's possible, after all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It however doesn't mean that we should not pollute.

      Oops, watch where you are pointing that double negative. Didn't you mean: It doesn't mean that we SHOULD pollute?

    13. Re:It's possible, after all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Well, the real problems would be:
      - accelerated desertification
      - rising seas (lots of islands and low-lying countries are about to disappear, at least partially)
      - plant life that dies off because it can't adapt fast enough (plants are sensitive to temperature changes, and if the weather moves faster than the plants, they die)
      - the end of the gulf stream, resulting in a radical cooling down of western europe (again, leading to plant extinction, and it's cold enough in Belgium already thank you very much)
      - the stored methane in oceans being released (which would result in accelerated climate heating)
      - death of the rain forests (with matching disastrous consequences for biodiversity, since rain forests are the life stores of the planet)
      - death of the reefs (in fact they're dying already, just look at the sorry state of the great barrier reef). Reefs are the oceanic equivalent of rain forests. Losing them would be disastrous, and not just because they look good.

      and so on, and so on...

      Now, did you actually try to find out about the consequences of global warming? Because I think that you didn't.

      Anyway, for more information, read the IPCC or UNEP climate change documents. (Link to UNEP GEO3, which deals specifically with global climate change in the near future) They contain the current scientific view on what's happening and what the consequences will be.

    14. Re:It's possible, after all by Ripplet · · Score: 1
      >He often climbs on top of the Mont Blanc
      Not at the moment he doesn't
      In summary - Mont Blanc is closed to climbers because it's falling apart, due to the melting permafrost which used to hold things together.
      A choice quote: 'Big banks will no longer give loans for new ski industry constructions,' he said, adding that from 1850 to 1980 Alpine glaciers lost half their volume, and in the 20 years from 1980 to 2000, another quarter of what was left was also lost.

      >It however doesn't mean that we should not pollute.
      I completely agree with you here. Whether we have global warming as a long term thing, or are still pulling out of the cold spell from the previous few hundred years, it still doesn't make sense to chuck out millions of tons of rubbish into the atmosphere. It's not just global warming we have to worry about, but global *pollution* in general, if we want to have clean air to breath, and clean water to drink etc.

      --

      Skiing? Check out The Independant Skiers Portal

    15. Re:It's possible, after all by T5 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Local variance in temperatures over a short time span (our lifetimes) does not equate to "global warming". We had an unusually mild summer here. Am I to assume that an ice age is right around the corner? We're not talking about localized changes in weather patterns here. We're talking about the entire planet potentially increasing in the amount of heat - fractions of a degree, yes, but in a large storage system this amounts to a large quantity of heat. If (and this is a big if) this is because of greenhouse gases, then we need to take some sort of action. But, until we're sure, kneejerk reactions based on local fluctuations is intellectually vapid and scientifically invalid.

      Everyone wants to blame environmental problems on either (1) industry or (2) governments, both playing politics. One has to remember that science is largely politically driven as well. What should be an objective, truly scientific process often turns into personal agenda promotion and/or a dash for cash from (1) or (2) above. Science is not above political ambition, although it should be. Scientists that are not above political ambition/agenda promotion aren't to be trusted.

      What we need, and by definition cannot get, is an objective, non-biased, scientifically valid analysis of untainted data to determine what, if any, global impact greenhouse gases have had. There are big problems here, however. No one understands the natural variations in global temperatures. You can't remove the other variables from the system (solar activity, global windfield changes, ocean current variations, etc.). You can't establish a control (no second earth - darn!). We can't devise an experiment to perform any valid testing ("Let's release gigatons of CO2 this year, and then readsorb it all next, year, and study the results."). Even if you had these conditions covered, or cleverely circumvent the need for them, you can't get unbiased funding, and that taints the process unacceptably. Unbiased researchers are hard to come by as well. They exist (although in fewer numbers and in relative anonymity to the known players), but they're unlikely to be trusted based on the funding sources. Therefore, political statements like the Kyoto Accords are based on sketchy science at best, politics at worst, and shouldn't be considered to be solutions to a problem that may not even exist.

    16. Re:It's possible, after all by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

      I'm all for it. If we're screwed anyone, might as well make the best of it. It isn't enough to just fuck up, you have to fuck up big time!

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    17. Re:It's possible, after all by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

      opps, i mean 'anyway'

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    18. Re:It's possible, after all by amightywind · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He found out that ther chemicals that impregnated the ice are similar only to the ones which emanates from the General Motors factories, in Detroit, US.

      The chemicals couldn't be from the automobile factories in southern France, could they?

      --
      an ill wind that blows no good
    19. Re:It's possible, after all by mirko · · Score: 1

      No because of some very specific molecules he found and submitted to a fellow chemist.

      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    20. Re:It's possible, after all by ambisinistral · · Score: 1
      Considering the fact that we're coming out of an Ice age, for the majority of Earth's history it has been much warmer than it is now.

      I don't recall the Earth's geological record being dominated by long periods of desertification like your post implies. Regardless of the impact on human civilization, the geological record indicates global warming would lead to a warmer moister planet. Your post is littered with hysterical doom and gloom. Oh woe is me, the entire earth will be a barren wasteland.

      --

      deserve's got nothing to do with it...

    21. Re:It's possible, after all by boatboy · · Score: 1

      Do you care to cite any sources for these "earth models", or should we take your word for it? I remember hearing in school in the 80s- from teachers and in the news media- that there would be no more oil by 2000. No more undeveloped land in the US by 1998. We would all fly on space planes by 2000. Excuse me for doubting your prediction, but it is hardly proven that there is even a global warming trend, much less that anything special will happen in 2050, though I am holding out hope for those space planes.

    22. Re:It's possible, after all by ambisinistral · · Score: 2, Funny
      Sounds like a line from a cheesey sci-fi movie. "Good God man, this is like no substance known to man!"

      Dum-de-dum-dum.

      --

      deserve's got nothing to do with it...

    23. Re:It's possible, after all by RocketScientist · · Score: 1

      You're trying to create a trend on a multiple-billion year old climate with 10 years of data. Nice. Even trying to do it with 600 years of data is questionable at best, and it seems that the leading analysis of that data is extremely flawed. If you haven't gone and read the report, please do so. It's straightforward and jargon-limited.

    24. Re:It's possible, after all by Reziac · · Score: 1

      In the 1950s, some early environmentalist movement types predicted, with all sorts of numbers to back up their claims, that we'd reach the implosion point somewhere around 1990, and that said implosion would be entirely mankind's fault.

      Either it didn't happen, or my time machine is faulty. ;)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    25. Re:It's possible, after all by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      Global warming is shown to be caused by greenhouse gases. (This definitely hasn't been shown to be true.)

      I'm sincerely curious. Can this be proven to your satisfaction without a spare planet to experiment on?

    26. Re:It's possible, after all by 110010001000 · · Score: 0

      Were they the "Evil American" molecules?

      God, you people are stupid.

    27. Re:It's possible, after all by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 1
      Absolutely. For instance, showning that it isn't a part of a natural cycle, that it correlates with greenhouse gas emissions and doesn't correlate with natural occurances.

      But the implication of your question is the problem. You imply that it is safer to assume that it is true so we should act on the assumption. Perhaps an analogy would show the fallacy of this reasoning. Suppose someone suggested that global warming was caused by the existence of Jews, and that Jews should be exterminated to fix the problem. If anyone questions this assertion, would your response be "Can this be proven to your satisfaction without a spare planet to experiment on?"

      That's an extreme example, but the point is valid. Insert any explanation, and use your question as a justification for acting on it. If we just assume a cause and act on it, we are more likely to cause harm than good.

    28. Re:It's possible, after all by mikewolf · · Score: 1

      hey, you said 'Fact remains that our current behaviour is driving this in some degree. It might be the main force or completly negligable.'

      ever heard of an oxymoron?

      how can 'our current behaviour [be] driving this' and it be 'completly negligable' at the same time????

    29. Re:It's possible, after all by nfk · · Score: 1

      From a Cato article:

      "But beyond 50 years we have little, if any, idea what the energy infrastructure of our society will be. To highlight the folly of any such projection, compare the energy-related concerns of 1900, when pundits cautioned that major U.S. cities would be knee-deep in horse ''emissions'' by 1930 unless we saw fit to '' act now,'' with those of 2000. We simply cannot predict our technological future."

    30. Re:It's possible, after all by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      Absolutely. For instance, showning that it isn't a part of a natural cycle, that it correlates with greenhouse gas emissions and doesn't correlate with natural occurances.

      The reason I ask is because I think you underestimate the difficulty of what you're asking for. The "natural cycles" that you speak of may only be apparent as averages over thousands or tens of thousands of years, with entirely natural local "spikes" along the way. One or two or ten really hot summers, for example, really may not prove anything.

      What I mean by "spare planet" is that because we live here, we can't just increase or decrease our various emissions to see what it does over the requisite long span. It is not an emotional appeal along the "this is our only planet" vein.

      But the implication of your question is the problem. You imply that it is safer to assume that it is true so we should act on the assumption.

      No, I imply no such thing. What I am asking is how you would act if reliable objective data is unknowable. Human progress has brought us to a point where we might be able to shape (for better or worse) our own environment without the ability to fully understand its consequences. The question is how we should act in such cases, not an implication that we should act quickly and blindly.

      Your global warming Jews analogy is not a good one. We know Jews are anatomically similar to other humans, and that they emit no unique poison. We cannot even posit how Jews can cause global warming more than other humans. On the other hand, we do know that greenhouse gases have a property of trapping heat. I'd say greenhouse gases are substantially more suspect than Jews, but the important thing is to understand that it's all relative.

      What I am saying is that sometimes we have to choose (and not acting is also a choice) without full information. In such cases we choose to attack the most plausible problems, not sit around doing nothing on principle until evidence can be provided. Maybe this isn't what you meant, but it's what you sounded like to me.

      In the specific case of the Kyoto Accord, I think the most basic problem is the political one that very few believe that Bush pulled out because of legitimate scientific concerns. Do you?

    31. Re:It's possible, after all by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      What we need, and by definition cannot get, is an objective, non-biased, scientifically valid analysis of untainted data to determine what, if any, global impact greenhouse gases have had.

      Why do you allege such a thing? Thermometers don't lie. There are well known ways to correct for human bias and scientists generally question each other pretty carefully about such things.

      No one understands the natural variations in global temperatures.

      The scientific community has many open questions, but no, to a first order cut we have quite a bit of confidence that we've figured out the main phenomena on the time scales that interest the policy sector.

      You can't remove the other variables from the system (solar activity,

      You can account for that one and measure it precisely.

      global windfield changes, ocean current variations, etc.).

      Um, those are what we are predicting (in an ensemble sense)... unless you mean something very different by climate than those of us in the business do

      You can't establish a control (no second earth - darn!).

      Fortunately the geological community has beenm working very hard on paleoclimate data and the modeling community has been working very hard to replicate paleoclimate from paleogeography, with quite good results.

      We can't devise an experiment to perform any valid testing ("Let's release gigatons of CO2 this year, and then readsorb it all next, year, and study the results.").

      Err, you can get a greenhouse effect in a lab, if you care to.

      Even if you had these conditions covered, or cleverely circumvent the need for them, you can't get unbiased funding, and that taints the process unacceptably.

      And which way do you suppose the funding is biased these days?

      ... Therefore, political statements like the Kyoto Accords are based on sketchy science at best, politics at worst, and shouldn't be considered to be solutions to a problem that may not even exist.

      Just because you and your favorite political publications fail to understand it doesn't mean it's sketchy. Read this before you pretend to know what you are talking about.

      --
      mt
    32. Re:It's possible, after all by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Hadn't seen that one (excellent quote, saved for future reference), but it does go to illustrate that these doomsayings are hardly new.

      I guess those 1900-era pundits kinda failed to notice that cities worldwide had suffered "horse emissions" for centuries or even millennia, without being buried alive in 'em. :)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    33. Re:It's possible, after all by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 1
      The reason I ask is because I think you underestimate the difficulty of what you're asking for.

      No, I think you overestimate it. Showing a correlation is not that difficult. If greenhouse gases are causing a global warming trend, then they must, by definition, correlate well. It appears quite clearly that they don't. Correlations doesn't necessary prove causality (though it is a start), but certainly a lack of correlation strongly suggests against such a causality.

      No, I imply no such thing.

      My apologies if you did not intend to imply such a thing. But your response is still along the same lines. You are assuming that "reliable objective data" requires a second planet to test with. Not true at all.

      Really, you seem to be trying to sound like it's a hypothetical question (what if), but applying the hypothetical to a real situation. Whether you realize it or not, this is an old debater's trick. You say "What if objective data is unknowable?" and we get to some sort of agreement about how to act in such a situation. But you've connected the question to a real situation (e.g., global warming), so the agreement on the hypothetical gets connected to an act on the real situation. This misdirection trick often works, but relies on the "audience" (including the second debater) not realizing that it was never agreed the hypothetical situation applies to the real situation.

      In this case, I don't accept the premise that reliable objective data is unknowable, so arguing about that hypothetical situation is a misdirection.

      Your global warming Jews analogy is not a good one.

      No, you are misusing the analogy. They are analogous only in the sense that objective evidence is required before acting on the claim. In that respect, it is a good analogy. You're arguments are about the degree to which plausability is sufficient evidence to act upon, which is a different topic from the intent of the analogy. Yes, greenhouse gases are more plausable as a cause, but that doesn't mean they are and it certainly doesn't mean we should act without understanding the consequences first.

      In such cases we choose to attack the most plausible problems, not sit around doing nothing on principle until evidence can be provided.

      Aha. Here's the problem. This is a typical line of reasoning of activists, but it's a straw man argument. You assume that not enforcing Kyoto is "sitting around doing nothing". The issue here is where should our environment efforts be. There is demonstratable harm, with clear objective evidence, from a variety of pollutants that are not greenhouse gases. And in fact, depending on how greenhouse gas reduction is performed, it may actually increase these pollutants. Many scientists, including me, think we should spend our environmental efforst cleaning up demonstratable problems, not hypothetical ones, and certainly without understanding the consequences. It's not a matter of "doing nothing", but doing the right thing.

      ...very few believe that Bush pulled out because of legitimate scientific concerns. Do you?

      Actually, I'd bet quite heavily that it has nothing to do with legitimate scientific concerns. Honestly, I think Bush is a moron. But whether the U.S. ratifies it or not, or Bush's motives, are completely irrelevant as to whether Kyoto is the right thing to do or not.

    34. Re:It's possible, after all by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      No, I think you overestimate it. Showing a correlation is not that difficult.

      I'm not going to argue this point incessantly, because what I'm really trying to understand is the threshold of proof that is required for you to act. It appears much lower than your initial post suggested. I was not suggesting that a spare planet is required, but asking if you'd accept anything short of that kind of proof.

      You say "What if objective data is unknowable?" and we get to some sort of agreement about how to act in such a situation. But you've connected the question to a real situation (e.g., global warming), so the agreement on the hypothetical gets connected to an act on the real situation.

      Whether the data is unknowable or not depends on how much proof it takes to get you to act. If you insist on causality beyond any doubt, then we may have to be talking about a second experimental planet. The hypothetical was placed there to illustrate that if your demands for proof are too high, we may never act.

      This is a typical line of reasoning of activists, but it's a straw man argument. You assume that not enforcing Kyoto is "sitting around doing nothing".

      No, that line was still a continuation of the hypothetical. In fact, way too much of my post dwelled on the hypothetical. Sorry for the confusion.

      What I detected, probably falsely, from your earliest post was an extreme skeptic demanding essentially zero objective doubt before acting. You wrote:

      it's paramount that it be clearly demonstrated that: [...] Global warming is shown to be caused by greenhouse gases.

      I think you might agree that this sounds like a pretty high bar.

  8. Kyoto and policies by erik+umenhofer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The poblem with most of these policies is they put rules in place on 3rd world countries that can't afford to put in technology to fix the problems they have, then they sell of thier clean air units to other countries to make cash.

    basically it works like this. every country has to make quotas. but the stupid thing is you can TRADE them. Lets say the US it polluting too much, it can buy "clean air quotas" from another country who doesn't pollute as much. It's kinda interesting but lame at the same time.

    1. Re:Kyoto and policies by isfuglen · · Score: 0
      It's kinda interesting but lame at the same time.

      What's going to be interesting is to see what happens when the clean air quota selling countries decide they want to join in on the polluting fun and consequently refuse to sell their quotas. Would the US eventually go to war over this?

      --
      When life hands you lemons, grab the salt and pass the tequilla...
    2. Re:Kyoto and policies by pe1rxq · · Score: 1

      No they will probably use another proven tactic for this: Ignore the rest of the world and be egocentric idiots

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    3. Re:Kyoto and policies by commodoresloat · · Score: 1
      It's kinda interesting but lame at the same time.

      Funny, that's how I feel about reading and posting on slashdot....

    4. Re:Kyoto and policies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only reason why the trading policy got adopted is beacuse the US pushed it. Europe and most other countries were against it from the beginning.

    5. Re:Kyoto and policies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um... "most other countries"??? Canada, Australia, Japan and Russia were all for it.

    6. Re:Kyoto and policies by kfg · · Score: 1

      Actually, I was kinda looking forward to actual cash payments for riding my bicycle.

      KFG

    7. Re:Kyoto and policies by ItWorkedLastTime · · Score: 1

      the stupid thing is you can TRADE them

      Agreed. The creation of artificial "commodities" purely for trading purposes (like CO2 credits or electricity) looks less and less like sound sense, other than from a narrow economic perspective. Companies with the same solid sense of moral purpose as Enron will grow up around CO2 credit trading in exactly the same way as they did with electricity trading, and we will see the same devious and cynical manipulation of channels of distribution and control of CO2 credits as we did with electricity, but instead of brownouts and blackouts we'll see the opposite (brownins? blackins? :-). The only sense in which it will be a success will be measurable by the wads of dosh pouring into the pockets of officers of those companies ...

    8. Re:Kyoto and policies by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1
      basically it works like this. every country has to make quotas. but the stupid thing is you can TRADE them. Lets say the US it polluting too much, it can buy "clean air quotas" from another country who doesn't pollute as much. It's kinda interesting but lame at the same time.
      The stupid thing is that you can't trade quota's... this is something the environmentalists emphasised in Kyoto: you have to meet pollution reductions in your own country. This rule seems stupid to me, and I wonder if it wasn't born out of malice: "Rich countries should not be allowed to just buy their way out, they should suffer". To me, it makes sense that the rich industrialist countries pay for the cleanup up third-world and ex-USSR factories, thereby achieving a huge decrease in pollution, instead of being forced to spend 10 times the amount to squeeze out the last 0,1% pollution reduction in their own already-cleanish factories.

      Pollution is a social, technological and an economical problem. It makes sense to see where we can achieve the most bang for our buck, and focus our efforts on where we can achieve the best results.
      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    9. Re:Kyoto and policies by cluckshot · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Cut the Crap! This stuff about 3rd world countries not being able to affort to clean up their act belies the reality that they are selling themselves as an "Out" to the restrictions of the US and others. In reality much of the "Prosperity" of China at this moment is as a result of their attracting poluting industries from the west.

      While the Environmentalist nuts have been hornswoggling the press and the politicos here in the west they have been quitely blinking at the massive pollution increases in the east. China and India have increased their Carbon Dioxide emissions a total exceeding total US Output by some 5 times(Each)! The south east asians have polluted the Pacific Ocean to the point where about 10% of it is DEAD and I have seen it flying over it!

      These Eco-nuts go on saying that the only country to actually be cleaning up is the problem. The USA has stabilized its output of pollution and in some areas reduced it. This while increasing its population by almost 25% in the period!

      If we continue to listen to such crap about 3rd world problems nothing is going to get cleaned up and we are all going to die in the mess. There are no limits on the pollution from India, China and much of the world under Koyoto. The industrialists will simply scoot out to the 3rd world and build their smoky dirty plants and ignore pollution controls unless we wake up. The problem is not the USA. The problem is elsewhere. But that is the whole problem with the Koyoto Treaty in the first place. It attempts to blame the USA and shut it down rather than deal with problems. This is of course justified by doctoring numbers and generally lying. Lies are so deep in Koyoto Treaty work that nobody is even looking at the real problems.

      I have worked to get pollution cleaned up and in fact I worked for over 20 years to get the 2nd worst (Per EPA List at the time) pollution site in North America cleaned up. Not once in the period did I get the Sierra Club or Friends of the Earth or any of the other "Green" organizations to even turn their ear to the problem. This site had Nuclear and Chemical Weapons Contamination to the limit. Could the "Greens" even look? Not on your life! Have they turned and looked since the EPA listed the site... NO!

      I think that people aught to look at what is going on. The Eco-nuts are not Eco at all. They are powered by Political Aims and internationally they are unified by "Anti-American" sentiments. They view the solution to be that of destruction of the USA rather than looking at their own areas. The China Coal burning as of now is approaching 5 Billion Tons a year and US consumption of coal has dropped to 0.7 Billion Tons from a high of 1.2 Billion Tons. The USA has rivers and streams recovering with new fish and much good going on. The Indians and Chinese are in grave danger of having their rivers and streams killed. The "Asian Brown Cloud" did not happen over Toledo Ohio and it didn't happen over Birmingham Alabama. Yes I can remember when these sites had such but the "Asian Brown Cloud" was this summer. America is the example for what to do to clean up not what is wrong.

      Does anyone remember the "Acid Rain" issue. It turns out much of the evidence was of natural causes and not related to mankind. Worse yet the scrubbers actually caused Acid rain by bringing out the alkali ash and letting the acid gas go. The issue of "Acid Rain" was caused in most part (95% or more) due to the Terminal State of the Forrest in the East USA after its regrowth from low levels in the 1930's. The fully grown trees emit much acid. This is why the "Smoky Mountains" and the "Blue Ridge" were named and they were named before the industrial era.

      The greatest CO2 emission in north America in 2003 was the fires in California and these owe to the Eco-Nuts who would not even let a DEAD tree be cut. They would not allow disease control or even controlled burns. The ecosystem of the forrest there is "Fire Dependent" and frankly needs regular burns. So 3400 homes burn

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    10. Re:Kyoto and policies by NexusTw1n · · Score: 1
      While the Environmentalist nuts have been hornswoggling the press and the politicos here in the west they have been quitely blinking at the massive pollution increases in the east. China and India have increased their Carbon Dioxide emissions a total exceeding total US Output by some 5 times(Each)!
      Nice rant. Pity so much of it is completely and utterly incorrect. I haven't time to take everything you say apart piece by piece but here are the facts regarding China's CO2 emissions.

      the Energy Information Administration and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory had determined that China's carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions -- the main cause of global warming -- declined 17 percent over that four-year span, despite economic growth of 36 percent.

      By contrast, U.S. emissions over the same period grew by approximately 70 million metric tons per year, approximately 5 percent

      Here's my Link , where's yours?

      I mean you do have a link that shows China has increased co2 emissions by 5 times US output don't you? You weren't just making that up?
      --
      It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity. --Albert Einstein
    11. Re:Kyoto and policies by cluckshot · · Score: 1

      Obviously LBNL didn't even read China's totals for coal use or India's. They upped their production of coal from about 1 Billion Tons a year to nearly 5 Billion Tons a year in both countries n just 10 years. They also increased their consumption of Petrochemicals substantially as well.

      The Petrochemical use has caused China to push into the Spratley Islands and elsewhere seeking energy. This is much of the tension in Southern Asia. If they were not demanding more and more as your numbers indicate, this would not be happening.

      In short the Eco-Nuts at Berkley are not in touch with reality. The data on this believe it or not was contained in the Koyoto supporting documents for their permitted increases. and you can go look them up yourself. I have learned that the Liberal Leftists in the USA know no facts they will not bend and no website they will not put up to push them. I also know that even if I went to the Chinese themselves and reported their numbers directly to you, that somehow the Berkley numbers would prevail.

      It isn't possible for China to maintain the growth or the output they have done without the increase. The massive trade surplus against the USA is an indicator of massive energy use. They are not pioneering some super efficient tech like domestic people are trying to do. Theirs is achived by a linear scaling of energy use. This means LINEAR Pollution. Besides if they were down, where did that "Asian Brown Cloud" materialize from. I suppose the USA exported it!?

      It is not possible to burn that much coal and not get the cloud or to avoid the CO2 emissions I said. In order for China to have decreased 36% in China they would have reduced their consumption which they did not. It is well known what Lawrene Berkeley is and how honest they are (NOT!). They are the center of the Eco-nuts. The situation was so bad recently that massive loss of life occurred from the increasingly horrid pollution. The number killed in India and China was in the thousands.

      But as usual anything to keep the eyes off the reality that the underlying effort is to hobble theUSA and to be Anti-American rather than to solve the world problems. The basic thinking of the Eco-Nuts and their elitist patrons is that there is a "Fixed" pie and that US Prosperity must be contained for the remainder of the world to prosper. Unfortunately this never works as any efforts to hurt the USA also hurt the remainder of the world. Also it does nothing to fix any problems. It only creates them.

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    12. Re:Kyoto and policies by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Ignore the rest of the world and be egocentric idiots

      Good advice, it's worked pretty damned well so far.

    13. Re:Kyoto and policies by davebo · · Score: 1
      China and India have increased their Carbon Dioxide emissions a total exceeding total US Output by some 5 times(Each)!


      No they haven't. 2002 statistics here. from BP Statistical Review of World Energy. In teragrams of CO2: USA: 6175.9; China: 3342; India: 1044. India + China = 4386.6.

      The south east asians have polluted the Pacific Ocean to the point where about 10% of it is DEAD

      Have any proof of this? Google for "pacific dead zone" turns up nothing. More telling, ISI's Web of Science doesn't either. Not to say it doesn't turn up mention of China-contributed Pacific Ocean pollution - because it does, obviously. But 10%?

      The USA has stabilized its output of pollution and in some areas reduced it.
      Possibly true. Not for CO2 though - we're up 16% from 1990 to 2002 levels. See the BP report above. The average of the "industralized" countries over the same period is down 0.6%.

      The China Coal burning as of now is approaching 5 Billion Tons a year and US consumption of coal has dropped to 0.7 Billion Tons from a high of 1.2 Billion Tons

      The BP report agrees China uses more coal than the US. But only 20% more coal. 0.7 is not 80% of 5 billion.

      Does anyone remember the "Acid Rain" issue
      You said it was caused by trees spewing out acid. Interesing idea. Doesn't seem to be supported by the scientific literature in the field though - after my quickie search on Web of Science I'd say look at the Bryologist: Vol. 106, No. 2, pp. 257-269 (2003). It'll point you to a number of other studies if you're so inclined.

      The greatest CO2 emission in north America in 2003 was the fires in California and these owe to the Eco-Nuts who would not even let a DEAD tree be cut.
      Well, you're correct in that forest fires can release HUGE amounts of CO2. But no such studies have been conducted & published yet as far as Web of Science is concerned on the California fires. But, as a point of reference, boreal forest fires in Russia & North America in 1998 were responsible for ~1000 teragrams of CO2 release - roughly as much as India generated in power consumption.

      And eco-nuts opposed to burning can't really claim to be good environmentalists - it's been more than a decade (I'd say approaching 20 years now) that folks realized the old "Smokey the Bear" idea of stamping out fire ASAP was a horrible horrible mistake. My googling for lawsuit + burn + california came up with a group trying to stop burns at a former army base which was contaminated with all sorts of chemicals/unexploded ordanance. That's it. I'd bet most opposition came (foolishly) from homeowners thinking of the Los Alamos fires from 4-5 years ago (controlled burn that got out of hand). I'd bet some of them lost their homes because of it. Costly mistake.


      Before the development Alabama was barren having only about 20% forrest and now it is 81% forrest.
      More like 67% forest. The number of trees has doubled in the last 50 years. A fine accomplishment.

      In general, I agree with the gist of your rant - China and India pollute too much. Having them develop to a western level before cutting back emissions is a really really bad idea. Lots of us "eco-nuts" as you so charmingly put it feel the same way. So please don't call us eco-nuts. And get some more facts to back what you say - it makes you look bad.
    14. Re:Kyoto and policies by pe1rxq · · Score: 1

      If sept 11. had thought you anything it should be that atleast some people in the world have stopped ignoring you....

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    15. Re:Kyoto and policies by cluckshot · · Score: 1

      These counter stats are just like the weather stats that you Eco-Nuts keep cranking up. You simply just don't get it. I could but never intend to provide counter sources as the Eco-Nuts have a gin ginning up all the numbers they want this being the whole Koyoto Problem (Phoney Numbers).

      Please Note: When a US Industry burns coal it is recorded. In China or India most of it is not even reported to officials. They don't even have the mechanism to report it like we do. The Coal numbers do represent permitted mining levels under Koyoto. US consumption is usually Power Plants and their use is easily tracked. China it usually is in some small shop or home. NO REPORTS FOR YOUR BP Numbers!

      Regards the Pacific Dead Zone, I really don't know why the Eco guys have never seen fit to see this disaster. They also ignored the one caused by banning DDT a few years ago when 1/2 Million People got Malaria in just 6 months from the loss of insect controls. Not being a fan of DDT I do respect the need to do things carefully. I don't know why they could not see in California the timber kills were reaching 100% in areas (See Dianne Feinstein's testimony recently US Senate) or allow the cutting of dead trees.

      Please note that I am aware that the fight seems to be between one side of extremists vs another set of extremists on Forrest Issues in the USA. Not much sane or decent problem solving is going on with this happening. It was the Eco-Nuts in California who locked up the entire process of controlling and managing forrests. They view them as some short of "Religious Temple" or "Historic District" not to ever be changed rather than something that must be managed. Admitttedly the "Bushies" think that a forrest is to be cut NOW!

      There seems to be a blind eye to what is going on in Asia. I have family there! I have friends who have family there.

      A realistic rule but it would violate "Free Trade" would be for the USA to simply ban the import of significant amounts of any product which is produced in conditions not meeting our US EPA and other standards.Then for a fee allow us EPA officials to inspect the area regularly if the country has inadequate EPA type standards. This would close the revolving door on Pollution. It would also greately benefit those in the rest of the world.

      Suppose for example that we applied US Fish and Game rules to the fish imported here. Suddenly the Asians and the South Americans would find their fish banned from our market until they established renewable management techniques. (Conservation not preservation) With US Pollution Controls their fish would have safe water. The production would rise and the people would prosper! Imagine that! We could quit sending soldiers to put out their poverty induced wars and start trading fairly and they would not have advantage over us to wipe out our controls!

      Suppose just for a moment that we limited by US Ag standards the feeds of animals to prevent excess hormones (The US Standards are questionably weak) and antibiotics etc. This goes on and on.

      Unfortunately the whole logic operatinal here is that the USA is the problem. As such we export industries and lose control on the pollution entirely.

      This pollution control issue is much deeper than the Eco-Nuts are willing to see. For example the Asians and South Americans are generally not treating sewerage. There are exceptions but they are rare. If an area there treats sewerage it costs too much for the "Industrialists" and they leave. So the people have pollution in the water. Note: This is largely INDUSTRIAL Pollution I am talking about with sewerage. It does include Human waste but that is the easiest factor to clean up!

      I really don't see why the Eco-Nuts don't get down to the table and start talking about what is really going on rather than some "Religious Belief" they picked up. The whole ecological situation is in grave danger. I could point to dozens of cases from the "Great Phosphate Flap" to "The 55 mph speed limit" where these pe

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    16. Re:Kyoto and policies by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > If sept 11. had thought you anything it should be that atleast some people in the world have stopped ignoring you....

      Well, the point was not that others are ignoring the U.S., it's that I'm ignoring them.

      Honestly? It didn't teach me anything, other than there are certain people out there that are willing to kill 3000 innocents to make themselves feel like they are doing something to change the world. I don't even claim to know 100% who they are or why they really did it.

      Know what else? I don't care. I have enough problems of my own that I don't have the time or energy to care about other people's problems. Like most other people on the planet, I'm just trying to live. Yet just because of where I happened to be born, I am considered evil, oppressive, or any other idiotic name others throw at the U.S. citizens without thinking.

      Yeah, some might say or think that the whole "I don't care" thing is exactly what's wrong with us, but I say it's exactly what's right (this does NOT extend to the government, who acts outside the power & wishes of the population). If everyone just said "I don't care about anyone else, just leave me alone," the world could be slightly better, although considerably less advanced in some places and slightly more in others... All around, not a bad outcome. This is, of course, on a large scale. If no one "cared" about their neighbors (like I do not), there's no interaction, no progress.

  9. Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by emkman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We shouldn't stop protecting the environment just because some analysis was wrong. Its funny that we even need justification in the first place to preserve the planet.

    --
    Moderation Totals: Flamebait=2, Troll=1, Redundant=1, Insightful=6, Overrated=1, Underrated=1, Total=12. (not mine)
    1. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by Jan-Pascal · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem is that we do not know if keeping to the Kyoto agreements _is_ protecting the environment. This paper suggests that there is no evidence that climate change is human CO2 production. That means that the environment might be better off if we would spend the time, money and energy on other things than reducing CO2 output, like reducing water pollution. Or even if we would not focus on short-term CO2 reduction like storing CO2 under the sea.

    2. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Its funny that we even need justification in the first place to preserve the planet.

      No. What's really wanted by governments both in the US and here in Australia is a good line of flummery to justify not ratifying an arrangement to which they have already agreed.

      Most individuals (one hopes) believe that reducing pollution is a Good Thing(tm). However, in countries where the big dollars control government policy, the real push is to keep burning the candle at both ends until there's nothing left to save.

    3. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by nicsterrr · · Score: 1

      It took millions of years for the world's oil to be created. Humans are desperately trying to burn it all in a single century.

      It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand that, irrelevant to environmental reports, sucking all the oil out in a single century is a stupid thing to be doing.

    4. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we are already in the second century of burning oil

    5. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by Simon+Lyngshede · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One the other hand, we don't know what will happen if we're not keeping to the Kyoto agreement. I see the main difference between the US and the rest of the western world as being willing to take a chance. The US focuses mostly on the fact that nobody can prove CO2 to be the cause of global warming. Europes main argument is that you can't prove that CO2 is not to blame. We're not willing to take the chance and tries to limit our C02 polution, just in case that CO2 is the bad guy. The US seems to don't give a damn about reducing CO2 polution until somebody proves it to be dangerous.

      I don't understand how somebody care so little about the environment. If there is even the smallest chance that something could destroy our planet, we should try to avoid it, even if it is later proven to be harmless. If you're not sure, you shouldn't take the chance.

    6. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by DCowern · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Here, here. While I'm definitely not a professional Earth scientist (i.e. in the broad field containing biology, geology, and their bretherin), I spent enough time studying geology to learn a few things from (mostly) non-biased, non-fanatical people who rely on more than FUD to make their assessments and I agree whole-heartedly with your interpretation of these results.

      The fact of the matter is that the Earth does make rapid dramatic shifts in climate. For example, the magnetic poles could swap on us with very little warning. (In fact, I think we're overdue for such an event right now... it'll probably happen within the next few thousand years if I remember correctly.) Anyway, we should be figuring out how much we're changing the climate and taking /appropriate/ action.

      If we're not hurting the environment that much and drastically reducing emissions is going to severely impact technological progress, slow or halt the development of third world countries, put millions of people out of work, and/or take money away from other more worthwhile environmental initiatives, it probably isn't going to be worth it. We should instead be focusing on technology to supplant current harmful technologies*.

      The problem is that most of this kind of legislation is pushed by one of two kinds of extremeists; the doomsday environmentalists and the motown oil executives. Both of these groups feed off of pure FUD. Those that have a clue are rarely involved in the process (unless they've been paid off by one of the above groups).

      Besides... even if we do pollute the Earth so badly that it becomes uninhabitable, geologic processes are extremely effective at cleaning such messes up. The earth would probably become habitable again in a couple tens of thousands of years and a race of super-intelligent cockroaches could succeed us as overlord of the planet. ;-)

      * - Again, this really needs to be thought through. Now that we're to the point where we have the ability to analyse the impact our technologies have on the environment, we really need to use that ability. For example, I recently read an article about how hydrogen fuel cells could dramatically increase the size of the hole in the ozone layer due to the amount of free oxygen they'll contribute to the atmosphere.

    7. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's "hear, hear".

    8. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by Haeleth · · Score: 1

      > This paper suggests that there is no evidence that climate change is human CO2 production.

      Even assuming that this one paper is correct where dozens of others, and the scientific community as a whole, hold the opposite view - even assuming that there IS no evidence that CO2 is changing our climate - even then, is it not worth cutting down on something that seems likely to have ill effects?

      To take an extreme case, wouldn't abandoning efforts to cut down CO2 emissions be like saying "we should turn off all the warning devices in our nuclear power stations, because they cost money to run, and there's no evidence that anything's going to go wrong"? Isn't it like saying "we should stop all this secret bunker business and keep our NBC weapons in a marked, unguarded warehouse in downtown LA, because there's no evidence that any terrorists will bother to steal them"?

      If CO2 emissions are doing serious damage, then it might well be too late to reverse that damage by the time we find evidence so strong that even the authors of this paper agree with it. If, on the other hand, we continue to invest in alternative technologies, and seriously cut back our CO2 emissions, what's the worst outcome then? It might turn out that CO2 wasn't doing significant harm after all. Big deal.

    9. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry, we have simply enormous amounts of coal --- much, much more than there is of petroleum.

    10. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is, can be very very expensive to cut down CO2 emissions. Perhaps the money could be better spent elsewhere.

    11. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by einTier · · Score: 1
      First, the 'scientific community as a whole' does not believe that global warming exists. There are many prominent and well-known scientists (along with many lesser-known ones) that believe that global warming isn't happening, and if it is, there's not much we can do about it at this point.

      Talking about global climate change reminds me of a five year old telling his mother that the house is too hot or too cold. There's a reason we don't let five year olds play with the thermostat in the house. First, his conclusions may be completely wrong. He may feel cold, but maybe that's because he just got out of the bathtub. Maybe the temperature is actually fine. He doesn't know, and can't tell. Maybe a better action would be to put on some clothes. He probably doesn't understand how the thermostat works either, and will slam it all the way over to full heat. If you don't understand how something works, trying to adjust it can sometimes cause worse effects. I worked with a girl in high school who couldn't understand that setting the thermostat all the way to one side or the other didn't heat or cool the building any faster. As such, every single day that I worked with her, I went through extreme periods of heat and cold. When I was 10, I got out of a pool and went in my father's house. I was cold and no one was home, so I turned on the heater. Of course, no one had explained to me how things worked, so I ended up cranking the temperature inside well past the temperature outside -- in the summertime.

      What I'm driving at, is that we shouldn't rush to fix a problem before we fully understand that problem. Especially with something so complex as the environment. You do know that we are overdue for an ice age, perhaps our current 'human global warming' is keeping that from happening, which I would classify as a good thing. Then again, things have been warmer in the past (look at the medival vineyards in Europe where it is currently too cold to grow grapes), so maybe it's not such a bad thing for the earth to warm up, and maybe it's totally natural. Maybe that big ball of fire in the sky doesn't pump out a constant 23 trillion BTUs of heat, and instead, like everything else in nature fluctuates over time.

      Who knows. But, I think the wrong thing to do is to rush in and try to fix things when we can't be sure if we're fixing things or just making things worse.

      --
      -------------------------------------------------- $665.95 -- retail price of the beast.
    12. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you know that the US congress did not want that treaty?

      There is only 1 person in the US that can sign that treaty and that is the President of the United states. Well *IF* you read his job description he is the finaly say on law in the united states.

      Did you know that treaties do not even have to go through congress? They do not have to follow the balance of power.

      Well guess what he did his job and 'vetoed' it. He sees it as loss to the American public. He is supposed to protect it you know. So if he sees it as a loss, wouldnt it be *NOT* doing his job if he signed it? So he didnt sign because he saw that other countries were 'exempt'. It was a treaty that was singling out some countries for no real good reason. Yet left others that are even bigger polluters to do as they will.

      While a different president was in power he saw it as a usefull thing for the american public. But he also had a history of circumventing the american will, for his own percieved power.

      However think about this. Lets say that KYOTO had been signed. What would probably have happened? Gas prices would have probably trippled. Construction costs would have sored. Across the board prices would have went up. Inflation would have been the word of the day. You think the current recession we just went through was bad. I estimate it would have been worse than the 1930's version. Ive noticed over the past few years you can tell how well the economy is doing by watching the price of gas. It effects everything we do in this country.

      Think about this lets say I have 100 trucks. It now costs me 10 dollars more per day per truck. thats 1000 dollars more PER day that I spend on something other than moving my stuff around. Thats 1-4 less people I can hire to help me move more stuff. Those 1-4 people now can not get a job. Then the people I deliver to they dont need to hire as many people, not as much stuff is coming in. All because it cost me more to just buy gas. That is the problem here. How do you reduce co2 output without changing the gas and the equipment all these companies already own. For when people are screaming for food they will not give a damn about co2 output levels.

      You dont just snap your fingers and poof everyone must be 'clean'. It takes time.

    13. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by RocketScientist · · Score: 1

      I agree we should protect the environment, but I'd much rather see us protect the environment by reducing real toxins that kill plants and animals. I'd rather see a reduction in the emission of paint solvents, heavy metals, and other nifty toxic chemicals. CO2 has not been proven to be harmful, and Kyoto is only about reducing greenhouse gases, like CO2.

      In short, we know that many paint solvents cause cancer. We know that heavy metal causes development problems and a wide range of other issues. Hell, we know that leaving rotting animal carcasses around breeds disease. Kyoto doesn't fix any of these problems, and it diverts funds that would fix these problems to fixing something that either doesn't need fixing, or that is a lower priority.

    14. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by BrianH · · Score: 1

      The problem is that most of those "dozens of others" based their research on the premises of the Mann '98 report, which claimed that the last 50 years were the hottest in history. They built their claims on what we now understand to be a potentially false foundation.

      Note the sequence of events here: A bunch of scientists said the Earth was getting warmer. One small group did some research and said that the Earth was hotter than any other time in history. A bunch of other scientists went "Uh oh, we'd better figure out what's going on" and started researching it. A bunch of other scientists realized that human caused CO2 emissions had risen substantially in the last 50 years, and that CO2 has the potential to be a greenhouse gas. A bunch of other scientists put two and two together and decided that human induced greenhouse gasses caused the sharpest temperature jump and highest temperatures in history. The public panicked, and governments joined in to draft a treaty which would limit CO2 and potentially devastate many economies "for the good of the planet".

      Manns research was the bottom card that the rest of the house was built on, and when we pull it out we undermine the whole structure. Is the Earth warming? Yes, that's indisputable. But we now understand that it's warming within its normal range, and that it has been even warmer in relatively recent history when humans WEREN'T influencing the environment. I'm a member of the Sierra Club and believe strongly in protecting our world, but I'm also a scientist and believe that facts must always come first. I read the paper, and it looks like a solid analysis that presents some real problems with the Mann report (which I've always had a problem with anyway...anyone with a research background should read it and take an objective look at some of the questionable assumptions they made to fill in missing data). I'll withhold judgement until a few more researchers familiar with the field have a chance to review and rebut, but it looks to me like the environmental movement just took a serious blow to their credibility.

      --

      There is nothing so pathetic as seeing a beautiful young theory roughed up by a tough gang of facts.
    15. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by beakburke · · Score: 1

      At someone taking a class on introductory statistical modeling, what you are saying rings very true. "The earth is warming", isn't a good reason to adopt Kyoto. The question is, what damage would be done with vs. without Kyoto (net benefits), and what are the costs of actually implementing it.

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    16. Re:Kyoto treaty is still a good thing by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      This paper suggests that there is no evidence that climate change is human CO2 production.

      Actually, no paper that I have heard of (yes a limited sample size), has shown that climate change is caused by human CO2 production. There have been quite a few showing correlation, including this one that is critical that humans cause climate change.

      All this paper has shown is that the planet has seen a similar climate in the past. Primarily in the 15th century. But, the graphs in the paper also show a lower average temperature than currently in the succeeding centuries. There is still a rise in 20th century temperatures compared to the few previous centuries. So, there is still some correlation of a rise in temperature to the 20th century.

      The question that needs to be answered is causation. Do we see a correlated rise in atmospheric CO2? Can we correlate that rise with human CO2 release? What are the natural mechanisms for CO2 release? Can we account for those? What are the mechanisms for CO2 absorption? What timescale do they work on?

      With that information then we can make an educated and accurate plan to deal with the situation. But, there is the question of can we wait for all the answers? The global warming naysayers latch onto the fact that we don't have all the answers, and say there is no problem. The enviromentalists latch onto what few answers we have and claim there is a huge problem. My thinking is we should try to do something to mitigate the impact because the worst case scenario if we get sufficient evidence too late is extinction.

      I don't know if Kyoto is the right answer, but trying to level off net human emissions is probably a good idea. At a minimum it would hopefully give long term planetary feedback mechanisms a chance to kick in.

  10. Who is really responsible?? by UnAmericanPunk · · Score: 1

    This science is brought to you by the Bush & Cheney energy commission...

    --
    Question everything that you've accepted without thinking.
    1. Re:Who is really responsible?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Ya screw all those damn texans from .co.uk

    2. Re:Who is really responsible?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, I just went to your website and read some of your poetry.

      Any hope of me taking you seriously now has flown out the window.

      Please, please, tell me you're not old enough to vote!

    3. Re:Who is really responsible?? by Fractal+Dice · · Score: 1

      The National Post often reads like a well-funded "I for one welcome our new corporate overlords" infomercial.

      It's painful that in a country with one of the most highly educated populations in the world, Canada's published newspapers consistantly have a scientific literacy somewhere below the average .advocacy newsgroup.

  11. Re:Extraterrestrial signals explained! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GCHQ's in-house paper, the Daily Observer, said the noises were unlike anything staff had encountered before and an investigating team initially thought they were coming from spies or aliens.

    Spies or aliens?

    Spies I can understand. But what information do they have that we don't have that would lead them to believe that aliens were communicating with us? There's quite a leap of logic to go from strange sounds in a receiver to aliens are contacting us.

  12. Interesting paper by arivanov · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Questions:

    1. Who are these guys. There are no affiliations listed and the research sponsor is not listed.

    2. MBH98 is not the only paper. It was one of the first ones. After that more detailed research was done and it did not refute any of the claims.

    3. Is the ice melt in the arctic a figment of my imagination?

    4. Is the retreat of South American Glaciers a figment of my imagination?

    5. Why doesn't NOAA put all the data for public consumption so that anyone can see who is right and who is wrong?

    --
    Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
    http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    1. Re:Interesting paper by arivanov · · Score: 1

      Another question.

      Some of the date exclusions in MBH98 are based on the current climat model for effects of climate change. Namely the exclusion of Texas and surrounding areas from calculations is justified as it will become less continental if average northern hemisphere warms up (europe should go more) due to the gulfstream becoming weaker.

      As a result if you leave the texas values in you will smoothen the overall result as expected and as described by these guys. If you take them out you get a correct result.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    2. Re:Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You may be interested to know that the Earth was warmer over the vast majority of its history.

      CO2 levels are, over the long term, in decline. This has, among other things, resulted in the evolution of grasses, which are far more efficent with their use of CO2, than their predicessors.

      We are at the serendipitious end of an ice age, it's stupid of us, with our short life spans, to assume the world was and should always be thus. It is the hieght of conciet for us to always expect it to be so.

      First man thought the universe was immutable, and earth was at the exact center. Then we came to know that not only was it not at the center, neither was our solar system, or galaxy, and there wasn't really a center to speak of in any case. Now we just expect the Earth's enviroment to convienently, and indefinately hover at we have come to consider an ideal. Seriously, it's time we got over ourselves as a species.

      You might be interested to know, that the raw data is considerable, for the most part not normalized, and if Joe Six pack has a beowulf cluster of supercomputers available to federate and interperate the data they would. But since the aliens only delivered supertechnology and not magic when they crashed we'll just have to make do with faking moon landings and tinfoil hats.

    3. Re:Interesting paper by thesupraman · · Score: 1

      Answers:

      1. Sorry? are there errors in what they are pointing out?

      2. This is not the only paper pointing out the opposite, either.

      3. No, it's called a 'natural occurance' - that's the whole point.

      4. No, see 3.

      5. There is a LOT of 'public' data out there, but very few of the people who like to stand on their soapboxes are at all interested in facts - since they know better.

      Ever wondered why we are seeing a rapid increase in solar activity? hmmm.. nah - THAT can't be relivant, it must be the fault of faceless companies!

      Have a Nice Day.

    4. Re:Interesting paper by kindofblue · · Score: 1
      I think the question is not of global warming, but global warming due to human actions. I think there is agreement that global warming has definately been occurring, but the disagreement is whether 20th century CO2 production is responsible for it.

      I would be thrilled to not have to care about CO2. Then a great reason to avoid fossil fuels is because everyone involved in oil production is a bunch of fucking assholes, Exxon, OPEC, Texans, terrorists or their apologists, take your pick...

      Heck, if we have fuel cell based cars, then you could also drink the water from the exhaust of your car. It would be more pure than Evian. Screw the French too.

    5. Re: Interesting paper by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Funny


      > You may be interested to know that the Earth was warmer over the vast majority of its history.

      Fortunately, we didn't have to live through those times.

      Most of the universe is a hard vacuum, but I kind of like having the local fluke we call "the atmosphere".

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    6. Re:Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      1. Who are these guys. There are no affiliations listed and the research sponsor is not listed.

      Who they are should be fairly irrelevant. The important question is: are they right?

      2. MBH98 is not the only paper. It was one of the first ones. After that more detailed research was done and it did not refute any of the claims.

      Can you give references?

      3. Is the ice melt in the arctic a figment of my imagination?

      The ice may well be melting. The question is why. This paper would seem to suggest that its not because temperatures are higher than we have ever seen before. Did the ice melt in the 1400s? If not, we have a very interesting conundrum.

      4. Is the retreat of South American Glaciers a figment of my imagination?

      see answer to previous question

      5. Why doesn't NOAA put all the data for public consumption so that anyone can see who is right and who is wrong?

      Indeed. It would help everyone.

      This paper seems to be of a high quality: it references correctly, it explains what its doing, it limits its conclusions to the data and the results obtained. If you want to criticise it then criticise the science.

    7. Re:Interesting paper by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      Except where do you think we'll get the Hydrogen for our vehicles except (DUN DUN DUN) fossil fuels! Either from directly seperating it from them or using fossil fuel burning plants to use electrolysis on water to seperate the hydrogen.

      Kudos on drinking fuel cell exhaust to spite the French. Any spiting of the French is a good thing. :)

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    8. Re:Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AC needs modding up

    9. Re:Interesting paper by edhall · · Score: 1
      Ever wondered why we are seeing a rapid increase in solar activity?

      As spectacular as the emissions of Xrays and charged particles from solar flares may be, they don't represent an overall increase in solar output. After all, increased "solar activity" also represents an increase in sunspots which are cooler areas of the Sun's photosphere.

      -Ed
    10. Re:Interesting paper by dhalgren · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Hopefully someday someone will invent some other way to generate power.

      Oh, wait...

    11. Re:Interesting paper by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      The problem is though that the public is scared stupid by nuclear power (kinda needlessly), solar power isn't economical *yet* (been saying that for 20 years), people protest wind farms for killing birds, affecting wind patterns, and "looking ugly", hydroelectric power screws up the environment pretty bad by flooding otherwise unflooded areas... etc.

      So yes, we've invented other methods of power generation, but they all have their problems that don't make them that feasible.

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    12. Re:Interesting paper by Haeleth · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of sustainable energy sources that don't have the problems you mention. Offshore windfarms. Tidal energy. Bovine flatulence. Sticking zinc and copper rods into potatoes.

    13. Re: Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Primates managed to get by before this most recent period of glaciation. I suspect homo sapiens would not have any more trouble.

    14. Re:Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I agree individual bursts of solar flares are probably irrelevant to Earth's climate.

      About sunspots: the spots themselves are cooler. But they are accompanied by faculae, which are hot spots on the sun. So when there are more sunspots, the sun actually outputs more radiation and charged particles.

      Here is an idea may seem even more counter-intuitive. Note that this part is still somewhat speculative. Some people have suggested that when the sun has less sunspots, the earth actually tends to become cooler through a rather indirect way. The idea is that when there are less sunspots, the solar wind is less strong. The solar wind is empirically known to shield the earth's atmosphere from interstellar cosmic rays (the exact mechanism is unknown). So then more cosmic rays strike the earth's atmosphere. This increases cloud formation, and so the earth tends to reflect more and absorb less sunlight. Thus the earth becomes cooler.

      Of course, this may or may not be correct. More study needs to be done. But it's too early to say that CO2 is the main cause of climate change.

    15. Re:Interesting paper by Jonathan · · Score: 1

      Who they are should be fairly irrelevant. The important question is: are they right?

      Yes, but the two questions are interrelated. Just as a Linux feasability study funded by Microsoft is useless, a climate study funded by the petroleum industry is useless. That's why in most serious journals one is required to list one's source of funding.

    16. Re: Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Primates managed to get by before this most recent period of glaciation. I suspect homo sapiens would not have any more trouble.
      Of course we would not have a problem; we would merely grow a huge rug of fur, right?

    17. Re:Interesting paper by arivanov · · Score: 1
      Sorry? are there errors in what they are pointing out?

      Yes there are. They are not weighting Texas and similar errors where the temperature will DROP during a global RISE. As a result their results are flawed.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    18. Re:Interesting paper by Angry+Toad · · Score: 1
      it limits its conclusions to the data and the results obtained. If you want to criticise it then criticise the science.

      This would be a good idea if there were any science in the paper to criticize. Check the threads above for the title "All Microsoft Excel's Fault". The original authors of "MBH98" have clearly pointed out that this peculiar little work grossly misrepresents the work they did, analyzes an imcomplete and biased sample of the data, and uses inappropriate analyses.

    19. Re:Interesting paper by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      *sigh* I knew someone would say 'tidal energy' but I just said 'etc' because I was tired...

      If you'd read my comment I'd already addressed wind farms. There was a huge uproar in New England over the idea of having wind farms offshore.

      Tidal energy, wind farms, etc all take energy out of the system. Taking energy from wind will change weather patterns (just like adding energy to it will) and one would assume something similar from taking energy from the tide. I'm *NOT* saying this makes these technologies a bad idea (I'm all for them). I'm saying that people are still going to find some reason to fight them. PETA will fight bovine flatulence. Zinc and copper rods in potatoes only give you low amperage DC power. :P

      Nuclear really is the way to go. Especially due to the recent breakthroughs in drastically shortening the half life of nuclear stuff. Failing all else, we can put the nuclear waste on the moon, and wait for it to explode and catapult it out of orbit... That seems to be the only way we're ever gonna explore anything outside of our solar system. :P

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    20. Re:Interesting paper by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      There are alternative explanations for the ice. In particular, the pollution that we emit may be mixing with the top of the ice and allowing it to absorb enough heat over time to weaken it.

      As to these guys, they are an economist and a statistician. While they are not in the field, lots of good science has come from those who have been willing to accept new thoughts and ideas. Think about when the conservative churh held back any new education by disbeleaving their eyes about the sun vs. earth.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    21. Re: Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Appearently, you've seen pictures of me with my shirt off. That's right, Robbin Williams and I have a little bit of an evolutionary head start.

    22. Re:Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      1. One thing I can tell you, the National Post is Canada's ultra-right wing business friendly newspaper. They would and do report anything that can help big industry regardless of it's worth. It's the canadian equivalent to Fox/Wall street.

    23. Re:Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, the only feasible long-term power source is nuclear fusion. Solar energy is nothing more than tapping into the radiation of nuclear fusion. And wind and water energy can't be realised on large scales. I don't understand why humanity isn't investing obscene amounts of money into making nuclear fusion a reality. It's clean, it's limitless, it's easy to do on a large scale once you've got it done on a small scale, and it can replace any and all existing power sources.

      Ofcourse, just because it has the word nuclear in its name, people don't like it. Maybe they should call it banana fusion, so people won't mind so much.

    24. Re:Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you claiming microsoft is unable to make a fair and unbioased study of linux's feasibility. Just because something is unlikely, doesn't mean it can't happen. I'd like to see this research paper debunked too, but I'd prefer if it was done on facts, not on who paid for it.

    25. Re:Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a figment of my imagination

      Mmmmmmmm. fig-mint.

    26. Re:Interesting paper by newMe · · Score: 0

      Do you really think there are any studys on this issue that are not out to prove a political point of view? I assume ALL of them (pro & con) have an agenda.

    27. Re:Interesting paper by Arthur+Dent · · Score: 1
      Some of the date exclusions in MBH98 are based on the current climat model for effects of climate change. Namely the exclusion of Texas and surrounding areas from calculations is justified as it will become less continental if average northern hemisphere warms up (europe should go more) due to the gulfstream becoming weaker.

      As a result if you leave the texas values in you will smoothen the overall result as expected and as described by these guys. If you take them out you get a correct result.
      So, let me get this straight: What you are saying is, all I have to do to prove that global warming exists is to discard the data that does not conform to it?
      Right. Got it. Thanks for clearing that up.
    28. Re: Interesting paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a/s/l?

    29. Re:Interesting paper by arivanov · · Score: 1

      No. You need to use another measure different from temperature. Average temperature is the lamer's measurement for global warming. For example by the time the average European temperature will go up by a degree the average winter will drop by about 4 and the average summer will go up by about 5. These will prove a major disaster (as they are already doing during this summer draughts). Similarly, texas will cool and go moist, while Maine will go warmer by several degrees. So on, so forth.

      Average temperature in N. Hemisphere is NOT a correct measure for global warming. And sorry I do not know what is.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    30. Re:Interesting paper by dhalgren · · Score: 1

      No-one would imply that alternative energy sources are free of all impact--obviously if you extract energy from a system, you are going to affect that system. That's beside the point. The issue is choosing the methods with the lowest impact (and indeed the lowest *potential* for impact) over the longest time frame. Fossil fuels don't come close to winning any contests on this basis; their only virtues are ease and ubiquity. Nuclear will be just fine once we figure out what to do with the waste and stop arguing about Yucca Mountain (which only accounts for U.S. waste, anyway). And if you compare the potential cost (financial and enviromental) from a wind farm going belly-up to that of a reactor going belly-up, even if you factor in the difference in raw power generation, the wind farm is going to win big. Sure it might kill some birds, but not nearly the number that are killed by pet cats in any major city.

      The people who are looking forward to using things like hydrogen cells are quite clever enough to realize that there is no benefit if all they are doing is moving the negative impact from the car to the power station.

    31. Re:Interesting paper by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      The do post their opinion it reads, "Global Warming is accepted as fact by most of the scientific community." And this is with a president denying that it exists. That is a very strong statement to be making in this political climate.

    32. Re:Interesting paper by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      There was a huge uproar in New England over the idea of having wind farms offshore.

      Yep, by the wealthy environmentalist crowd. The biggest bunch of hypocrits I have seens. "Renewable energy is good, but not anywhere I can look at it."

  13. According to the latest research... by ceeam · · Score: 2, Funny

    ... your vehicle's exhaust won't make any harm to the nature. You can try it: lock yourself in the garage and run the engine for an hour. You won't feel anything bad, serious, it's all harmless stuff, everybody knows that, right? D'oh..

    1. Re:According to the latest research... by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

      The air won't cause you harm either. Seal yourself in a room and breathe for a couple of hours. You won't feel anything bad when you begiun to run out of O2 and CO2 posioning...

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
  14. Lame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're comparing filling a very small space with a very toxic poison to putting a tiny bit of pollution into a very vast atmosphere.

    The analogy doesn't even come close to being correct.

    1. Re:Lame by ceeam · · Score: 1

      It's not tiny - there are huge, at least regional spots in the world. And it grows somewhat exponentially I tend to believe.

    2. Re:Lame by Freexe · · Score: 1

      Many of todays drugs are tested by giving large doses to small animals.

      If the drug can kill a mouse/rabbit would you volunteer to try it?

      --
      "In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act." - George Orwell
    3. Re:Lame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, so a broken ironydetector awards my anonymous colleague a score of 2 and even rating as insightful? Unreal. Unless of course this is the insight that I am getting.

    4. Re:Lame by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > Many of todays drugs are tested by giving large doses to small animals.

      Oh shit! Large doses of caffiene are deadly. I better NEVER see you drink Mountain Dew, Coffee, Tea... Not to mention alcohol's toxicity... Or ANY DRUG (Rx|Otherwise) YOU'VE EVER TAKEN. Double-Standard?

  15. Global Warming by herwin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    About twenty years ago, there was a conference on global warming held at Caltech. The gist of the results presented was that adding energy to the atmosphere seemed to make it more chaotic. That doesn't imply local warming must occur, but rather that the weather becomes more unpredictable. I think we're seeing that now in the data.

    1. Re:Global Warming by befletch · · Score: 1

      That doesn't imply local warming must occur, but rather that the weather becomes more unpredictable.

      That is why people in this field generally refer to 'climate change' now, instead of the older term 'global warming'.

      --
      If you say, "now I'll be modded down because of X", I'll happily oblige.
    2. Re:Global Warming by pipingguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think we're seeing that now in the data.

      Yes, 10 years worth of data on climate change is relevant. After all, I remember that when I was a kid 30 years ago it never snowed this much/so little, therefore there must be climate change because I perceive it to be so (in addition to being told incessantly by news media whose attention span sometimes exceeds "oooh, look, shiny", frequently doesn't know what its talking about but knows that fear sells newspapers.

    3. Re:Global Warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In what form would you add energy to the atmosphere? I think heat is the most significant form, so this implies that adding heat (and a global, average warming) should result in more chaotic weather patterns - this seems consistent with observations.

      Maybe that is what you meant, it just sounded like you were referring to what we're releasing directly into the atmosphere as "adding energy". Of course we are also adding heat directly, but probably not in significant amounts compared to the sun.

    4. Re:Global Warming by tius · · Score: 1

      Oh, so does that mean that all those GigaWatts that they're pumping into the atmosphere via HAARP are having a detrimental effect?!?

      Curiousity killed the cat, but satisfaction brought him back...but then again a cat's got nine lives right!?!

    5. Re:Global Warming by herwin · · Score: 1

      Yep. The problem is that the dynamics and heat transfer become more chaotic, so everything gets worse. That's not good for anyone who needs predictable weather, like farmers.

    6. Re:Global Warming by herwin · · Score: 1

      I'm disturbed this comment was moderated down, since it's quite insightful. The coupling between solar radiation and the atmosphere is via heating of the surface and particles in the atmosphere and involves the albedo of the Earth.

    7. Re:Global Warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      come back and talk to me when you have 1000 years worth of weather data.

      and that is a tiny sample set to get a general idea. you need more like a 10,000 year sample set or more to get accurate results considering the age of this planet and the extreme slow-ness of global climatic change.

      Fricking idiot scientists making wild ass guesses based on the equilivant of making 2 temperature readings... how about we do some real science?

      Global warming is bullcrap. coming out of our very recent ice age? yes. possibility of increased C02 levels because of the end of the ice age? or measuring that the orbit of the planet might be degrading? sure... everything that is measurable but STILL only a wild ass guess because we dont have enough data to say anything other than "we think"

    8. Re:Global Warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember as a kid in the 70's seeing the news coverage that was suggesting we were heading towards another ice age.

      Go ahead and look back at late 70's and early 80's Poplular Science and other publications and see for yourself.

    9. Re:Global Warming by Fess_Longhair · · Score: 1
      What data show that weather is becoming more unpredictable?

      The evidence I'm seeing is that certain directions in phase space are preferred in the modern era of "global change." That may suggest the atmosphere is _less_ chaotic on low-frequency time scales when it is forced.

      OT: Parent is rated 5-interesting!??? Who rates these things?

    10. Re:Global Warming by laertes · · Score: 1
      I'm disturbed

      Get used to it; you're on Slashdot.

      --

      Yes, I'm still a junky. Are you still a bitch?
    11. Re:Global Warming by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      Yes, 10 years worth of data on climate change is relevant. After all, I remember that when I was a kid 30 years ago it never snowed this much/so little, therefore there must be climate change because I perceive it to be so [...]

      Also, even if there is climate change afoot, as has been pointed out elsewhere, it's not necessarily our doing as a species.

      B following A does not imply that A causes B.

  16. Good result, though hardly surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The "hockey stick" graph has been roundly criticized for years -- and yes, legitimate scientists criticize it, not just "neo-cons" or whatever.

    Unfortunately there is immense political pressure placed upon anyone who says something that could be seen as weakening the Kyoto protocol or the "global climate consensus." I expect the authors of this paper will see quite a lot of heat about this.

    This is a shame, because the fact that the "hockey stick" graph is flawed absolutely does not imply that human-influenced global warming isn't a problem! Sure, people may misuse these results to argue that global warming is somehow disproven, but the potential misuse of a result is no reason to suppress it. On the contrary, pressuring people to keep quiet about their findings will only hurt the credibility of the entire field in the long run. So it is very good to see that this is published.

    And remember -- there is no "final word" in science. The most vital element of science is results can be tested and disproven. Nothing is above criticism, including the hockey stick graph, this paper, and any other paper written about climate change or any other scientific subject. That is what science is all about.

    1. Re:Good result, though hardly surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if the earth was already once as warm as today, the RATE at which it heats is what's hurting the environment: it's too quick for evolution to respond.

    2. Re:Good result, though hardly surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue is pretty complicated, and it doesn't seem that anybody credible is claiming certainty as to what kind of effects we are seeing.

      They are mostly saying that as long as we have reason to even strongly suspect that there is a problem, we should be very careful not to make it worse.

      From what I've seen, most of the problem with those who say that there isn't a problem is their own attitudes, as they are the ones who try to claim that we are ok enough that we don't need to worry or do anything. Nobody who thinks that it's "better safe than sorry" is going to take such people seriously.

    3. Re:Good result, though hardly surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you're basing this on what? Your own keen insight? Show me some research that backs up your claims.

    4. Re:Good result, though hardly surprising by nfk · · Score: 1

      I think you have a good perspective, namely that final part about Science. Not only it changes contantly, sometimes the most interesting parts of it happen when you look at things from a different angle.

      I came across this interesting paper from CATO Institute some time ago (it's a pdf, but if you google for "horse emissions" you'll find it high on the list). It ends with this paragraph:

      "Beyond 50 years we have little, if any, idea what the energy infrastructure of our society will be. To highlight the folly of any such projection, compare the energy-related concerns of 1900, when pundits cautioned that major U.S. cities would be knee-deep in horse ''emissions'' by 1930 unless we saw fit to ''act now,'' with those of 2000. We simply cannot predict our technological future. Rather, the more serious question the facts on global warming provokes is this: Is the way the planet warms something that we should even try to stop?"

    5. Re:Good result, though hardly surprising by HiThere · · Score: 1

      This happens periodically. What's new is that ubiquitous fences keep species from moving towards where the temperature is more to their liking. This doesn't explain the problems that toads and frogs are having...that's likely chemical. And I don't know about where you live, but where I live earthworms have essentially disappeared. Now if I happen to see one after a rain I carefull move it to a dry piece of ground away from the sidewalks. There used to be so many I couldn't count them, now I rarely see one. (OTOH, I understand that this is not true everywhere.)

      Rapid climate changes always hurt species which can't move to where things are more to their liking. It's just that with everything fenced, nothing much larger than a rat can move.

      As to "it's too quick for evolution to respond", see my sig.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  17. eh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I dunno.... I thought it was kind of odd that it's just now getting cold in San Diego. The climate has been rather fucked up the last couple years...at least from what I can tell.

  18. The Political Climate... by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I wonder if the results are skewed because of mistakes, or if the numbers have been wilfully embellished. Neither would surprise me: almost every lobby group for every side of every issue, from Greenpeace to the car industry lobby, have been known to juggle the books a little in order to support their own beliefs. In some cases, outright fraud has taken place.

    What scared me about Kyoto is not so much the conclusion that was drawn, nor the way scientists had arrived at that conclusion, but the zealous belief of many governments in these conclusions. In Europe, scientists or governments (the US) who were sceptical about the Kyoto paper became the brunt of scorn and vilification in the media. It again showed how deeply environmentalists have become entrenched in the decision-making bodies of government... it reminds me of the case where two scientists were fired from the Dutch government environmental agency, for publishing reports that proved the official line on acid rain was wrong.

    The reactions to this article will tell us if the political climate has changed... if the policy-makers are still only accepting opinions that fit their own world view, or if we have a more open climate where scientific discussion rather than dogma holds sway.

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    1. Re:The Political Climate... by ScouseMouse · · Score: 0

      As a european, What scared me about Kyoto was the fact the politicials thaught they knew better than the majoraty of the scientific specialists who had been working on this for years, and the fact that the worlds biggest polluter decided they could ignore the majoraty of scientific opinion because it was inconvenient.

      (Although precisely why they thaught that not doing anything about their own dependance on the middle east was not a good thing, escapes me at the moment)

      Yes, there were desenters, but they were in a minority which means they still have to work to prove their case to the majority. (Thats the way these sort of science works BTW, Exactly the same thing happenned 50 years ago with the big bang theory)

      While basic principles state that there *might* not be a problem (After all its impossible to prove any theory in Science), the majoraty of the thinking is that there *IS* a problem and to ignore the possibility is the height of arrogance.

      Or to put it another way. Most people thing there is a problem. We need to do something about it before we kill ourselves.
      If there isnt a problem, then doing something about it wont hurt.
      Kudos to Californias car emission regulations BTW, Now if only more states where as forward thinking we wouldnt be having this argument.

    2. Re:The Political Climate... by ivaradi · · Score: 1

      I agree, that we don't know if we have a problem or not or what the problem is. But forcing everyone to do something to do something about it can hurt, because valuable economic resources might get misdirected, wasted and not be available when we find out what the real problem is (if there is a problem).

      Let's say, that it turns out in 10 years, that the current increase in temperatures is a natural process, so it is "normal". However, this natural increase might still be a problem from an agricultural point of view. Or if not the increase but the decrease that follows afterwards. Solving that problem may require a lot of resources, much of which could be wasted in trying to reduce pollution in vain.

      So I think we should be careful about how we handle such uncertain problems, and not get carried away when some theory looks plausible, even though we have no usable proof of it.

    3. Re:The Political Climate... by glesga_kiss · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      It again showed how deeply environmentalists have become entrenched in the decision-making bodies of government...

      I know. We should all follow the US model of corporations becoming entrenched in the decision-making bodies of government. ;-)

    4. Re:The Political Climate... by xeno-cat · · Score: 2, Interesting
      "...the zealous belief of many governments in these conclusions."

      Now there is a loaded statement. Do you think that the data is so conclusivly against global warming that nothing should be done? These Governments ( and the populace who comprise them ) are upset because they are attempting to effect an altruistic preference for the cautionary preservation of the future of our planet. This goes against the desires of the loby that is on the other side of the argument, namely big business. It's little wounder that the one country who is most visibly against Kyoto is the one country where business interests regularly trump the public wellfare (the US).

      The situation is such that most of the signitories of the Kyoto protocol have, in fact, ratified it with one major notable exception, the USA. So here the world is on the brink of implementing prudent cationary limits on the emmissions of gases and we have one rich brat who is pissing on the playing feild. Damn strait their going to get ruffed up in the media and well they should. The world has voted and the US has decided, unilateraly , that the opinions of the majority of the world do not matter.

      Kind Regards

      --
      "A few great minds are enough to endow humanity with monstrous power, but a few great hearts are not enough to make us w
    5. Re:The Political Climate... by serutan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Around 1990 I read a newspaper article about a documentary produced by some scientists in England that refuted the idea of global warming. Their thesis was that a large body of recorded temperature data, on which the idea of global warming was originally based, is known to have come from faulty equipment. Temperature recorders made before some point in the 20th century had a design defect that makes them accurate only to about 3 degrees, which is well outside the claimed variation.

      The thing is, although this documentary won awards in Great Britain, the American PBS management refused to air it. One of the PBS spokespeople was quoted as saying that it wasn't always necessary to air all points of view on an issue, and if they did then viewers might be confused about what opinions to have. Or words to that effect. It was a stunning statement, which forever tainted my trust in what I see and hear on PBS.

    6. Re:The Political Climate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kudos to Californias car emission regulations BTW, Now if only more states where as forward thinking we wouldnt be having this argument.

      Yeah, it looks like they may have worked out a reasonable form this time around. It's too bad the whole "zero emissions vehicle" thing basically caused GM to flush a few billion dollars down the toilet, though.

    7. Re:The Political Climate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If the world wants to take action, go ahead. But guess what, if you want me to take action, you have to show me why I should and convince me. All these Euro-threats of me not being a good guy because I won't do what you say is just bull. If you can really prove your point, then prove it, don't just call me names. And why don't these oh so noble countrys take action on Kyoto now, if it means so much to them? Why do they have to wait for everyone else to take action?

    8. Re:The Political Climate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is amazing how people are against corporations while actively promoting the most powerful corporation of them all - the government.

    9. Re:The Political Climate... by chrisbord · · Score: 1, Informative

      Because they know there is no evidence supporting the idea of 'global warming' as a result of human activities. Politicians don't dare speak up against environmentalist dogma, but they are even more afraid of devastating their economies. So, they give Kyoto great lip service while making sure behind the scenes not enough countries will ever sign the treaty to cause it to go in effect.

      This is a *dangerous* balancing act! Just a few weeks ago Russia, after claiming they supported and would sign Kyoto, decided to come clean claiming their climate scientists had strong doubts about the scientific basis of Kyoto and therefor Russian would not ratify Kyoto. Russia's signature would have pushed Kyoto over the threshold, putting Kyoto into effect.

      Russia may have dodged the bullet, but eventually enough other countries may sign on to get Kyoto right up to the brink, then it will be a matter of the right combination of 'financial aid,' official bribes, and political pressure on that last small country to push it over!

    10. Re:The Political Climate... by xeno-cat · · Score: 1
      "But guess what, if you want me to take action, you have to show me why I should and convince me"

      Well I understand your perspective on a personal level, however, we all have to live on the same round sphere and it is simply not fair that if the majority of the world wants to limit atmospheric emissions that a single major polutor be allowed to degrade the whole thing. There is such a thing as shared responsibilty when it comes to the use and enjoyement of the commons, and the atmosphere is a large part of the commons.

      As far as proving things, well, you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink. The world has clearly looked at the evidence that is available and, conclusive or not, has decided that it is best to play it safe and just try and reduce emissions. It's not like emissions are good for us anyway.

      Fact is, the USA likes to give lip service to democracy but when the world votes in a way that the US does not approve it simply acts unilateraly. Not in the democractic spirit at all.

      Kind Regards

      --
      "A few great minds are enough to endow humanity with monstrous power, but a few great hearts are not enough to make us w
    11. Re:The Political Climate... by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      That is a kind way of saying "we have a limited amount of airtime and can't air every 'prize-winning' 'documentary'". Distinguishing between good and biased reporting is not a trivial task. Perhaps you think they erred. As it happens I don't.

      Systematic observational biases are well-known and a great deal of effort goes into compensating for them in the instrumental record. Fortunately, there are multiple streams of evidence which greatly reduce the uncertainty.

      --
      mt
    12. Re:The Political Climate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It is amazing how people are against corporations
      > while actively promoting the most powerful
      > corporation of them all - the government.

      I can vote with the government, one person, one vote.
      With corporations, it is one dollar, one vote.

    13. Re:The Political Climate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the economic resources spent on dealing with this potential problem are a drop in the bucket compared to the cost of the known problems caused by the same sources. there is a massive portion of the yearly cost of healthcare in the US that can be directly attributed to airborne pollutants *that are only human-produced*. many of the worst offenders are traced directly to the power plants that the Bush EPA just let off the hook.

      if we want to use rhetoric, try
      "the kids are dying NOW"
      instead of
      "we might have a big problem in n years"

      it's more emotionally effective, it's far more verifiable, consensus is already there, and we get the bonus of dealing with two problems at the same time.

    14. Re:The Political Climate... by laird · · Score: 1

      "Temperature recorders made before some point in the 20th century had a design defect that makes them accurate only to about 3 degrees, which is well outside the claimed variation."

      Even if any individual measurement has a varience of 3 degrees, an analysis of many thousands of measurements will virtually eliminate that imprecision. Now assuming that the "global temperature" was measured in a reasonable number of locations (hundreds of cities?) fairly often (weekly? daily?) the number of samples would be large (10K's?).

      Also, the study that started the whole global warming thing covered a much larger time period than when humans were measuring the temperature with thermometers -- they measured ice rings, etc., in order to estimate the temperature over many, many thousands of years. So even if the measurements for one recent decade were off, that wouldn't change a long term trend.

  19. I spotted one tiny mistake.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "Corrections to the Mann et. al. (1998) Proxy Data Base and Northern Hemispheric Average Temperature Series"
    Energy and Environment 14(6) 751-772.
    By Steven McIntyre & Ross McKitrick ...

    They seem to have misspelt "Corporate right-wing crony apologist" there - otherwise fine..

    1. Re:I spotted one tiny mistake.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Corrections to the Mann et. al. (1998) Proxy Data Base and Northern Hemispheric Average Temperature Series"
      Energy and Environment 14(6) 751-772.
      By Steven McIntyre & Ross McKitrick ...

      They seem to have misspelt "Corporate right-wing crony apologist" there - otherwise fine..


      No, it is more like "Corrections to a left wing extremist religious document".

  20. Political fallout by HalfFlat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Taking this referenced paper as being on the mark, do look at their corrected temperature graph. One can't say that the recent warming has been unprecedented based on that graph, but you could claim that there's been nothing like it in 500 years.

    It seems almost certain that this news will be welcomed by certain governments (US, Australia, ...) as a good reason to dispute the need for CO2 emission controls. Yet they would still (IMO) be misguided. As evidenced by the hole in the ozone layer, human industrial activity can have significant long-term effects on the global environment. Given that we only have the one planet, it seems only good sense that we should be cautious when it comes to activity that has the potential to seriously change the environment.

    The warming trend in the last 100 years may have very little to do with industrial emissions - but as yet we can't tell. That there is a correlation indicates we should err on the side of caution: if it is indeed a matter of causation, then we're essential pissing on our own future.

    Regardless of quality of life issues, it makes sense as an economic one, when viewed in global terms. We will have to deal with the effects of climate change whether it be due to human activity or not, but if there is a significant component that we're responsible for, continuing in this behaviour is going to make a very large problem a great deal worse, with attendant very high costs to amerliorate it. It is risk management. Putting heads in the sand and saying that there's doubt about the link, does not make the risk of that link magically disappear. Even a 5% chance of the link being actual may be sufficient for a purely economic assessment to indicate that emissions should be sharply curbed.

    If there were alternative policies being adopted by those governments against the Kyoto accords, then that would be an indication that their objections were based on more than short-term economic growth (or worse, given the somewhat incestuous relationships between governments and industry.) Yet Australia for example has not even managed to reduce its rate of growth of emissions (not the emission levels themselves!) to targets that had been set earlier.

    If the Kyoto accords are not a step in the right direction, then the continuing increase of CO2 emissions is certainly not a preferable alternative.

    1. Re:Political fallout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The basic importance of this result is that it bolsters the claims that changes in solar output (on the scale of decades) are a major driving force in earth's climate. i.e., if the 1998 paper was so severely flawed it may be true that the "Little Ice Age" was part of a global climate change related to the Maunder Minimum. There is other research done over the last few years which further substantiates this idea.

      If decade-scale changes in the sun have as much influence on the earth's climate as the difference between 400ppm and 600ppm of CO2 in the atmosphere, then the benefits of the Kyoto Protocol look much much less certain. Thus the cost-benefit analysis changes.

      And anyway, if CO2 turns out not to be as bad for the environment as we thought, surely it would be good to reallocate some of the vast resources being spent on CO2 output reduction into other areas that would benefit the environment more for the same cost. There are plenty of polluted sites to clean up, there are endangered species and rainforests to be protected, and so on. There is no shortage of worthy causes. It is very important to make a good determination of where the money should be spent.

    2. Re:Political fallout by HalfFlat · · Score: 1

      And anyway, if CO2 turns out not to be as bad for the environment as we thought, surely it would be good to reallocate some of the vast resources being spent on CO2 output reduction into other areas that would benefit the environment more for the same cost. There are plenty of polluted sites to clean up, there are endangered species and rainforests to be protected, and so on. There is no shortage of worthy causes. It is very important to make a good determination of where the money should be spent.
      Spending money wisely is of course the right thing to do. On the other hand, there are few environmental concerns with the same potential for large scale costs and general disaster - at least that we're facing at present. So even a small risk seems to indicate that concerns about CO2 are warranted.

      The other point is that it's not a static situation: it's (of course) not just a matter of having dumped an excess of some quantity of Co2; but neither is it a case of dealing with a constant rate of excess CO2 introduction into the system. The CO2 emissions are increasing over time, with the growth being more or less exponential. Clearly this can't be sustained indefinitely, as we'll run out of things to burn. But the potential for impact on the environment is much greater than if it were a fixed quanity, or even a fixed rate.

      It seems that the money being spent isn't even reducing CO2 output, but so far (on average), only reducing the growth of that output. Which is abit worrying, really. If it turns out that the risk of climate change through human CO2 emission is significant, just how difficult is it going to be to change our industries?

      Not having done enough reading of the subject to speak with authority, I can't say much. Intuitively, adopting lower-impact energy sources and cleaner cars would together make a huge impact. It is a shame that nuclear energy has such a bad reputation.

    3. Re:Political fallout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A previous writer said.

      Given that we only have the one planet, it seems only good sense that we should be cautious when it comes to activity that has the potential to seriously change the environment.

      Wrong ..... we don't have the planet, it has us - the planet will survive reagrdless of us., it has before and will again get over cataclysmic events. Darwin was right - the fittest will survive, humanity might not always be the fittest species, and IMHO there is very little chance (if any at all) of fighting nature - you may slow something down, but the end result will be the same.

      After all, it all ends in a big ball of fire, as the sun expands.....

    4. Re:Political fallout by b-baggins · · Score: 1

      Oh, please. The hole in the Ozone was another manufactured crisis.

      The hole was discovered before CFCs were even invented.

      --
      You can tell a great deal about the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
    5. Re:Political fallout by Zirtix · · Score: 1

      Oh great. I'll just kill myself now.

    6. Re:Political fallout by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      Which is why Rowland and Molina got the Nobel Prize in chemistry, right, for helping fabricate the hoax? Here is Molina's Nobel Lecture.

      --
      mt
    7. Re:Political fallout by b-baggins · · Score: 1

      Give it a rest. The Nobel committee made it clear they award the prize for political reasons when they admitted Carter got the prize because they wanted to send a message to Bush.

      --
      You can tell a great deal about the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
    8. Re:Political fallout by b-baggins · · Score: 1

      They didn't fabricate a hoax, they presented a flawed report. They presented two facts:

      A. CFCs can degenerate into Cl radicals.
      B. Cl radicals break down ozone.

      They then commit a post hoc fallacy by claiming A, therefore B.

      They fail to account for other sources of chlorine radicals. They fail to account for natural Ozone fluctuations. They fail to account for the equilibrium pressures that will tend to favor ozone creation from atmospheric oxygen when ozone concentrations decrease. They fail to account for why ozone depletion was the worst over Antarctica when CFC production is the heaviest over North America.

      They fail to account for many things.

      By the way, your citing their nobel prize suffers from the fallacy of Appeal to Authority. The nobel committee made it clear that they award their prizes based on ideology and politics when they gave Carter the peace prize to express their dislike for Bush and his policies.

      --
      You can tell a great deal about the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
    9. Re:Political fallout by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      I find your suggestion that a Nobel Peace Prize for Carter, Sadat and Begin amounts to evidence that the Chemistry committee would award its prize for invalid research ludicrous, at first glance, but I am openminded. Would you care to elaborate?

      Failing that, I am happy to Appeal to Authority until you present a cohesive argument. I don't have time to argue with every airhead who thinks they know more chemistry than a Nobel winner.

      --
      mt
  21. Follow the money... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A recent study by Arctic researchers showed that the polar ice cap isn't just shrinking in terms of land mass, it's shrinking in terms of depth too, by 4cm a year.

    All that water's going somewhere, and that somewhere is the oceans. Global sea levels are rising, and you only have to look at the situation in Tuvalu in the Pacific or Venice, Italy to see that the threat of rising tides isn't a myth.

    People can harp on about "not enough data" or "inconclusive evidence" all they want but if entire nations vanishing beneath the waves or historic cities sinking isn't a wake-up call then I don't know what is.

    Frankly, there are some people who will bury their heads in the sand over this issue just as long as they can make a profit by ignoring it. Oil companies and big business are never going to recognise that they are part of the problem until the last possible moment, at which time they'll just shrug their shoulders and say "Who knew?", just like the tobacco industry before them.

    But, unlike tobacco, this isn't a problem that will affect just a handful of people, or a problem that will be easily settled by the courts - billions in punitive damages are useless when your country is underwater. The last time I checked there wasn't a court on the planet that could push back the tides.

    I'm sure there are dozens of readers out there that will right off this comment as yet more half-baked environmental doom-mongering but I find it funny that these same people will demand more money to scan the heavens for deadly meteors - it seems that extinction Armageddon-style is trendy but the possibility of extinction because of our own actions just isn't sexy enough.

    If you really want to be objective about these issues try to look beyond the smoke and mirrors. Ask yourself how objective the research is - there are far more people out there funded by big business than you'd imagine. Ask yourself who stands to profit by presenting a negative picture of climate change? Who stands to lose if the problem is tackled head-on? And who stands to profit if it's ignored and the situation is allowed to continue unchecked?

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    1. Re:Follow the money... by xxTYBALTxx · · Score: 1

      Did you even read the article? How about any of the /. comments? No one's disputing that the earth is getting warmer. That's a given. What is at issue here is whether _humans_ contribute to that warming. This study seems to suggest that no, humans have no significant impact on global warming.

    2. Re:Follow the money... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      Are you trolling? Did you even read my post? Who paid for this research? Do they have an agenda?

      The very fact that you believe that humans play no part in global warming astounds me. Ever heard of ozone depletion caused by CFCs, etc? Deforestation of the rain forests? Acid rain? Aren't those our responsibility?

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    3. Re:Follow the money... by jap · · Score: 1

      Cribes. Have you thought about what happens if the ice near the North Pole melts? Compare it to having an icecube melting in a glass of water. The level of water will not, I repeat, will not rise. Thanks to our old friend Archimedes.

      Wrt the ice at the South Pole, this might give rise to a sea-level change (however, no conclusive evidence has been presented that the icecap on the South Pole is melting ( that is because there's solid ground beneath that cap, and the load of the ice can cause the ground to compress or expand, so measurements are quite useless. Until you start doing fancy stuff like measuring gravitational constants from satellite missions etc.)

      There are however, some flaws in the above reasoning: never underestimate the influence of gravity - that is, that block of ice known as the North Pole pulls water towards it, which causes higher than expected sea levels locally, but lower levels further away. Melting that ice makes this anomaly disappear, and so, even though the average level will not change, close to the Arctic Cap sea levels will *drop* when it melts. The other side of the world will have a problem with rising sea levels though.

    4. Re:Follow the money... by Chris+Hodges · · Score: 1
      Have you thought about what happens if the ice near the North Pole melts? Compare it to having an icecube melting in a glass of water. The level of water will not, I repeat, will not rise.

      Not much maybe, but the part that is currently above the surface will be spread out instead of concentrated in one small area. Much of the worry about (Northern hemisphere) melting is not concerned with the Arctic ice sheet (for the reasons you describe), but the Greenland ice sheet (which is, strangely enough, on top of Greenland). Also there is a large amount of water tied up in glaciers globally. Whether or not you think the Antarctic ice sheet is melting is open to debate - personally based on the evidence I have seen (though mostly a couple of years ago) I think it is.

    5. Re:Follow the money... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      Ice is less dense than water. So, an ice cube melting in a glass of water will cause the level of water to rise. If you don't believe me then try it.

      Why do you think that a bottle of water (or beer, ok Coke) left in the freezer too long will crack its container? Put a bottle of Bud or a can of Coke in the freezer if you don't believe this either. Simple science: ice takes up more room than water because it has a lower density.

      Imagine a glass that's got a cube of ice in it and water full to the brim. What will happen when that ice cube melts? The water will spill over the side of the glass, that's what will happen. The same thing is true with the polar ice caps and the oceans, just on a bigger scale.

      Your Archimedes theory is flawed because you've failed to take into account the volume of the solid ice that is above the water level before it started, which is approximately 10 percent by mass. The rest of your post seems to be gibberish. For one thing, you don't seem to have a clue how gravitic forces work, which is a bit worrying as you profess to be an engineering student (according to your user page).

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    6. Re:Follow the money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sea levels aren't actually rising at Tuvalu, it's suffering from some kind of weird El Nino effect where the tides increase the water level dramatically just before the onset of El Nino and then decrease it again when it arrives. This could conceivably be an indirect result of global warming changing weather patterns, but doesn't demonstrate globally rising sea levels. Venice is subsiding, and has been for hundreds of years, but this doesn't show any sort of global effect either.

    7. Re:Follow the money... by LEPP · · Score: 1

      I hate to break it to you but many people do not believe that humans contribute little to global warming. I am on the fence in regards to the human influence on global climate change. One of the greatest reasons for people's skepticism is the reliance on logical fallacies. It always shocks me when I see a discussion on global climate change the personal attacks and other logical fallacies that are employed primarily by the group that believes in the human influenced global warming.
      Incedently, attacking the person does not support your point in the slightest.

    8. Re:Follow the money... by Zocalo · · Score: 5, Informative
      Actually, you have some factual errors too since displacement is relative to *mass* not to volume. Water is kind of funny in that the solid has more volume than the liquid for a given mass due to the chemical structures, so 1KG of ice has more volume than 1KG of water, as you state. But if you put some ice cubes in a glass, fill it to the brim with water and then let the ice melt, it will still be full to the brim with no overflow because the mass remains constant. And that's in an ideal world, before you account for the losses due to evaporation. The section of the ice sticking out of the water is the difference in *volume* between the mass of the water in the ice cube in its liquid and solid states.

      People getting confused when relating this to the melting of the polar caps is due to the fact that while the northern cap is largely over water and they think of the ice cube in a glass thing. But that's not the end of the story. The bulk of the southern ice mass *is* over land, and a good chunk of ice in the north is too, plus the temperature rise necessary to melt the caps would almost certainly cause a rise in the snowline and meltage of other inland ice.

      In a nutshell, ice mass supported by the oceans can melt without causing the seas to rise, but ice supported by land will cause the seas to rise. Note: I seem to recall that "supported by" is not the same as "directly over", but it's a *long* time since I did any geography.

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    9. Re:Follow the money... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      Part of Venice's problem is because of sinking but part of it is also due to rising water levels. The rate of the overall descent has dramatically increased in the last century, epecially so in the last 40 years.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    10. Re:Follow the money... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

      Well, even the current Bush government admits that deforestation is an issue. Their watered down environmental plan talks about establishing "sinks", and the rain forests are the biggest natural sinks on the planet.

      If even the skeptics admit that deforestation is an issue then why can't you?

      And as for me attacking the person who my grandparent post was in response to, I was merely responding to his question asking whether or not I had read the article by questioning whether he had read my comment, specifically the bit regarding research funding and objectivity.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    11. Re:Follow the money... by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1
      If you really want to be objective about these issues try to look beyond the smoke and mirrors. Ask yourself how objective the research is - there are far more people out there funded by big business than you'd imagine. Ask yourself who stands to profit by presenting a negative picture of climate change? Who stands to lose if the problem is tackled head-on? And who stands to profit if it's ignored and the situation is allowed to continue unchecked?

      Just so... but you have to look at the big picture rather than just follow the money. Ask yourself who benefits from these studies, but also ask how they benefit.

      Certainly big business fund research to produce results that they like to see... but environmentalists are just as guilty. For example: the way Greenpeace falsified reports about the amount of harmful substances on the Brent Spar (I cancelled my membership after that event).

      Organisations sometimes simply want to push their own misguided views of the world, or in some cases they pursue their own self-interest. Organisations like Greenpeace may not be in it for the money, but for thing like power and influence. That does not make them any better or more objective than researchers funded by business.
      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    12. Re:Follow the money... by fluffy666 · · Score: 1

      The level of water will not, I repeat, will not rise. Thanks to our old friend Archimedes.

      Of course, should the meltimg be followed by an increase in the temperature of the water, then the level WILL rise (salt water does not have the 4C maximum density that fresh water has).

      however, no conclusive evidence has been presented that the icecap on the South Pole is melting

      Actually, it appears to be increasing in volume due to higher precipitation, which is a Good Thing. However, the Greenland ice cap does appear to be melting; it is only metastable in the current climate (i.e. if you lifted it off today, it would not re-form). That would increase sea level.

      that is, that block of ice known as the North Pole pulls water towards it, which causes higher than expected sea levels locally, but lower levels further away.

      OUCH!!! And I thought you understood Archemedies..

    13. Re:Follow the money... by amorsen · · Score: 1
      Ice is less dense than water. So, an ice cube melting in a glass of water will cause the level of water to rise. If you don't believe me then try it.

      You really should try out your experiments before spouting off about the results. The only way a melting ice cube would make the water level rise is if it was stuck to the glass. Luckily the arctic ice is floating. Unfortunately, the antarctic ice is stuck to the bottom, so when that melts, sea levels will rise.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    14. Re:Follow the money... by LEPP · · Score: 1

      I cannot find anything in my post that would in any way indicate that I think deforestation is not an issue. How did you derive that from my post? You may be referring to my assertion that "I am on the fence in regards to the human influence on global climate change" but alas deforestation is not global climate change.

      You did not really attack the poster other than to suggest that he is a troll. What I was referring to was the attack on the author of the article. While, slashdot is rather informal, the basic premises of logic still apply. The validity of an arguement in no way is influenced or bolstered by the motives or objectivity of the person making the arguement. A good arguement will stand on the merit of arguement alone. I have not read the paper so I don't have an opinion one way or the other on the merit of his arguement.

      Please refer to Logical Fallicies for a complete list of these fallacies.

    15. Re:Follow the money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Their watered down environmental plan talks about establishing "sinks", and the rain forests are the biggest natural sinks on the planet"

      Wrong, the largest carbon sink on earth is the phytoplankton inhabiting the top six inches of seawater in the arctic oceans, which accounts for nearly two-thirds of CO2 conversion. The rain forest bullshit is promoted by the environmental lobby because they haven't found a way to make a micro-organism sexy.

      See, the environmentalists play the misinformation game too, when it suits them.

    16. Re:Follow the money... by RTMFD · · Score: 1

      Venice is subsiding without the help of global warming, it has been for years (7cm a year for the past 1000 years). Please check your facts because when you try to use a bad example to back up your argument, you and your claims become as baseless as all of the other "treehuggers".

      The sky isn't falling and you are not Chicken Little :) Take a deep breath and go back to coding or studying.

    17. Re:Follow the money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems that many individuals not involved in research would like to believe that scientists who disagree with the human involvement aspect (and global warming in general) are funded by big companies where as those scientist that claim human responsibility for global warming are doing their work for free. That is not accurate. Both groups have much to gain claiming that they are right. If they prove otherwise, those scientists may lose their funding. And not many people are willing to part with such a long term source of money.

    18. Re:Follow the money... by bourne · · Score: 1

      People can harp on about "not enough data" or "inconclusive evidence" all they want but if entire nations vanishing beneath the waves or historic cities sinking isn't a wake-up call then I don't know what is.

      You seem to be confusing climate swings, which we know happen normally over great time periods, with human propensity to build in places that are convenient and attractive without regard to the long term status of the land.

      Venice may very well have been flooded many, many times over the earth's history. It's only now that the human ants have built their hill there that the possibility of it happening again becomes a capital-P problem.

      The current climate change may be affected by human outputs, or it may just be another natural swing (one doubts, for example, that human emissions have caused historic high sunspot activity). To advocate that our propensity for building beach houses should give us the right or responsibility to leash the natural variations of the world and confine them to some comfortable mean is just plain dumb.

    19. Re:Follow the money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I look behind the smoke and mirrors of enviro-natzi's like you.

      let's look at the facts that sea levels have been rising for over 500 years... or did the early greeks really decide to build underwater cities.

      please, continue to be a sheep and follow those that lead you in what to believe in.

      I'll stick with real science.

    20. Re:Follow the money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lesson 1: To cite a case study requires background information

      "Part of Venice's problem is because of sinking but part of it is also due to rising water levels."

      Venice is situated in a lagoon. Anyone familiar with coastal formations knows that a lagoon entrance can become silted up through normal sediment movements, and lose connection with the sea. When this happens the water level in the lagoon can rise much higher than sea level. This is a normal part of the dynamic behaviour of lagoon structures, which can change dramatically over the course of months.

      Lesson 2: Choose case studies that visibly support your argument and are not open to trivialization.

      "The rate of the overall descent has dramatically increased in the last century, epecially so in the last 40 years."

      As www.veniceinperil.org (your reference) states, the relative sea level around Venice has risen 9 inches in 100 years, wheras global sea levels in the same time have risen (IIRC) 1/10th of an inch. So, on worst estimates, global warming accounts for 1/90th of the relative rise of sea level around Venice, which puts it way down on the list of factors responsible, and makes Venice a poor example of the effects of climate change.

      Lesson 3: Make sure your references say what you need them to say, not what you think they say, or don't put words into other people's mouths

      www.veniceinperil.org does not blame climate change for previous changes in sea level; there is no evidence to back it up (the Adriatic has not risen 9 inches in the last 100 years), though it does make projections based on the worst-case environmental situation. Repeat after me: "A prediction is not a statement of fact".

      Lesson 4: Eliminate confounding variables

      Yes, the rate of submersion has increased over the last 40 years. So has the incidence of power-boat ownership. It was found more than 20 years ago that power boats generate more wash than the traditional flat-boats and gondolas, and that this wash undermines the foundations of buildings. No mystery here, it's been solved and is attributable to very clear causes that aren't climate change. The previous 60 years is harder to explain directly, but could be because of a change in flow patterns around the lagoon due to tidal shifting of sand banks, changes in water salinity or silt replenishment (due to farming or damming of fresh water tributaries), or dredging navigation channels; that's just what I can think of off the top of my head based on my scant knowledge of the esturine environment and the history of Venice. But no, it can't be any of those reasons, could it, because they're just too obvious, and they don't have the sex appeal of global warming.

      Lesson 5: Admit when you have made an error, and correct it. Better yet, don't make errors.

      You may have noticed that I assumed global warming exists. So why am I bagging you out? Because you're trying to mount an argument with an inappropriate example, and you don't see why it's inappropriate. The site you referenced doesn't even support your claim. If you want to be taken seriously (and I assume you do), don't leave yourself open to such easy dismissal. Choose irrefutable evidence that can't be shredded by a bored hippie such as myself; it will only help the environmental movement. Remember, environmentalism is effective only as long as it retains the moral high ground, and can only be damaged by using the same tactics (willful or not) as its opponents.

    21. Re:Follow the money... by thbb · · Score: 1

      If you really want to be objective about these issues try to look beyond the smoke and mirrors.

      At least, this statement is not incorrect...

      A recent study by Arctic researchers showed that the polar ice cap isn't just shrinking in terms of land mass [bbc.co.uk], it's shrinking in terms of depth too [bbc.co.uk], by 4cm a year.

      All that water's going somewhere, and that somewhere is the oceans. Global sea levels are rising, and you only have to look at the situation in Tuvalu in the Pacific [bbc.co.uk] or Venice, Italy [veniceinperil.org] to see that the threat of rising tides isn't a myth.


      Elementary physics will tell you that the artic ocean ice caps could fully melt without raising the sea level by one centimeter: Whether the artic ocean is in a solid or liquid state does not change the underwater volume (remember Archimedes ?). This is quite fortunate, because otherwise the sea level would drastically change between the northern hemisphere winter and summer, precluding much of the seaside activity many of us enjoy sometimes. The problem with the Venice lagoon has to do with centuries of mishandling the water flows in the local area and nothing to do with global climate changes.

      Contrary to popular belief, most serious oceanographers believe that a global warming would rather lower the sea level than raising it: The most influential water tanks that could have an impact on sea level are the antartic and groenland continental ice caps. If those melted then sea level would rise, and vice versa. It happens that those regions have very little precipitations because clouds very seldom go up to these latitudes. Because the area is (and will stay) still very cold, the melting in fact barely compensates the accumulation of water on these continental ice caps. Hence, the ice there is not renewing itself a lot. A global warming would increase the evaporation at the equator, push the clouds at higher latitudes, and augment the precipitations on top of the continental areas. Hence water would keep accumulating on the land, therefore lowering the global sea level. QED.

      Now, this is not to say that human-induced climate change is not dangerous and that we should not take drastic measures to limit the various activities (including farting ;-) that could have an impact on climate. It's just that if you read very informed litterature, you'll find that no one can in their earnest say whether or not human activities will or will not have a drastic impact on our planet's ecosystem.

      The best seems to try to stay as informed as possible and not let false Cassandras monopolize the discussion.

    22. Re:Follow the money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ice is less dense than water. So, an ice cube melting in a glass of water will cause the level of water to rise. If you don't believe me then try it.


      It's better to be quiet and have the world wonder if you're a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.

    23. Re:Follow the money... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why oh why is there not a mod (-1: Clueless) or (-1: Misinformed) or (-1: Talking Out of Ass)

    24. Re:Follow the money... by HardCase · · Score: 1
      Ice is less dense than water. So, an ice cube melting in a glass of water will cause the level of water to rise. If you don't believe me then try it.


      The ice cube displaces an amount of water equal to its mass. Its volume is completely irrelevant. If you drop an ice cube into a glass of water, it will displace an amount of water equal to its mass. When the ice melts, it still displaces an amount of water equal to its mass. Nothing has changed. A gram of ice displaces as much water as a gram of water. The water level cannot change unless the mass of the ice changes when it melts...and while its density certainly changes, its mass most definitely does not!


      -h-

    25. Re:Follow the money... by j_schmoe · · Score: 1

      Not quite.

      If you put ice cubes in a glass, fill it to the brim with water and let the ice melt, then the the glass will NOT be as full as it was originally since the melted (liquid) ice has less volume than the frozen (solid) water. The mass has stayed the same, but the total volume definitely changes (feeze a full glass of water and the ice will be above the rim).

      Your preceding sentence was correct that 1 kg of ice has more volume than 1 kg of water.

    26. Re:Follow the money... by RocketScientist · · Score: 1

      OK, I was hoping somebody would bring up rain forests.

      Do you, personally, want to stop deforestation?

      Then buy some damn rain forest. Quit complaining about it. Don't give you money to organizations who have the sole agenda of stopping deforestation through legislation and litigation. Stop the deforestation by owning the trees.

      The truly successful environmental groups are typically run by people who buy land and preserve it. Think "Ducks Unlimited" and not "Greenpeace". Ducks Unlimited doesn't get big headlines for bringing huge expensive lawsuits, because they don't. I'd bet DU has saved a lot more wetlands than Greenpeace ever will. While you may not like their motives (them ducks is tasty eatin'), their methods work and they have been widely successful.

    27. Re:Follow the money... by Arthur+Dent · · Score: 1

      Ozone depletion caused by CFC's?
      I'm glad you brought that up, because it's simply not true..
      <quote>
      Persistent high-altitude clouds of nitric-acid crystals are responsible for depleting ozone levels in the Arctic atmosphere, scientists said Tuesday.
      Data from NASA satellites, aircraft and balloons -- along with aircraft and ground observations from other nations -- show that the ozone-gobbling clouds are caused by abnormally cold temperatures in the Arctic that last for an unusually long time.
      <quote>

    28. Re:Follow the money... by Zocalo · · Score: 1
      I'd have to say yes and no on that. Ice floats, so with a glass brim full of water and an ice cube floating in it, some of the ice will be *above* the rim. This is the whole point of the demonstration; that the melting ice *doesn't* cause the glass to overflow as it melts. If on the otherhand the combined volume of ice and water is level with the rim, then none of your science students are going think the glass will overflow.

      Incidentally, if you freeze a glass of water the glass usually breaks, as I discovered when trying to make icepops when I was about five or so. Mother was not amused. :(

      --
      UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
    29. Re:Follow the money... by Quikah · · Score: 1

      You make a very good point. Hunters should be actively persude for support by environmental groups. They use the wild lands more than most people and have a huge interest in seeing it preserved.

      --
      Q.
    30. Re:Follow the money... by jap · · Score: 1

      I do -- this is a second order effect caused by the non-uniform distribution of mass near large (floating) ice-masses. Calculating the distortion in the gravity potential near such a mass is left as an exercise for the reader ;)

    31. Re:Follow the money... by jcorgan · · Score: 1
      All that water's going somewhere, and that somewhere is the oceans. Global sea levels are rising, and you only have to look at the situation in Tuvalu in the Pacific or Venice, Italy to see that the threat of rising tides isn't a myth.

      The Arctic ice cap is floating in the ocean, not on land, and is already displacing seawater. As it melts, the water released to the ocean does not raise sea levels.

      If global sea levels are rising, it is NOT because the Arctic ice is melting.

      When the ice cubes in your glass of soft drink melt, the level doesn't increase.

      The situation, of course, is different in Antarctica because there the mass of ice is largely sitting on land and as it melts into the ocean it *is* raising global sea levels.

      The increase in melting ice may disrupt ocean currents, however, as the difference in salinity and density may cause convective flows that aren't normally there.

      --
      Babies are cute because they have to be.
    32. Re:Follow the money... by fluffy666 · · Score: 1

      Well, let's see.. to be generous, consider a 100m thick (uniform) ice sheet. This will have the same mass as a 90m column of water, except that the center of mass of the water will be 45 meters below the surface and the center of mass of the ice will be 40m below the surface. Good luck detecting that anomoly..

      In reality, of course, the density of the ice will increase as you go down, so reducing the effect, and the ice will usually be thinner. Then compare this to the effect of continental margins, ocean floor topography, air pressure, etc, etc..

  22. I see.. by adeyadey · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I visited a Glacier in Norway once (at Olden) and they have actually signposted the glacier boundary at various previous times for the tourists - ie. "Glacier boundary 1850" etc.

    I can tell you its a long climb from those points until you get to where the glacier is today..

    Just because you can spot the odd anomoly in a bunch of data does not render the whole thing untrue..

    --
    "You lied to me! There is a Swansea!"
    1. Re:I see.. by Eivind · · Score: 3, Informative
      The Briksdalen glacier, rigth ?

      I know it. Rather well. I grew up about hundred kilometers further west, in Nordfjordeid.

      Anyways, it is true like you say that the glacier went a lot further down in the valley in the middle 1800s. But here's the thing: For the last 30 years or so its been *growing* quite a lot, on the order of 3-5 meters a year.

      The glacier is actually a lot *bigger* now than it was when I was small. Now this is not due to colder climate, but rather due to more snowfall in the winthers, but still, the briksdalen glacier is a very poor choise for examples of global warming and ice melting. :-)

    2. Re:I see.. by 10Ghz · · Score: 0, Redundant

      So? Is the rise in temperature (and the receding glacier) due to human action (CO2-emissions) or due to something else (increased solar-activity, altered wind-patterns etc.)?

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    3. Re:I see.. by theonetruekeebler · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You mean to tell me a glacier that has been receding since the end of the last Ice Age is still receding? Oh, dear.

      --
      This is not my sandwich.
    4. Re:I see.. by RTMFD · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Yes, but the assumption that man is the cause of this warming trend is not grounded on any hard scientific evidence. As of now we only have theories without any "hard" evidence, which is not enough to make good public policy with.

      Take a few deep breaths, it's okay.

    5. Re:I see.. by adeyadey · · Score: 1

      Well, you may expect to see temporary short term fluctuations - its the longer term pattern that really matters.. ie..

      http://www.enn.com/news/2003-08-01/s_6964.asp

      GLACIERS SHRINK

      In other areas, global warming seems to be catching up with some of the icy exceptions.

      The Briksdal glacier in west Norway, for instance, has receded about 426 feet since a peak in 2000 when it was splintering birch trees on ground that had been free of ice for decades.

      "It's shrunk a lot, though in the middle of the 17th century is was 1.5 km (one mile) longer than now," said Frode Briksdal, a glacier guide whose family has long lived in the area.

      Climate experts say that recent hotter summers are melting the ice despite more snowfall in winter that is adding to the overall mass of the glaciers.

      --
      "You lied to me! There is a Swansea!"
    6. Re:I see.. by adeyadey · · Score: 1

      We cant say 100% for sure, but do you then think its OK to keep pouring CO2 into the atmosphere? Why take the risk, if there are emerging alternatives anyway?

      --
      "You lied to me! There is a Swansea!"
  23. Awesome position to take by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your position:

    1) Any evidence to the contrary of what I believe is a product of corporate shilling and is inherently agenda-driven.

    2) I will be convinced by credible scientists.

    3) Anyone espousing (1) cannot fulfill criteria (2)

  24. this is how I see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a gorge with a rope streched out across it, and 6 ropemakers (experts) 4 are telling me the rope is not safe (the environmentalists) and 1 is unsure the other tells me it is fine to drive an SUV over it.

    Better to err on the side of caution.

    And also the temperature IS rising, and I don't mean to split hairs but by a certain hair splitting razor the simplest explination is that the major variable change has been human shit pumped into the atmosphere - combine that with "better to be cautious" and I think the DEFAULT should be environmental conservation.

    One of the reasons people use the BSDs and Linux is secure communications to prevent government censorship.... but you say "there is hardly any government censorship"..... and you are right.... but it's about making sure the infrastructure is in place for when the shit hits the fan - being cautious. Because I tell you, if from Hitler's Germany "election" to dictatorship was a hop away then Bush + Oily co. and their "election" is only a hop and a skip.

    Sure, make a tin foil hat comment, but believe you me the 21st century dictatorships aren't going to use overt force, they have TV. The don't need dissidents, there are terrorists. They don't need innocent till proven guilty, they need results in the war against terror.

    How many fundamental rights have slipped away for a select few in the past few years? Too many, and "select few" ends up being applied to anyone they need to apply it to. This is a sad day for the the America we once knew.

    American democracy is rotten, I don't know whether to spur you on to fight the rot or whether you should just let it go on into a pile of shit and help you fight the revolutionary war.

    Where is the America I used to respect? She has fallen into shadow. "In god we trust" written on your currency, but the notes are gods unto themselves.

    Trust not in god to bless america, you have to bless it for yourselves. I see so much self-hate in america, you should be proud - once one of the finest nations on earth. But you must force a change, I beg of you, before it is too late. A step away from democracy and freedom may not be a step right into facism, but it is a step away none the less.

    Use your agency while you still can. You of all people who have so much agency compared to the rest of us are faced with the question of action. Should one act, or not act? What are the possibilities of the meaning of the action? How do you take action on issues so complex?

    The first step, I believe, is to form groups -no, not stinking hippy drum circles or smiley glad-hand lobbyists but citizen's interest groups. Grassroots democracy. Like any good server, you have to view the logs - the public records - and hold errant processes accountable for their actions. If needs be, replace and upgrade them.

    You have processes running that are violating their access rights. Judiciary processes have no write access rights directly to prisoners without going through the contitution/kernel.... check the core dumps and the logs (if they haven't been ushered away) and enforce the rules of your system or remove/upgrade the parts that are in violation.

    Don't like proprietary code run you democratic processes! etc. etc.

    If you had a cluster of 50+ computers (states) connected to 3 arms of government servers and something was fucking up. You wouldn't tackle it alone - you'd get freinds, make a plan, write new code. The frameworks and literacies for action are already there is OSS - unpaid collabrative work for a better world.

    signing off,

    Anonymous Coward

    P.S. people will mod this "off topic" but in reality this whole shebang is connected - the principles of computer design connects to the philosophy of politics which connects to the economics and realities of caring for the environment, which connects to the very atoms that constitute our bodies from the food we eat. What is said in the footnotes, in the errata, in the appendix - in the scream against a sleeping democracy with the curtains on fire.... nothing can ever be offtopic in this field.

  25. Fuck conceit by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1
    We are at the serendipitious end of an ice age, it's stupid of us, with our short life spans, to assume the world was and should always be thus. It is the hieght of conciet for us to always expect it to be so.
    Regardless of whether it is natural or not if a change in climate will make the earth less hospitable to us and it is within our power to stop or lesson that effect it makes sense for us to do so.
    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    1. Re:Fuck conceit by Moofie · · Score: 1

      If we can't heat up the atmosphere (as this article agrees), then how exactly are we going to cool it down?

      You're talking about spending billions of dollars on a program that has not been demonstrated to have any measurable effect. I can think of lots of ways to spend billions of dollars that have measurable effects. Like hiring good teachers, for starters.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    2. Re:Fuck conceit by BitGeek · · Score: 1

      On the contrary... whenever socialist engineers try to change the environment (or any problem, really) they make it worse.

      Your "in the powerr to change it" is based on a complete lack of understanding of economics, and what you'll actually change will be the number of poor poeple in the world (you'll make that number much bigger) and do nothing about the environment.

      This has been the way with all attempts to engineer the environment by "environmentalists".

      If you don't understand economics-- and they don't-- they can only create more problems.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    3. Re:Fuck conceit by untaken_name · · Score: 1

      Regardless of whether it is natural or not if a change in climate will make the earth less hospitable to us and it is within our power to stop or lesson that effect it makes sense for us to do so.

      Sure. Right. We can stop or lessen the effect of the sun's output increasing. Good one, bub. Perhaps you were referring to halting the production of manmade CFCs? Maybe you're afraid that O3 will cease to be produced? Or perhaps you're simply afraid that the hole in the ozone layer is getting bigger, or that we're in for global cooling, or global warming, or you think there aren't enough trees or that evil logging companies encourage monocultures, or that eating vegetarian doesn't cause any animals to die, or some other foolish thing. It really doesn't matter. I promise you that the earth really doesn't give a shit about human conceit and that 1000 years or less after our species is gone there will be very very very little sign of it remaining. Of course, you won't care, being dead. Neither will I, but then I don't care now. I could raze and salt half the state I live in, but someone viewing that state 1000 years from now would never know it. The dinosaurs cleared more land than humans ever could. Somehow, plants still exist, and so does the planet. We need to stop the mistaken belief that humans are capable of destroying this planet. We couldn't do it if we tried. Sure, we can wipe out species, we could wipe out entire orders if we wanted to. So what? Mother Nature has been doing that FOR MILLIONS OF YEARS. It's called "Natural Selection" and here's how it works: Some species become more viable and thus more populous, some species become less viable and thus less populous. Here's a hint: if your species *can* be wiped out, especially by something innocuous like humans clearing land for housing and such, YOUR SPECIES DOESN'T DESERVE TO EXIST. We have some kind of notion that we own this planet, or that we rule it. Bah. Stop whinging about the planet, it's taken care of itself for a long, long time, and nothing we do will have any real lasting impact in, say, a geological age. We don't have to "save" the planet, since it's in no real danger. Don't give me any rainforest bullshit either. I don't care. Nature's track record of genocide and genesis is much longer than most people ever take the time to try and comprehend. I know humans are conceited as a species, but it's getting ridiculous. Worst case: we kill ourselves (and probably a shitload of other species) off. Result: Nature rebuilds and moves on. Net result of human occupation on Earth, time frame 10 million years after the last human dies: nothing.

    4. Re:Fuck conceit by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Want to hear my rant on how treehuggers are ultimately a major cause of the recent SoCal wildfires?

      <rant>
      If the treehuggers hadn't got logging banned in Calif's national forests (and everywhere here that has two scrubs sticking out of the ground has been designated national forest), this would never have happened -- the fires would have been of moderate proportion, not larger than some small states. (For perspective, the total area burned was larger than Rhode Island.) The main problem was that there were FIVE TIMES as many trees per acre as there is moisture to support (even under normal conditions, never mind how dry it was after five years of drought), so many trees got stressed by inadequate water, then infected with bark beetles and died from the infestation. So you've got miles and miles of pure tinder out there. Selective logging would have cleared out the deadwood, kept the forest healthier overall, and there would have been access roads and firebreaks already in place, so the fire would have been much easier to contain. But NOOOO, the treehuggers would rather the entire forest burned down, than let logging do its job and keep the environment healthier than it can do on its own in a severe drought area. NOW, instead of logging companies paying the state to keep the forest in good shape, taxpayers are going to have to foot the bill, not to mention nearly 3000 families whose homes burned (never mind the 20-odd people who got killed) and who are now going to suck billions out of FEMA relief funds (ie. taxpayer pockets).

      Way to go, California...
      </rant>

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    5. Re:Fuck conceit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I hate to be contrarian but I would submit that the ensuing famine would seriously cut into the numbers of poor people, not to mention more powerful storms reducing available shelter, hygene and spreading disease. I might even be so bold as to bet that their proportions (rich to poor) remain the same, as if one gets too poor, they die.

    6. Re:Fuck conceit by BitGeek · · Score: 1


      Yep, right on all counts.

      How much of this government ineptitude and incompetance does it take before people wake up?

      They wander around thinking nothing should happen to them, and that they shouldnt' be responsible for their own actions.

      If insurance doesn't cover the fire damage, why does FEMA?

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    7. Re:Fuck conceit by BitGeek · · Score: 1

      Atually, in a free society, there would be abundant harvests.

      Its only in socialist states, like russia, where you get massive famine.

      You let people get paid for growing food, and what happens? They grow food!

      Amazing that!

      As to global warming, it won't create famine... areas that are not productive now would become more productive. Areas that would become less productive happen to be areas that are relatively easy to irrigate.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    8. Re:Fuck conceit by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Love your sig, it's sure right on to this discussion!

      As to why FEMA gets involved, it's because if the private insurance companies had to pay out all those claims at once, they'd quickly be into serious negative cash flow, and soon out of business entirely. The claims could easily exceed some insurance companies' total assets combined. So FEMA is used (or at least is supposed to be used, gods know how much waste is involved) to even things out. But that doesn't make me any happier about having my tax dollars go up in smoke because treehuggers take political precedence over good forest management.

      I suggest chaining the treehuggers to the dead trees, and leaving them there. Sooner or later another fire will come along to teach them the error of their ways. ;)

      I dearly love trees and it pains me to cut down a healthy tree, but I also grok cutting out diseased and overcrowded members to save the health and lives of the majority. And I hie from logging country, so I know how it works when its done well.

      Now just wait til the winter rains cause flooding, which these morons here will deal with by cutting even deeper channels, so the floodwater can rush along even faster, carrying even more dirt and homes with it! Whereas any midwsterner knows that the correct approach is to dam up the water so it doesn't undercut and carry away your land. Yeah, you get more spread-out flooding that way, but you don't lose whole buildings. Soggy possessions can be dried out a lot easier than you can recover those that wash away entirely.

      Sometimes I swear California is where everyone ends up who is too mentally defective to get a job in any other part of the country!!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    9. Re:Fuck conceit by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      I dearly love trees and it pains me to cut down a healthy tree, but I also grok cutting out diseased and overcrowded members to save the health and lives of the majority. And I hie from logging country, so I know how it works when its done well.

      Actually, the problem is that we spent most of a century squashing fires too quickly, so now we have to deal with brush/tree/detritus choked forests and scrub land, that used to be cleared regularly by fire. A potential alternative as you have presented is attempting to manmade management. The only problem is the entire ecosystem evolved with regular fires, no one can predict what human management will result in.

      And I hie from logging country, so I know how it works when its done well.

      Really, do you have a couple centuries worth of data to back that up? Or, are you going to find out that our method of cutting down the diseased and overcrowded has unintended consequences?

      My opinion is if it ain't broke don't fix it. The forests have dealt with fires for millions of years. We made one mistake by deciding that fires were bad, and squelching them. You are suggesting we try again to fix the natural system by cutting out brush and trees we think are bad. Maybe instead we should figure out how to get things back where nature can take care of itself, while at the same time protecting our lives and property?

    10. Re:Fuck conceit by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Actually, part of good forest management, including good logging practice (in terms of keeping the maximum of healthy, replenishable lumber available), is to let at least some naturally-caused fires burn in a reasonably normal way, to clear out the brushy crap that otherwise tends to take over and chokes out young trees. If there are semi-regular fires, a lot of the young and middle-aged trees survive it, while the old tired ones don't, and neither does the excess undergrowth.

      This also tends to put a natural halt on overgrowth in deer populations, since they are browsers who mostly eat undergrowth (and young trees, but that's part of the cycle).

      And forestry is not a recent science, either. Look up the practice of coppicing, which dates back at least a thousand years in England, and was aimed at keeping good healthy growth for lumber harvest. I'm sure forestry experts (real ones, not nuts) have studied the side effects of coppicing and related practices. I've read about similar practices that date back even further.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    11. Re:Fuck conceit by BitGeek · · Score: 1



      I disagree. IF FEMA wasn't involved, the insurance companies would handle it. The re-insurance business is in the many trillions of dollars range. The primary insurers are backed by re-insurance, which is often negotiated at the Lloyds of London exhcange-- which has no liability limits.

      Insurers know the risks, they calculate them, and they have sufficient reserves to cover tragedies.

      The only situation in which insurance companies DON'T have enough reserves is when FEMA is there and that lowers their risk-- but then, FEMA is there to take up the slack, so to speak.

      Furthermore, FEMA is really welfare for the uninsured. FEMA is just a subsidy that encourages people not to be insured-- why spend real money on insurance when you can get FEMA money if something bad happens? Its not total coverage, but that partial coverage encourages financial irresponsibility.

      Since you recognize socialism for what it is, you probably can see that taking money from tax payers with ability, and distributing it to those with need (uninsured homeowners) only incentivizes people to have that need. And the damage done to the economy by taking that tax money undermines the industry that would provide more jobs and make it so that more people could afford insurance in the first place.

      Every time you take tax money and re-allocate it, the cost in terms of taxes is far higher than the benefit to society, because that money is taken out of the place where it will grow more money, and given to an ever increasing population of people who won't invest it wisely.

      The standard issue broken-window fallacy applies here. Also, its worth noticing all the reporters who say "disasters have a silver lining! The local economy will get a boom from re-building efforts!" By that logic, disaster is good and we should all destroy our houses. They are not educated enough to know that the damage done far exceeds the boost to the economy from re-building.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    12. Re:Fuck conceit by BitGeek · · Score: 1

      It is broke.

      Privately managed forests do not get caught on fire-- what lumber company wants to loose their assets. They manage them well, and they have been doing so for at least a century.

      Its this "public" land that is mismanaged, mostly due to erronous environmental concerns.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    13. Re:Fuck conceit by Reziac · · Score: 1

      The trouble with relying on reinsurance, is that the primary carriers still have a profit margin they're interested in making first and foremost, and if they can't -- they'll pull out of the market. Many (including State Farm, Allstate, and some other big players) have already stopped selling new policies to homeowners in Calif. -- so if you buy a house here today, you have no choice but to use either a bottom-feeder company that may not be there when you need 'em, or to rely on the state-backed insurance program (can't think of the name but it's for Calif. homeowners in wildfire zones that can't get regular insurance).

      So while it grinds me to spend tax dollars to cover what the private sector should handle, the fact is that private sector insurance already relies on being backed up by tax money. Now, if FEMA were replenished by a proportional tax against insurance company profits (which are pretty obscene to start with) ... but of course that never works anyway, since any business simply tacks tax on top of what they charge consumers, and cuts corners elsewhere (usually by layoffs) to cover their immediate out-of-pocket costs.

      (Try typing "tacks tax" three times fast. :)

      The "broken window" analogy reminds me painfully of the "gov't can create jobs out of thin air" practices that I vaguely recall were instituted during the Great Depression.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    14. Re:Fuck conceit by BitGeek · · Score: 1


      They're pulling out of the market because of government regulation, more than it not being a profitable market, I believe.

      Even if there isn't insurance around, that doesn't justify the morality of FEMA. Initiation of force is always wrong, right? But you cannot collect taxes without initiating it.

      Yeah, the broken window theory is applicable to the great depression-- the taxes raised to create those makework jobs would have created thousands of long lasting permanent jobs if they hadn't been redirected.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    15. Re:Fuck conceit by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      Privately managed forests do not get caught on fire-- what lumber company wants to loose their assets. They manage them well, and they have been doing so for at least a century.

      A privately managed forest is an oxymoron. It is a wood farm, pure and simple. This is not a bad thing either. A far seeing lumber company with a a**load of land should be able to sustainably farm even old growth trees. The only problem is the payoff will occur in some one else's lifetime. And, how many lumber executives are selfless enough to try to create a system of wood farming that takes centuries until a tree can be harvested?

      Its this "public" land that is mismanaged, mostly due to erronous environmental concerns.

      Correct. Because it has been managed for the last 100 years. Your proposal is that after mismanaging one way, we turn around and mismanage a different way. Yes, environmental concerns have resulted in mismanagement due to the past 100 years of squashing fires as quickly as possible. We never should have tried to manage natural forests in the first place. Fires are a requirement for the development of natural forests, any so called management results in a park not a forest.

  26. Great troll, but could be better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cut out about half of the points, especially the references to the server crap. Also, don't apologize for being off-topic, that's a moderator issue and your mentioning it doesn't do anything one way or the other.

    Try to keep the length under 4 paragraphs and don't let the fish see "Click here for full article".

    In short, you've got a winner here (I especially liked the "environmentalists are experts" bait), but it's a bit too long. Shorten it up and you could use this indefinitely.

    1. Re:Great troll, but could be better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps when posting anonymously you should be allowed to select between anonymous coward and anonymous troll as your name?

      No, the point is there - with the environment it is better to err on the side of caution. We only have ONE earth, we don't get a second chance, caution is needed.

      re: american democracy. I truly believe something should be done and american democracy does need a jump start, a shock or something. Democracy is rotting in the US, you barely have half your population voting. I would argue it is they (the non-voters) who must get involved and involve others lest some catastophe pitches us into a second dark ages.

      Sure you could see it is a troll, but anyone who is opposed to a lengthy piece of opinion will label it a "troll" before engaging it on an equally deep level.

      If I am a troll then I am trolling for democracy, and you sir the "talk but don't act and laugh it out of the way" type person I wish to speak to. It is you and your cynicism and self hate that I speak to.

      I have been a huge critic of the US as a whole in the past, but I thought about it alot and I decided I am more patriotic for America than many Americans themselves. Nobody's perfect America has tons of blood on it's hands, but I ask you; who doesn't? That said, America has an awesome history of democracy, people fighting and dying for other men's freedom. This is not easily erased from the history books. America is both a great evil and a beacon of democracy. I urge Americans rather than be pessimistic to focus on the good parts, and duplicate them. This is the true path to taking action, not beating oneself up over past wrong-doings.

      The very fact that I write this, as a non-american, should move some of you to act. I am not sucking up....I will never cowtow to you..... you are as a brother to me. And brother I ask you to be the person you once were, I remember him as bright, hopeful, idealistic, flawed but generally good.

      There is no "arguement" to "troll" with to start a "flamewar" over, all I am asking for you to do is recognise the best in yourselves and be that best.

      Not a troll, a concerned freind.

    2. Re:Great troll, but could be better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Perhaps when posting anonymously you should be allowed to select between anonymous coward and anonymous troll as your name?


      ROTFL

  27. not strange by mantera · · Score: 1


    After Canada's ratification of the treaty in late 2002, environmentalists had every reason to believe that few climate experts would dare continue to publicly oppose Kyoto's science, Russia would quickly ratify the accord and it soon would become international law. Instead, as illustrated at this month's World Climate Change Conference in Moscow, exactly the opposite has happened. The growing number of scientists who dispute the treaty's scientific foundation have become increasingly vocal, regularly pushing their case in the media as groundbreaking studies continue to be published that pull the rug out from under Kyoto's shaky edifice.

    Sounds to me like the author of this story on USA today probably never did any scientific research or even understood the basic theory of it; it's entirely expected that they'd continue to dispute it even more. The whole function of science is to "disprove" rather than "prove" things, that's why you have that carefully crafted thing called the "null" hypothesis, that people agonize over for ages, and that sounds something like... "there is no difference between A and B" (simplification) that you set out to disprove, so that if you get a difference you calculate the likelihood that such difference was the result of chance, and if such likelihood is very small and chance very improbable then that's the best of your evidence. The whole idea of "scientifically proven" is such a complete misnomer, there's nothing that's "scientifically proven", it's more that it's "null hypothesis" is "disproven", which again is no certain terms and just an exercise in probability and correlation, in engineering it might be up to 99% and in medicine it might be as low as 80%.

    The other thing is... those of you who might find this story interesting might wanna have a look at the controversial work of Danish Statistician Bjorn Lomborg and his book; "the skeptical environmentalist, measuring the real state of the world". Just notice two things... like the key figure in this study, an economist, lomborg was neither an ecologist or an environmentalist, and just like him, if you read the reply of Professor Mann who aims to discredit the work of the authors of this study with quite apparent anger, Lomborg's work has been disputed heavily, and he even had things physically thrown at him by an academic scholar when he was invited to speak at Cambridge.

  28. Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, destroy all conservation areas, drill all the oil, fill athmosphere with pollutions.. all awful consequences are only made up by idiot hippies, statistics are wrong, nature can withstand anything!

    How f***** stupid people are! This is not something where you need stastistics to proof consequences, YOU CAN SEE THEM WITH YOUR OWN EYES!

    1. Re:Sure by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > YOU CAN SEE THEM WITH YOUR OWN EYES!

      Really? I can't see any. Where are they? Point them out.

  29. Whether climate change is happening or not.... by gsdali · · Score: 1

    and I believe it is.

    There are plenty of other good reasons to reduce emissions, not least reducing consumption of precious and dwindling fossil resources. Oil is great, really great for making things from and we insist on burning it to get around and to heat ourselves. It doesn't grow on trees you know whereas trees, well, do.

    Don't even get me started on commercial aviation.

  30. National Post by befletch · · Score: 5, Informative

    In case it isn't obvious, the National Post is a very right wing paper, at least in Canadian terms. That doesn't mean they are wrong, but they have a history of taking any opportunity to attack the Kyoto Accord.

    As a case in point, I offer the title, subtitle and byline for the article:

    Kyoto debunked
    A pillar of the Kyoto Accord is based on flawed calculations, incorrect data and an overtly biased selection of climate records, an important new paper reveals

    Tim Patterson
    Financial Post

    I would say, for instance, that a more cautious interpretation would be that an important new paper suggests flaws in the research, not that it reveals it. Particularly if I were a writer for a business & economics paper, not a climate change researcher. And then there is the title itself...

    To give credit where it is due, he does tend to use the phrase 'climate change' rather than the older 'global warming', which is a more accurate description of what the body of research underpinning Kyoto actually suggests. Usually you can spot biased participants in debates like this by their choice of language.

    Personally, I have never taken sides over whether climate change is likely to be a reality or not. I don't need it as a justification for my environmental leanings. I think there are many national security and economic justifications for taking such actions as improving energy efficiency throughout society without relying on theories such as climate change that are far beyond my ability to competently analyze. So go ahead and tear Kyoto apart if you care to, but don't use that as an excuse to increase dependence on Middle East oil, for example.

    And I haven't seen a big appetite for new nuclear or coal power plants in the US as of late either.

    --
    If you say, "now I'll be modded down because of X", I'll happily oblige.
    1. Re:National Post by Malc · · Score: 1

      You beat me to it. I too was going to point this out.

      I receive a copy of this paper (yeah, not the electronic form!!!) everyday. Their very subjective journalism when it comes to this issue in particular has been making me think of ditching them for the Globe and Mail (besides their increasing slip towards tabloidism and their frequent grammatic and spelling errors).

      They have a penchant for publishing letters (quite often from Alberta it appears) that attack the Kyoto Protocol. Some of the arguments I've seen them publish could have been formulated by a 9 year-old - baseless and transparent. Just because the author is a Dr or Professor or engineer doesn't make them an expert in this field. It's pathetic. As yet I haven't seen one letter published from somebody in favour of the KP. Hardly unbiased. Perhaps they're desparately trying not to be reduced to a Toronto only rag (and thus compete head-on with the Star) by pandering in this manner to the right-wing oil boys club that Alberta has to put up with.

      Incidentally, CBC dug some stuff up on Ralph Klein (Alberta Premier). Apparently as AB environment minister a decade ago (before the Rio Summit?), he published a paper indicating that if AB instituted many of the measures now covered by the KP that AB could save billions of dollars. So why is he now fighting the federal government tooth and nail claiming it's going to cost them billions? I guess like Dubya south of the border that he's been bought out by the oil club. Like you said: oil dependence is stupid and short-sighted if we want stability and national security.

    2. Re:National Post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.calpundit.com/archives/002564.html
      htt p://holocene.evsc.virginia.edu/Mann/EandEPaperP roblem.pdf

      Apparently, the critics of global warming screwed up the data when they did their analysis. There is a nice graph in the PDF that shows that the critics excluded data. This excluded data makes it a lot cooler in the past than it was now. Otherwise, there isn't any global warming!

      Obviously, they cherry picked data to get the answer they wanted.

  31. Perspective by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
    What the paper says is that another paper might be wrong. It doesn't say there'll be no global warming, it doesn't provide an alternative climate theory. That's all fine for a scientific work - criticism is important. However it does not give us any indications whether releasing certain emissions into the atmosphere is safe for us.

    What the Mann paper claims is that there is an observable trend showing global temperature increase. This is not by all means the only argument pointing to a danger related to releasing "green house gases". These are not affected if the Mann paper is found to be flawed. I think it's extremely premature to assume at this point that we have no problems.

  32. This is Microsoft Excel's fault by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 4, Informative

    You seem, however, to have left out your scientific criticism of their methodology and results.

    The original 1998 paper by Mann, Bradley, and Hughes was not in error. McIntyre and McKitrick screwed up their data when they published this paper. Somebody exported the raw data in the original paper to Excel but somehow exported 159 columns of data into a 112 column spreadsheet. M&M did not compare the spreadsheet and produced a "correction" to the original paper that was based on nothing but errors, since the full paleoclimatic data series of 159 columns is required to properly audit the analysis done in the 1998 paper. More information here and here. The world really is melting.

    The authors of the original paper have already published a rebuttal to this M&M paper with further details about how M&M faithfully replicated neither the data nor the procedures in their audit.

    1. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by kfg · · Score: 1

      Thank you Master Monkey.

      Now this is the sort of work I expect to see in this class. The original paper, legitimate rebutals and even a link to the original raw data so that we may make proper comparisons and legitimately draw our own informed conclusions.

      You should do well here. You may return to your seat.

      KFG

    2. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by adubey · · Score: 1, Redundant

      As I Canadian, I want to add a few comments.

      First, the National Post is noted for having a right-wing bias in its editorial section.

      Second, the piece in the National Post was written by an Earth Sciences professor of a University famously known as "last chance U": Carleton has one of the lowest admission standards in the province of Ontario, which tends to be correlated with the quality of faculty they tend to attract. They have a couple of good programs (such as journalism) but I can't say if the earth science department is very good or not, nor can I speak for the competence of the article's author.

      Third, as other posters have mentioned, the paper wasn't published by people who necessarily understand anything about climate - the work was done by an economist and an "independant consultant". I'm not saying that you need a PhD in earth sciences or meterology to contribute to the debate, but on the other hand, I'd like some reassurances they neither they nor the editors of the journal (how to put this?)... have pointy-hair.

      On the matter of the journal, I think it is a bit of a stretch to say they are "respected". As another poster mentioned, their website implies a slight bias to the warming naysayers crowd, and they are more or less touting this paper for publicity in a manner which verges on editorializing. Respectable journals don't do that.

      Finally, having read some things about the global warming debate, I think looking at historical warming data is interesting, but it might even turn out to be a sideline. What we know without a doubt is that CO_2 concentrations are rising exponentially, and that CO_2 is trapping solar energy. The question of the global warming debate (better expressed, perhaps, as the greenhouse gas debate) isn't "is it happening", but rather, "what will be the outcome", "how soon will we see the outcomes", and "what do we need to do to guard against the outcomes".

    3. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      First, the National Post is noted for having a right-wing bias in its editorial section.

      There's an understatement if I've ever seen one.

      Along with being extremely right-wing (and anti-Canadian, humorously enough), the National Post caters to the armchair-cynic that feels that they best serve the planet by disbelieving anything those crazy environmentalists put forth (they occasionally have a "junk science" section -- a section which 'dispels' environmental/health/food claims with virtually no actual information, flawed conclusions and deductions, and an emphasis on words over facts. These articles are usually written by irrelevants who, incapable of doing actual research or innovative analysis themselves, grab a couple of seconds of fame by being the contrarian who 'sets the record straight').

      During the BC fires, they had one article by a bitter and spiteful middle-aged female columnists in which she berated environmentalists for causing the fires. This apparently was due to the prevalence of underbrush in the forest -- her claim was that in the 1500s, all of North America was a carefully tended garden, apparently with all of the underbrush removed regularly by the indigenous people, and it's only been a recent development that underbrush has been allowed to collect to facilitate those damn environmentalists. Quite an amazing claim.

    4. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by vascoKabouter · · Score: 1

      It seems that there is probably some data confusion that it is not as simple as what Mann said, but what is boils down to is the 'audit' is embarassingly messed up. You can look at the two papers comments yourselves: Here is the E&E paper's website: http://www.climate2003.com And Mann's reply website: http://holocene.evsc.virginia.edu/Mann/EEReply.htm l It will be interesting to spot the anti-greenhouse propagandists, who don't report on their forthcoming paper which debunks the debunker. However, one can probably spot those already as lots of posters have mentioned - there are lots of other independent climate reconstructions, which generally agree with Mann et al rather than the E&E paper. However, you often sees anti-kyoto articles talking about how the stratosphere isn't warming (despite several years of papers showing that it actually it is!).

    5. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by irix · · Score: 1

      As a Canadian who apparently knows more about this than you, let me rebut...

      the National Post is noted for having a right-wing bias in its editorial section

      LOL. Let me guess what kind of bias you have? The National Post might have a more conservative view than the Globe and Mail, but the Globe is so far left of center it is easy to notice.

      Second, the piece in the National Post was written by an Earth Sciences professor of a University famously known as "last chance U": Carleton has one of the lowest admission standards in the province of Ontario, which tends to be correlated with the quality of faculty they tend to attract.

      This is straight up bullshit. Carleton might have been called "last chance U" by certain other Ontario universities over its arts program admission standards in the 1990s. However, the admission standards for programs like Science, Engineering and Journalisim were never in question. Slandering Carleton's faculty like this shows how truly ignorant you are.

      Feel free to argue this paper based on its merits. Trying to besmirch the reputation of the author and the newspaper that this story was from just makes you look like a fool to anyone who knows better.

      --

      Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
    6. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by Alomex · · Score: 0

      but the Globe is so far left of center it is easy to notice.

      What?? You gotta be kidding me.

      The Globe considers itself a business newspaper, and hence panders to a conservative, fiscally responsible audience. To wit over the last few elections the Globe has endorsed the Conservatice party candidate most of the times, the liberal party candidate some times, and never the NDP candidate...

      Seriously, if you find a newspaper that regularly supports conservative candidates leftist you should consider skipping some of your KKK meetings...

    7. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by Zeriel · · Score: 1

      Quoth the poster:
      "This apparently was due to the prevalence of underbrush in the forest -- her claim was that in the 1500s, all of North America was a carefully tended garden, apparently with all of the underbrush removed regularly by the indigenous people"

      Very ridiculous of you, but from my earth science courses and speaking with a professor in forestry at Penn State, prevalance of underbrush is a potential cause of the truly devastating fires we're getting these days--mostly because, in the past when there were no fire departments, small fires happened regularly and cleared the undergrowth while leaving large trees standing. This doesn't happen any more near populated areas because people are hard-up about preventing forest fires. Ironically, stopping natural fires causes more devastating fires down the road.

      --
      "America has done some terrible things. But I know that Americans don't cheer when innocents die." -Dave Barry
    8. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by Arthur+Dent · · Score: 1

      CO_2 is trapping solar energy?
      If so, shouldn't that increase the temperature of the atmosphere?. Funny, how studies keep finding that the temperature of the atmosphere is actually dropping!
      See: http://science.nasa.gov/newhome/headlines/essd06oc t97_1.htm
      <quote>
      Unlike the surface-based temperatures, global temperature measurements of the Earth's lower atmosphere obtained from satellites reveal no definitive warming trend over the past two decades. The slight trend that is in the data actually appears to be downward. The largest fluctuations in the satellite temperature data are not from any man-made activity, but from natural phenomena such as large volcanic eruptions from Mt. Pinatubo, and from El Nino. So the programs which model global warming in a computer say the temperature of the Earth's lower atmosphere should be going up markedly, but actual measurements of the temperature of the lower atmosphere reveal no such pronounced activity.
      </quote>

    9. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      Very ridiculous of you

      Uh...okay....

      This doesn't happen any more near populated areas because people are hard-up about preventing forest fires.

      How do people prevent natural forest fires (i.e. lightning, etc)? We're "hard-up" about preventing human-caused forest fires, of course, but before there were people everywhere I don't think this was much of an influence.

    10. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by Zeriel · · Score: 1

      "How do people prevent natural forest fires (i.e. lightning, etc)?"

      I was unclear--I meant "People put out small natural forest fires before they can adequately clear the underbrush."

      "We're "hard-up" about preventing human-caused forest fires, of course, but before there were people everywhere I don't think this was much of an influence."

      Exactly. Before there were people, there were smallish underbrush-clearing forest fires all the time, and you didn't really get the huge tree-burning wildfires you get now. (at least not as often)

      --
      "America has done some terrible things. But I know that Americans don't cheer when innocents die." -Dave Barry
    11. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Riddle me this. Mann has exactly the same data on his FTP site as he says was sent to M&M in error. And it's dated a year earlier.

    12. Re:This is Microsoft Excel's fault by Otto · · Score: 1

      How do people prevent natural forest fires (i.e. lightning, etc)?

      They put them out instead of letting them burn. Seems pretty obvious in retrospect, doesn't it?

      We're "hard-up" about preventing human-caused forest fires, of course, but before there were people everywhere I don't think this was much of an influence.

      Here's the deal... This is a *well* known fact of forest fires and human invervention.
      a) People move into an area and start taking care of their surroundings
      b) Part of that includes putting out fires in wooded areas, no matter what starts them
      c) The underbrush that would naturally be burned off by these fires (if people weren't around) builds up
      d) Eventually, you have a fire that burns really hot due to the extra fuel, and it kills every tree in the forest.

      This is a well known consequence of over protection of natural environments. Without people, the fires would happen, but the underbrush wouldn't be as thick and the fire would not be as hot or as damaging. It scorches the trees, but doesn't kill them. After we start putting the fires out, the underbrush and fallings and such that would normally be burnt off builds up instead because we don't let it burn off. Thus when the fire does happen, it's a big one, and it kills the whole forest area.

      This is so well known, in fact, that forest services regularly start controlled burns in problem areas specifically to burn off that underbrush so it can't build up, thus restoring the balance.

      --
      - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  33. both sides of the story by gonerill · · Score: 1

    Various blogs have been talking about this recently. It seems too early to say who's right here --- the original authors have issued a vigorous interim rebuttal [pdf] of the charges, so it's hard to say what's happening. But let's not let that get in the way of a good bit of enviro-sensationalism, eh?

  34. Irrelevant by moderators_are_w*nke · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is irrelevent anyway. Unless it says that continuing to exploit non-renewable energy at the current rate (or faster) and emitting carbon dioxide at the current rate is actually good for the environment.

    People need to look at the big picture and stop arguing over the small print.

    --
    "XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve your problem, use more." - Anonymous Coward
    1. Re:Irrelevant by fredmosby · · Score: 1

      But if CO2 emissions aren't contributing to global warming we could be wasting a great deal of resources that could be put towards fighting more important environmental problems.

  35. Does this result anger you? by rufusdufus · · Score: 1, Insightful

    When a man is wrong and won't admit it, he always gets angry. ~ Thomas Haliburton

    I have found many people will get angry when you say that global warming isn't real. Are you one of these people?
    Do you hold on so dearly to this notion that evidence to the contrary outrages you? Isn't this a symptom that just maybe you might be wrong?
    When I look at any of the graphs used to back up the global warming story, I do not see evidence of warming. Usually the graphs are zoomed in and incorrectly based. People like to imagine that they can 'see' a signal in the noise just like the stock graphs on the nightly news. But its not there, it is an illusion. Weather is a chaotic system so you will see fluctuations. Fluctuations are indicative of nothing.
    Making the case that just because there is no evidence of a problem that reducing CO2 emmisions is still a good idea is an invalid argument. There are many things that might be true but have no basis, such as the idea that you should give me all your money if you want to go to heaven. Taking action on imagined crisis is foolish.

    Just because the neo-cons are assholes does not imply that everything they say is wrong. In this case, the evidence is on their side.

    1. Re:Does this result anger you? by Haeleth · · Score: 1

      Do you hold on so dearly to this notion that evidence to the contrary outrages you? Isn't this a symptom that just maybe you might be wrong? ~ Rufusdufus

      A wonderful troll.

      Sure, people who are wrong and don't like to consider that possibility often get angry when their beliefs are challenged. That doesn't mean that someone getting angry when their beliefs are challenged must therefore be wrong. Please, base your argument on something more solid than a non sequitur.

    2. Re:Does this result anger you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you my friend don't seem to get Boolean logic. Just because a men get's angry when he is wrong does not mean that any angry men is wrong.

    3. Re:Does this result anger you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I meant to say ...every angry men... so don't bother.

  36. Climate change is peanuts by viking80 · · Score: 1

    It is of course obvious that earth currently is in the middle of the most swift mass extinction ever seen. The loss of 90% of species when the dinosaus went extinct was gradual and small compared.

    Human activity do of course affect the climate, and the Kyoto agreement was a spit in the bucket trying to just slow this down. Was is a 5% reduction in the annual increase? That is still an increase in emissions! It's a joke, and not even that are we able to do.

    --
    don't cut it off www.mgmbill.org
    1. Re:Climate change is peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is of course obvious that earth currently is in the middle of the most swift mass extinction ever seen. The loss of 90% of species when the dinosaus went extinct was gradual and small compared.

      What in Sam Hill is gradual about a meteorite impact!?

  37. If you read the article ... by Robb · · Score: 1
    You would see that they do not contradict the concensus that this century is warmer than the previous two centuries. They show that due to numerous errors in the data and how it was handled resulted in a much less convincing temperature profile. Notably the 20th century, while warmer than recent centuries was clearly not the warmest in the last millenium.

    Basically they debunk the claim that current average temperatures are unprecedented in the last 500 years.

  38. No real change from the original conclusions by DamnYankee · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The researcher basically states that it was warmer in 1400 than previously estimated. I have read that the end of the Viking Age (~800-1100 AD) was mainly due to a large drop in global temperatures. The Viking colony in Greenland lasted until 1380 AD when the Summer thaw that allowed them to travel by ship stopped occuring, for example.

    He does not refute the fact that it is getting warmer - and rapidly so. He simply says it was pretty warm in 1400 too, in contrast to prior conslusions. Note also that, according to his data, we have already reached his pre-1400 temperature levels and the trend continuing steeply upward.

    Thank god I live in Sweden. We love global warming. Vroom vroom!

    Damn Yankee
    ----------------------

    --

    Life is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
    William Shakespeare

    1. Re:No real change from the original conclusions by kfg · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately for you one of the likely effects of global warming is that Sweden will get a bit colder.

      Ironic,isn't it?

      The upside, I suppose, is that you won't have to put up with all those snotty Norwegians boasting about their "balmy" climate anymore.

      KFG

    2. Re:No real change from the original conclusions by jpkeating · · Score: 1

      Yay, at last we get to the point.

      The new paper really claims only that current temperatures aren't unprecedented -- that they fall within the range of normal variation, and the 20th century is no longer the highest.

      But even their corrected data show the same sudden, sustained recent rise. Furthermore, their data stop decades before the century ends. See http://www.giss.nasa.gov/data/update/gistemp/graph s/
      for fuller recent data. Recent data run straight out the top of M&M's charts. Their point is invalid.

      It comes down to this:

      1. Recent global warming is a fact -- measurable, concrete and undeniable. All the debate is over its causes and consequences.

      2. The first question is whether it is part of random variation.

      3. If it's not random, what's the cause?.

      4. Having found the (main) cause, will it continue?

      5. If it does, is that necessarily bad?

      6. If it is, what should we do?

      Many people work the logic backwards: changing our ways is unthinkable, therefore we're not having any effect, so the warming must be random.

      This is a wishful denial of physics. The recent warming begins around the same time that internal combustion engines started converting vast quantities of petroleum into free carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. They reflect back infrared radiation that would have escaped into space. The effect may be ameliorated by secondary effects, such as increased cloud cover and plant growth, but the steadily increasing temperatures and the melting of millennia-old ice across the globe show plainly that they aren't enough.

      Does it matter? Hippos and elephants once roamed England. Climate has varied, and will vary. Better to have the world grow warmer than have the ice sheets return to bury whole nations.

      But any change, warmer or colder, will cause huge disruptions. Farmlands will turn to desert. Floods and fires will wipe out communities. Rising seas will swallow low-lying nations, coastal cities and entire regions. Famine and war will follow.

      The sensible course is to reduce emissions as much as practical, and encourage use of and research into energy sources other than fossil fuels, making the transition as smoothly and painlessly as possible. Conservatives worthy of the name would understand this best of all.

  39. Debunking already debunked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    See the authors' reply here
    http://holocene.evsc.virginia.edu/Mann/EandE PaperP roblem.pdf
    and Kevin Drum's comment here:
    http://www.calpundit.com/archives/002564.ht ml
    "In laymen's terms, they say that their critics are completely full of shit and wouldn't know their ass from a hole in the ozone layer."

    1. Re:Debunking already debunked by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      Hemos moves slowly. Most of the attention this report is getting at this point is in the context of the debate over whether of not they're using the right data. The report was interesting last month, now we've moved on to whether the report was made the fuck up or just based on some minor errors in it's foundation.

      And over whether or not we should be jumping on reports by self-proclaimed "amateurs" with the assumption that their methods are as good as established figures in the field. "Amateur debunks experts!" sounds great, and scientists more than anyone love the way great ideas come from patent clerks and everything, but should we be trying to do something to prevent the sort of destructive reporting like /.'s that reports the exciting, but false, debunking and fails to follow up with the innevitable consensus that the original report was correct?

  40. Attn. Global warming sceptics by Cally · · Score: 1
    Please, save your fingers and don't bother posting your standard unsupported, pseudo-authoritative guff about climate change being due to solar flares. Special -5 to anyone trying to link the last week's CME frenzy with climate change.

    My personal arbitary list of bookmark'd climate change stories now includes the "Polar Bears likely to become extinct as North Polar icecap will melt completely in summer".




    • http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast07sep _1 .htm?list98953
      http://earth.agu.org/revgeophys/sc hmit01/node8.htm l
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/world/america s/n ewsid_2137000/2137205.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/l ow/english/world/americas/n ewsid_1820000/1820584.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/l ow/english/world/americas/n ewsid_1375000/1375089.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/l ow/english/in_depth/sci_tec h/2002/boston_2002/newsid_1825000/1825283.stm
      htt p://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/world/europe/new sid_2019000/2019349.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/l ow/health/2168145.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/e nglish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1718000/1718183.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1804000/1804467.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1779000/1779619.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1706000/1706823.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1993000/1993832.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1940000/1940117.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1643000/1643156.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1899000/1899150.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1782000/1782691.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1528000/1528348.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1951000/1951084.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1833000/1833902.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/eng lish/sci/tech/newsid_ 1664000/1664887.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/s ci/tech/3221795.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/s ci/tech/2559633.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/s ci/tech/2333133.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/s ci/tech/3218961.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/s ci/tech/2369333.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/s ci/tech/2558319.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/s ci/tech/3200450.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/s ci/tech/2525041.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/s ci/tech/2385591.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/w orld/asia-pacific/220 2919.stm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/world/europe /2188407.s tm
      http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/uk/england/n ewsi d_1661000/1661560.stm
      http://www.whoi.edu/home/ab out/whatsnew_abruptclim ate.html
      http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2002/ 15jan_gree nhouse.htm?list98953
      http://www.guardian.co.uk/us latest/story/0,1282,-2 161625,00.html
      http://www.observer.co.uk/internat ional/story/0,69 03,837058,00.html
      http://www.spacedaily.com/news/ early-earth-01k.htm l
      http://www.nationalpost.com/search/story.html?f =/s tories/20020327/463946.html
      http://science.slashd ot.org/article.pl?sid=02/11/1 1/1436214&mode=nested&tid=134
      http://slashdot.org /article.pl?sid=02/11/10/202123 6&mode=nested&tid=134
      http://science.slashdot.org /comments.pl?sid=40977& cid=4354856


    --
    "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free." -- Goethe
    1. Re:Attn. Global warming sceptics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which url is for the polar bear story? I'd be interested in reading that..

    2. Re:Attn. Global warming sceptics by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      Has anyone claimed that temperatures are not rising? No. Only thing that people are discussing is WHY they are rising. How about this?

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    3. Re:Attn. Global warming sceptics by iapetus · · Score: 1

      That's a link to a page suggesting that they're fluctuating because of solar activity, but that the recent rise above and beyond levels of solar activity is probably down to the greenhouse effect. From the linked page:

      "While the curves do not match perfectly at any time, they start to diverge noticeably by the 1980's. We interpret this widening gap as evidence for an additional influence on the temperature - over and above what the Sun is causing. We think this is likely to be due to the anthropogenic greenhouse effect."

      --
      ++ Say to Elrond "Hello.".
      Elrond says "No.". Elrond gives you some lunch.
    4. Re:Attn. Global warming sceptics by cassidyc · · Score: 1

      I've said it before and I'll say it again, whilst I don`t doubt the fact that the temperatures are rising, I would like to point out that the natural state of this planet, out with, an ice age is (drum roll)....

      NOT TO HAVE ANY ICE ON IT.

      that'll be polar ice caps for you ice capped mountain loving pedants

      thankyew

    5. Re:Attn. Global warming sceptics by roystgnr · · Score: 1

      Please, save your fingers and don't bother posting your standard unsupported, pseudo-authoritative guff about climate change being due to solar flares.

      Crazy nuts, thinking that a million mile wide ball of quazistable ultrahot plasma might have something to do with temperatures on the Earth. Why, I'm sure you've got solid proof that our current temperature changes are unrelated to solar variability, you just don't want to post it because... um... your fingers cramped?

    6. Re:Attn. Global warming sceptics by uncadonna · · Score: 1

      Nobody said solar variability was irrelevant. It's merely swamped by the much larger anthropogenic greenhouse forcing.

      --
      mt
  41. Ice Age? by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

    And considering we're still technically in an ice-age, just on the receding end of one, this makes alot of sense that you'd see that.

    Yes, the Earth is getting warmer, sort of... (been unnaturally cold the past four years where I live) but at the same time this should be expected. This always happens at the end of ice ages. They wouldn't be called 'ice ages' unless they were periods where the Earth was unnaturally cold.

    --
    Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
    Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
    1. Re:Ice Age? by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      Sorry, no.

      The interglacial peaked about 6000 years ago, and there has been a small but consistent cooling trend since, until about 1900. Since about 1950 the rise appears to have been more rapid than at any time since the cooling trend began.

      --
      mt
  42. human survival by m1chael · · Score: 0, Funny

    nature is sustainable. we bring oil to the surface (just an example) where it doesnt belong and change into objects and then discard them, laying on the surface. sure it will be taken care of by nature but do we have time to wait?

    are we able to advance technologically fast enough when the times comes to have an environmentally friendly power source before our world changes and we cannot?

    i think this is what darwin had in mind. we shall see... we will see.

    --
    I know you are psychotic, but please make an effort.
  43. Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater by Gunark · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While climate change may or may not be caused by human activity, there is other much more obvious and pressing proof that we are in fact destroying this planet. For example, there is little doubt that the mass extinction and loss of biodiversity we are currently seeing is unprecedented (save maybe for the extinction of the dinasaur era 65 million years ago). The danger here is that some may be tempted to use the results of this climate study as some sort of proof against environmentalism in general.

    While a reduction of CO2 emissions is nice, the real effect of Kyoto would have been to boost renewable, non-polluting sources of energy. The benifits of this go far beyond just greenhouse gasses. By getting off oil we could do everything from reducing cancer rates (less air pollution), to decentralizing the power grid, to shifting global power away from terrorist states like Saudi Arabia. It really is a win-win situation for everyone -- except those who are currently in power.

    1. Re:Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater by O.M.A.C. · · Score: 0

      There has been some research that suggests that periodically the earth's climate changes, and has undergone changes before we evolved. Even if this research is correct, what is wrong with treating the environment better? We are destroying our planet, in some areas slowly, in others more rapidly. Coal companies boast that we have a 200 year supply of coal deposits. I think this is more of a reason to despair than rejoice. 200 years is roughly two and a half human lifetimes, which is pretty short, relatively speaking.

      --
      /* It's amazing the damage someone with a stunted sense of humor and mod points can do to your karma. */
  44. Microsoft sponsored by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    This is another Microsoft sponsored review isn't it?.

  45. Any action or non-action is taking chances. by Jan-Pascal · · Score: 1

    You're _always_ taking chances. Like I said, if you invest all your efforts into reducing CO2 output, you can't at the same time do other things. We might end up with a lot of CO2 stored under the seas, in order to limit CO2 emissions, while we had better had spent our efforts on doing _other_ things. It's all about priorities, and keeping to the Kyoto agreements will certainly cost us a lot. What other things can we do with that money/time/effort?

  46. Yeah Right by vandan · · Score: 2, Informative

    An 'important' paper written by a scientist employed in the mining industry.

    Oh yes and the university guy. Don't know exactly what financial links exist between the university and the people who don't like the news of global warming spreading.

    Move along please. No global warming to be seen here.

    1. Re:Yeah Right by Saint+Aardvark · · Score: 1
      Don't know exactly what financial links exist between the university and the people who don't like the news of global warming spreading.

      --Nice: You don't have any information, but that doesn't stop you from throwing mud.

      Why is no one discussing the claims of the paper and how valid they are or aren't? Or the reply from the authors of the original paper as mentioned in this comment?

      There are some pretty impressive claims in this paper. The rebuttal looks good, too. I don't know who's right, but I was hoping to see some debate on that here. Instead, there's all this back-and-forthing about the motivations of capitalists (see parent post) vs. environmentalists, or anecdotal evidence about how it's obvious that it's getting warmer ('cos a) we all know how the scientific method pales before anecdotal evidence, and b) for the love of God, the M&M paper did not say that temperatures hadn't risen in the last hundred years -- merely that that rise wasn't unprecedented).

      Sorry, getting less coherent as I go on. There are discussions here on the data. But c'mon! I may be overly optimistic here. I realize this is Slashdot, but surely someone here is willing to help me find out what I think :-).

    2. Re:Yeah Right by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the two sides are using completely different sets of data. You can't have a rational debate when you can't even agree on which universe the discussion is taking place in. Even if the differences between the original data set and the one the "re-examiners" used aren't the result of simple MS Excel glitches (and what isn't?) it's still pointless to debate interpretations when you haven't even reached a consensus on the data yet.

    3. Re:Yeah Right by ThisIsFred · · Score: 1

      Move along please. No global warming to be seen here.

      Yeah, but because of the media, the environmentalists are going to have a major credibility problem, which I'll explain in a moment. I'm just your average Joe Sixpack, but because of the Internet, I read enough sources to know that 1) it's the extremes of change, not the 70s-era term "global warming", and 2) variations can lead to a domino like effect. For example, when the sub-surface ocean currents change in speed, or stop entirely. That'll be the day when the local paper's science section prints something about William Calvin.

      Anyway, I can just see it now: "Wait, now it's variation? What happened to global warming? You're just making stuff up!" So, you environmentalists better be prepared for this argument, because it's easier for Joe Sixpack to understand an apparent inconsistency (which actually has to do with the 5th-grade level "science" printed in the media) than all the science behind the true explanation. After all, why disprove someone on a scientific basis, when you can just call defame his character?

      --
      Fred

      "A fool and his freedom are soon parted"
      -RMS
    4. Re:Yeah Right by Arthur+Dent · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if you've seen this but, E&E have a response to an earlier criticism.

  47. Re:not strange [but who to believe?] by waterbear · · Score: 1

    ... if you read the reply of Professor Mann who aims to discredit the work of the authors of this study with quite apparent anger, ...

    I'm not sure that comment is quite fair to the author of the original paper under criticism, who alleges (with quite a lot of supporting detail), that the new paper gives a 'gross misrepresentation' of the original work that is criticized, and he also says that contrary to normal practice of scientific journals, the authors of the original paper under criticism were not given an opportunity to respond.

    I'm not an expert in this field but I did try to read the recent paper. The point on which it is all said to be based is data integrity. I wondered how all of the alleged data errors had been verified, and more importantly, how the outside world could repeat that verification. To me, the original author's reply certainly reinforces those concerns about verification of the alleged errors, in part because it raises issues about what makes for the difference in the conclusions -- is the difference significantly due to data errors, or was it due to intentional re-selection of data which appears to be a matter of judgement rather than of error.

    Either way, it may all be a local squabble, the content of the 1998 paper under criticism clearly has not been the only evidence for climate change.

  48. no a falsifaction of the kyoto conclusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From my elementary course of logic :

    From false fact you can deduce something true or false. (i.e. the kyoto conclusion can yet be true...).

    Some fact are indeniable :
    - CO2 have got an effect on environement/climate ;
    - The number of repiratory problems and allergies (For example: http://www.niaid.nih.gov/factsheets/allergystat.ht m ) have increased in the very last years ;
    - in many cities in the world problems with high ozone rate (related to CO2 problem) during summer is increasing (especially for the older people) ;
    - and so on.

    THese facts must appeal to be carefull. THe kyoto protocol is this carefullness.

  49. Re:This is Mann's fault by henrygb · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The original 1998 paper by Mann, Bradley, and Hughes was not in error. McIntyre and McKitrick screwed up their data when they published this paper. Somebody exported the raw data in the original paper to Excel but somehow exported 159 columns of data into a 112 column spreadsheet.

    It is a pity that the original MBH paper you link to states (page 1 top right) "112 indicators back to 1820" and (page 3 middle right) "the reconstructions from 1820 onwards based on the full multiproxy network of 112 indicators". 159 does not appear in the paper except in the date 1599.

  50. CO2 is not polution by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 1

    at least not in the conventional sense. It is a natural and necessary part of our ecosystem. And increased levels of CO2 are not a direct threat to our ecosystem, it will increase plant growth which is usually thought of a good thing. More plants will feed more anaimals, including us.

    Increasing CO2 levels are only a problem if the increase is large enough to increase the temperature of the Earth, due to the greenhouse effect. An increased temperature will have good and bad effects, but it will change weather patterns and increase sea level, which will certainly cause problems both for us and the rest of the ecological system.

  51. one paper. by flyingdisc · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The scientific literature is something that is being continuously developed. It's something that the media don't understand. There just needs to be one paper published which disputes the scientific concensus and every journal runs with it, while there are maybe 10 other papers which support the consensus.

    This is a normal part of the peer review. We will have to see if this new paper stands up or has flaws itself. Don't hold you breath. The way we view the world has not suddenly just changed. There is just a new strand to the science to be looked at and investigated in more detail.

  52. Don't rely on politicians or government by Morgaine · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry to break this to you, but there isn't a government on the planet with the slightest intention of modifying their political agendas to assist the planet in any way at all. (I'm not actually saying that they should, but merely pointing out that they are not.)

    Very occasionally you hear a little pro-conservation posturing when it may help raise someone's fading political profile by a small amount, and occasionally grand gestures like Kyoto are organized, but you need to understand that all of these are just gestures, and they fade from the agenda the instant that they are over.

    The problem is simply that politicians are by their very nature uncommitted to anything except their own electoral future. A hypothetical politician that is committed to doing good for others simply will not last within our first world's political systems, even if he or she manages to gain entrance once. The few that manage to stay become compromised --- "corrupted" may sound harsh but the label is not entirely inaccurate.

    To those who are interested in (for example) reducing the amount of C02 that is accumulating in the atmosphere, I would suggest that a far more profitable avenue than relying on politicians is to actually do something about it directly: get into the forestry business, convert farms to high-CO2 consumption crops, promote, develop and market electric vehicles, and so on.

    Relying on politicians is a dead loss. If you want something useful done, just do it.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  53. Re:not strange [but who to believe?] by mantera · · Score: 1

    well... that's what i meant... Professor Mann is the author of the original paper under criticism... with whom i agree that the method of the those guys is suspect as it relies on data that they admit was provided to them with some difficulty, with the misleading and deceiving claim that the intention was to "replicate" the study, which usually doesn't mean the mere reanalysis of data, but the application of the study methodology on a new set of data to see if the same outcome can be replicated.

  54. Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nooooooooo....

    I believe we're still waiting for the documents relating to the oil companies' 'consultations' with Archduke Cheney over energy policy, aren't we?

    Why do people think environmentalists would be biased, anyway? What are they biased towards? Not dying? Is there some secret Globex-EnviroCorporation Inc in which all tree hugging hippies have undisclosed shares? Or is it possible that they simply understand the value of erring on the side of caution when the stakes are so high?

    I love it that people think that they are able to be so 'skeptical' about the environment. Can't you see that the logical way to be skeptical about it is to assume that the warning signs mean something significant until you can be sure they don't? Otherwise you're acting like someone with half the symptoms of cancer who wants to wait until they have them all before getting it checked out. After all, you can never be sure so better to do nothing, eh?

    Don't worry, go ahead and doubt environmentalists. I'm sure businessmen whose entire job is making profits for their own companies are *much* more reliable at telling you what the state of the environment is.

    --
    Read Pynchon.
    1. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      --- Why do people think environmentalists would be biased, anyway? ---

      They need donations. Give people scare stories and they will give you money to protect them.

      In Mid-Evil times the church used to let you BUY your way in to heaven. Can't be too careful with your soul, ya know

    2. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Yogurtu · · Score: 0, Troll

      Silly environmentalists, there's a lot more money to be done selling out to corporations to tell dying people they have nothing to worry about.

    3. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh come on. Why do you even want documents from the Bush administration? Is there any evidence they could possibly provide that would convince you that they are anything other than evil incarnate?

      I didn't think so.

    4. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Still doesn't explain why they would be motivated to do so. In case you haven't noticed most environmentalists aren't exactly the wealthy type. I don't see them building any big churches and papal palaces. Frankly, I find it pretty offensive on behalf of a group of dedicated and genuine people that you are ignorant enough to compare them to the medieval church, you filthy anonymous bastard.

      Anyway, if you want to talk about scare stories and getting money from people to protect them, let's talk about the Bush administration some more, shall we? Did you know the entire annual budget of the UN is 1.5 days worth of Pentagon budget? One dedicated to peace and security, the other dedicated to 'defence'.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    5. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their motivation is the same as those who took up pitchforks to overthrow the czar:

      Love for their fellow man.

    6. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      No, you're right, there's been so much evidence that they *are* evil incarnate that it would have to be something pretty spectacular.

      Bush himself I don't consider that evil, just dumb and weak willed. Its the others around him that trouble me. Of course its entirely possible that an administration made up of a group of people closely connected with the oil industry, many of whom have had significant positions in major energy companies, could be unbiased and working for the betterment of mankind. However, it doesn't really seem all that likely, does it? I tell you what, if, after Dubbya is hopefully (please Jesus Buddha Allah I love you all) tossed out of office next year, these guys own as many shares in renewable energy companies as they do in oil companies, I'll admit they're not evil.

      Meanwhile, here's a picture for you.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    7. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 0, Troll

      ?

      So they're filthy commies? I knew it! That means we can witch-hunt them! Call Joe McCarthy, we's gonna have us a lynchin'!

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    8. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by binaryDigit · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why do people think environmentalists would be biased, anyway? What are they biased towards? Not dying? Is there some secret Globex-EnviroCorporation Inc in which all tree hugging hippies have undisclosed shares? Or is it possible that they simply understand the value of erring on the side of caution when the stakes are so high?

      No, they have an agenda. They have a belief that they feel strongly about, and they want others to either believe it too, or at least be held to the constraints that those beliefs create. This is every bit as greedy has having that "belief" be that my bank account should be the biggest or that Globex-MegaCorp's belief that their balance sheet is the most important thing in the world. Remember, having what one thinks in ones brain is a "good" motive does not justify acts that potentially harm (physically, financially, or otherwise) others.

      Can't you see that the logical way to be skeptical about it is to assume that the warning signs mean something significant until you can be sure they don't? Otherwise you're acting like someone with half the symptoms of cancer who wants to wait until they have them all before getting it checked out. After all, you can never be sure so better to do nothing, eh?

      Or like getting chemo just because you found a bump on your arm? A situation where the "cure" can be worse than the perceived disease? Shall we have put all AIDS patience on an island, after all, better to be safe than sorry right? The problem with your statement is that you're ignoring the fact that there is a gray area. The problem is that the signs are far from "obvious" and the actions being taken are truely massive in scale and affect the lives of millions. So it is something that warrants careful study, and re-study, and checks and balances to come about to a proper conclusion (or as close as you can reasonbly get).

      Don't worry, go ahead and doubt environmentalists. I'm sure businessmen whose entire job is making profits for their own companies are *much* more reliable at telling you what the state of the environment is.

      Funny you say that when the article mentions NOTHING about any business being involved in the contradicting studies. As far as I can see, YOU'RE the only one even mentioning business or the profit motive into this equation. I would say that anyone completely believing in EITHER side is just as bad as anyone completely believing in the OTHER side.

    9. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is every bit as greedy has having that "belief" be that my bank account should be the biggest or that Globex-MegaCorp's belief that their balance sheet is the most important thing in the world.

      Without meaning to be too offensive, this is a total load. Whilst I am fully aware that at a basic philosophical level this is an arguable point, I will believe that moral relativists actually exist when I see them living accordingly. I don't believe you are one, either, unless you truly and honestly believe that there are no absolute truths at all.

      A situation where the "cure" can be worse than the perceived disease?

      And how exactly would living off renewable energy be 'worse' than the whole planet dying?

      the actions being taken are truely massive in scale and affect the lives of millions.

      Yeah, hopefully for the better. I don't wish it on anyone, but if the whole populations of China and India live like Americans do today in 50 years, we are more than screwed. I think the point is that the lives of millions need to be affected, especially one group of about 250 million that I can think of.

      As for the business stuff, I am talking more generally about the arguments strongly put foward against greenhouse reduction etc., especially in a political context, having a constant and disturbing connection to the influence of certain major oil companies.

      I would say that anyone completely believing in EITHER side is just as bad as anyone completely believing in the OTHER side.

      At least we agree on one thing :). Although, as is often misquoted, all that is needed for evil to triumph is that good men do nothing...

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    10. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oooh Wow. You just showed a pic of Don R shaking hands with Saddam. Gee, you might have mentioned that he was part of an envoy sent by Reagan to end the Iran/Iraq war.

      Next time include the pic of Saddam and Chirac taking a tour of the nuclear reactor that France built for him.

      http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=lang_en&ie =U TF-8&oe=UTF-8&newwindow=1&q=Chirac+saddam+nucl ear

      Thanks the Jews they remodeled it for the sake of humanity.

    11. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by TSage · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "[W]e have to offer up scary scenarios, make simplified, dramatic statements, and make little mention of any doubts we many have. Each of us has to decide what the right balance between being effective and being honest." (emphasis added)
      Dr. Stephen Schneider
      Professor of Biological Sciences
      Stanford University
      Author of Global Warming: Are We Entering the Greenhouse Cenutry

      To say that there are not biased environmentalists ignores the fact that they are human and guess what, humans are biased! I'm biased right now by responding to your post in this way and you were biased in trying to paint environmentalists as only caring about saving the human race from the brink of destruction.

      I agree we need to be cautious, but to what extent? There are a number (not in the majority obviously) of extreme environmentalists (whom you conveniently ignored) that would like to see a return to agricultural societies so that we stop 'pillaging the Earth'.

      There are people who feel that the western way of life is inappropriate (on some accounts I'd even agree with them) or perhaps think capitalism is destroying everyone and everything. How many people who are extreme environmentalists are also on the extreme left in politics? How many of those would like to see capitalism fall flat on its face?

      All I'm saying is that there is no such thing as an unbiased human. We can be far removed from a situation such that we are just about unbiased, but bias is just part of being human.

      TSage

    12. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      You're mighty brave in cyberspace, anonymous boy (or girl). Of course if I dare criticise the mighty Republican Empire I must be a Frenchy loving eurotrash kneejerk liberal. Why don't you include the fact that French people smell like garlic and are cowards in wartime, too? Well, I guess we'll call it even then, you sure showed me with your well reasoned arguments.

      By the way, good to see you are still able to justify unilateral warmongering to stop evil regimes who might commit such heinous acts as... unilateral warmongering. If only my mind was as elastic as yours, I might be a conservative too. Unfortunately I suffer from this weird mental inflexibility... I like to call it consistency. It teaches me that only governments who have not backed and in some cases installed fascist dictators and military regimes, and also launched repeated unilateral wars against sovereign states get to go around preaching about peace, democracy, and non-aggression.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    13. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      I totally agree, and by the way I didn't say that they were totally unbiased, just that they don't really have a huge motive to be biased IMO when compared with other 'interested parties' to this discussion.

      You are right that all humans are biased. So what are we to do in controlling our destiny, and the destiny of our planet? We can't have the earth be 40% polluted, 17% uncommitted, and 43% unpolluted. I think it is necessary to recognise that the potential destruction or severe degradation of the environment is not the type of issue that can be governed by 'freedom of choice' or 'freedom of belief' in the ordinary sense. It takes everyone to row the boat, so if half the people disagree then we are not going to move at all.

      Incidentally, I have never heard a convincing response to the insanely high rate of extinction currently occurring from those who claim the environment is doing fine (not that I think you would make this claim).

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    14. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are they biased towards?

      They're biased against the human race. Extreme environmentalism is just the old "man and all his works are eeeeevil" ultra-Puritan belief writ large.

      Can't you see that the logical way to be skeptical about it is to assume that the warning signs mean something significant until you can be sure they don't?

      That would be fine, if implementing the policies touted by the envirowhackos didn't have costs of its own. Unfortunately, that is not the case. To take just one example, the Kyoto treaty would cripple the United States while allowing such bastions of environmental concern as China to continue polluting at will.

    15. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Guppy06 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Why do people think environmentalists would be biased, anyway? What are they biased towards?"

      People (especially young people) like to have a cause they can feel passionately about, one they feel all but defines their lives. A titanic struggle against "The Man," something a lot more exciting than an otherwise mundane life. They have an emotional investment in all this.

      "Can't you see that the logical way to be skeptical about it is to assume that the warning signs mean something significant until you can be sure they don't? Otherwise you're acting like someone with half the symptoms of cancer who wants to wait until they have them all before getting it checked out."

      Interesting analogy. You do know that most of the methods we have for fighting cancer is almost as bad as the disease itself, right? Personally, I'd like to find out for sure one way or the other before starting chemotherapy. If the diagnosis is wrong, all I'd be doing is heaping more problems on top of doing nothing about whatever the real cause of the symptoms are.

    16. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile, here's a picture for you.

      And here are a couple for you:

      Jimmy Carter shaking hands with mass-murderer Leonid Brezhnev

      Franklin Roosevelt schmoozing with mass-murderer Josef Stalin

      Bill Clinton toasting mass-murderer Jiang Zemin

      Hint: politicians meet, and shake hands with, a lot of truly disgusting people. These photos prove nothing at all about the politician's personal feelings.

    17. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That 'unilateral warmongering' went into Bosina and Kosovo to stop yet ANOTHER Euro genocide. There was no UN approval because it was self-evident that Russia was protecting Slavid. Milo. as France was protecting Saddam.

      Maybe your 'mental inflexibility' isn't compatiable in our every changing world.

    18. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's what it would do, it would cripple the US. I guess that's the kind of thing that the Clinton administration would have negotiated, the bastards. You remember, back when the US economy wasn't in a tailspin? When people had jobs? Yep, no idea about the economy, that slick Willie. He probably signed you on to pay an annual tribute to China or something.

      So your argument, I take it, is that no action should be taken to stop possible (some might even say likely) environmental disaster unless it has no cost?

      And by the way, most of the rest of the world does actually think that the US should stop treating the world and its resources like a personal buffet. I've even heard some Americans express such sentiments (commies!).

      And I don't recall mentioning 'extreme environmentalism.' I also doubt that most of Europe, Canada, most of South America and most of Asia would sign onto anything based on 'extreme environmentalism.' You know, its really just you guys and Russia who haven't signed on.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    19. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that's what it would do, it would cripple the US. I guess that's the kind of thing that the Clinton administration would have negotiated, the bastards.

      Since this is obviously a religious issue for you there's not much point in discussing it, is there?

      You know, its really just you guys and Russia who haven't signed on.

      Get back to me when those other countries actually IMPLEMENT the Kyoto treaty rather than paying it lip service. Hint: it's not happening.

    20. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      Yes, we all know the security council is broken, as evidenced by the US's constant protection of Israel from any kind of valid criticism or intervention.

      "yet ANOTHER Euro genocide" - Indians. Mexicans. Blacks.

      You are truly, spectacularly foolish if you think France was protecting Saddam. I will accept that they were trying to use the Council to check US power (thank god, so is everyone else except yes man #1 the UK), but it is stupid and offensive to suggest that the French actually thought Saddam was a good thing. Maybe they foresaw the orgy of American corporate contract distribution that has occurred since the 'end of major combat'...

      Anyway, I was actually referring to recent events in Iraq, and to Israel attacking Iraq.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    21. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Guppy06 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "And how exactly would living off renewable energy be 'worse' than the whole planet dying?"

      Because environmentalists want to change a lot more than power generation. The big sources of greenhouse gasses aren't power plants so much as factories, the ones that make the things than we use to maintain our standard of living.

      But even ignoring that, renewable energy sources have their own problems environmental associated with them. Going all solar or all wind, for example, means clearing a lot of land that might otherwise be natural wilderness. It's hard to say that's better than a coal-fired plant, and I know I personally feel that it's worse than a nuclear power plant.

      "I don't wish it on anyone, but if the whole populations of China and India live like Americans do today in 50 years, we are more than screwed."

      Except that China and India are the big polluters of the day. The Kyoto Protocols restrict the greenhouse output only of developed countries that have already moved on to more efficient (and therefore cleaner) means of energy production. China and India as "developing" nations are exempt. In many ways the Kyoto Protocols increase the greenhouse output of these countries, hobbling local manufacturing in the industrialized world and making the cheapier and dirtier manufacturing operations over there seem all that more attractive.

      "As for the business stuff, I am talking more generally about the arguments strongly put foward against greenhouse reduction etc., especially in a political context, having a constant and disturbing connection to the influence of certain major oil companies."

      This looks a little like hypocricy. You don't want us to be prejudiced against the views of environmentalists because of who they are ("tree-hugging hippies looking for a cause"), but you seem to be prejudiced against the views of non-environmentalists because of who they are ("money-grubbing fat cats looking for a quick buck").

    22. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "yet ANOTHER Euro genocide" - Indians. Mexicans. Blacks.

      Hint: almost all of that was, in fact, committed by Europeans. Slave traders: Europeans. Conquerors who destroyed the great Indian civilizations of Central and South America, where 90% of the Indian population lived: Europeans. People who exterminated the Tasmanians, and nearly wiped out the mainland Australia abos: Europeans.

      But let's not confuse the issue with facts, right?

    23. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People (especially young people) like to have a cause they can feel passionately about, one they feel all but defines their lives. A titanic struggle against "The Man," something a lot more exciting than an otherwise mundane life. They have an emotional investment in all this.

      Such a sweeping generalisation. Yes, obviously there are the aforementioned, but then, there are many different types people who are concerned/involved. If I were to make my own generalisation, it would be "that environmentalists are people who tend to care about the planet," regardless of social standing, politics, wealth, race, age, etc.

      And is coming from a normal bloke who would like to leave the planet in a better condition than it was presented. So that maybe future generations can have less to worry about.

      People who are selfish tend to have a hard time understanding this, IMHO.

      Personally, I'd like to find out for sure one way or the other before starting chemotherapy.

      Are renewable resources equal, in your eyes, to chemotherapy?

      Considering the USA's pre-emptive attack on Iraq that was done, amongst other reasons, to prevent more terroist incidents, why can't the same logic be applied here - for something positive like improving the quality of this planet?

    24. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      Hint: White Americans *are* Europeans if you want to look at it that way.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    25. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As an American who has been living in Europe for the last couple of years, I can tell you that the statement --> 'I will accept that they were trying to use the Council to check US power' is the crux of the breakdown of EU-US releations.

      Europeans see putting a check US power as paramount; while Americans see ending the tyrany of brutal dicatator as most important.

      Most Americans are dismayed why we deserve such mistrust. Yet, most Europeans see a historical folly with a lone superpower.

      BTW: I never heared the US described as a superpower till I came over here.

    26. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by jmichaelg · · Score: 5, Informative
      Why do people think environmentalists would be biased, anyway?

      Possibly because they admit it?

      In John McPhee's Encounters with the Archdruid, David Bower, the former director of the Sierra Club, admits he just made his numbers up. McPhee asks Bower where he found the data for the 'The U.S. has 6% of the world's population but consumes 40% of the world's resourcess' quote. Bower's response was it sounded about right.

    27. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by patches · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's what it would do, it would cripple the US. I guess that's the kind of thing that the Clinton administration would have negotiated, the bastards. You remember, back when the US economy wasn't in a tailspin? When people had jobs? Yep, no idea about the economy, that slick Willie. He probably signed you on to pay an annual tribute to China or something.

      Umm, I suppose that it is that you just do not understand the economy. First of all, the economy is heading back up. It is up over 7% in the last quarter. Secondly Jobs are the LAST part of an economic recession to recover, this is absolutly normal. Please don't delute yourself into thinking that this recession is somehow a freak event that occured because some evil Republican is in office. Economies are cyclical in nature and are always going up and down. Also the majority of economists tribute the upturn of the economy to the Tax Cuts. I am sure you thought those tax cuts were pretty evil also, huh?

      Do you really think that the entire economy of the United States is something so viotile that it can be changed immediatley? The chain of cause and effects that percipitate up to a major change in the economy take time, this recession was probably brewing since before Bush was in office. It is just now starting to show recovery, and the tax cuts that HELPed it to start recovering are more then 2 years old...

      And you can rant on and on about some mythical "war of aggression" by the US in Iraq, but the facts are that the weather you want to admit it or not, Saddam activly supported terrorism. The same terrorism that has directly attacked The United States and her citizens on more then a couple occasions. And Isreal is only tring to survive on a stretch of land that is by all rights thiers, yet noone around them wants them there. It is no different then if you owned your house, and your nieghbors didn't wnat you there so they kept breaking into your house and robbing you, so one day you shot back WHILE THEY ARE IN YOUR HOUSE, and people saying that it is your fault. It is absurd.

      --
      The worst part of being athiest.... You don't have anyone to talk to during orgasm!
    28. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by tjstork · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Many environmentalists are not the wealthy type because they are closet slackers. They decry everyone else's prosperity and want to shut the people that work down out of jealously. Their beef with the United States is the culture of consumption, the notion of of consumer capitalism. Even if it were environmentally 0 impact, they would have issues with it. Environmentalists want to impose their severe religion on everyone and so their science must be taken with as much a grain of salt as would science from RJ Reynolds. Environmentalists just hate people too much for people to trust their advice.

      --
      This is my sig.
    29. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they have an agenda. They have a belief that they feel strongly about, and they want others to either believe it too, or at least be held to the constraints that those beliefs create. This is every bit as greedy has having that "belief" be that my bank account should be the biggest or that Globex-MegaCorp's belief that their balance sheet is the most important thing in the world. Remember, having what one thinks in ones brain is a "good" motive does not justify acts that potentially harm (physically, financially, or otherwise) others.

      But in the event that your bank account does NOT become "the biggest," does that harm you and others around you? What about your children? Will they honestly die young due to cancer if your bank account is not "The Biggest?"

      Or like getting chemo just because you found a bump on your arm? A situation where the "cure" can be worse than the perceived disease? Shall we have put all AIDS patience on an island, after all, better to be safe than sorry right? The problem with your statement is that you're ignoring the fact that there is a gray area. The problem is that the signs are far from "obvious" and the actions being taken are truely massive in scale and affect the lives of millions. So it is something that warrants careful study, and re-study, and checks and balances to come about to a proper conclusion (or as close as you can reasonbly get).

      How the hell is cleaning up our environment akin to getting chemo? I'd liken it more to cleaning your house when you notice it's starting to get kind of skanky, rather than waiting 'till your family members start getting the plague from your kitchen. How could cleaning up our environment possibly have negative side effects?

      -Cleaner future for us and our children
      -Alternative sources of energy spawn new markets, creating new jobs and new areas of specialization
      -Break America's dependence on oil, and by association, the middle-east
      -Money flows from the super-rich oil families (small old-boys network that currently makes up the better part of the white house) back into other industries like hydrogen or solar power. Diversity = good, people. This is /. meaning this is one thing you all know.

      I see NONE of those as being a negative thing for anyone, except for maybe the second last one for the middle east....

    30. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      A little graph for you:

      http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2003/11/02/pol it ics/campaigns/20031102_ECON_GRAPH.html

      Ok, now for your claims.

      1. "the economy is heading back up" - One quarter of growth does not a recovery make. You still have unemployment problems and the biggest deficit ever.

      2. Don't feed me that bullshit that the economy is bad now because of Clinton, and before that it was good because of Bush Snr. Whatever else you can say about Clinton, he did oversee a remarkable period of strength in the US for almost his entire term in office. Since Bush has taken over, things have gone south and stayed there, probably because of September 11 but also probably because of his fiscal policy, which has been mixed at best.

      3. IRAQ DID NOT SUPPORT AL QAEDA. There is NO EVIDENCE OF THIS WHATSOEVER. There were some brief communications ages ago between them and nothing concrete ever came of it. Even Bush has retracted his insinuations that this is the case. I cannot believe there are Americans intelligent enough to type on a computer who actually believe this Grade-A BULLSHIT. THERE WAS NO CONNECTION BETWEEN IRAQ AND SEPTEMBER 11. Bush and his handlers invented it.

      4. "Israel is only trying to survive on a stretch of land that is by all rights theirs." Another myth. Yes, Israel has a right to survive. However, Israel is currently occupying a stretch of territory that IS NOT part of Israel and was captured in their war with their neighbours. They freely acknowledge that it is not part of Israel proper. This land is the major cause of conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians at present.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    31. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      Well, I think it is perfectly natural that the rest of the world is afraid of US domination. Imagine if the Russians had won the Cold War and America was a smoking shell of an economy - how would you feel about Soviet domination of all foreign policy issues? How frightening would it be to see a huge foreign nation militarily intervening wherever and whenever it pleased with no chance for anyone to stop or defeat it?

      Of course Europeans see checking US power as crucial.

      I do not believe the US government gave a damn about Saddam being a brutal dictator. The US supported him in various ways, including militarily, for many years before 1991. If you are dismayed by mistrust, you should consider why America has lost the trust of its non-core allies (i.e. everyone but the UK and Australia). There is a long history of US support for exactly the type of regime Hussein ran in Iraq.

      I find it unbelievable that you never heard the US described as a superpower. In many international law academic circles the US is often called a 'hyperpower' now to reflect its total military dominance.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    32. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by stankulp · · Score: 1
      Or is it possible that they simply understand the value of erring on the side of caution when the stakes are so high?

      By that logic, wouldn't it be wise to "err on the side of caution" by outlawing abortion since the possibility exists that fetuses are human beings?

      Or does your aversion to error not extend to innocent human lives?

      --
      We must be alert to the danger that public policy could become captive to a scientific-technological elite. - Eisenhower
    33. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      It's not a religious issue, I just think it is worth considering that the US did attend the Kyoto talks and negotiate the agreement along with anyone else. It was significantly later that they withdrew support.

      Quite a few countries are actually taking Kyoto quite seriously. If the Russians had not made the unfortunate decision to hold off on ratification, quite a few would now be subject to an international agreement with enforcement mechanisms for the protocol.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    34. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by ahillen · · Score: 1

      Because environmentalists want to change a lot more than power generation. The big sources of greenhouse gasses aren't power plants so much as factories, the ones that make the things than we use to maintain our standard of living.

      The main problem I have with the US environment politics is that the US energy consumption (and green house gas emission) per citizen is really much higher then in almost all other countries, and that includes very developed countries like the ones in Western Europe, which have a very high standard of living (no, we don't sit in the dark in the evening...). Sure, you cannot just compare countries without being aware of geographical differences (if you have a very moderate climate you have obviously less need for energy intensive air-conditioning). But I still do believe that the US could do much better without seriously cutting into the general standard of living. And this is not just about possible dangers due to global warming, this is also about the fact that several of our most important energy sources ARE limited (oil, coal). Sure, according to forecasts decades ago we should run out of oil by now, and we don't. But still there is obviously a limited supply of these things, and it is generally a good idea to handle this resources sensible.

    35. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by TSage · · Score: 1

      I think we are mostly in agreement then. Although I think extreme environmentalists can have just as strong a motive as the 'interested parties' you speak of because they would seem to not value money in the same sense so monetary comparisons would seem inappropriate. But I don't think this is really a key issue anyway.

      We do need to be thinking proactively to try to limit the extent of our affect on the environment. You and I would probably differ on the best way to do this.

      I would just like to say (this isn't necessarily directed at the parent; just a general statement) that if we cared about environmental effects at the beginning of the industrial revolution, we probably would never have started. Would we have been better off? It all depends on what you value more, I suppose (heh, that's where the bias comes into play). We should remember that the Western world was built on bad environmental practices; it was almost a necessity in order to get the factories installed into the economy. Now, however, the cleanest countries are generally the more industrial nations (compared to developing nations).

      Again, this does not give us carte blanche to just say, "The environment be damned!" and then dump mercury in the ocean. But we need to realize that human beings should be given a better life and that there are costs to such things. We just somehow need to find a way to accurately value such costs.

      The Earth is our only home, let's all try to keep it clean.

      TSage

    36. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Environmentalists just hate people too much for people to trust their advice."

      Glad you are able to keep things in perspective, anyway.

      I love it how any suggestion that things could be done better is an 'attack on the American way of life.' Land of opportunity my ass, you have the most self-reinforcing culture I have ever seen.

    37. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by dimonic · · Score: 1

      No, they have an agenda. They have a belief that they feel strongly about, and they want others to either believe it too, or at least be held to the constraints that those beliefs create. This is every bit as greedy has having that "belief" be that my bank account should be the biggest or that Globex-MegaCorp's belief that their balance sheet is the most important thing in the world. Remember, having what one thinks in ones brain is a "good" motive does not justify acts that potentially harm (physically, financially, or otherwise) others. Having a belief that my bank account should be the biggest is clearly of no great help to others in general. Having a belief that it is important to keep the air clean and the climate within bounds is clearly of benefit to others. You need to work on your definition of good. On the issue of the cure being worse than the illness: in order to maintain the US dependancy on fossil fuels, americans are dying daily in Iraq. The Great Lakes are being poisoned by midwest power stations (an adult can only safely eat 6 annual portions of fish from some great lakes). Is it really worthwhile to push for the economy the economy the economy when real people are getting sick? Funny you say that when the article mentions NOTHING about any business being involved in the contradicting studies. As far as I can see, YOU'RE the only one even mentioning business or the profit motive into this equation. I would say that anyone completely believing in EITHER side is just as bad as anyone completely believing in the OTHER side. Note that the two report authors are: an economist, and a statistic expert working in the minig industry. These are unbiased people? And from the US Today article: It remains to be seen whether the McKitrick and McIntyre study will withstand the ''outside scrutiny'' they have asked for and will no doubt receive. But given the implications of the errors and problems they apparently have unearthed within the Mann study, the two researchers have done a tremendous service to science and the public, which should rely on facts to make informed public policy decisions. Ridiculous: how can we credit a "tremendous service" before the data is evaluated. If it is bogus, won't these people have performed a tremendous disservice?

    38. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      People (especially young people) like to have a cause they can feel passionately about, one they feel all but defines their lives.

      This attitude is demeaning to the young. There is some evidence to suggest that your intelligence and learning ability peaks early in life and then drops off gradually as you get older. Yet the young are condemned or ignored if they dare to be idealistic.

      You do know that most of the methods we have for fighting cancer is almost as bad as the disease itself, right?

      So what, you should just die? Anyway, that's why I said 'get it checked out.' In any case, now that I think about it it is quite appropriate - there may be some pain involved (i.e. economic adjustment) but long term at least you are more likely to survive.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    39. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by caitsith01 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I couldn't agree more - any economic model that included environmental costs of some kind would be an amazing leap forward and represent a huge (and needed) change in our attitude to the planet. This is why I personally think carbon credits and similar schemes are a good start, even though they certainly have drawbacks.

      The real tragedy in my opinion is that we have the power to undergo what would basically be a second industrial revolution and move to a technological era where large scale pollution is basically unneccessary.

      Example: recently a major manufacturer of biscuits has moved to a new type of packaging that is completely biodegradable in a very short amount of time when exposed to water. This replaces plastic which basically doesn't biodegrade ever. If we applied this type of technology to all food and goods packaging we could almost totally eliminate waste management problems - we could even use packaging as fertilizer.

      I strongly favour economic/market based solutions as I think it is the only realistic option. However, all markets operate in a legislative framework, and this framework needs to create a value for environmentally sound practices.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    40. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by BCole · · Score: 1

      Your own signature indicts you.

    41. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Phragmen-Lindelof · · Score: 1

      This is a troll. What environmental "cure" is being promoted internationally (with mainstream international support) which is anything like taking chemo for a bump on the arm? Let's set up another straw man. In any movement, one can find ridiculous proposals; this does not necessarily invalidate the entire movement.

    42. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ofcourse, the reason environmentalists in general dislike the american consumption culture is that it's unsustainable behaviour. The only way for americans to use so much, is for other people to either die or starve. The earth isn't big enough to give everyone the life an average american enjoys. Even things that are considered very basic, like eating meat, is impossible to realise on a global scale. Meat is too wasteful as a food for everyone to be fed with it.

      There are three ways out of this, radical advancements of technology (and given how radical they'd have to be, this one is unlikely), killing off the surplus population of the planet (sorry people, we want your food, now die!), or adapting the lifestyle of the average first-world citizen to be more sustainable.

      Unless one of those three things is done there will always be those who are starving, no matter how much the rest of us donates to the red cross.

    43. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well yeah, except None of the meetings you mentioned were with people our government propped up into their positions of power. Oh, but nevermind that minor detail. Or the other one about those chemical weapons he used on Iran, the Kurds and his own people coming from us.

      Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain...

    44. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is every bit as greedy has having that "belief" be that my bank account should be the biggest or that Globex-MegaCorp's belief that their balance sheet is the most important thing in the world.

      No, these are things that benefit only the individual, whereas the "belief" of environmentalists would, in theory, benefit everyone. IMO that's a gigantic difference in greed.

      They have a belief that they feel strongly about, and they want others to either believe it too, or at least be held to the constraints that those beliefs create.

      See, what you're really comparing to is religion. I've heard of religious people being called a lot of things for this behavior, but greedy is not one of them. (after all, in their minds they are after YOUR benefit)

      So it is something that warrants careful study, and re-study, and checks and balances to come about to a proper conclusion (or as close as you can reasonbly get).

      Absolutely, but this doesn't mean you can't take precautions in the meantime.

      I would say that anyone completely believing in EITHER side is just as bad as anyone completely believing in the OTHER side.

      amen to that.

    45. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by 4ntifa · · Score: 1

      Moderators are simply no good these days... MOD PARENT UP!

      --
      -=- 4ntifa -=-
    46. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are dozens of countries which have ratified kyoto (implemented it as national law), including the entire EU and japan.

      See the ratification status document for more info.

      It really is the US and Russia stopping kyoto from entering into action. If either ratifies it, kyoto will be doable (and thank god for that, since it only advocates keeping pollution at the same levels, not actually reducing it).

      Hint: try reality, it's refreshing.

    47. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      This attitude is demeaning to the young. There is some evidence to suggest that your intelligence and learning ability peaks early in life and then drops off gradually as you get older.

      "Intelligence" and "learning ability" are both metrics of potential. Potential is largely irrelevant on its own. What makes it valuable is time spent gaining knowledge and experience. This is why 18 year olds aren't immediately drafted to serve in legislatures/parliaments.

      Yet the young are condemned or ignored if they dare to be idealistic.

      Idealism is easy when you have little knowledge or experience and can look at complex problems and view them as simple matters of principle. In principle, we shouldn't polute at all. In reality, even simple acts like making a cooking fire and taking a crap are polluting. The reason the young are laughed at for their idealism is because idealism handwaves much of reality.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    48. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and invalidating the arguments of a single environmentalist invalidates the arguments of ALL environmentalists.

    49. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      --- Or the other one about those chemical weapons he used on Iran, the Kurds and his own people coming from us. ---

      If you are somehow suggesting that the anthrax that came from American Type Culture Collection, Rockville MD was what was used in war, then you are seriously stupid.

      http://www.atcc.org/About/AboutATCC.cfm

      Any grad level university microbiology student has looked at anthrax in a lab. ATCC does NOT ship weaponised (ie milled) anthrax.

    50. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get back to me when those other countries actually IMPLEMENT the Kyoto treaty rather than paying it lip service. Hint: it's not happening.

      Hint: It is happening. Don't let your media blinders fool you. Canada, Japan, Finland and more are all doing great things with regards to keeping in line with their Kyoto duties.

      Some of them have already lowered emissions, while others have kept from increasing greenhouse gas emissions, which is quite impressive, considering industrial growth is still happening in those nations.

      But don't worry, the US and Russia still put out enough to offset any good anyone else could do.

    51. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by patches · · Score: 1

      You still have unemployment problems and the biggest deficit ever.

      Yes you do still have unemployment, but as I said, jobs are the LAST part of the recovery that will occur. You also don't know you are in a recession, or a recovery for that matter, untill after you are already in one. And you are right, one quarter of growth does not make a recovery, but it is a sign that we are in a recovery.

      What I am saying is that one sure thing that leads to strength in the economy is tax cuts, it happened for Kennedy, Regan, and Bush Jr.

      I do not believe that I said that Iraq supported Al Queada, or that Iraq planned September 11, I did however say that Saddam is and was a terrorist. Al Queada is just one sect of terrorists. Saddam is a terrorist of epic proportions, who has had Weapons of Mass Destruction. I am sure you are probably going to say that He didn't, and that they haven't been able to find any so it must be made up. I laugh that the entire world gave Sadddam over 11 years to hide the weapons, that he admitted to having, and theat everyone knew he had. But now the entire world immediatly upon the US knocking Saddam off his throne expect us to find these weapons immediately, or else they must have never existed.

      And Isreal might be occuping territory that is not part of thier proper, but even if Isreal gave that stetch up, Pallistinian terrorism against Isreal would not stop, the Pallistinians do not even want Isreal to exist! The Pallistinians are the biggest threat to world peace, not Isreal.

      --
      The worst part of being athiest.... You don't have anyone to talk to during orgasm!
    52. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regarding point 2.

      The economy was on the upturn before the 1992 election and on the downturn aroudn the 2000 election. However, AFAIK, the president has very little direct impact on the economy. The house impact is much greater, but even there they don't really know what the results of various actions will be beforehand. I don't think clinton or either Bush were really responsibly for the recessions etc. Reagan managed to squash inflation I believe, but I was too young to have any personal awareness at the time.

      Regarding point 3, the Bush admin never claimed there was a direct connection between Iraq and September 11. Here's the actual logic: AFter 911, we decided we couldn't tolerate state sponsers of terrorism. Afghanistan supported the actual direct cause of 9/11, so hit them first. Iraq is a state sponser of terror that has other Causus Belli we can use, and is an easy target for other reasons, so hit them next.

      There are other benefits to taking out Iraq. It's well located to affect the rest of the region. It's a terrible regime that we once partially supported in the 'Anything but communism' days, so taking them out can be a first step towards redeeming ourselves on that front. (The argument that we shouldn't take out bad regimes that we once supported it fundamentally flawed. That's a GOOD reason to go after them, since we are partially responsible.)Iran might be falling anyways, so best to just keep an eye on it. Iraq being able to sell oil on the open market will make it easier to put pressure on Saudi Arabia. There are issues with actually attacking the Arab holy land, so let's avoid that for now.

      Arguably SA should have been second, but it is an arguable point.

      Regarding point 4.
      I don't have enough time. It's nowhere near as one sided as you are portraying it.

    53. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reasons you give are the reasons I list for the US being morally and financially responsible for overthrowing the bastard...

    54. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      videnced by the US's constant protection of Israel from any kind of valid criticism or intervention.

      Maybe you should read up on your history. The Security council is more responsible for the refugee problem then Israel. They are the ones who changed the definition of refugee to not include Palistinians. They are the ones who refused to try and stop the six day war and the Yom Kippur war. If the Security Council had done it's job, there would BE no problem.

    55. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by cens0r · · Score: 1

      Actually, I don't think 90% of the Indian population lived in south america and mesoamerica. There were thriving cultures in the mississipi valley and the american southwest (anasazi and mound builders). the europeans never saw them because the european diseases actuaclly traveled there and wiped them out before the europeans themseleves got there.

      --
      Jack Valenti and Orrin Hatch will be first up against the wall when the revolution comes.
    56. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by QuackQuack · · Score: 1
      Why do people think environmentalists would be biased, anyway?

      Because the "environmental movement" is based on left-wing politics more so than science. Look what happens to you when you question their claims. They don't debate you, they attack you mercilessly. Is this the way responsible scientists behave? I hope not.

      At the core, the left-wing environmental movement is a relatively new way of packaging the old leftist ideals. It tends to be anti-capitalist, anti-business, anti-progress. Republicans, including W. and his Father have voted for and signed environmental legislation, but do they ever get any credit for it with the so called environmental movement? No? See it's about politics, not science.

      I'm not saying we shouldn't be concerned with the environment, but we need to act based on science, not hype.

      --
      By reading this sig, you agree to the terms of my sig license.
    57. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by BlewScreen · · Score: 1
      The big sources of greenhouse gasses aren't power plants so much as factories, the ones that make the things than we use to maintain our standard of living.

      Well, yes and no... Here's some info on greenhouse gasses:

      Natural sources of carbon dioxide include the respiration (breathing) of animals and plants, and evaporation from the oceans. Together, these natural sources release about 150 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide each year, far outweighing the 7 billion tonnes of man-made emissions from fossil fuel burning, waste incineration, deforestation and cement manufacture.

      So clearing thousands of acres of forest to install solar panels would cut down on animal / plant emissions as well as human, so the world would "benefit" twice...

      j/k :)

      I think we agree though - if you ignore the 95% that come from natural sources, the majority of the remainder does come from improving our standard of living. In fact, what I read somewhere (sorry, no reference) is that accepting the Kyoto treaty and cutting our emissions by 1/3 would be more devastating to our economy than any recent war or even the Great Depression.

      Environmentalism looks a lot more like a religion than a science.

      --
      That that is is not that that is not. That that is not is not that that is.
    58. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately international relations is messy. You can't just have relations with the "good people", sometime you need to get in bed with some truly disgusting people.

      After the 1979 revolution, Iran became a major pain in our arse. Iraq soon went to war with them. At the time, it was prudent for us to increase ties with Iraq, until Saddam overstepped his bounds in 1990, when he became public enemy #1 overnight.

      It would be great if we could just not get involved with Middle East politics. But given the fanaticism that's bred in the region, combined with the money their abundant supply of oil brings in.

      The prospect of fanatical Taliban-like government, or ruthless Saddam-like govt. gaining Nuclear weapons is not something you can really afford to sit by and let happen.

    59. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by ThisIsFred · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Even if it were environmentally 0 impact, they would have issues with it. Environmentalists want to impose their severe religion on everyone and so their science must be taken with as much a grain of salt as would science from RJ Reynolds.

      I've never done a survey of environmentalists myself, so I couldn't possibly verify this as true. I'm not one, but despite my personal feelings, I can acknowledge some positive influence of environmentalism in my life. Although there are also points that I'd say are negatives, I can ask myself some questions:

      Which is better? A 4000-pound passenger car that gets 18 mpg on the highway, or a 3200-pound car which has the same amount of interior room, 30 more horsepower and gets 30 mpg on the highway? Added bonus is that the engine doesn't turn itself into a slimy greaseball over the course of its lifetime, because of better tolerances and improved emissions controls. I know which one I'd rather drive and maintain.

      Which is better, a light source that draws 60 watts or a light source with the same light output that draws 14 watts and lasts five times as long? I'll take the latter, thanks.

      Which is better? Duck hunters poisoning their future game with lead shot, or a prohibition on toxic shot, resulting in a stable duck population? Being a hunter myself, I've got the old articles to prove the difficulty environmentalists had in convincing waterfowl hunters of the 60s and 70s that dumping pounds of lead into waterways was a bad idea. You'd think it would be a no-brainer, but still, resistance abounds for banning lead shot everywhere. Sure non-toxic shot is more expensive now, but it wouldn't be if the switch had been made 30 years ago.

      Which is better? Dumping resultant chemicals from manufacturing into natural waterways, or storing those chemicals offsite, where other companies can deal with the disposal in a manner that doesn't kill things. Considering that I can actually swim in the local river and eat the fish I catch there for the first time in my life, I'd say that not dumping toxic chemicals is preferable.

      ...More efficient home furnaces, better insulating materials that don't cause cancer with repeated exposure, better air quality (sorry exhaust fumes are more irritating to me than pollen), disclosure of potentially dangerous substances in use at otherwise low-risk jobs. There are quite a few benefits to environmentalism, so I'm not quite ready to pan all environmentalists as extremists. Things are getting awfully black and white in political arenas as of late, and I wouldn't want my affiliation as "Republican" to mean "get rid of all environmentalists".

      --
      Fred

      "A fool and his freedom are soon parted"
      -RMS
    60. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by QuackQuack · · Score: 1

      Well France, for example, gets something like 90% of it's electricity from Nuclear (no greenhouse emmisions). You simply cannot do that in the US, the environmentalists won't allow it.

      --
      By reading this sig, you agree to the terms of my sig license.
    61. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

      The pollution in these countries are mostly caused by 3 wheel vehicles and scooters. These pesky vehicles are everywhere. Luckily, at least the 3 wheeled rickshaws are now converting to natural gas in order to alleviate pollution problems.

      But there needs to be more. I believe that accelerating fuel cell technology would drastically reduce a lot of these problems. Provided that an infrastructure can be set up . As of now the whole thing is in limbo. If there was no electricity or no gas or anything, India and China would be able to manage very quickly be reverting back to time honored traditions. The West would be screwed. (Too bad for me, having given my allegiance to U.S.)

      As for renewable resources, Asian countries are/were the biggest recyclers. Most of what villages used in those days were all natural. Plaintain leaves were used as plates in the bygone era, and the trash would become compost. These days it's not as good because people are using plastic bags, plates and what not and completely causing problems there. I see at least India slowly relying on industries outside rather than itself. An economic embargo would have resulted in nothing due to self sufficiency. But alas, times change and India has to join the global trade group too bad it's not as an equal partner.

      sri

    62. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Arthur+Dent · · Score: 1
      Insanely high rate of extinction?

      How can you say that when we don't know with certainty exactly how many species there are in the first place? Why, just recently, 600 new species of fish were discovered!

    63. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by randyest · · Score: 1

      A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds.

      - Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Self-Reliance"

      --
      everything in moderation
    64. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by lmenke · · Score: 0

      Actually, a businessman is a more reliable judge on the environment than the environmentalists because he is trained to make judgments that have consequences--the very nature of running a business-- and must live with these judgments-loss of business, jobs, and profits. I would trust a man who lives by the consequences of his work over the judgments of a man who proposes the way things should be and work.

      Lorenz H. Menke, Jr.

    65. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Reziac · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is a common tactic among such "*I* want to control how *you* live" groups. Frex, you've all heard PETA's statement that "83 million dogs and cats are killed in shelters every year" and that "6 million of those are purebreds", right? (Do the math, folks -- that number means *every* American family kills one pet per year, and that 3 times more purebreds are killed than are actually born in the first place.) But when cornered, the head of PETA admitted that he "pulled the number of the air, because it sounded good". (*Actual* annual stats, per shelter records: about one euthanized pet per 500 Americans.)

      It's just too damned typical, and it's why the moment I hear such a number from the head of any such organization, I now immediately assume the stats quoted are somewhere between suspect and bogus, and that there is some hidden agenda at work that is not in the public's best interests.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    66. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Reziac · · Score: 1
      "Many environmentalists are not the wealthy type because they are closet slackers."

      You misspelled "liberal" ;)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    67. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by oldwarrior · · Score: 0

      no, France did however think that Saddams money was good - enough to make them an enemy of US policies.

      --
      If it were done when 'tis done, then t'were well it were done quickly... MacBeth
    68. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which of course is the biggest crock. Any nation that can spend the type of wad to send a man into space is no longer a developing nation.

    69. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Tackhead · · Score: 2, Insightful
      > > Each of us has to decide what the right balance between being effective and being honest." (emphasis added)
      >Dr. Stephen Schneider Professor of Biological Sciences
      > Stanford University
      > Author of Global Warming: Are We Entering the Greenhouse Cenutry

      Dr. Schneider, if you're in a business where you have to "balance" being "effective" (pushing your personal agenda) and being "honest" (maintaining your scientific integrity), kindly stop dignifying what you do as science.

      If the truth conflicts with your agenda, and you make any concessions to truth whatsoever, you are a politician and a propagandist, barely worthy of the title "professor", and what you profess is not science.

    70. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, the environmental issue has been hijacked by anti-business socialists for their own ends (see the comments of Dr. Moore, co-founder of Greenpeace).

      Second, many of the most visible protestors in the environmental movement are uneducated hippy-dippy types who, for example, want to ban dihydrogen monoxide.

      Third, I have worked on writing climate models and they are extremely finicky. Slightly different assumptions can produce wildly different results. Anyone who claims to know the answer to the question of the future trend of the climate is selling something.

    71. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Which is, of course, the Europeans' fault, right? Because, in the early 1600's, they understood disease and could have prevented it, right?

      Distributing smallpox-infected blankets was an atrocity, to be sure. But the "genocide" was caused by naturally occuring diseases, transmitted naturally. Evolution at work.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    72. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by jafac · · Score: 1

      It's just a different way of looking at the world.

      The "hippies" see the world, all of human civilization, as a system. Like a machine. We'll use a car as an analogy. They see that without somebody doing something about the exhaust, and the need for gasoline, the passenger compartment will fill up with smoke and everyone will die. Unless everyone pitches in and puts an exhaust pipe on the engine.

      The "straights" see the world, as a system, and they see that they can use this system to their advantage. They happen to be lucky enough to be sitting in the seat next to the window that rolls down. So they won't die, but everyone else will. Why should they pay to put in an exhaust pipe. Those lazy bastards sitting in the other seats can damn well build their own roll-down windows. On the other hand, when everyone else dies from the car exhaust in the passenger compartment, he can just dump their bodies, and the car will belong to him alone.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    73. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by cens0r · · Score: 1

      Did I say it was the european's fault? It was horrible, but the european's weren't aware of this. They did comitt other atrocities, but this really can't count as one of them. However, it is an important fact to realize. In most US history classes kids are taught that there were about 1 million indians in north America at the time columbus landed. This is a lie, and they should at least know the truth.

      --
      Jack Valenti and Orrin Hatch will be first up against the wall when the revolution comes.
    74. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I believe we're still waiting for the documents relating to the oil companies' 'consultations' with Archduke Cheney over energy policy, aren't we?" - That's a red herring and doesn't really have anything to do with the article. However, it does reveal how a political agenda can be tied directly to what should be an impartial and scientific research oppertunity. The fact is that the 'Environmentalists' are mostly political activists that use Environmentalism as a tool to get what they want. They may or may not really care about the issue (they should, evenone should, it's the environment we're talking about), but no one should be suprised when people expect there's an ulterior motive involved. Because, as your statment indicates, there almost always is.

      "Why do people think environmentalists would be biased, anyway? What are they biased towards? Not dying?" - That's simple, many of them are baised agianst the establishment. Envornmentalism is used as a tool to hit at those percieved threats. Just as you're doing now.

      "I love it that people think that they are able to be so 'skeptical' about the environment. Can't you see that the logical way to be skeptical about it is to assume that the warning signs mean something significant until you can be sure they don't? Otherwise you're acting like someone with half the symptoms of cancer who wants to wait until they have them all before getting it checked out. After all, you can never be sure so better to do nothing, eh?" - Well, with cancer you need the proper treatment. Sometimes Chemo would be needed, sometimes it's benign and nothing needs to be done, and sometimes it can simply be cut away. In the end, the situation should always be examined carefully and the best course of action taken. There's no sense in destroing your immune system with chemo if you don't have to, and there's no reason to have your breast removed if it's benign. Kyoto and other proposed laws drasticly affect people on a variety of levels. Such action must be taken on solid, informed, and accurate information. Just, as in your example, it should be for cancer.

    75. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by tjstork · · Score: 1

      >Which is better? A 4000-pound passenger car that >gets 18 mpg on the highway, or a 3200-pound car

      The 4000 pound car has a beautiful sounding engine while the 3200 pound car sounds like a buzzsaw. Come on man, big v8 vs little 4 cylinder. It's gotta be v8. It just sounds and feels so much better.

      >Which is better, a light source that draws 60 >watts or a light source with the same light

      Flourescent lights give me headaches, thank you. I'll take good old incandescent any day. And I'll add that water saving shower heads are aweful.

      >Which is better? Duck hunters poisoning their >future game with lead shot, or a prohibition on

      I'm glad they banned lead shot.

      > Which is better? Dumping resultant chemicals from manufacturing into natural waterways

      I don't like dumping into rivers or lakes either and I support the Chesapeake Bay cleanup effort.

      > More efficient home furnaces, better insulating materials that don't cause cancer with repeated exposure

      That's good, but I like to keep the windows open as I have a severe distrust of "safe" materials. Indoor air pollution is a drag.

      What I'm getting at it is that our drive to replace some of our more wasteful practices with "more efficient" exotic chemicals have placed humans into a chemical soup whose long term health effects are just beginning to be understood. What's up with all the plastic everywhere and the possible links to raised environmental estrogen levels?

      --
      This is my sig.
    76. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by ThisIsFred · · Score: 1

      The 4000 pound car has a beautiful sounding engine while the 3200 pound car sounds like a buzzsaw. Come on man, big v8 vs little 4 cylinder. It's gotta be v8. It just sounds and feels so much better.

      Sorry, it's a six, not a four. And my opinion is that it sounds a hell of a lot better than some shitty 140 horsepower V8 with a two-barrel carb that sounds like it's going to come apart when I push it past 4500 RPM. But hey, even the V8s are better as a result of improved engine management. That 300 hp V8 now over gets 20 mpg on the highway, instead of 10 @ 165 hp.

      --
      Fred

      "A fool and his freedom are soon parted"
      -RMS
    77. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by susano_otter · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've never really understood the "limited resources" argument. "We should pretend there's a shortage now, in order to postpone the date of the real shortage". It doesn't make sense. For one thing, we're not going to run out of oil (say) all in one day. It's not like we're going to wake up one morning and world oil production is suddenly at zero, thus destroying civilization as we know it in some sort of Mad Max parody.

      Rather, as oil reserves dwindle (gradually, over time), the cost of oil-based energy will go up. At various points, other energy sources will become more ecnomical than oil, and development of those sources will begin to accelerate. Economies of scale will kick in. There will probably be some fluctuations in the overall cost of living during the transition, but I doubt it will be anything drastic.

      Moving to those technologies now, while oil is still cheaper and the infrastructure is already well in place, would have an even bigger impact on the cost of living. Furthermore, it would have a huge impact on economic growth. We'd be saving our children (or grandchildren, or whatever) the cost of conversion, by taking that cost on ourselves. But it seems likely that our descendants will have more wealth available to pay those costs than we do.

      Another thing is, they're called "resources" because we use them for stuff. If they just sit there, not being used, they're not resources and there is no shortage. Saving resources for future generations makes no sense. There's no reason to think they have any greater need for iron (say), than we do, or that they'll make better use of it than we are.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    78. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by mrosgood · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Or like getting chemo just because you found a bump on your arm? A situation where the "cure" can be worse than the perceived disease?
      Exactly how is polluting less worse than polluting more?
    79. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by davidph · · Score: 1

      Playing a bit loose with the facts, aren't we? The Anasazi and other southwest tribes collapsed because of a prolonged drought in the 12th and 13th centuries.

    80. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > Oooh Wow. You just showed a pic of Don R shaking hands with Saddam.

      No no no! That wasn't a handshake, Rummy was just reaching out to pat him down for hidden WMD!

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    81. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by butane_bob2003 · · Score: 1

      Jumping headfirst into this debate:
      The big sources of greenhouse gasses aren't power plants so much as factories, [but] the ones that make the things than [that?] we use to maintain our standard of living

      Our standard of living is unsustainably high. If maintaining our standard of living involves burning fossil fuels and producing millions of tons of toxic garbage, then what long term benefit does our near term comfort have?

      --


      TallGreen CMS hosting
    82. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by vv2 · · Score: 1
      The big sources of greenhouse gasses aren't power plants so much as factories, the ones that make the things than we use to maintain our standard of living.

      So having SUV's and consuming (and wasting) more resource than anyone else is a good way to keep a standard of living?

    83. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by GlassHeart · · Score: 2, Insightful
      as oil reserves dwindle (gradually, over time), the cost of oil-based energy will go up. At various points, other energy sources will become more ecnomical than oil, and development of those sources will begin to accelerate.

      At the same time, because the oil consuming machinery cannot turn on a dime, the high prices of oil will allow us to drill literally everywhere for it. The environmentalist fear is that by the time the market forces an alternative energy source into the mainstream, we'd have drilled holes in every backyard and national park.

      We'd be saving our children (or grandchildren, or whatever) the cost of conversion, by taking that cost on ourselves. But it seems likely that our descendants will have more wealth available to pay those costs than we do.

      Is that why these are the same politicians who are borrowing money to cut taxes for the same descendants to pay? The question to me is not whether they will or will not be richer, but whether we can already afford to start doing something right now.

      On a philosophical scale, if you can't leave the earth a little better than you inherited it, why do you exist? Just to consume?

    84. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by MountainBoiler · · Score: 1
      So environmentalists are the only ones who can "err on the side of caution", huh?

      I don't take a stance on the validity of global warming. It likely is getting warmer, but there isn't sufficient proof of what is causing it. Not to mention, it may have been hotter in the past (hard to prove or disprove). And we do know that global temperatures are cyclic.

      However, has it occurred to you that capitalists also want to "err on the side of caution"? After all, Kyoto is damn expensive to implement. And there is no proof of the economic benefits. Not to mention the richer countries have stricter controls placed on them while 3rd world can continue to pollute away.

      When you want something, it usually means you don't have what you want, and you need to find a way to convince those who DO have "it" to willingly give "it" to you. I get money from my employer for providing a service they want. I can't just take it from them because they have more. Same with environmentalism - where is the incentives to comply? Those pushing for change don't have a vested interest in the solutions - only the outcome. Yet, strangely enough, they are driving their Excursions, H2's and other large barges around while telling me what to do.

    85. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by ahillen · · Score: 1

      For one thing, we're not going to run out of oil (say) all in one day. It's not like we're going to wake up one morning and world oil production is suddenly at zero, thus destroying civilization as we know it in some sort of Mad Max parody.

      Nope, we won't, but at the same time we won't be able to just change our way of living and our economy from "highly oil dependent" to "what's that, oil?" mode. It will take some time. And are you really sure that, if we only accelerate our research on this other sources when oil energy really starts to become expensive, these replacements are developed fast enough (and become cheap fast enough) so that they just can replace oil like that? What about the third world countries? Will they be able to catch up, if we develop "just in time"?

      Moving to those technologies now, while oil is still cheaper and the infrastructure is already well in place, would have an even bigger impact on the cost of living.

      No, I think, the later we start(!), the more severe the impact on our lives will be when we finally HAVE to act. Getting away with the need for oil completely might proof a quite difficult task. Handling the limited ressources carefully already now means to be able to do the easier (and less intrusive) changes now and have more time later for the more difficult things.

      Saving resources for future generations makes no sense. There's no reason to think they have any greater need for iron (say), than we do, or that they'll make better use of it than we are.

      I'm sure they also won't have a better need for clean water than us (drinking), but I think it still would be fair to leave the some... ;)

    86. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by javaxman · · Score: 1
      Going all solar or all wind, for example, means clearing a lot of land that might otherwise be natural wilderness. It's hard to say that's better than a coal-fired plant, and I know I personally feel that it's worse than a nuclear power plant.

      I'll have to assume you've never seen the results of uranium mining, nor assessed the contamination experienced by people living near such mines or related processing facilities.

      Have you purposely avoided learning about the realities of nuclear power production and mining, or are you just a hypocrite yourself ?

    87. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by ThisIsFred · · Score: 1

      Oops, almost forgot this one:

      Flourescent lights give me headaches, thank you. I'll take good old incandescent any day. And I'll add that water saving shower heads are aweful.

      You must be thinking of the old, inefficient tubes that have been around for decades. The modern supertwist bulbs are indistinguishable from modern incandescents except for these points: They are shaped differently, they don't produce as much heat, they don't fail as often. Other than that, there is no flicker in light output, so your headaches are probably due to the stress caused by paying a high electric bill every month.

      I don't like efficiency shower heads either, but the problems are less noticeable when you have good water pressure, i.e. city water.

      --
      Fred

      "A fool and his freedom are soon parted"
      -RMS
    88. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Barbara,+not+Barbie · · Score: 1
      You wrote:
      Distributing smallpox-infected blankets was an atrocity, to be sure. But the "genocide" was caused by naturally occuring diseases, transmitted naturally. Evolution at work.

      Sorry, but I have to disagree. It was a natural disease, but the transmission was not natural - it was intentional:

      "You will do well to inoculate the Indians (with smallpox) by means of blankets, as well as to try every other method that can serve to extirpate this exorable race. I should be very glad your scheme for hunting them down by dogs could take effect."

      -General Amherst to Colonel Henry Bouquet, July 1763

      here's a link to a page that has links to microfiches of the original letters.

      It was known at the time that disease could be spread through contact with contaminated objects.

      --
      Let's call it what it is, Anti-Social Media.
    89. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      I think I didn't make my point clearly.

      The smallpox infected blankets were an atrocity, and were NOT a natural disease vector.

      However, prior to that event, European diseases had already done a number on the indigenous peoples of North America. Most of those diseases were transmitted by natural vectors.

      Sorry about the confusion.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    90. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Tailhook · · Score: 1

      Why do people think environmentalists would be biased, anyway?

      Because environmental activists (note: I am deeply aware of the distinction between an "environmentalist" and an "environmental activist") travel in the same circles as the anti-capitalist, anti-gun, anti-western(policy,medicine,science,what-have-you ), anti-religion, anti-meat, anti-male, anti-hetrosexual, Blame America First zealots. They pull elements from each of these, the Environment not least, and use them to form a complete quasi-religious world view.

      Go attend a protest event sometime. I have. You'll see all of this lined up on tables and sold on tee-shirts, all in one convenient outlet. This is true regardless of which aspect is being protested. It's one wholelistic belief system.

      Matters of Environment have been entirely subsumed by politics. There are no unbiased sources beyond your own perceptions. For every argument you can find an equally credible and opposite counter. You're left to count heads which amounts to measuring what's most trendy at the moment. Grant money from inherently collectivist government bodies has a lot to do with that.

      Perhaps you question is genuine. You really don't know why environmentalists are often suspected of bias. Then again, perhaps not. For the former case I can only conclude that you are naive beyond my ability to fathom. In the latter case you're a liar.

      As for me; It's gotten warmer. I've been around long enough to remember hard winters. I haven't seen one in a long time. I can't deny that and I wouldn't try. I also have seen no evidence extraordinary enough to convince me that humans have had thing #1 to do with it and, furthermore, no evidence at all to convince me that it's bad. As for the argument that it's better to be safe than sorry, you'll have to do a much better job explaining exactly what you mean by safe.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    91. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by pj737 · · Score: 0
      Going all solar or all wind, for example, means clearing a lot of land that might otherwise be natural wilderness.

      Well, that statement itself is false. Generally speaking, land has to be cleared to make way for wind turbines but there is a heck a lot of land out there used for the farming industry of which can be used to place wind turbines. When placed on land used for, let's say, raising cattle, the wind turbines are not requiring any additional stripping of land.

      In regards to solar, the average home has approx 2,000 sq ft of rooftop. The average home consumes approx 22 kWh/day. A 4 kilowatt photovoltaic system that takes up approx 350 sq ft of roof space (18% of the rooftop) will provide enough power for the entire home. Also, most office buildings (3 stories or less) and warehouses have enough rooftop space to provide >80% of their own power needs. So solar doesn't require any additional land to power at least virtually all homes, low-rise apartments, small office buildings, and all warehouses. So this leaves the power hungry power plants and tall buildings but houses can actually provide some power for these energy dense properties. In Germany, for example, they have enormous incentives for those that sell power back to the grid. A single home could provide enough power to several homes or even augment that of a nearby high-rise building. Even tall buildings can have pv systems installed into their glass windows to supply at least a small percentage of their power needs. All in all, I'm sure we could supply at least 50-60% of all electrical needs with solar if we took advantage of existing rooftop space. 50-60% is a whole heck lot more than the .02% we got now and it doesn't require any stripping of precious land.

    92. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Lars+T. · · Score: 1
      Shall we have put all AIDS patience on an island, after all, better to be safe than sorry right?

      No, we shall use the neo-conservative tactic of just ignoring AIDS, fully knowing that it will just go away if we do. Oh, wait, that doesn't work either.... but at least we didn't waste any money actually doing something that might never work.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    93. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by randomencounter · · Score: 1

      You misspelled "not born with a silver spoon up their nose".

      --
      Forget diamonds, copyright is forever.
    94. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Grayputer · · Score: 1

      -----
      Why do people think environmentalists would be biased, anyway? What are they biased towards? Not dying? Is there some secret Globex-EnviroCorporation Inc in which all tree hugging hippies have undisclosed shares? Or is it possible that they simply understand the value of erring on the side of caution when the stakes are so high?
      -----

      Yeah, but part of the issue is the zero sum game problem. There's only so much money allocated to ALL environmental issues and while it is not truly a zero sum game it is damn close. So basing allocations of that fixed resource on false assumptions is not REALLY being 'biased toward not dying. In fact it could be said it IS biased toward dying, fix the wrong issue and die from the one you SHOULD have fixed. But that's pretty typical, the usual viewpoint is 'we should fix ALL the environmental issues, we shouldn't have to choose'. For those of us that are environmentally oriented and yet still live in the real world, we realize the problems this type of thing will cause. Less money, less creditability, AND LESS STUFF ACTUALLY FIXED IN TEH LONG RUN (crying wolf again, they argue). Remember the average voter has an IQ of 100 and an attention span measured in picoseconds.

    95. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by SiliconBateman · · Score: 1

      Given your argument is a OR argument "The earth isn't big enough to give everyone the life an average american enjoys"..."killing off the surplus population of the planet (sorry people, we want your food, now die!)"... most of the planet survives on a diet which can give them the diet and material products the average American enjoys (saturated fat is cheap, plentiful and most US manufactured consumption is still domestically made [toys from China make up a pitifully low proportion when compared to GM cars]).

      What the entire planet cannot afford for very long is the amount of pollution the US produces. The US creates around 1/4 of atmospheric pollution the world produces yet has only around 6%$ of the population.

      So yes they can have the lifestyle if it were not the pollution that would prevent ANY further generations from enjoying it. The United States of America subsidises its lifestyle by polluting the lives of all others around the world.

      --
      -- Alchohol is a hard drug. Cannabis is a soft drug.
    96. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by fbg111 · · Score: 1

      "It teaches me that only governments who have not backed and in some cases installed fascist dictators and military regimes, and also launched repeated unilateral wars against sovereign states get to go around preaching about peace, democracy, and non-aggression."

      It must also teach you to completely ignore causality. Name me the "fascist dictators and military regimes" and "unilateral wars" of which you speak, and I will explain to you how the US took these actions during the Cold War to prevent Communist Domination of the world. Remember the "Dictatorship of the Proletariat", the "Commintern", and all that old Communist stuff? Yeah, it was real, and many times the US sided with bad people for no other reason than that they were against Communists and there was no one else strong enough to work with. From the Shah to the Taliban to the South American dictator of the day, the one thing they all have in common is that America used them to check the advance of the Communists. A dirty business, but we should all be glad it was done, given Communism's unmatched bloody record.

      --
      Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
    97. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how exactly would living off renewable energy be 'worse' than the whole planet dying?

      But would you say living off renewable energy resources would be better than some of the alternatives. Resources are scarce, and every resource spent on finding and using alternate energy sources are resources that are not spent doing other things. Would you say alternate energy is more important than EVERY other advancement of the human race?

      Better post this one anon.

    98. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "but there is a heck a lot of land out there used for the farming industry of which can be used to place wind turbines."

      Farms are large and clear-cut for a reason. Is the farmer compensated for the effect the turbines' shadows will have on his crops? Plants on the north side of a single turbine will get less sunlight per day the closer it is to the turbine, with the land adjacent to the turbine unusable for growing much of anything. The problem gets worse when you start looking at multiple turbines, where some areas are within the shadow sweep of two or more turbines over the course a day can be almost as bad off as land up against the turbine.

      "When placed on land used for, let's say, raising cattle,"

      Cattle eat a lot of grass, which is also affected by the loss of sunlight these turbines will cause.

      "The average home consumes approx 22 kWh/day."

      I see you used the word "average." Averaged over a week? A month? A year? What ranges of latitudes were included in this average? What's the standard deviation from that average?

      Let me put this another way: How much electricity does a house at around 37 degrees north latitude in the middle of January need? January, when the days are short and cloudy and there's a pretty good chance your solar panels are covered in snow (unless, of course, the house has poor thermal insulation, which would increase its energy requirements). And what if we assume a totally "green" solution where the house uses electric heat instead of fossil fuels? I would imagine such a house would need quite a bit more than that average you mentioned.

      Using that average number pretty much assumes that the house has some sort of energy storage system that can store up energy surpluses and hold onto it for months at a time with manageable loss, as well as able to return that energy with a power output similar to the solar cells themselves. Hydrogen might work here, but then there's the NIMBY issue.

    99. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your sentiments. One correction and one clarification of what you mentioned:

      (1)
      "Going all solar or all wind, for example, means clearing a lot of land that might otherwise be natural wilderness."

      False. There is much surface area that is already cleared that is not put to functional, practical energy generating use. Rooftops, for example, are very very rarely covered. Suburbia (where I live and I am in favor of) take up huge swaths of land in the form of yards.

      You also may be overlooking that energy consumption is dropping per head in some ways. This goes along with the reference article in the Economist, which noted that competition and natural business forces ends up in cleaner and greener usage.

      At the very least, again referenced in the article, solar efficiency and technologies have been increasing.

      Take sewage--instead of 5 gallons to flush, we use what, 1.6 liters or gallons or so. Many newer communities, notably in the suburbs and NOT the cities, don't even bother with 2% grades of sewer pipes anymore to a main pipe. They instead use what amounts to a garbage disposal and low pressurized pump system to move their waste. While more energy intensive, the savings in water is huge, and the newer materials offset the huge amount of times munipalities took to maintain the traditional large diameter lines.

      (2)
      "It's hard to say that's better than a coal-fired plant, and I know I personally feel that it's worse than a nuclear power plant."

      I personally feel nuclear power has a hugely bad rap. Die hard greens are anti-nuclear. Unfortunately, they have played into the 'nuclear nukes weapons bad' bullshit, and ignore what investments in nuclear power could be bringing about, both rapidly and politically. Much foreign work has revealed near safe (safe being relative to nuclear; maybe even compared to sub 10 micron sucking diesel particles) nuclear implementations.

      To the greens, they ignore this completely and utterly, part of a political, not a scientifical or practical results based analysis.

    100. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by pj737 · · Score: 0
      Is the farmer compensated for the effect the turbines' shadows will have on his crops?

      In a word - YES. In fact most farmers would jump on the opportunity to have an electric utility pay them to lease their land. In most cases, the land remains 99% usable (in its original form).

      Plants on the north side of a single turbine will get less sunlight per day the closer it is to the turbine, with the land adjacent to the turbine unusable for growing much of anything.

      Ummm, have you seen a wind turbine? - they are tall and skinny. Yes, you will lose considerable sunlight near the base of the turbine on the north side (granted you are in the upper latitudes) but the sun also rides on an east-west axis as well so that tall skinny pole will only block out a small area (at max about 50% of the width of the base of the turbine). The turbine itself is so high that the shading effect is negligible (in terms of excessive shading in one concentrated area). I wish I had that study I read from Zond Wind that summarized the impact that wind turbines have on the land in which they are installed. The biggest problem with wind turbines is not really so much the fact that they take up so much land (as most of the land used is either "useless" or "hybridable" because of steep rolling hills) but rather because they kill migratory birdies and they are unsightly (read ugly). Another application is off-shore wind turbines that take up ZERO land. But you can complain that they make a shadow and disrupt proper plankton and coral growth.

      "The average home consumes approx 22 kWh/day." I see you used the word "average." Averaged over a week? A month? A year? What ranges of latitudes were included in this average? What's the standard deviation from that average?

      Huh? I'll say it again verbatim - the average home consumes approx 22 kWh/day. What doesn't make sense? When I mean home, I mean house - not apartments, which inherently consume less energy. "Average" means some homes may consume 50 kWh/day and some will consume 12 kWh/day. 22 kWh is an AVERAGE for ALL homes. It's also clear in my statement that the average is per DAY. So I'm not sure why you ask my week, month or year???

      Let me put this another way: How much electricity does a house at around 37 degrees north latitude in the middle of January need?

      I couldn't even try to answer that question. There are much too many variables!! First of all, it makes a huge difference where you are located, the topography, the altitude, etc. If you were in the west at 37 degrees you'd likely get a ton of sun compared to that if you were in the east at the same latitude.

      Using that average number pretty much assumes that the house has some sort of energy storage system that can store up energy surpluses and hold onto it for months at a time with manageable loss, as well as able to return that energy with a power output similar to the solar cells themselves. Hydrogen might work here, but then there's the NIMBY issue.

      There are a million means to store energy - hydrogen (least mature), super capacitors, water reservoirs (hydro turbine based), flywheels, and batteries (PbA being most mature). There are downsides to all of them but in order to embrace solar technology today, we don't need them. We can use solar to shave our peak loads during the day. The sun happens to shine when utilities demands are greatest. So why not take advantage of it?? We could increase solar installations by a factor of 10,000 and we still won't even come close to needing storage to help reduce our dependence on any other kind of electric generation. That's the bottom line. You make a point that solar is better is some places than others. But in those places were solar is attractive why not move forward???

    101. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Hi,

      > Europeans see putting a check US power as paramount;

      Agreed, and this may be short-sighted

      > while Americans see ending the tyrany of brutal dicatator as most important.

      No, America actually helped and continues to help local tyrants whenever it suits them (From Chile to Afghanistan right now). Has America ever installed a genuine democracy anywhere? Don't say Japan, because Japan's democracy is not working very well. The same party has been in power since WWII. Whenever democracy has flourished in a country it was in spite of the US and not thanks to them, such as in Europe and South Korea.

      > Most Americans are dismayed why we deserve such mistrust.

      See above.

    102. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to think Chile was an example (as you used it above). Then I met people who are actually from Chile and they are darn glad the U.S. helped them to not have followed in the path of Cuba. Just goes to show things are not as cut and dried as one might think.

    103. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      I know some people support Pinochet, but you have to have a pretty dry heart or a very selective and short memory to do that. In particular you have not to mind torture and assassination as means of government.

      I've met a young Chilean who said exactly the same thing as you quote. To me this proves that propaganda works really well. S. Allende was not bringing Chile down the path of Cuba, in fact Chile was the most prosperous South American country when the coup took place. Allende was not communist, but he did have a democrat socialist agenda (like many European countries do now). Moreover Allende had been democratically elected. Yes Allende was not particularly or at least not sufficiently pro-US. This does prove my point that America is not particularly pro-democracy abroad.

      Then I asked the same young Chilean if he thought the Chileans in exile had a similar opinion to his, particularly the families of those that the Pinochet government tortured in Chile and assassinated in various countries, he had no reply.

      A few years ago Pinochet was arrested in England after Spain laid charges against him for political assassinations of Spanish citizens *in Spain*. There assassinated people were ex-Chileans in exile that Pinochet took great pain to kill. Unfortunately he got off on health grounds, but it would have been interesting to follow his trial, because a lot of very dirty secrets would probably have been revealed.

      I can't believe anyone with any sense of humanity would defend such a man as Pinochet.

      You can read this if you want.

    104. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      a new type of packaging that is completely biodegradable in a very short amount of time when exposed to water. This replaces plastic which basically doesn't biodegrade ever.

      Your explanation doesn't contain enough information to tell if this is really a win or not. How much more expensive is the new package than the old? (Higher energy costs to produce, which might outweigh later savings). And how effective is the packaging? For biscuits it prehaps doesn't matter, but the distribution chains for other, more important foodstuffs depends on sturdy, plastic packaging.

      If a material is biodegradable, it means that pests and vermin (any kind of nasty biology) will have an easier time tearing through it to consume and contaminate the product. This creates a need for more packaging around the packaging, adding weight and fuel consumption to every shipment that is moved.

      Interestingly, if the goal was to reduce waste handling costs for consumer foodstuff packages, the only approach certain not to have an environmental downside would be to ban decorative boxes. Many companies use unnecessarily elaborate packs for promotional/marketing reasons, going far beyond what's needed to protect the food.

    105. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      By that logic, wouldn't it be wise to "err on the side of caution" by outlawing abortion since the possibility exists that fetuses are human beings?

      The stakes for abortion aren't nearly as high. Whether or not the fetuses are human (they are), whether or not they deserve protection (maybe), abortion could never kill off more than a percentage of humanity.

      An environmental catastrophe could kill everyone.

    106. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The modern supertwist bulbs are indistinguishable from modern incandescents except for these points...

      Is the color balance the same? The thing I have always liked about incandescent (and disliked about fluorescent) is the natural color balance.

    107. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Barbara,+not+Barbie · · Score: 1
      It's just that you said "naturally occuring disease, transmitted naturally. Evolution at work." Glad we agree that this was NOT nature at work :-)

      And, yes, I see your point. Gonorrhea and syphilis were transmitted by "normal" vectors (rape) - normal for a conquering invader at that time. It's the same stuff we see with UN aid workers being the biggest users of prostitutes lately in some countries :-(

      Unfortunately, it seems that the more things change, the more they stay the same.

      --
      Let's call it what it is, Anti-Social Media.
    108. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Summary: My kind of bloody dictatorship (fascim) is better than your kind of bloody dictatorship (communism).

    109. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by penguin7of9 · · Score: 1

      Remember, having what one thinks in ones brain is a "good" motive does not justify acts that potentially harm (physically, financially, or otherwise) others.

      But physical and financial harm are not the same. Global warming threatens to kill hundreds of millions of people. It is not a certainty that it will, but it likely, and it becomes a certainty beyond some (unknown) level of greenhouse gas concentrations. If we keep growing, we will hit that.

      Reductions in greenhouse gas emissions threaten what, exactly? So far, anti-environmentalists haven't even been able to demonstrate that reductions in greenhouse gas emissions would be economically harmful. All they really do is threaten a few economically powerful special interests.

      So it is something that warrants careful study, and re-study, and checks and balances to come about to a proper conclusion (or as close as you can reasonbly get).

      So, why do you want to do the unproven, risky thing? We know we can live well at lower levels of greenhouse gas emissions. Europe demonstrates that relative to the US, and the US demonstrates it in comparison with its own history. But people like you want to continue to increase greenhouse gas emissions and put our global climate at risk, because, well, why exactly?

      I would say that anyone completely believing in EITHER side is just as bad as anyone completely believing in the OTHER side.

      You are under the mistaken assumption that environmentalists "completely believe" in a causal connection between greenhouse gas emissions and measurable climate change.

      In reality, that causal connection doesn't even matter. Greenhouse gas emissions clearly will affect our climate beyond some level. Whether we have already reached that level or whether that is yet to happen is a minor detail. You completely believe that it is harmless, while environmentalists say "let's not continue on this path until we have reasonable scientific proof that it is safe and until we have reasonable economic proof that it is beneficial".

    110. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by penguin7of9 · · Score: 1

      Because environmentalists want to change a lot more than power generation. The big sources of greenhouse gasses aren't power plants so much as factories, the ones that make the things than we use to maintain our standard of living.

      Other nations manage to produce goods and services far more efficiently (both in terms of energy and human resources) than the US. So, no, emissions at US levels are clearly not necessary to maintain our standard of living. The only reason the US gets away with it is because it has managed to procure itself an unreasonably cheap supply of energy.

      Basically, the US is externalizing some of its costs and asking the rest of the world to put up with it. That may seem like a good deal for the US in the short run, but it cannot be justified either ethically or legally, and it will sooner or later cause serious conflict.

    111. Re:Biased Bush administration energy whores? by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      Here is what it woudl take to supply the entire US energy needs.

      http://www.nmsea.org/Curriculum/7_12/The_Solar_R es ource.htm

  55. You have this backwards, or I am being trolled :) by Versix · · Score: 1

    If ice is less dense than water, a given amount of ice will take up more volume than the same amount of water. You describe the bottle-cracking effect of water expanding once it is frozen - consider what happens when ice melts.

  56. about models by pwarf · · Score: 1

    A slight correction: SOME current earth models. The current science for climate prediction models is pretty shaky.

    First of all, there are probably unidentified factors that need to be taken into account for any decent model. Second, weights for these variables are hard to assign, and there may be some unidentified feedback mechanisms, both positive and negative.

    The models are getting better, but it is an intrinsically very difficult problem, and there is insufficient data to thoroughly evaluate the model.

    Also, the rate of recent temperature rise is a subject of debate. "The problem essentially is that observed average global surface
    temperatures over the period 1979-1997 show an increase of approximately 0.2oC
    whereas downward micro-wave soundings from satellites reveal zero temperature
    change through the lower atmosphere or perhaps a slight decrease." http://www.apec.org.au/docs/tucker.pdf

  57. Re:You have this backwards, or I am being trolled by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

    10 percent of the volume of ice sits above the water level. What bit of that is hard to understand?

    If you don't believe that the water levels will rise try out the "melting ice in a glass" experiment I described. If that doesn't convince you then I don't know what will.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  58. This is not true. The rest of the story. by rufusdufus · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you follow the links provided in the parent post, you will find the rebuttal by the authros where they state:
    We did not ask for an Excel spreadsheet nor did we receive one.
    If you read the rest of their rebuttal, it becomes clear that Mann just made the excel error up! No really! Go read!

    1. Re:This is not true. The rest of the story. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy cow... I noticed Mann was a bit free with the ad hominem attacks in the rebuttal, but now that you point this out, it's really quite damning. Either he's really confused, or he's trying to cover his ass with a piece of cellophane.

      If I held any stock in Mann, Inc., I'd be on the phone with my broker right now.

    2. Re:This is not true. The rest of the story. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The gist of the rebuttal seems to be that, as far as MBH can tell, the MM paper removed several proxies (i.e. series of data, such as tree-ring widths used as proxies for temperature for years when such data doesn't exist) from the original MBH data. The MM data then showed extreme oscillations in global temp around 500 years ago that are much more muted in the MBH data.

      MBH picks various other more technical nits, such as it does not appear that MM attempted to vet their modified proxy set by comparing its indicated temps with actual temp data for years when such data exists.

    3. Re:This is not true. The rest of the story. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes -- note however those points are from the formal response by all three authors (MBH), which was issued sometime Nov 3, and has yet to be answered by MM.

      The earlier, informal rubuttal by Mann appears to be basically wrong, based on the email correspondence posted by MM. That exchange is what rufusdufus and MillionthMonkey were discussing.

      I myself have no idea what these "proxies" are. (Presumbly a way to provide a 'running calibration' for the various time series, similar to the distance ladder in astronomy?) I am disappointed that MBH did not choose to respond to most of MM's criticisms. However, the alleged use of an illegitimate procedure is an important point, and has the potential to explain the discrepancies observed.

      It will be interesting to see MM's response. Of course MM don't have to follow the same procedure as MBH's original paper. All that they have to show is that their procedure is equally justified.

      Probably there are now some independent groups working away at re-analysing the data. Their results will probably be what more or less settles the matter, at least for the mainstream scientific community.

  59. Re:Interesting paper [but how to check it out?] by waterbear · · Score: 1

    Why doesn't NOAA put all the data for public consumption so that anyone can see who is right and who is wrong?

    Well, it was said that the data have been online since 2000. The recent paper cites to here as a source for the original data. The original authors cite to a lot of data here. They also cite to a doubtful/dead link (http://holocene.evsc.virginia.edu/pub/MBH98/TREE/ ITRDB/NOAMER/), and a list of their papers is here.

    Personally I'm not sure how to make anything of the data, but I hope independent reviewers who can will weigh in on it .... ?!

  60. Re:You have this backwards, or I am being trolled by Versix · · Score: 1

    Your understanding of Archimedes' principle is flawed. Perhaps *you* should try your little experiment. If that sounds like too much work, try researching your claim a little.

  61. Bjorn Lombourg semi-vindicated? by briancnorton · · Score: 1

    "The Skeptical Environmentalist" raised a real $hitfit in the environmentalist community two or three years ago. Some of his chief points were a his perception of a complete disregard of statistical honesty used to calculate the treaty. Interesting (if long) read.

    --

    People who think they know everything really piss off those of us that actually do.

  62. What happened to the ice age? by Progman3K · · Score: 1

    In the 70s, scientists were saying that they had definite proof that the earth was heading back into another ice-age. What happened to it?

    --
    I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
    1. Re:What happened to the ice age? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      still got ice caps = still in an ice age

    2. Re:What happened to the ice age? by Progman3K · · Score: 1

      But the predictions were saying things like the climate would progressively cool, glaciers would grow and advance down into temperate regions.

      Instead glaciers are retreating.

      --
      I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
    3. Re:What happened to the ice age? by fluffy666 · · Score: 1

      First, show me the references. How many scientific papers were published predicting global cooling? Name one.

      Second, are you saying that Climatology as a science has not moved on, collected more data, used more advanced techniques and more powerful computers sonce the 1970s? This sounds a bit strange.

      Third, just because a theory was once accepted (it this case it never was, but let's pretend) in a field of science but was later rejected on new evidence, does that mean that every subsequent theory is equally invalid?

      Of course, you'll just ignore all this and say exactly the same thing next time the subject comes up. But I have to try and get something through.

    4. Re:What happened to the ice age? by Progman3K · · Score: 1

      fluffy,

      Do I have to find you the references? No.

      In the 70s, it WAS reported in the media often that scientists were predicting an ice-age. I am not lying.

      Also, I think you are mistaking my statements as dismissive of global-warming. Try a little balance.

      To go on with what I was saying -
      I am wondering what changed scientist's minds when they had rock-solid evidence a mere 20 or so years ago that we were going into an ice-age...

      Maybe the alarmist press just didn't bother publicizing scientist's retractions, because they just weren't exciting enough.

      Based on that, can we trust that global-warming is real?

      How much of your own global-warming fanaticism (see your previous post as an example) is shaped by the media?

      I've heard the ozone-hole above the pole has started to shrink... Wasn't that one of the indicators of global-warming?

      Instead of considering that the picture we have is incomplete at best, bleat on like other sheep instead of discussing rationaly, but don't mind me if I ignore it.

      --
      I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
    5. Re:What happened to the ice age? by fluffy666 · · Score: 1

      Do I have to find you the references? No.

      Yes, you do. You made the claim, you back it up. Simple as that. Now, I can back up my claim with fully referenced sites litke this. Can you?

      Also, I think you are mistaking my statements as dismissive of global-warming. Try a little balance.

      No, I am considering your statements as profoundly lazy; I get the impression that you believe anything that supports what you think you know and reject anything different without bothering to look into it.

      I am wondering what changed scientist's minds when they had rock-solid evidence a mere 20 or so years ago that we were going into an ice-age

      There was never any 'rock solid' evidence, it was never a consensus, and a couple of pop-science articles about a potential ice age appeared circa 1974, closer to 30 than 20 years ago. I'd suggest here for some more reading; you may still disagree, but at least you might be informed.

      Based on that, can we trust that global-warming is real?

      Because it is massively backed by several different avenues of scientific research (paleoclamatology, recent measurements, physics calculations, modelling, etc.).

      How much of your own global-warming fanaticism (see your previous post as an example) is shaped by the media?

      None. I'm a geoscientist and computer modeller by training. I regard most of the mainstream media's science, energy and environmental reporting as criminally underinformed, frequently outright wrong and almost invariably misleading.

      I've heard the ozone-hole above the pole has started to shrink... Wasn't that one of the indicators of global-warming?

      No.

      ..bleat on like other sheep..

      Wait a minute - you're the one mindlessly repeating the old '1970s ice age prediction. And then accusing me of being a fanatic when I point out just how wrong that statement is on so many levels.

  63. Environmentalist agenda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's my firm belief that much of the environmentalist agenda is about pushing socialism and not necessarily about protecting the environment. There's a lot more to the equation than manmade greenhouse gasses; volcanism, periodic cometery/asteroidal impacts, even variability of the Sun are all implicated in climate change.

  64. Manageable and unmanageable CO2 increase by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Increasing CO2 levels are only a problem if the increase is large enough to increase the temperature of the Earth

    Actually, on the scale of an ecosystem it's not much of a problem even then. It only becomes a real problem if the rise takes us into positive-feedback territory: for example, if rising temperatures drown forests faster than new ones can grow to replace them, so that the rate of CO2 increase accelerates without addditional input on our part. That would be severely bad since it would be very hard to stop.

    Most of the arguments warning against greenhouse effects do not forsee out-of-control scenarios, but only the lesser dangers of distorted weather patterns. Alas, any calamities that occur are likely to be suffered by the poorer communities of the planet alone, and our record on supporting them is underwhelming to say the least.

  65. The point of carbon credits by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

    "but the stupid thing is you can TRADE them"

    Um, I think the point being that this makes renewable energy a tradeable resource, even though you can't physically trade it due to power transmission limitations. Instead, you can replace your 'bad' energy with clean power, then sell the equivalent bad energy to the US (ahem, or someone else I guess) for money. Result: there is a real economic (as opposed to moral, ethical, logical and all those other types that don't matter) reason to invest heavily in renewable energy.

    The thing that is really sad is that we have the tech RIGHT NOW to use renewable energy. We could move to it in a couple of decades and never look back - and up there in the sky, and in the oceans, and in the wind, is an energy source that will never run out in a billion* years or so.

    The way I see it, it's a race between the carbon-based energy stocks and the planet's ability to survive - hopefully we will run out of coal and oil before we have actually managed to kill ourselves.

    *actual years may vary according to use

    --
    Read Pynchon.
  66. I am Canadian by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Want to try again? Besides, it was a joke, not a bash. Hockey is THE game up there and basically all my relitives are nuts about it.

  67. Paradoxically by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's counter-intuitive, but warmer temperatures can cause increased snowfall - the warmer air can carry more water, you see.

    1. Re:Paradoxically by Eivind · · Score: 3, Informative
      Perfectly true. This only illustrates the uncertanity around all this.

      Some people say the glaciers are melting is a sign of global warming. The person I responded to seemed to think that the briksdalen glacier being smaller now than in the 1800s is an example in this category.

      Then I point out that actually, the Briksdalen glacier is *growing* and has been for like 3 decades.

      And you come along tell me that warmer air can carry more moisture, thus more snow, thus the glaciers grow.

      So it would seem, if the glaciers grow, it's evidence for global warming. And if the glaciers shrink, it's also evidence for global warming.

      I hope you see the problem with this line of reasoning :-)

    2. Re:Paradoxically by beakburke · · Score: 1
      And you come along tell me that warmer air can carry more moisture, thus more snow, thus the glaciers grow. So it would seem, if the glaciers grow, it's evidence for global warming. And if the glaciers shrink, it's also evidence for global warming.

      Sounds like an arguement between labor economists about the shape of the labor supply curve. (elastic, highly inelastic, or backward bending.)

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    3. Re:Paradoxically by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's just that the effects of a warming global climate can differ between different places.

      As it happens, precipitation has a much greater effect on the advance or retreat of glaciers than temperature. Further, some places will warm up without increased precipitation, others may do the opposite, some may even cool down with increased precipitation, some may experience different seasonal weather patterns, etc.

      Finally, climate is a complex system and has complex feedbacks that might result in varying weather pattherns through time at a particular location. The important lesson is to look at climate data as a whole to interpret all its trends cohesively. Most climate scientists believe the preponderance of data supports the conclusion that climate change is taking place.

      Your simplistic retort does not characterize reality, nor the arguments of people with whom you disagree.

    4. Re:Paradoxically by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > I hope you see the problem with this line of reasoning :-)

      The problem lies not with the reasoning, but the reasoner. Take any given fact, then make a story so it matches close enough to what you have said before. Politics defined...

    5. Re:Paradoxically by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Local events are not representative of macro events. Not in the least.

  68. Typical of science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Item X has been proven true || good || to keep you alive.

    Item X actually is shown to be false || bad || kill you.

    Repeat cycle and rinse every several years.

  69. Aah don't worry... by Yogurtu · · Score: 1

    ...there isn't nearly enough oil left to do the damage. See dieoff.org

    1. Re:Aah don't worry... by fluffy666 · · Score: 1

      Of course, you realise that if we continue business as usual, we'll probably end up using coal-to-liquirds and gas processes, thus giving us both less net energy and higher GHG emissions all in one.

    2. Re:Aah don't worry... by Yartrebo · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but we might start seriously exploiting oil shale and peat, which have even lower net energy than coal (possibly negative for oil shale) and even higher carbon emissions. There is enough carbon out there to heat the earth an easy 10 degrees Centigrade if we burnt it all.

    3. Re:Aah don't worry... by Yogurtu · · Score: 1

      Precisely. I'm not telling you about this in order to continue business as usual. And coal isn't particularly renewable either, and biomass just doesn't yield enough energy to continue, even if we cover the planet in biomass-yielding crops. We have to start using energy rationally; even if it is -gasp- bad for the economy, our civilization will be in deep shit very soon if we don't cut back on wasting energy like we are now.

    4. Re:Aah don't worry... by Yogurtu · · Score: 1

      Sorry about the link: it's www.dieoff.org (well you *can* figure it out on your own, but anyway)

  70. The way grants are doled out by cluge · · Score: 1

    This points to one of the big problems in science. The method in which funding is aquired. If you produce a thesis that says "The sky is falling, but we can prevent it" you attract attention, and due to the potential acatstrophe that awaits man kind if we don't understand WHY the sky is falling, you get money. If you say "The sky looks like it's going through a natural cycle it won't fall" - you don't. The fact that a lot of the studies appear to have willfully ignroed data that didn't support their thesis is also equally as disturbing. Can you smell political agenda driven science here? See sig for final thought on the matter

    --
    "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
  71. Bullshit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Item X has been proven true || good || to keep you alive.

    Item X actually is shown to be false || bad || kill you.

    Repeat cycle and rinse every several years.


    And I'm STILL waiting for a study to prove potato chips are healthy!

  72. Re:You have this backwards, or I am being trolled by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 1

    As others have pointed out much better than I have, only part of the ice is floating in the seas and supported by displacement, much of the rest of it is supported by land. Where this is the case, there's no equivalent volume of water that's being replaced by an equivalent volume of melted ice.

    Sorry if I was too dense (no pun intended) to have made myself clearer. I've been up for almost 30 hours now and I won't be hitting the sack for at least another 10-12.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  73. But that's faulty reasoning by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because the same thing could be applied to anything that lacks proof, but would have a consequence if true. The oldest example I know of this kind of thing is Pascal's wager. It's an argument for the belief in god that goes like this:

    There is a 2x2 matrix, where you either believe or don't believe in god and he does or doesn't exist. You then fill in the boxes with values for benefit or penalty for the situations. Now what Pascal argued is that in the "does exist" column the values are infinite, positive for belief, negative for disbelief since teh reward and punishment are infinetly greater than anything in this world. So it doesn't matter what is in the "does not exist" column since it will be finite. Well, you don't want to risk it, so you should jsut believe in god.

    This is, of course, hugely problematic and easy to poke holes in. There are tons of other cases we could argue including that it ISN'T infinite in the "does exist" column, that god can tell between real and faked belief, that there is a different god, etc.

    Now the problem is applying that kind of "you can't risk it" logic to everything lets psuedo science get teh same creedence as real science, and in that, swindlers. Like suppose I come to you with a bunch of graphs n' numbers n' daigrams and stuff. I tell you that this is data on my new drug that can cure all forms of cancer. All I need is $10 million to develop it. You look over my data and realise that it in no way justifies my claim. My response? "Yes, but can you really risk it? I mean what if my data IS right and I CAN make the drug? Can you risk on missing out on that oppertunity, not to mention depriving society of that benifit?" If you find that compelling, well then I have some graphs n' numbers n' daigrams to show you...

    Basically, before comitting to something as a fact, and making large changes becaues of it, it needs to pass scientific (strong inference) muster. Otherwise, we get into a really bad situation.

    1. Re:But that's faulty reasoning by dfeist · · Score: 1

      I strongly support what you say about Pascal and why this is no justification.

      But don't say that there is no evidence for a climate change because of the greenhouse effect. Facts are that the climate effect does exist (no one with basic understanding of the subject can deny this) and that CO2 does increase the effect. What is not yet clear is if that is the major effect explaining the temperature increase in the last century. But that's a fact, too, and it is highly probable that the greenhouse effect has lead to it - and, after all, we cannot yet say if MBH98 was wrong - after all, there are still discussing, and even if they seem to have made mistakes concerning the raw data they supplied, that does not mean it can't be cleared out (but I'm open for discussion, if it comes out they made it up I'm going to accept that)

      --
      Unix makes easy tasks hard and hard tasks possible. Windows makes easy tasks easy and hard tasks $29.95.
    2. Re:But that's faulty reasoning by xxTYBALTxx · · Score: 1

      But...but...the whole point of this conversation, indeed the original parent article at hand, suggests that no, greenhouse gasses do not cause global warming...

    3. Re:But that's faulty reasoning by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      Exactly right. We can't go off half-cocked because of some fringe allegations.

      On the other hand, it would be nice if, on questions of substance like this one, people got their information from scientists, rather than the political press.

      In the present case, the place to go is not some loony newspaper reporting on some fringe journal. The place to go is to the relevant professional community .

      --
      mt
    4. Re:But that's faulty reasoning by dfeist · · Score: 1

      No. That's wrong! It only says that it is possible that some study has been made up.

      Yeah, continue to deny the greenhouse effect, it's only a few years from now that no one can really deny it anymore because of the evidence everyone can see. I mean, at least it is currently warming up, and the greenhouse gasses are increasing - that's already strong evidence, and there has not been found any other explanation (and, BTW, solar activity causes the sun radiation to be less intense, so that is not an explanation).

      --
      Unix makes easy tasks hard and hard tasks possible. Windows makes easy tasks easy and hard tasks $29.95.
  74. Government and politicians don't care, ever by Morgaine · · Score: 1

    I don't understand how somebody can care so little about the environment.

    LOL, if you think that government and politicians care about anything at all except themselves then you haven't been around much.

    A few politicians do start off as idealists, but it rarely lasts long, and it never lasts beyond the point where they acquire political office. You see, it can't last beyond that, because the first-world political environment is one where only hyenas thrive. A dove will only survive by circling high out of reach, but inevitably, without any effect whatsoever on the politics of government.

    My advice to the environmentalists (or indeed to any faction without major $$$ lobbying power) is not to waste time on government and politics, and to put your resources into changing the world directly through your own actions. One tree planted by yourself is vastly more than you'll ever get your president or prime minister to do for your planet.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  75. historical climate data is irrelevant by penguin7of9 · · Score: 1

    Historical climate data is pretty much irrelevant to the question of whether we can safely emit greenhouse gasses. Emission of greenhouse gasses would be unsafe even if we were currently heading into a new ice age. Its lack of safety doesn't derive from historical data or complex climate modeling, but is a consequence of elementary thermodynamics: if you keep pumping those gasses into the atmosphere, sooner or later you are going to get large climate changes. The only thing that people are still debating is whether it's already happening or whether it's going to happen a few decades from now.

    Kyoto may or may not have been justified to the public using historical climate records, but that doesn't matter. Kyoto is a meaningless band-aid anyway.

    Why supposedly intelligent people keep being so hostile towards what is pretty much the consensus opinion of climatologists is beyond me. There seems to be some irrationally libertarian world view going around that basically states "apres nous le deluge", in this case, quite literally, a world view that was as self-descructive during Louis XIV's reign as it is today. And what is beyond me, too, is that people who want to engage in absolutely unprecendent experiments with our global climate and health call themselves "conservatives"--maybe they are just talking about their power and bank accounts when they are talking about being "conservative".

  76. French Power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    >Except where do you think we'll get the Hydrogen for our vehicles except (DUN DUN DUN) fossil fuels!
    Why, we would simply catch all the French, plug them in, use them as batteries and get free power. And then we would call it Battrix Uploaded.

    >Kudos on drinking fuel cell exhaust to spite the French. Any spiting of the French is a good thing.
    We will do better than that, a lot better...

  77. Spot the hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And then all of you got in your -cars- and drove home. ;-)

    The solution is simple. Who pollutes? We do. How to stop pollution? You -stop- polluting and support companies which produce non-polluting products. Or demand that existing companies 'clean' up their act. The -key- is respect and selflessness- for the planet and those around you.

    Now, this won't take care of the total problem, but -if- everyone simply did the above, it would go a -long- way in cleaning up the environment.

    Less excuses and more action! :-)

  78. Re:Biased trolls? by Thomas+Miconi · · Score: 1

    Noooooo - btw I really think we should restore death penalty for abortion, homosexuality and blasphemy.

    Thomas Miconi

  79. You are making a common error by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In assuming that a correlation implies a causation. It doesn't. There is no argument that temperatures have been rising in recorded history (a short period actually) nor is there an argument that human output of CO2 has risen since the IR. However that those two happened together does not mean that one caused the other, that is a seperate issue.

    Finding causation is much harder than finding a correlation since all sorts of things are correlated (and it's simply to measure) but the causal link can be much more complex.

    For example:

    You can get the causal link the wrong way. There is a positive correlation between weight and height. There's aslo a causal link. However if you say that increasing weight will increase height, you've got teh direction of the link wrong.

    There can be an outside factor. There is a positive correlation in the United States between being white and scoring well on standardised tests. However if you say that being white CAUSES you to score well on tests, you'd be wrong. The real cause is much more complex and has to do with general trends in educational and economic background.

    Then there are just things that are incidental. For awhile, there was a positive correlation between one of my friends attending football games and the team winning. Every game he attended, they won, the couple he missed, they lost. Well of course he didn't cause them to win, nor did their loosing cause him not to attend, it was just random luck.

    So, just because we have found a positive correlation between an increase in temperature and an increase in CO2 does NOT mean we've found a causal link.

    1. Re:You are making a common error by Alomex · · Score: 1

      There is no argument that temperatures have been rising in recorded history (a short period actually)

      Actually, even on this there was an argument until very recently, as the trend in the data is very faint. Only in the last five years or so have we accumulated enough data to positively assert an increase of temperature in the 0.5-5 degree Celsius over the last 150 years (yes, the range is that large, because natural variation hide trend).

    2. Re:You are making a common error by 2marcus · · Score: 1


      And do you seriously think that climate change researchers have been basing all of their assumptions just on a correlation between temperature change and CO2 rise?

      Start back at Tyndall in the 19th century who recognized the IR absorbing properties of CO2, and Svante Arrhenius at the turn of the century who asked whether CO2 emissions might lead to a warming earth, and you will see that the theory of global warming started long before there was any correlation to observe.

      An increase of CO2 in the atmosphere will, in the absence of other factors, lead to warming. That is incontrovertible. The questions then become: how much warming? What other factors might change the climate (natural variability, aerosol cooling, etc)? What are the feedbacks involved? Can we come closer to answers to the above questions by looking at the historical record (This is where the accuracy of the Mann study becomes important)? How good are our models?

      And then we might go on to ask, how much should we invest in reducing greenhouse gas emissions today, given our uncertainty in how much damage they will cause tomorrow? The answer may not be "Kyoto Protocol", but it seems rather unlikely that the answer is "do nothing"...

      -Marcus

    3. Re:You are making a common error by Mac+Scientist · · Score: 1
      Then there are just things that are incidental. For awhile, there was a positive correlation between one of my friends attending football games and the team winning. Every game he attended, they won, the couple he missed, they lost. Well of course he didn't cause them to win, nor did their loosing cause him not to attend, it was just random luck.

      Then again, if the team loses everytime the star quarterback fails to play, you can bet there's a direct, causal correlation. Since we understand the physics of CO2 gas and the greenhouse effect, it becomes reasonable to assume one causes the other.

      Yes, it is hard to prove with 100% assurance that a correlation implies causation in some things. That's what control subjects in experiments are for. Problem with global warming, there isn't an easy cure if the placebo of doing nothing goes on too long, and the assumptions are proven correct!

    4. Re:You are making a common error by garver · · Score: 1

      My favorite example is: Democracy causes cancer. Cancer rates are much higher in democratic countries, therefore democracy causes cancer. QED.

      As a friend of mine is fond of saying: There are lies, damned lies, and statistics.

    5. Re:You are making a common error by RedWizzard · · Score: 1
      In assuming that a correlation implies a causation. It doesn't. There is no argument that temperatures have been rising in recorded history (a short period actually) nor is there an argument that human output of CO2 has risen since the IR. However that those two happened together does not mean that one caused the other, that is a seperate issue.
      You're right that it is not yet clear if the increase in tempteratures seen so far is caused by our increased CO2 emissions, but the mechanism is undisputed: increased CO2 concentration in the atmosphere will cause higher temperatures, all other things being equal.
    6. Re:You are making a common error by BenV666 · · Score: 1
      one of my friends attending football games and the team winning. Every game he attended, they won, the couple he missed, they lost. Well of course he didn't cause them to win, nor did their loosing cause him not to attend, it was just random luck.

      By any chance, he wasn't on the team, was he? ;)
    7. Re:You are making a common error by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      Actually it is quite clear that some of the warming is anthropogenic, and that all of it is anthropogenic is not excluded by the evidence. Often forgotten is that the natural background trend of the past 5,000 years was a gradual cooling, so in a sense over 100% of the observed temperature change may be a warming effect.

      The current accelerated warming is comfortably in the range predicted 15 years ago when physics-based climate models first became plausible and is quite outside the range of the null hypothesis.

      --
      mt
  80. What most people fail to consider in these debates by Illserve · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Is that by bottling up the sub industrial nations with environmental regulations, and thereby slowing their advance through the industrial stages, we may be making the problem worse in the long run.

    The best way to get people to care about the environment is to get them beyond the point of having to worry about food, clothing and shelter. People worried about their next meal really could care less about pollution.

    Kyoto and similar measures threaten to force sub-industrial nations to submit to burdensome restrictions that will make it harder for them to blossom into a wealthier economy.

    Furthermore, it's grossly unfair to prolong the poverty of such nations by dictating how they can and can't develop so that we can sleep easier at night.

    Remember, we didn't have any such restrictions when we went through this stage.

  81. Re:Biased trolls? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would like to add that Windows rocks and all slashdot users are overweight computer geeks with no friends

  82. time by cheezus · · Score: 2, Funny

    Posted by Hemos on Wednesday November 05, @04:20AM

    So this is what Hemos was doing while hitting his first joint of the day?

    --
    /bin/fortune | slashdotsig.sh
  83. Money can be printed ... by nniillss · · Score: 1

    a healthy ecosystem cannot. Preserving our only earth does not have an intrinsic cost. It's only a question of priorities if every familily needs their third SUV or if the money is spent on projects like cutting down on air pollution or cleaning poisened rivers. In both cases, workers get their salaries and nobody has to starve. In fact, usually a larger portion of cost seems to be associated with personnel for ecological projects than either for consumer products or fuel.

  84. Bias is a two way street: by gowen · · Score: 4, Informative

    Please note that the editor of "E&E" is one of the few environmental scientists who agreed with Bjorn Lomborg "Skeptical Environmentalist", and a self-confessed environmental sceptic. As stated there, the journal itself has a "stance [that] is critical of conventional wisdom".

    Now, I don't read E&E (I tend to read the mainstream geophysics journals: GAFD, JGR(Oceans) and GRL -- "E&E" is not a mainstream geophysics journal), but I am slightly concerned about work published in a journal with an agenda. One may also be concerned about the suitability of referees selected by an editor out to prove a point, rather than to publicise good science.

    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    1. Re:Bias is a two way street: by gowen · · Score: 2, Interesting
      And here's an interesting quote from the editor:
      "I'm following my political agenda -- a bit, anyway. But isn't that the right of the editor?"
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    2. Re:Bias is a two way street: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "a self confessed environmental sceptic"

      Bjorn Lomborg is a former Greenpeace activist and a first-rate statistician, you might add. He is not some gadfly "skeptic" but rather published a phenomenal work that your "mainstream" journals could not and did not rebut based on fact or logic but based largely on smears and innuendo. That you might suggest that "mainstream" journals are without an agenda is utterly laughable. The vast majority drink Kyoto Koolaid and sport a far-left-wing agenda which seeks nothing less than the dismantling of capitalism throughout the world.

    3. Re:Bias is a two way street: by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Good scientists are skeptical. That's what makes them good scientists.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    4. Re:Bias is a two way street: by gowen · · Score: 1
      Bjorn Lomborg is a former Greenpeace activist
      The sentence you quote is not about Bjorn Lomborg.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    5. Re:Bias is a two way street: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, but the post I replied to referred to Lomborg as a skeptic in a pejorative sense, not in the technical sense --- loosely referring to Lomborg as an "environmental skeptic" lumps him in with the anti-conservation/pro-business lobby when in fact that's not his point at all. Fact of the matter is that Lomborg has shaken the "environmental industry" to its roots with his book -- his work is exhaustive and damning of the pro-Kyoto lobby and simply dismissing Lomborg or those who side with him as "having an agenda" (and implying that the journals who disagree with him are somehow not biased!) is cheap and misleading.

    6. Re:Bias is a two way street: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But when used in this context, they don't really mean "skeptical", they mean iconoclastic. Too often, they don't just doubt the received wisdom, they refute it outright, a then look for data to back up their refutations.

    7. Re:Bias is a two way street: by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Hmm. If that's what they meant, maybe that's what they should have said.

      Many environmentalists use the exact same tactic; decide upon a course of action, then gin up some plausible reason that everybody should shut up and do it their way, and anybody who says different wants to rape Mother Earth. (Freon is a perfect example)

      There's plenty of bad science on both sides. That's why I'm, well, skeptical.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    8. Re:Bias is a two way street: by Tailhook · · Score: 1

      I am slightly concerned about work published in a journal with an agenda

      As opposed to what? Work funded by government grants and published by academia? Pure as the wind driven snow...

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    9. Re:Bias is a two way street: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you completely unaware of the difference between sources of funding for work, and the journals that publish the work? Funding bodies may well have agendas of their own, journals shouldn't.

  85. I think the word is "BZZZZT"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Global sea levels are rising, and you only have to look at the situation in Tuvalu in the Pacific or Venice, Italy to see that the threat of rising tides isn't a myth."

    Venice has been sinking since before the industrial revolution. Please re-read the site you reference (www.veniceinperil.org):

    "There has been a rise in relative sea level of about nine inches (23cms) since 1900, partly due to subsidence, partly due to a rise in the water level of the lagoon."

    Two points about this sentence: (1) "relative" sea level, which means how far street level sits above the tide mark, and is not related to the absolute sea level, because (2) a lagoon is a body of brackish water which at times may be isolated from the sea (silt build-up for example), when it is entirely possible that the level of water in the lagoon is higher than the nearby sea. So no evidence of global warming here, I'm afraid, just poor civic planning centuries ago.

    Now, I'm not disputing the record tide levels around the Pacific (in fact, I happen to know people from affected countries like Kiribati; if you want to help contact Oxfam); however, if you don't want to be labelled a "half-baked doom monger" then please cite examples that actually support your case, otherwise you are just as guilty of using smoke and mirrors as those you criticise, and it leaves you open to accusations of...(drum roll, please)...Lack of Objectivity!

    "Smoke and mirrors", BTW, includes specious or unrelated arguments: to counter your meteor quip with some logic, there are fewer than 10 people worldwide watching for a single event that could destroy everything, but there are already hundreds of thousands of experts arguing whether global warming even exists; I think we could safely triple, or even quadruple the resources going into asteroid observation without it grossly affecting environmental research. I'm glad that you can find it funny when people call for fuding for fundamental science while pointing out the errors in your own research (thought I can't see how the two are related, since I suspect you aren't responsible for any fundamental science); most environmentalists I know have no sense of humour, and cetainly lack that ability to laugh at themselves.

    You are correct to urge people to question the objectivity of research; they should equally question the objectivity of the environmental lobby. Both sides lie; both sides use evidence selectively (your post is a case in point of the latter); both sides belittle or insult not just each other but anyone who dares question their logic or authority on the issue (another case in point); and, most importantly, both sides stand to profit. Profit isn't just money (although I haven't seen David Suzuki in an unemployment line recently...), it's political influence, personal recognition or infamy, for some simply the excuse to be holier-than-thou or a matyr, others a chance to piss off their parents or round out the curriculum vitae. Money is not the only source of motivation in the world, and it holds no monopoly on evil.

    To conclude: if you are going to accuse others of lacking ethics or scientific rigour then you should be damned sure you are not guilty of the same.

  86. Re:You have this backwards, or I am being trolled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you even know the difference between Arctic and Antarctic?

    But do please continue on with your desperate clinging to a bogus idea, even after being proven 100% wrong. It's entertaining.

  87. Americans should keep polluting... by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1

    Because I'd like Canada to be tropical so I can wear shorts year round when I move there.

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
  88. Peer Review by pigah · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This journal does not say it is peer-reviewed. Hmm, with that many data sets and obscure methods, can we trust it?

  89. Nope, gettin' warmer in Sweden too by DamnYankee · · Score: 1

    Actually 7 of the 10 last Summers have been the warmest on record ever in Sweden. My first Summer here was 1995 when temps were 85-90 from June through September. 1994 was even hotter according to friends. The last two years Summer weather has come in March and April and lasted until late September (unheard of for Sweden pre-1995!!)

    Also Stockholm no longer gets deep snow like it used to. In a somewhat funny side-effect of global warming, the Stockholm town government cancelled all the old contracts for Winter snow removal a few years ago. When it did snow for two weeks last Winter, there was no one to remove it. It piled up for days causing chaos until they could arrange emergency removal.

    -Damn Yankee

    --

    Life is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
    William Shakespeare

  90. The actual figures, if you care by caitsith01 · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Except that China and India are the big polluters of the day."

    Check out:
    http://www.ioe.ucla.edu/publications/report0 1/Gree nhouse/Fig1P19.gif

    Compare the population one with the energy use one, and the per capita one. The US is EASILY the biggest per capita AND net user of energy.

    If you prefer a measure of straight pollution to energy use, try:
    http://yosemite.epa.gov/oar/globalwarming.ns f/cont ent/emissionsindividual.html
    http://yosemite.epa. gov/oar/globalwarming.nsf/cont ent/EmissionsInternational.html

    USA totally dominates others in pretty much all respects. Try basing your posts on actual math next time.

    --
    Read Pynchon.
    1. Re:The actual figures, if you care by lobsterGun · · Score: 3, Informative

      That data is five years old. Do you have links to any more recent data?

    2. Re:The actual figures, if you care by caitsith01 · · Score: 0

      www.google.com

      Find it yourself, I'm not a research assistant. Off the top of my head, the US still leads by miles on per capita and total greenhouse pollution production.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    3. Re:The actual figures, if you care by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      How about pollution per per capita GNP? Yes, we might consume more energy and/or pollute more than others but we also are the most productive economy on the face of the earth. It takes more to make more. That's a more accurate number.

      Last I checked (and it has been awhile), the U.S. wasn't the worst polluter when the per capita GNP metric was used. And it's the only fair metric to use.

    4. Re:The actual figures, if you care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the only fair metric to use if you think it is totally justified for the US to produce and consume more than anyone else whilst raping the planet senseless. Which, I think you will find, most non-US citizens do not.

    5. Re:The actual figures, if you care by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      My dear Anonymous Coward...

      If a bum on the street that produces 100 units of wealth for the economy sits around and burns a fire every night that produces 100 units of pollution while I make widgets that the economy finds useful and thus produce 10,000 units of wealth for the economy and produce 500 uinits of pollution, is it a crime that I produce 5 times as much pollution? With 5 times as much pollution I'm producing 100 times as much wealth for the economy.

      It's called efficiency and it IS desirable. And I think you'll find most people on the planet agree, even non-US citizens. Only those that are intent on US-bashing will close their eyes to this reality.

    6. Re:The actual figures, if you care by York+the+Mysterious · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So are you saying that if you produce 10 million gallons of say PVC (this is based off a real situation here) and in doing so you kill several hundred workers, irreversible the water supply of a town, cause irreversible health effects for the town and the majority of your workers, etc etc then that's ok since the bum probably burned some plastic in his steel drum? I understand efficiency, but efficiency isn't an excuse to cause environmental damage. I breath the air and I breath the water. This is mine too and you don't have the right to mess it up for me. In economic terms it's called externalizing costs. Pollute to make money and wait for the public to pay the health and environmental costs. It must be accepted that pollution to some extent is unavoidable, but using the excuse of efficiency to allow unlimited pollution or to justify ridiculously high levels is unacceptable. There are ways for companies to continue to be profitable while reducing their pollution significantly. They just have to try and of course pay. There just aren't many companies out there that see that as an important investment.

      --

      Tim Smith - Ramblings from Nerd Land
    7. Re:The actual figures, if you care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I understand efficiency, but efficiency isn't an excuse to cause environmental damage. I breath[e] the air and I breath[e] the water."

      What are you, an amphibious systems analyst?

    8. Re:The actual figures, if you care by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      So are you saying that if you produce 10 million gallons of say PVC (this is based off a real situation here) and in doing so you kill several hundred workers, irreversible the water supply of a town, cause irreversible health effects for the town and the majority of your workers, etc etc then that's ok since the bum probably burned some plastic in his steel drum?

      No, but I'm saying that if the same operation in another country produces 5 millions gallons of PVC and kills off half as many workers as I do but in the process only produces 30% as much production then the world would be better served by me doing it than my competitor since when the amount of production is considered my efficiency--both in pollutants and employees killed--is much more desirable.

      I understand efficiency, but efficiency isn't an excuse to cause environmental damage.

      Sure it is, to an extent. We ALL cause environmental damage. The question is how much is acceptable for a given contribution to the world economy. In your above example, the world would come out ahead and with less pollution if I simply increased my production by 30% and my competitor went out of business. Yes, they are producing less pollution but are producing even less widgets.

      This is mine too and you don't have the right to mess it up for me.

      As I said, we weren't really discussing that aspect of pollution. We were discussing the fact that the US isn't the worst polluter when you consider how much wealth we product for the world economy compared to how much pollution.

      It must be accepted that pollution to some extent is unavoidable, but using the excuse of efficiency to allow unlimited pollution or to justify ridiculously high levels is unacceptable.

      I'm not using it as an excuse, I'm using it as a metric to measure whether or not we (US) is producing "rediculously high levels" of pollution.

      Example, if Nicaragua produces 1000 units of pollution and China produces 2000 units of pollution, who is the worse polluter? China because it pollutes more? Of course not, because its population is about 250 times as large but the pollution is only twice as large.

      Now lets consider two countries of identical population. Country A produces 2000 units of wealth for the world economy and 1000 units of pollution while Country B produces 10,000 units of wealth for the world economy and produces 2000 units of pollution. Is Country B the worse polluter? No... Because even though it produces twice as much pollution it's producing 5 times as much wealth. What should be done? Country A should improve its processes so it can be as efficient as Country B.

      There are ways for companies to continue to be profitable while reducing their pollution significantly. They just have to try and of course pay. There just aren't many companies out there that see that as an important investment.

      I think it really depends on what "pollutants" we are talking about and what kind of decrease in pollutants. Would I want to double my electric bill so we can reduce human CO2 production by 20%? No. I'm not even convinced CO2 should be considered a pollutant and even if it is it seems like a 20% decrease isn't worth a 50% increase in cost.

      If we're talking about lead or some other *poison*, or we're talking about not filling rivers with raw sewage, etc. then I'll be more willing to pay to keep it clean.

    9. Re:The actual figures, if you care by cluge · · Score: 3, Informative

      BTW the original debate was about the apparent fact that the original author of a study that showed global warming as a serious problem was wrong. In essence someone got their math wrong by accident, or perhaps ignored certain data to further their point (ie get funding for more research).

      USA totally dominates others in pretty much all respects. Try basing your posts on actual math next time.

      Actually, if the truth be told Indonesia has the largest per capita greenhouse emmision of any country (1997-2001). Yet the have a very low per capita energy use. Energy use doesn't necessarily mean greenhouse gas emitter - while the two ar related they are not inexorably tied. For example: Google (your favorite accurate research tool *cough*) France and her Nuclear power and compare it to Saudi Arabia.

      It seems that natural occurences can still produce way more greenhouse gas than the little ole US can. Below is a select quote from new scientist. BTW, last I checked those peat bogs were still burning.

      From New Scientist:
      " ... Now a team of scientists from Britain, Germany and Indonesia has reported that as Indonesia's forests burned in 1997, the smouldering peat beneath released as much as 2.6 billion tonnes of carbon into the air.

      That is equivalent to 40 percent of the global emissions from burning fossil fuels that year, and was the prime cause of the biggest annual increase in atmospheric CO2 levels since records began more than 40 years ago."

      cluge

      --
      "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
    10. Re:The actual figures, if you care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tried to get through to your examples, but all 3 links were dead.

      Do they include adjustments for GDP? The US produces 66% of the worlds products, even though we are a small percentage of world population. I'd like to see how other countries compare.

      We produce twice as much in terms of goods as the rest of the entire world combines. Do we produce twice as much polution as the entire rest of the world combined?

    11. Re:The actual figures, if you care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does GDP have to do with anything? Just because you produce more doesn't mean you are allowed to pollute more, what kind of twisted logic is that?

      I don't care that the U.S. produces more per capita (a fact that will inevitably not be true in 100 years). Does a rich man have the right to smoke in a restaurant because he is rich?

      Do you realize why the world hates your guts?

    12. Re:The actual figures, if you care by jarran · · Score: 1

      This is a great solution if you want to maintain the status quo. The problem is, sone of us want to move towards a world where there is less of a huge discrepancy between the quality of life of people in rich and poor countries.

      Under that argument, it seems logical that those who are most able to pay pay most. To people in the developing world, being able to pollute might well be the difference between life and death. To people in developed world, being able to pollute makes very little difference to our quality of life. I live in a rich country, and I'd be more than happy for our economy to grow a bit slower because we had to make larger cuts in pollution, if that meant some people in the developing world could lift themselves out of abject poverty.

      Creating a system where countries can pollute according to how much "stuff" they produce is overlooking the fact that some people are dieing because they don't have enough stuff, whereas some people already have more than enough.

    13. Re:The actual figures, if you care by argStyopa · · Score: 2

      "Except that China and India are the big polluters of the day."

      "Try basing your posts on actual math next time"

      OK, the initial poster was incorrect in saying that China and India are CURRENTLY the big polluters. But you are using a little sleight of hand here, too. The point is NOT that the Chinese and Indians are the biggest polluters NOW, it's that when they reach a per-capita GDP productivity of the US (or even in the same order of magnitude) their emissions will be off the scale. To exempt them from the Kyoto protocols is utter shortsightedness, MAINLY due to political correctness.

      Oh, and by the way, do you think they'd have AGREED to the protocol if they weren't exempted? Tell you what, you exempt the US, and I bet the US will agree to it too. Duh.

      --
      -Styopa
    14. Re:The actual figures, if you care by beakburke · · Score: 1
      It's the only fair metric to use if you think it is totally justified for the US to produce and consume more than anyone else whilst raping the planet senseless. Which, I think you will find, most non-US citizens do not.

      Well what metric would you prefer we use then? per capita discriminates against countries that have already traded higher population growth (or any growth at all) for a higher standard of living. Its not that they are using so much more, but their (relative) population is lower. No matter what you pick as a metric, you can argue about its percieved fairness.

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    15. Re:The actual figures, if you care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then why don't you go live there. Pack up your wealth and take it to the people. Otherwise your only a hypocrit.

    16. Re:The actual figures, if you care by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      To people in the developing world, being able to pollute might well be the difference between life and death. To people in developed world, being able to pollute makes very little difference to our quality of life.

      If it's wrong, it's wrong. Applying two different standards based on "need" to what affects everyone globally is wrong. That's the main reason why the U.S. Senate voted 99-0 against Kyoto back in, what, 1999?

      I live in a rich country, and I'd be more than happy for our economy to grow a bit slower because we had to make larger cuts in pollution, if that meant some people in the developing world could lift themselves out of abject poverty.

      Uhm... then donate some of your money to the cause. But instituting CO2 limits on American companies isn't going to raise anyone in the developing world out of poverty. It's just going to reduce OUR standard of living. We may decrease our pollution a bit, but those in the developing countries will more than make up for it. Plus companies in developed countries will just move high-polluting industries to developing countries which will 1) Cause more pollution in those countries that already are in bad shape. 2) Cause domestic jobs to be moved overseas where the workers will probably be significantly underpayed. 3) Result in no net decrease in global pollution.

      Creating a system where countries can pollute according to how much "stuff" they produce is overlooking the fact that some people are dieing because they don't have enough stuff, whereas some people already have more than enough.

      So who gets to decide who has enough stuff? Suggesting that some people have too much and others have too little is essentially communism. I don't mean that as an insult to you, but communism doesn't work and is not the economic system that we employ in most of the world.

    17. Re:The actual figures, if you care by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and underground coal fires are the very devil to put out! There was one in Pennsylvania that burned for years, and swallowed some towns whole. I think it eventually ran out of fuel rather than being extinguished by people.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    18. Re:The actual figures, if you care by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      So basically your argument is that you want to be rich at any cost to the environment, and you can't understand any connection between your wealth and others poverty, or your wealth and others environmental concerns?

      This attitude wouldn't worry me so much if we could just build a big bubble over the USA and let you wallow in your own crapulence until you asphyxiate, but unfortunately this is not currently the situation.

      You have, what, 1/24th the world population and you use 25% the world's energy. And all those goods are not flowing to other countries, either, they are mostly going to be used by you at home. I don't really give a damn about your personal comfort, it's still inequitable.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    19. Re:The actual figures, if you care by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      So basically your argument is that you want to be rich at any cost to the environment, and you can't understand any connection between your wealth and others poverty, or your wealth and others environmental concerns?

      You misstate my argument.

      My argument is that if the environment is as deadly critical as environmentalists suggest then the same rules should apply to all. Just as being poor isn't an excuse to accept a thousand bucks to kill someone, nor is being poor an excuse to pollute the world--IF we are to believe the environmentalists that the threat of our pollution is so grave. Plus most of the pollution in developing countries isn't from poor people--it's from the factories of the rich and/or factories that belong to companies based in developed countries. By exempting pollution controls in developing countries you are giving a handout to the rich in those countries or the rich in developed countries at the expense of even worse health for the poor in those developing countries.

      More likely than not the threat is NOT that grave. In that case I resent the environment being used as an excuse to justify worldwide wealth redistribution. If they want handouts for the poor they should say so and let us debate that on the economic or ethical merits.

      You have, what, 1/24th the world population and you use 25% the world's energy.

      The GWP (Gross World Product) was 45.9 trillion in 2001. The US GDP was 10.4 trillion in 2002 (sorry for the one year difference in stats). So the US generates 22.7% of the world's wealth. And the U.S. produces 23.3% of CO2. Are you seeing the similarity? 22.7% of the wealth and 23.3% of the CO2. We produce an amount of CO2 proportional to what we contribute to the world economy.

      Further, the U.S. growth in CO2 production was 9.9% from 1990 through 1996. In the same period, China grew by 40%, India grew by 47.7%, and South Korea by 69.2%. Is it of no concern to you that the two most populous countries in the world are increasing their CO2 production at the rate of over 40% per year?

      And all those goods are not flowing to other countries, either, they are mostly going to be used by you at home.

      Irrelevant. Wealth is wealth. Even if most products are consumed at home the wealth enters the U.S. banking system and the effects are worldwide. If U.S. wealth goes down by 50% believe me everyone in the world will feel the pinch big time.

      I don't really give a damn about your personal comfort, it's still inequitable.

      Bingo! So we're talking about what is fair and wealth redistribution. Then let's make that the topic and stop making the environment a scape-goat to achieve economic rather than environmental goals.

    20. Re:The actual figures, if you care by knobmaker · · Score: 1
      Suggesting that some people have too much and others have too little is essentially communism.

      No, it's reality. Communism is suggesting that because some have too much and some have too little, the state should steal from the former and give to the latter.

      The thing that you need to grasp is that those who have too little can get their hands on guns or other weapons and make their displeasure evident, in the form of killing those who have too much. Therefore, it is in the self-interest of those who have too much to figure out how to help everyone get enough. It's called self-preservation, not philanthropy. A starving man with a gun is a scary thing.

    21. Re:The actual figures, if you care by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And do you know why the forest burns? Land clearing, often to create pastures for cattle etc. There are some stupid greenies that think its only cars/electricity, but any of the thinkers know that land clearing is a HUGE problem. Australia, for example, could meet it's kyoto target simply by ending land clearing in QLD.

    22. Re:The actual figures, if you care by penguin7of9 · · Score: 2, Informative

      " ... Now a team of scientists from Britain, Germany and Indonesia has reported that as Indonesia's forests burned in 1997, the smouldering peat beneath released as much as 2.6 billion tonnes of carbon into the air.

      That is equivalent to 40 percent of the global emissions from burning fossil fuels that year, and was the prime cause of the biggest annual increase in atmospheric CO2 levels since records began more than 40 years ago."


      And what is your point exactly? That because we already get lots of CO2 emissions one way, it's OK to dump even more into the air? Some people do their financial management that way, too: "well, we've already spent $21k on a new car, why not spend another $5k on a vacation, what harm can it do". They often end up bankrupt.

      Besides, CO2 released from forest fires is obviously self-limiting and non-fossil: those peat bogs won't be able to burn again until the forest has recaptured the carbon from the atmosphere.

      But fossil fuels represent a huge amount of stored carbon, possibly many times of what all organic material on land current contains. And that carbon has not been present in the atmosphere for a long time (if ever).

    23. Re:The actual figures, if you care by jarran · · Score: 1

      Applying two different standards based on "need" to what affects everyone globally is wrong.

      Why? I can see no reason why this is true. If country A wants to produce CO2 to feed it's starving people, and country B wants to produce CO2 to make luxory goods, it seems fairly obvious that need should be taken into account, and that it would in fact be morally wrong to ignore this need.

      Besides which, a system of allowing pollution emmisions to scale with economic growth is still linking pollution to need, just in the wrong direction - countries with the least need are allowed to pollute most, and the most needy countries are allowed to pollute least!

      So who gets to decide who has enough stuff?

      Is that really an intractable problem? Countries where people are dieing of starvation and easily preventable diseases, where people very poor. are countries which don't have enough. Countries where starvation is very rare, where healthcare is very good and people are relatively rich, are countries which have enough.

      If you really want to boil it down to number we could use GDP per capita. I would expect that the countries with the lowest GDP pc are the same countries where people are dieing because they are extremely poor, whereas the countries with very high GDP per capita are the countries where a slowdown in growth would affect peoples actual quality of life very little.

      Suggesting that some people have too much and others have too little is essentially communism. I don't mean that as an insult to you, but communism doesn't work and is not the economic system that we employ in most of the world.

      That's OK, I'm not insulted. The people of Bangledesh have too little. The people of America, by comparison, have enough. If that makes me a Communist, so be it.

      BTW, I don't know about the rest of the world where you say it failed, but Communism seems to be working very well for us here in Britain. We have had a system for many years whereby we decide who has enough and who doesn't, and we transfer some wealth from those who have enough to those who don't. By doing this, the average quality of life in our country goes up, as the people we give to gain massively (e.g. they don't starve to death) and the people we take from only lose a little (because they can still afford a decent standard of life).

  91. Re:What most people fail to consider in these deba by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember, the world was less polluted when we went through this stage.

    Imagine a beautifal ancient artifact that is now extremely fragile through repeated handling by thousands of people. Should we let further thousands handle it as they wish, even if it means it *will* break?

  92. Re:This is Mann's fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    While 159 and 112 do not appear in the original paper there is this criticism from the rebuttal:
    "(b) Incorrect representation of the MBH98 proxy data set.
    MBH98 calculated PCs of proxy sub-networks separately for each interval in their stepwise
    reconstruction. This is the only sensible approach, as it allows all data available over each sub-interval to
    be used (i.e., first for 1400-1980, then separately for 1450-1980, 1500-1980, and so on). This requires 159
    independent time series to represent all indicators required for reconstructions of all possible subintervals,
    even though the maximum number ever used for a particular sub-interval is 112. By not
    following this protocol, MM appear to have eliminated in the range of 100 proxy series used by MBH98
    over the interval 1400-1600."

  93. Yay! by FIT_Entry1 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Now I can use hairspray again! Seriously, I looked at the data for the mid to late 1980s and there are distinct spikes in atmospheric GHG that coincide with Poison concert dates.

  94. Re:Who is really responsible?? The Sun! by G4from128k · · Score: 1

    Over at space.com I noticed this interesting article. Sun's Output Increasing in Possible Trend Fueling Global Warming. The upshot is that the sun seems to emitting 0.05% more energy per decade since the 1970s. My quick calculation suggests that this rise in energy flux should create about a 0.15 degree C change in temperatures each decade (but that rise will probably lag as oceans equilibrate).

    Its not surprising the the Sun might be causing this. After all, oscillations is solar output are probably responsible for Greenland being green around 1000 AD and may also end up being responsible for Greenland being green in the future.

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
  95. It's been much warmer in the past. by kc0dxh · · Score: 1

    Do some digging on the Piri Reis Map. The accurate coastline of Antarctica is convincing evidence that the ice caps were once nonexistent.

    Of course it was also colder in the past. A Google search reveals this quickly enough.

    Working from ~100 years of climatological data is myopic when there is ~1000 years of other evidence available.

    My spin? The environmental movement is wacky. It has taken laudable ideas of conservation and made them oppressive to the people. Sounds a bit like communism to me.

    --

    --- "1.21 Jigawatts!" -Doc

  96. Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Tau+Zero · · Score: 4, Informative
    Now, I'm not a climate researcher. But I do know that there's a lot of spectacular evidence supporting the claim that global warming exists and is accelerating, and a pretty firm body of theory rooted in physics to show how it occurs. I don't see how you can dismiss things like the retreat of glaciers around much of the globe (to sizes unprecedented in history or the recent archaeological record) and claim that nothing is going on.
    No, they have an agenda. They have a belief that they feel strongly about, and they want others to either believe it too, or at least be held to the constraints that those beliefs create.
    That's like claiming that people who oppose promiscuity because it spreads AIDS are puritanical, or people who promote condoms to prevent AIDS are libertines because condoms make promiscuity relatively safe. Both arguments are fallacious.
    The problem with your statement is that you're ignoring the fact that there is a gray area.
    The problem with yours is that there are other costs to fossil fuels. Coal, for example, puts enough mercury into the environment that it's unsafe for people to eat fish steadily in my state. Becoming more efficient can often be done at a negative cost, completely aside from pollution or climate considerations. Then there is the net present value of the (uncertain and climbing) future cost of many fuels, including natural gas. If there is a gray area, it starts at a much lower level of energy consumption than we have today; the purely economic arguments for cutting back a good ways are solid without even thinking about climate change.
    Funny you say that when the article mentions NOTHING about any business being involved in the contradicting studies.
    University of Guelph. One of Canada's biggest exports is energy, mostly from the province of Alberta. The value of several large corporations could evaporate if e.g. the tar sands were regarded as too polluting to exploit. Corporations have lobbyists, their employees vote their personal interests. You do the math.
    --
    Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
    1. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by JWW · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Enough clear evidence? You're kidding, right?

      Geologically we know for a fact that Ice Ages have occured off and on in the last few million years. Every Ice Age involves substancial global cooling and then substancial global warming to come out of. The last Ice Age was only tens of thousands of years ago, which a rather small number when talking about geological time. It may be that we just have not reached the peak temperature after coming out of an Ice Age.

      I think its amazing how much credit we give ourselves on our impact on the climate. While I agree that cleaner fuels, and more importantly power generation are good things. Our impact is still insignificant on many levels. Just one volcano can have more climactic impact than all the people on earth. Yellowstone's caldera volcano, if (or when) it erupts again will have more impact on the climate than mankind has had throughout the entire industrial age.

      We should minimize our impact on the environment, but we could well find that the climate is just doing whatever it wants and we are exaggerating in the extreme what we can do about it.

      Hell, we're currently perplexed at what the sun is doing right now and its the root cause of all global warming.

    2. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Barbara,+not+Barbie · · Score: 2
      We may not have reached the peak temperature after coming out of the last ice age, but there's no reason to accelerate the process.

      After all, do we really need to repeat THIS:

      Given a warm climate, it is unlikely that there was any extensive continental glaciation.

      Sea level was perhaps 200-300 meters higher than today.

      This caused large areas of the continents to be inundated by broad shallow seaways.

      Central North America from the Rockies to the Appalachians was an ocean connecting the Gulf of Mexico with Hudson's Bay.

      Source: here . We already know the polar ice caps are shrinking.

      --
      Let's call it what it is, Anti-Social Media.
    3. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      And the "human conceit" ignores little factoids like how the explosion at Krakatoa spewed an order of magnitude more gunk into the air (both particulate and toxic chemical factors), than humankind has throughout its entire history.

      Yeah, maybe for our own health we shouldn't spit mercury into places it isn't found already, and localized warming can change a river's biomass faster than it would on its own. But we don't make a dent even in just the earth's own naturally-caused climate variations. If Krakatoa couldn't do more than cause "the year without a summer" but no lasting global cooling, it's damned silly to think that mankind's worst efforts could outdo the sun's energy variations wrt global warming.

      Or does anyone really think humankind outputs waste energy on a solar scale? If so, please apply your physics to my bank account. ;)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    4. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      But we CAN'T accelerate it. Or slow it down. At least, that's the argument (which I tend to agree with, although I don't have a well-educated opinion)

      If our greenhouse gas emissions don't have a substantial effect on global warming, reducing our greenhouse gas emissions won't have a substantial effect on global warming. It will be expensive. I can think of more productive ways to spend our money than emptying the Red Sea with a teaspoon.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    5. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Barbara,+not+Barbie · · Score: 1

      So I guess all those studies about terraforming Mars are another plot, like Capricorn 1 ("we never landed on the moon" :-)

      --
      Let's call it what it is, Anti-Social Media.
    6. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      We should already be on Mars.

      NASA is dipping their pinky-toe into the idea of maybe someday thinking about evaluating the possibility of considering going to Mars.

      I am not sanguine about their plans.

      And, more to the point, this Flash Gordon style rocket business is not going to get us there. It's a solution in search of a problem.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    7. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Fess_Longhair · · Score: 1

      Milankovitch cycles are fairly well understood, and should be removed when discussing anthropogenic climate change.

      Tropical volcanic eruptions have larger influence on climate than those in the extratropics, so I'm suspicious of your claim for Yellowstone. Do you have a reference?

    8. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by 2marcus · · Score: 3, Insightful


      Its amazing how many people cite volcanoes when dismissing human influence on the climate.

      Yes, a single volcano (Pinatubo for example) can cause global scale cooling by throwing particulates into the atmosphere. Then the particulates settle out, and in a year or two temperatures return to normal.

      This is compared with CO2, which lasts 100+ years in the atmosphere, and during each and every one of those years is adding a little bit of extra heat to the planet. We have changed the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere by 30%!!!

      The forcing caused by that extra 80+ ppm of carbon dioxide is much larger than the observed variability of solar forcing. It is _not_ insignificant. Think about it. Please.

      -Marcus

    9. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by 2marcus · · Score: 1

      It isn't our output of waste energy. It is the increase in greenhouse gas concentration that means that the energy we receive from the sun is trapped more efficiently in the atmosphere.

      And we do output CO2 on a globally significant scale.

      And the forcing of that CO2 every year is larger than the sun's observed energy variations in the last century.

    10. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Yellowstone volcano to which he refers is frequently called a supervolcano, googling for this will provide you with a wealth of information.

      If/when it erupts it's impact will be catastrophic, not just for those in montana, idaho, and wyoming, not just for america, or even north america, but for the world. It's effect on the enviroment would probably be second only to a comet or asteroid impact, and likely greater than world war three.

      The "mouth" of the volcano is roughly 15 to 20 miles in radius.

    11. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet grasses evolved to combat the plummeting CO2 levels caused by carbon sequestration. That's right, trees are slowly going extinct because of the CO2 that isn't being put back into the atmosphere. But I guess you're one of those new-fangled tree *hating* hippies. If not for the children, can't we at least provide more CO2 for the trees?

    12. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Brandybuck · · Score: 0, Troll

      Pinatubo expelled more CO2 into the atmosphere than the entire history of industrialized civilization.

      I'm not saying that humans should just keep on polluting, I'm only saying that the extremist scaremongering is wrong. We can solve our problems with logic and reason, without having to resort to panicked emotionalism.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    13. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Re: the Flash Gordon Rocket: Whoops. And I just got corn-fuzed about which discussion I was posting to. My bad.

      Terraforming Mars is going to be a lot easier than moderating the behavior of Earth's atmosphere. Mars' atmosphere has 1/100 the density of Earth's, and the planet's surface is right about a third the size of Earth (if I remember correctly). So, you've got 1/300th as much atmosphere you need to deal with.

      However, I'm not sure that a lot of people really appreciate the volume of gases we're talking about. Terraforming Mars is going to take hundreds of years, and some really amazing industrial might. It's certainly a long-term goal. "Terraforming" Earth (moderating its long-cycle periodic weather changes) is, I believe, not possible with technology that will be available within the next 50 years, simply because of the mass of fluid we're talking about.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    14. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      I'd like a pointer to some evidence for that. I have heard that we've already emitted so much CO2 that the radiation hole is pretty tightly closed, and more won't affect it... but even at it's current levels it is having effects that cause the oceans acidity to increase, making the lives of numerous shellfish more difficult. And, perhaps, contributing to the problems of corals. (When your exoskeleton keeps dissolving away, you've got problems!)

      Note that Krakatoa was a one time event, but the release of fossil carbons is ongoing. I'm not convince that forests are the kind of sink that they're being sold as, since they tend to release the carbon that they accumulate (unless people cut down the trees and build houses, etc., from them and protect them from decay! by doing things like varathaning them. So the newly released carbon continues circulating for a long time..this isn't just once around. Now I'll grant you that Krakatoa (and other volcanos) release large amounts of buried carbon...but not as much as the oil fields and coal mines do. And anyway, they act in ways that reinforce each other, so things are pushed further in the same direction than they would otherwise be pushed.

      Do you also doubt the flurocarbons disrupting the Ozone layer? But the tonnage involved was miniscual. However the same molecule takes part in many reactions. Similarly with carbon in the organic environment. However carbon *isn't* usually the chemical in shortest supply, so predicting the effects is quite difficult. And most people would oversimplify anyway.

      I find no grounds for dogmatic stances by either side, except in the realm of politics.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    15. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Free_Meson · · Score: 1

      You're a moron.

      Okay, not really, but you should think more about this, seeing as you're a rocket scientist and all. True, earth naturally emits ~150BN tons of CO2 every year and we puny humans only contribute 7 or 8 billion tons, but that's not the whole story. The environment also absorbs about ~150BN tons of CO2 through natural processes. That's why we can get a better tan here than on venus. we know for sure that greenhouse gasses can cause global warming, the question is whether or not we are making a net contribution. If the environment can absorb our 7BN tons of CO2 indefinitely then that's great. If it can't, though, then that 7BN tons/year will add up quickly and have a large effect. the best way to avoid such effects is to get our production down into a range that can be absorbed naturally.

      All of this "environment" stuff aside, though, the squandering of resources is foolish. There is a finite amount of black energy-rich crap buried underneath our mountains and sand dunes. It is by far the most easily exploited energy source on the planet. When, at some point in the future we wish to invest a large amount of energy into a single project -- such as a space elevator or a moon settlement or a mars settlement -- having access to such an easily exploited energy source would greatly reduce the cost and increase the likelihood of such an important investment being made... the current attitude is to engage in a arms race of blingin' one-ups-manship, buying larger and more ridiculous cars and appliances until our capacity to use energy, and our inability to function without it, criples us and makes any attempt to concentrate energy, even to invest it in some noble, productive task, impossible. It's the tragedy of the commons writ large, except in the tragedy of the commons, the grass can grow back.

    16. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      You are apparently unfamiliar with rhetoric and debate. I was defending a position, and I made it clear that I wasn't sure if that position was correct or not, you turd-munching fuckwit.

      The point that the article was making (you did read the article, didn't you?) is that it's unclear how much impact humans are having. That is not the same as saying "I like raping Mother Earth in the asshole."

      I did not argue that wise management of our resources is stupid. As a matter of fact, I made it clear that wise management of one of our resources (capital) is a particularly good idea: Use it where it will do the most good (schools) rather than throwing it into a "hole" in the atmosphere.

      Don't even bother replying if you don't want to be civil. If that's the way you want to debate, go chain yourself to a redwood and leave the rest of us alone.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    17. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      The "evidence" is in the story at the top of this article. That's my point: If this author is right, then we can not affect global warming by decreasing greenhouse gas emissions.

      Now, we need to figure out if he's right or not, by employing the scientific method. Unfortunately, the political situation will make that a very difficult piece of science.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    18. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pretty firm body of theory rooted in physics to show how it occurs
      ...well, no. When you plug the physics - which have been observed working under some conditions -into a model with a whole bunch of other assumptions then run a simulation (I did this for a living) you get answers with a lot of room for uncertainty.

    19. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Waste energy defined as "everything we do to contribute to retained planetary energy".

      Those recent SoCal fires probably produced more CO2 than every human activity for the past several years, and they aren't a drop in the bucket compared to one volcano.

      Or do you breathe an extra lot? :)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    20. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Care to cite your source?

      According to this paper, Mt Pinatubo's eruption had zero net effect on CO2 atmosphere content.

      If it had the effect that you describe, you can bet your bottom dollar that everyone would know about it.

    21. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      Looking around on the web some more, Mt Pinatubo released very little C02, what it did was release a lot of ash which diffused the solar radiation and made it possible for plants to absorb atmospheric C02 for some reason.

      So it had the inverse effect to what you are claiming. Well done.

    22. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Cynical+Troll · · Score: 1

      He called you a moron, then took it back. You called him a turd-munching fuckwit, and went on to hotly defend yourself. Yet you're complaining about him not being civil? Are you on drugs?

      --
      Who's that tripping over my bridge!
    23. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      As for sources, I have to confess, that while I have some, I did mistate them. Pinatubo didn't emit more CO2 than all of industry, but total pollutants, greenhouse gases and ozone-depleting chemicals. A gross error on my part. For my mistake, I apologize. But it still demonstrates that nature affects nature more than man affects nature.

      Some quick refs I found on google:

      "Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines spewed forth more than a thousand times the amount of ozone-depleting chemicals in one eruption than all the fluorocarbons manufactured by corporations in history." [http://showcase.netins.net/web/the-f-files/Global Warming.html]

      "When Mt. Pinatubo in the Philipines erupted it spued out in one day more that 500 times the amount that man has produced since the production of man-made CFCs" [http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/1286/envp.htm l]

      "For example, when the Mount Pinatubo volcano erupted, within just a few hours it had thrown into the atmosphere 30 million tonnes of sulphur dioxide - almost twice as much as all the factories, power plants and cars in the United States do in a whole year. Oceans emit 90 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, every year. Decaying plants throw up another 90 billion tonnes, compared to just six billion tonnes a year from humans." [http://www.users.bigpond.com/smartboard/aginatur/ prog1.htm]

      p.s. The paper you cite shows, as you say, a "zero net effect". It doesn't say that no C02 was released by Pinatubo, only that it had no effect.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    24. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, when someone who is obviously biased pushes a controversial opinion, he needs better evidence than an appearantly impartial person who pushes "conventional wisdom". I'm not saying he's wrong...but that's the way to bet.

      I suppose, however, that what I should have asked for was "other evidence". (Politicos on both sides make up so much garbage that I hesitate to believe ANY of them.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    25. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hot damn. You need a cold shower Mister Rocket!

      Wise management of *all* our resources is a good idea. Wise management of *one* of our resources, at the possible-unknown expense of a possible-unknown quantity of the others seems to be an overall *unwise* management strategy.

      It's a lot like Microsoft arguing that a rich, versatile email experience is really what matters most, and so that's what they're managing for. Fuck no! We need to balance our needs, and we need to admit the possibility of the unknown. Many previous posters are right: anyone claiming to know the answer to the interpretation problem posed by the environmental situation is smoking crack.

      BUT. We can be sane about it. We can compromise, and we can try to learn more so that we can make more informed choices. In the meantime, perhaps it would not be best to ignore a problem that has some significant *likelihood* of existing - for a little while, we can stand to manage around it.

      And if managing around it cuts into somebody's profits, I really don't give a shit. You can argue that the money goes towards education, etc., all you want. And I can tell you that the data is in, and is quite clear: these same pollutants are damaging the kids RIGHT NOW. They may or may not be causing global warming, but they sure as fuck are making a lot of people sick. I'm sorry I can't remember the figures offhand, but the yearly cost of asthma would easily cover the pollution controls people are talking about (both in the US).

      How about that?

      (Why yes, I AM a farmer. And my wife's a doctor with respiratory specialization.)

    26. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by HuguesT · · Score: 1

      See other reference in other response.

      The monotonically increasing curve in the graph (not the spiky one) shows the average concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere. If Pinatubo had released any significant amount it would have showed on this graph. Instead the CO2 content in the atmosphere continues to increase at exactly the same rate as a result of man's activity I presume.

      The articles that you cite are again somewhat incorrect. Eruptions generate HCL (hydrochloric acid) which have an effect on the ozone layer and acid rains, but it is a short-lived effect, see this link.

      The US throw out relatively little SO2 now, compared with some developing countries thanks to more stringent emission regulations, so comparing with the US emission is not very interesting. I don't have the figure for the whole world, sorry.

      Sure, Man `only' generates a few puny billion tonnes of C02 compared with the oceans and forest, but both forest and oceans are `carbon neutral'. Both absorb again the exact same quantity by making new trees and new plancton. Man on the other hand releases CO2 over a short time that had been trapped in geological layers aeons ago over a very long period. This carbon cannot be absorbed again at a sufficient rate.

      Most scientists agree that it is industrialization which is the root cause of CO2 rate increase in the atmosphere. What they disagree upon is whether this is having a warming effect or not, and over which timescale.

      All the best (I would give more references but I have to go now, pick up my daughter, please continue this discussion if you are interested).

    27. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by 2marcus · · Score: 1

      Ok. Let's try this again:

      Humans account for about 7 Gigatons of Carbon emitted into the atmosphere every year - that is about 6 GtC from fossil fuels, and 1 GtC from "land use changes" (ie, deforestation etc.).

      The entire planetary ecosystem absorbs about 3.5 GtC more than it emits every year. This is because the atmosphere now contains 360+ ppm CO2, where it used to have 280 ppm in preindustrial times, and therefore ecosystems and oceans are no longer in equilibrium with the atmosphere.

      Atmospheric CO2 levels are increasing at a rate equal to about 3.5 GtC a year - ie, one half of the amount that we emit.

      (That breaks down into the ocean having a net absorption of about 2 gigatons of carbon a year. The terrestrial ecosystem has a further absorption of about 1 gigaton)

      You might hear other numbers, like "the forests take up 50+ gigatons of carbon every year!". That is "gross primary production", which is almost exactly balanced by 50+ gigatons of "decomposition + forest fires". These are the two numbers which are usually in balance... the difference is "net primary production" which is only 1 gigaton per year.

      And volcanoes don't produce much CO2 at all.

      Trust me - no one with any real scientific background believes that the increases in CO2 are due to anything except fossil fuel burning. There is disagreement about how much the temperature has risen, how much that temperature is due to human influence, what future temperature rise will be, what the damages that rise will cause... BUT THERE IS NO DISAGREEMENT ABOUT THE REASON FOR CO2 INCREASES IN THE ATMOSPHERE!!!

      -Marcus

      Similar numbers to the ones in my memory can be found here:
      http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Gl obalFir e/fire_3.html

    28. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Barbara,+not+Barbie · · Score: 1
      The problem is you're going to have to hold onto any gases you generate. With only 1/2 the gravity of earth, leakage is going to be rather high, so terraforming will be a challenge.

      BTW - We already have the technology to drastically change the Earth's climate within a matter of hours. Nuclear winter ;-)

      --
      Let's call it what it is, Anti-Social Media.
    29. Re:Thought of evaluating the data, not the biases? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Nuclear Winter was debunked 20 years ago, though. Carl Sagan pretty well lost his reputation (in my eyes) because of his poorly-founded stance on the subject.

      Remember when the Iraqi oil fires were going to blacken the skies and kill us all? That's right. Neither do I. Didn't happen.

      Would nuclear war be awful? You betcha. But an overcast sky would be the least of my worries.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  97. Is pollution sometimes "good"? by G4from128k · · Score: 1

    Cloud cover plays a big role in repelling solar radiation and keeping the Earth cool. For better or for worse, many sources of pollution help increase cloud cover. Sulfate emissions and jet contrails are two good examples as both stimulate cloud formation. Whether man-made cloud-based cooling is "good" depends on if you think this phenomenon mitigates or masks the problem of global warming.

    It will be interesting to see if global warming kicks into high gear once more countries install sulfate scrubbers on coal-fired plants. It would be ironic if attempts to ameliorate one form of environment damage (sulfate emissions) actually exacerbates another form (global warming).

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
  98. Pah! It's a conspiracy, I tell you! by Spoing · · Score: 1
    (old man voice) "No global warming? Deception and lies! That's just the kind of plot the reds would think of!

    One day they're frozen solid, next thing you know they'll be putting up palm trees and we'll be importing ice from them. Mark my words, boy! Mark my woooooords!"

    --
    A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
  99. MOD PARENT UP by ChrisCampbell47 · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up please. It deserves to be +5 just like the grandparent.

  100. Wow by Badanov · · Score: 0, Troll

    This is pretty cool. Seeing posts which treat environMENTALists like the loonies they actually are and NO flambaits or trolls mods. You oughta see how many of mine in the past have been treated that way. Enjoy it while it lasts, though, folks.

    --
    Dawn of the Dead
  101. End of eco-coersion by amightywind · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    For the past decade tree huggers and eco liberals have managed to stiffle scientific debate on climate. They have tried to foist their own wierd view of a peasant future onto an unwilling world through the Kyoto treaty. They found ready allies in the Eurocrats and others in the "international community" who would benefit from a hobbled U.S. economy. I am glad to see that the coersion that is the Kyoto treaty is failing and that there is a return to a healthy scientific discussion of these important matters.

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
  102. Put the weight on the data, project from there by Tau+Zero · · Score: 1
    Because environmentalists want to change a lot more than power generation. The big sources of greenhouse gasses aren't power plants so much as factories, the ones that make the things than we use to maintain our standard of living.
    I've been studying this issue a bit, and your claim appears bogus. For coal, for example, something like 90% is consumed by electric power plants in my state (which still has a fair amount of industry). I have not studied the consumption of oil and natural gas by factories (I'm currently plowing through data particular to the electric industry) so I can't say if that conclusion holds across the board, but your claim looks suspicious in the light of what I know.
    But even ignoring that, renewable energy sources have their own problems environmental associated with them. Going all solar or all wind, for example, means clearing a lot of land that might otherwise be natural wilderness.
    Obviously you have not looked at the figures. The top 11 states for windpower have over a terawatt of potential, and the energy is mostly available in plains areas rather than the forested or mountainous areas we consider wilderness. Solar could do an amazing amount of work with just the light that currently falls on rooftops (the land isn't just converted already, it's under buildings). When you consider how much energy use can be eliminated with proper selection of appliances and construction practices, the houses in the Solar Decathlon competition last year "would use only one-third of the energy of a basic code-compliant house the same size, and about half the energy of an Energy Star complaint house" even without their solar collectors (Home Power magazine, issue 96, page 62). If we forced the production of materials such as SIPs up by increasing insulation requirements in building codes, the economies of scale would reduce costs even more and make a purely economic argument attractive even without the environmental issues.
    You don't want us to be prejudiced against the views of environmentalists because of who they are ("tree-hugging hippies looking for a cause"), but you seem to be prejudiced against the views of non-environmentalists because of who they are ("money-grubbing fat cats looking for a quick buck").
    I'm prejudiced against the watermelons (green on the outside, red on the inside) for whom the environment is an excuse to impose a social(ist) agenda. But if that invalidates the data which supports environmentalism, then a few fanatics invalidate Christianity. You wouldn't accept such reasoning in other matters, so don't put it forward to support your agenda.
    --
    Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
    1. Re:Put the weight on the data, project from there by linzeal · · Score: 2, Informative

      Do you know how nasty photovaliac cells are to manufacture? I would presume it would cost more in resources to create the solar cells than you would ever get out of them in energy production.

    2. Re:Put the weight on the data, project from there by javiercero · · Score: 0

      Did you know that for large scale generators, no photovoltaic cells are used? Mirrors is what they use for large scale solar generator! Oh... my, those nasty mirrors! LOL!

      I have no idea of how nasty "photovaliac" cells are, since I have never heard of "photovaliac" cells, is that a new technology? I know about "photovoltaic" though, these are used for small scale generation, some are silicon based... and are much much easier to manufacture than, lets say silicon chips... which indeed those can be rather nasty to manufacture.

      Anyhow, keep on the good job with the FUD about stuff you obviously have no idea about.

    3. Re:Put the weight on the data, project from there by RocketScientist · · Score: 1

      Pollution is relative. Kyoto is all about one thing: Greenhouse gases. Honestly, I'd rather have greenhouse gases than the toxic crap that comes out of most factories. Kyoto not only ignores toxic crap (for political reasons) but it would actively shift pollution controls away from dealing with toxic crap and into dealing with something that may not have any harmful side effects, we don't know for sure.

      We do, for example, know that heavy metals cause problems, but Kyoto does nothing about pollution of heavy metals, and would shift all of the money spent on researching and installing heavy metal anti-pollution devices into researching and installing ways to limit CO2 production.

    4. Re:Put the weight on the data, project from there by Tau+Zero · · Score: 1
      Do you know how nasty photovaliac cells are to manufacture?
      Let's see: use CVD to turn silane into elemental SI on glass, dope and apply contacts. Silane and arsene are nasty stuff, but they tend not to get outside the plant and you only need traces of arsene while silane tends to self-ignite and turn into SiO2. So I'd guess, not very nasty at all.
      I would presume it would cost more in resources to create the solar cells than you would ever get out of them in energy production
      I presume you know what they say about presumptuous people.... whoops, now I did it!
      --
      Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
    5. Re:Put the weight on the data, project from there by linzeal · · Score: 2, Informative
      A bit more nasty than you let on. I can't find the exact quote by I believe it is from Zubrin talking about the latest 18-20% eff Solar cells and how they cost more to manufacture in energy than they will ever produce.

      I have nothing against PV solar cells in space where they face different problems and are more applicable solutions but on earth they are of limited practical use at the moment. Some of the stories about cheap flexible solar arrays being made soon are promising but until there are demonstrateable enviromental and economic advantages over nuclear power I am reluctant to consider them a panacea and more of a hinderance to the energy crisis. Perhaps one day though.

    6. Re:Put the weight on the data, project from there by Tau+Zero · · Score: 2, Informative
      A bit more nasty than you let on.
      From your link: "The remainder, in gaseous form, can be collected by cold traps or similar devices." Also, "In contrast, material utilization rates for molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) deposition process are 40 to 70% mol% for Ga and 10 to 20 mol% for As."

      I read that as saying that what's not left in the machine is typically brought out in recyclable form; you can distill condensed vapors and re-use them, and molecular beam technology can boost utilization if it matters that much. I can't see that you refuted anything I said.

      I can't find the exact quote by I believe it is from Zubrin talking about the latest 18-20% eff Solar cells and how they cost more to manufacture in energy than they will ever produce.
      Well, yeah. The bleeding edge is always expensive. Now if you're talking $4/watt amorphous silicon cells, if they cost more energy to produce than they'll make in 20 years each watt of cell would take... hmmm, need an envelope...

      1 watt * 6 hours sun/day average * .8 derating factor * 365 days/year * 15 years = 26 kilowatt-hours. That's the energy equivalent of about 2/3 of a gallon of gasoline, or 3.3 gallons of gas if you consider the typical conversion efficiency of small to medium size engines. I find it doubtful that you could spend even a dollar on energy to make a cell that retails for four dollars, plus I've read that the payback time for the best panels these days is only a couple of years. I'll take better data when I can get it, but right now I don't think that the bleeding-edge economics applies to the stuff a consumer would buy.

      Of course, not all solar is PV (see this, they updated their site), and wind pays back very quickly in any kind of decent site.

      Some of the stories about cheap flexible solar arrays being made soon are promising but until there are demonstrateable enviromental and economic advantages over nuclear power I am reluctant to consider them a panacea and more of a hinderance to the energy crisis.
      Solar PV currently costs about $.25/KWH, but peak time-of-use electric rates in some areas are $.35/KWH and up. Solar PV is actually cheaper than the grid there while it's producing, or will be unless and until something flattens the demand curve. Solar PV has been cheaper than paying to extend electric service for well over a decade. Then there are breakthrough technologies such as have been discussed on Slashdot in the last couple of months, any one of which could throw a real curveball.

      I've got nothing against nuclear, but its improvements are going to be incremental. Wind isn't bad, but barring tricks like gyromills it is going to move incrementally too. PV, photochemical, and other things are still improving on an exponential curve; those are the ones to watch.

      --
      Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
  103. Of Course the climate is changing!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Otherwize glaciers would still cover most of North America. There have been several ice ages and there was global warming in between each one.

  104. Don't believe in global warming? by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

    "How long can you thread water? Ha ha ha"

    --
    There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
    most of us won't be able to afford it.
    -- Lemmy
  105. What do you want to sacrifice for it? by Tau+Zero · · Score: 1

    I don't think that the process of mountain-top removal mining is particularly friendly to the environment, no matter how cleanly you can burn the stuff once it's been shipped elsewhere. If you are going to promote more coal consumption, you've got to have a recipe for reducing its impacts from one end of the chain to the other or you're vulnerable to criticism and even injunctions.

    --
    Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
    1. Re:What do you want to sacrifice for it? by Zeriel · · Score: 1

      Speaking as someone who lives in the heart of Pennsylvania coal country, they're getting significantly better--if not at reducing the impact while they're mining, at least they put the land back the way they found it (I mean that almost literally--some strip mines that were mined out twenty years ago are once again indistinguishable from the surrounding forests).

      --
      "America has done some terrible things. But I know that Americans don't cheer when innocents die." -Dave Barry
  106. Wow.. now that's naive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And how exactly would living off renewable energy be 'worse' than the whole planet dying?

    The Earth has survived catastrophic events far, far worse than we could ever hope to create.

    I'm not saying we ought to try to "one-up" nature, but look at the effect that previous mass extinctions have had with regard to the diversification of life. If we destroy ourselves, then that sucks for us, but Earth would be better off in the long run.

    Now if you think that environmentalists are doing this solely because they worry about the environment, you are mistaken. There is an agenda on both sides of the issue.

    For the environmentalists (who are primarily democrats) it is this:

    1) Selectively interpret data in such a way that it looks much worse than it actually is
    2) Create paranoia and panic over the issue. Over the years it becomes "fact"
    3) Since it's already accepted as "fact" it is easy to claim that your political opponents are ignoring the "facts"
    4) Claim yourself to be the answer to this problem. We can help make the big, nasty problem go away if you elect the political party that supports us
    5) Now you can get away with claiming that your opponents actually want more people to DIE, for the sake of profit, thus scaring more people into voting for the political party that supports your cause
    6) ???????
    7) Profit

  107. You're forgetting one thing.... by JackJudge · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Comparing the agendas on both sides may well be valid, but what about comparing the consequences if either side is wrong ??

    If the tree huggers have got it wrong we see smaller profits, disgruntled share holders and short term job losses. Boo-hoo.

    If the Megacorps have got it wrong (or more likely are simply covering up) then we've screwed up the planet.

    The stakes are a little bigger.

    1. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If the tree huggers have got it wrong we see smaller profits, disgruntled share holders and short term job losses. Boo-hoo.

      Are you really this clueless?

      If we stopped burning oil tomorrow you would DIE. Everybody you know would DIE.

      You can prove me wrong by turning off the heat in your house and ceasing to eat any food grown using a tractor or transported on an oil burning vehicle.

    2. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      If that ain't the most retarded statement I've heard all week I'll eat my hat.

      Not if that hat was made by burning oil, you won't. You'll DIE!

    3. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by slash.dt · · Score: 1
      No one is talking about stopping burning oil tomorrow except you.

      Reducting our reliance of oil, improving our efficency and reducing our polution levels are a process - it doesn't happen overnight.

      Please remember that you are suppose to at least pretend to be intelligent.

    4. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be a good argument, if the parent was actually advocating abandoning all oil consumption. Can you quote the part where he said that?

      Most environmentalists just want energy use to decrease (energy use can easily be cut in half while maintaining the same exact standard of living). And they want that the government sets up a program for migrating to renewable (sustainable) energy sources. That doesn't mean it has to happen tomorrow, just eventually.

      The current amount of dollars invested by the US government in research into renewables is pitiful. It's my personal belief that if they invested one year's budget worth of pentagon money into research into nuclear fusion (a limitless supply of clean energy, that's proven to work in the form of the sun), within 10 years we'd have all the free energy we want. But that would mean the end of all the oil conglomerates, so we don't want that, no...

    5. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut the fuck up.

    6. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by belgin · · Score: 1

      "then we've screwed up the planet"

      Changed is not equal to screwed up.

      Anybody who thinks we haven't changed the planet is probably a rampaging idiot. Screwed it up? I don't know. It depends on your priorities. "The sky is falling!" exclamations of a few make me very skeptical about the real impact of global warming. Why? Because we are exiting a miniature ice age, and people who panic and run around screaming rarely isolate problems correctly or produce intelligent solutions to them. The planet shows strong geological evidence of periods both significantly hotter and colder than the current norm. The planet was not "screwed up", it was simply more ideal for different lifeforms.

      Climate shifts are happening. Climate shifts have been happening for millenia. The question is whether this one is something we have formed a disproportionate percentage of and whether it is a bad thing for us. Obviously, it is not a terrible thing for the planet, though it might push some species into extinction. We've already done a pretty good job of rendering species extinct. Habitat loss is killing them at a much, much faster rate than climate shifts.

      --

      B. Elgin
      "Read at your own risk; feel free to ignore."
    7. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by pod · · Score: 1

      I don't think very many reasonable people are arguing against cleaning up. I don't like smog. I don't like the stink of diesel and factory exhausts. I don't like not being able to eat fish I catch in lakes and rivers, or not having any fish at all.

      Someone above said that if you had some symptoms of cancer, would you check yourself out or wait for ALL the symptoms? That's fine, but we're not sticking our head in the sand here. We ARE checking things out. We're seeing some signs now. But those signs are far from unambiguous. Moving to cleaner fuels and energy sources is great, and we're doing that. Accelerating it is great. This is all part of 'checking yourself out' and cleaning up your lifestyle to avoid major trouble and improve your overall quality of life.

      But some of the things that are being proposed amount to waging full scale warfare against something we have no clue about. If you're feeling a bump where there wasn't one on your body, or have some cancer symptoms, you don't start full on chemo. You get things checked out. It's the reasonable thing to do, because the cure can kill you, and if you're not sick that would suck.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
    8. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one is talking about stopping burning oil tomorrow except you.

      Okay, let me rephrase: if we simply curtail oil consumption (rather than eliminating it completely) and switch to more expensive sources, then only the poor people will die.

      Happy now?

    9. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice "rebuttal".

      Hint: that means that you lose.

    10. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      "If the Megacorps have got it wrong (or more likely are simply covering up) then we've screwed up the planet."

      Well, except we in such a case we really haven't.
      AFAIK the global climate has undergone TREMENDOUS periods of warming and cooling, far outstripping the current maxima or minima. Antarctica was a freakin' jungle - how can a couple of degrees C "screw up the planet" now ??

      What's really happening is that the cozy little niche inhabited by humans won't be so cozy any more. SO WHAT? This process, both faster and slower, has happened for eons. And you know what? I bet we'll either adapt or die out, or (preferably) finally be kicked off this backwater planet. None of the above really is so terrifying.

      Either way, my money's on the fact that the climate dislocations will prove to be far more gradual, far LESS widespread and LESS severe (speaking chronologically) than the dislocations and problems caused to your average working Joe or Joanna if the envrionmentalists get their way.

      --
      -Styopa
    11. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > only the poor people will die.

      Hey, wait a second... That's brilliant! Send it to Cheney, maybe he'll become an environmentalist! ;)

    12. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > But that would mean the end of all the oil conglomerates

      not exactly... We still have cars, no? All that would happen is they shrink and then the remainder will merge to form a monopoly. The Republicans will be accused of allowing it to happen, while the Democrats will be accused of causing it.

    13. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > We've already done a pretty good job of rendering species extinct

      Pssh, give genetics a decade or two without regulation, we'll create all kinds of new species. Of course, most of them will only live a horribly tortured 5 minutes of mutated mess...

      (That's a joke, BTW, I like genetics.)

    14. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      The problem is that it has a very good chance of touching off major wars.

      How major? Got me. Much of Siberia may flood, but since it isn't a part of Russia any more...

      The Caspian Sea may re-establish itself on it's former banks...of course people have moved closer to it and filled in for many generations. If it floods, then they've got to find somewhere else to live. I don't expect the Tethys sea to reappear. I think that central California is too far above sea level. But I'm not certain. Etc.

      How sudden? Hard to tell. It depends a lot on what happens. We've reasonable records that indicate that such things can happen on a very short time scale. We might have years rather than days. And we might not. Or we might have a century of slow changes. But the records seem to show massive of ice suddenly liquifying at their bases, and moving RAPIDLY into the ocean. Ah, but from where?

      Antartica probably won't really melt, merely speed up the glacial creep. That would be a slow process. Greenland is more problematic. But is probably being monitored so that there will be warning. (I sure HOPE so!) And I don't see and LARGE masses of ice laying around elsewhere. So I guess the way to bet is relatively slow. But the way to prepare for is something sudden and unexpected, that we have, days to hours of warning about. (OTOH, most rises will only be inches to feet.)

      If I lived in the Netherlands I'd be very nervous. If I lived near sea-level I'd be checking my foundations for seaworthiness. (In some places, even though the sea doesn't flood them, it can prevent the storm drains from doing their jobs properly.)

      And If I lived in New Orleans I'd move. (See the recent [this year or last] Scientific American article about it.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    15. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by xxTYBALTxx · · Score: 1

      Wait wait wait. Someone actually gave this post a score of "3, Insightful"?????///???//??

    16. Re:You're forgetting one thing.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, you're right, it did deserve a 5.

  108. Mod this puupy up! by pedro · · Score: 1

    Yeah, yeah, it's a rant and all, but it's probably the most insightful and on-target post in the whole thread.
    Especially the bit about Big Bidness farming out the dirtiest parts of their operations via Koyoto to the desperate and poor parts of the world to bolster their bottom line.

    --
    Brak: What's THAT?
    Thundercleese: A light switch.. of TOTAL DEVASTATION!
  109. Errr no. by Angostura · · Score: 1

    If you look at most of the complaints surrouding Kyoto, you will see much annoyance over the fact that the most rigorous controls were being imposed on the more developed nations. This structure was proposed largely to avoid the type of trap that you set out.

    But it didn't half annoy the U.S - and some other developed nations.

  110. Only half the argument by horace · · Score: 2, Informative

    A robust response from the authors of the original paper is here. In general a paper like hte one noted here should really be put in some kind of context.

  111. Well respected journal? by Basalisk · · Score: 1

    '- just about the only journal which gives a platform to all sides of the global warming debate, especially on the policy issues.'

    Now, this may just be my cynicism talking, but most publications that claim to represent all sides of a debate usually don't. Often, they represent the view that is against the mainstream, and so there may be bias against global climate change. The second, and MUCH LARGER red flag is the the phrase "Policy issues". In other words, the journal is overtly political. It's very hard for a political publication to sit on a fence. (Excepting of course the obvious, such as Hansard which are just records.)

    On the other hand, like any other area of science surrounded by controversy, it's hard to separate the wheat from the chaff. All sides will reach for anything that supports their position, no matter how tenuous, and so you get a lot of bullshit, making real, hard science hard to find and hard to do.

    As for my own position, so that you know where I am coming from, is this:

    The 'hockey stick' graph is probably dodgy. It may reflect reality, but the nature of it's derivation makes it suspicious. There is, however, other data on global warming, such as the shrinkage of the world glaciers, ice shelf collapse, more intense weather, etc, etc. How much of this is natural variation and how much is human induced, it's hard to say. One side would have you believe it's nearly all our fault, the other thinks it's just another cycle. I don't know where we could get the data to make a rough estimate at the proportion, but I suspect taking a core from some really really old trees might help, such as the giant sequoia.

    Additionally, this is an area where there are monied interests, and they can and will fight the new order if their interests are threatened. (For a more extreme example, look at how much FUD Big Tobacco threw at smoking related diseases.)

    Is climate change going to wipe life off the planet? No. Other forms of environmental disturbance might, such as a massive toxin leak, but that too would have to be pretty big. The earth has been warmer in the past, and it will probably be warmer in the future. It's also been a lot colder. Life is remarkably able to withstand knocks. If all but the most primitive bacteria were wiped out by a comet strike, I'd be willing to bet there'd be life back on the surface within one hundred million years, and certainly by one billion years.

    Individual species, however, become extinct quite readily, and often in groups. What possibly very rapid climate change will do is make the biodiversity of life plummet. As the climate of an area changes, all the specialist species, adapted to various niches, will find those niches disappearing, and will die out. If we lose the ice caps, we'll probably lose many seal, walrus, penguin, polar bear and artic fox species, and many more. Of course, given how interlinked an ecosystem is, there will probably be flow on effects. Essentially, some species won't be able to cope with the new conditions, anything that depends on those species will also die out, whether it's through a broken symbioses or from starvation. The effect of those lost species ripples through the ecosystem, causing species to go extinct, especially the highly specialised ones.

    But why is losing biodiversity bad? Apart from the loss of the individual species, a system with low biodiversity is a lot more fragile, and a lot less efficient, and a lot less stable than one with great diversity. It's more fragile, because biodiversity acts as an ecosystem's buffer against stress. A good analogy is that game where you have a tower of blocks, and you pull out blocks one by one, until the tower collapses. Except now you're doing it with deeply interlocked blocks, and you also can't see all the connections. When you have a lot of blocks, the loss of a single block is not as likely to cause collapse as when you have only a few.

    As for the efficiency of diverse ecosystems, when you have more ways of using the resource

  112. Here are a couple of links for you by Walkiry · · Score: 1

    http://www.newscientist.com/hottopics/climate/clim ate.jsp?id=ns99992958
    http://www.newscientist.com/hottopics/climate/clim ate.jsp?id=ns99992249

    As the rest of the replies to your post said, it's not about "the planet is not getting warmer!" (which in absolute terms it is, duh!), it's about WHY, and we don't really have a clue about how the complex system works, far from enough to make any reliable "models".

    --
    ---- Take the Space Quiz!
  113. FYI to our American Cousins by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 2, Informative

    Just so all of you are aware of some things surrounding Kyoto and the National Post up here in Canada. They my help you access this information in context.

    1. When Canada ratified the Kyoto agreement last year there was a huge controversy in the country about whether it was based on facts. This was led by the ultra-conservative Premier of Alberta ("Red Nose Ralphy") Ralph Klien. He was supported by many right wing, neo-conservative business people. They tried to claim Kyoto would cost Canadians jobs - it was also going to cost Alberta Oil and some big industies profit, but I'm sure they were more concerned about the jobs. These conservative elements in Canada trotted out a few "scientists" (not climatologists mind you, but a biologist, I beleive...the ones with the fake names on their online petitions) who claim there is no global warming, contrary to the opinion of most mainstream scientists, including most climatologists.

    2. The National Post is NOT the populist pap that USA Today is. The National Post is a very conservative, right wing newspaper (formerly owned by Conrad Black, an ultra-conservative icon up here and now owned by Can-West Global, the media company of the late Issy Asper, another conservative icon). To say that the National Post might be supporting an anti-Kyoto agenda is an understatement. They are willing to latch onto anything that might cast doubt on global warming and claim a " pillar of the Kyoto Accord is based on false calculations, incorrect data and an overtly biased selection of climate records." - at the bidding of the bussiness and political interests that support them.

    So given that, consider source of this story.

    As for the scientific paper cited, well, it's been out for about a week. Why not let the scientific community do what it does best - review the facts and try to verify the data. Perhaps it is the study that contains the errors, not the original. Even if it's correct, it is only one of the hundreds of studies conducted by scientists for the past 20 years that support global warming.

    Try a Google searh ans see how many more you can come up with whose evidnce is NOT based on extrapolated climate data from the 1400's....then decide if Kyoto is bogus.

    "Pillar" indeed. Kyto is standing on a lot more scientific ground that this study, even if it is correct.

    --
    Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
  114. Read more than just the article ... by fygment · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ... the rebuttals from the authors of the original paper are here.

    That there can be so much controversy highlights the fragility of the "models" that have been developed to support the varying points of view. It seems we really don't understand the climate process yet so maybe, just maybe, we shouldn't leap at any proposed solutions (like Kyoto) because maybe there isn't a problem.

    How come not jumping to solutions based on scanty knowledge of the problem makes sense on the small scale (e.g. advice from a sysadmin to a user) but gets lost on the large scale issues (global warming)?

    --
    "Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
    1. Re:Read more than just the article ... by o'reor · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry but applying the Kyoto resolutions is certainly not "jumping to a solution", it is more like "minimizing human interference with the atmosphere and the climate, until we know better".

      Here's an analogy to the idea behind the reasoning:

      Suppose you are a clueless driver driving an old car that has never gone beyond 55 mph, and has always behaved nicely so far. Then, for whatever reason, you begin using that car at higher and higher speeds: 70, 80, 90 mph, and you realize that when you hit those speeds, your car is shaking all along the way, you have trouble steering it and the motor is overheating. You don't know anything about cars, but you find it strange. Then an idea springs to your mind : "Hey, what has changed since the last few weeks ? Well, my average speed has gone way beyond what my car was used to. So, it may have something to do with my speed.". So you try to go back to the speed levels you used to drive your car at before. Since you have no idea how a car works, you try this, thinking that it may or may not work, but it is certainly not unreasonable to think that it may work.

      Not understanding how it works is no excuse for taking no action and not trying to limit the consumption of fossil carbon. It may or may not work, but we also know that it took tens of millions of years to accumulate it in the present oil wells, yet it will only be a few decades until we blow it all up into the atmosphere. Given what we know about the potential greenhouse effects of carbon dioxyde, it is reasonable to think that reducing our consumption of fossil fuels would certaimly be a good thing.

      So to me, the Kyoto agreements sound more like "let's slow down our fuel burning util we've got a complete understanding of all the effects that carbon dioxyde may have on the climate, instead of just burning away until something irreversible happens".

      --
      In Soviet Russia, our new overlords are belong to all your base.
    2. Re:Read more than just the article ... by pfafrich · · Score: 1
      From the above link. MM03 = McIntyre and McKitrick, MBH98 = Mach et al.

      The MBH98 reconstruction of Northern Hemisphere temperature since 1400 AD is an important result that certainly deserves scientific attention. MM03 obtain a rather different result to MBH98, which - if it were correct - would be very important.

      Unfortunately neither MM03 nor the journal in which it was published took the necessary step of investigating (with Mann, Bradley or Hughes) whether the difference between MM03 results and MBH98 could be explained simply by some error or set of errors in MM03's use of the data or in their implementation of the MBH98 method. This should have been an essential step to take in a case such as this where the difference in results is so large and important. Especialy when the MM03 results, regarding a warm 15th century, were also at odds with the many other reconstructions that have been published, not just at odds with MBH98. Simple errors should first be ruled out prior to publication.

      --
      There are four sorts of people in the world: fools, lunatics, idiots and morons. - Umberto Eco, Foucaut's pendulum.
    3. Re:Read more than just the article ... by Carbonite · · Score: 1

      Suppose you are a clueless driver driving an old car that has never gone beyond 55 mph, and has always behaved nicely so far.

      The problem with your analogy is that we don't have accurate climate data from a large enough sample size.

      With the old car, we know it ran nicely at 55 MPH. Keeping all other variables constant, we increase the speed and begin to notice problems. In this case, it's quite likely that higher speeds are the problem.

      With the climate change, it may be possible to determine that the average temperature has risen in the past century or two. However, we don't have conclusive data on what the precise temperatures were 500, 1000, or 2000 years ago.

      To continue your analogy, it's as if we've just bought an old car and driven it for a few minutes. We've noticed that it shakes at 80 MPH and thus declared that everyone must drive their cars at 55 MPH.

      --
      ich muß mehr Kuhglocke haben
    4. Re:Read more than just the article ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nah. it's like we've just bought an old car and driven it for a few minutes. We've noticed that it shakes at 80 MPH and thus *we shouldn't drive it at 80 MPH*.

      what the fuck is wrong with you?

  115. this is really simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the environmental doom and gloom model are still guesses as to what will happen and are not facts.

    How come it is always a crisis that we must drastically change our society based on unproven therories.

    If you buy the environmental theries, then you should be very acceptive of Wahhabism since it is just radical Islam and only requires faith to accept it fully to justify doing terrorist attacks.

    Earth First applies similar methods.

  116. Wow, will this upset some people by dheltzel · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    My first thought was that whis was going to be ignored by the PWAA (people with an agenda), but after reading the paper, I realized that they must attack this fast and hard, or they will never gain back the ground they've been losing.

    The real issue here is about power. Both sides want the political power to control environmental policy decisions and will do whatever it takes to grab and keep that power. There's no moral high ground here, and anyone who claims their position is absolutely right and that's not negotiable, is clearly viewing this as a religious war.

    It's interesting to me that all the terrorists (radical Islam, Green Peace, neo-Nazi's, Stalin-brand communists, and even the medievel "crusaders", to name a few) are in it for religious reasons. And to the man (or woman), they are convinced that they are acting in their victims best interest.

    Of all tyrannies, a tyranny exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval of their consciences.

    -- C. S. Lewis

  117. Corrections by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    1) Melting ice in the arctic would have no effect on sea level, since that ice is floating. Read up on archimedes' principle (basic physics). For the same reason, an ice cube melting in a glass of water does not raise the water level in the glass.

    2) Re-read the sites you linked to. Here's a blurb from the page regarding Tuvalu:


    A recent reassessment of historical tide-gauge data in the central Pacific found no acceleration in the rise in sea levels.


    And for Venice, the problem is the rise in relative sea level, primarily because it is the land that is sinking, not the sea rising. And then there is the mistaken assumption that sea levels are supposed to remain constant in the first place. Sea levels and shorelines have been constantly changing since the oceans have been in existence-- but this has only become an issue now that humans have started building structures by the shore.

    "I'm sure there are dozens of readers out there that will right off this comment as yet more half-baked environmental doom-mongering.."

    That is self-evident, based on items #1 and #2 above.

  118. Give other researchers time to read to paper first by BuilderBob · · Score: 1

    Posting this as newsworthy less than a week after it was published in a journal is silly. Research takes time, debunking research takes more time.

    The authors of the original paper have posted their rebutal already (as linked to by Millionth Monkey. At the moment its still a virtual mud-fight, each side calling the others' data and method wrong.

    The abstract from this paper reads like a shotgun attack on the original paper, if your going to critique another author's work it helps not call their data obselete and their method poor, at least not in the abstract. You have a better chance of cooperation and admission of error then.

    Both authors of this paper also seem to be first time authors in the field (not that the data should be discounted on that fact alone), McIntyre has no apparent affiliation with a university and McKitrick is an Economist (who has published before, albeit in book form).

    For further backup of their theory, more sources are needed (they don't appear to include any supportive references). For example, we have John Daly's account of the hockey stick. There's also Massan's critique, showing essentially the same thing (medieval warm period being ignored by Mann et al.) This data seems to have been sourced from The Greening Earth Society, which, conveniently, is a Oil lobbying organisation.

    We can find even more Oil funded rebutals to the original Mann paper, 1,2 (a tenuous link to the Greening Earth Society and General Motors...)

    Citing a paper, published in the last week, submitted by an Anonymous Reader (to Slashdot), using the National Post and USA Today as supporting material isn't the proper way to do serious science. The USA Today article opens with " An important new paper in the journal Energy & Environment". The paper is a week old!

    Anyway, at least I have some fun reading tonight, ooh, and some data to play with.

  119. Universal Warming, not Global! by gizmonic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Considering that Mars is experiencing global warming as well, maybe the situation is entirely out of our control? Perhaps we, as humans, have overrated our ability to affect our planet? Or would the extreme environmentalists claim we are somehow screwing Mars over too?

    Of course, if this does indicate more of a pattern throughout the Solar System, then we have no control over it whatsoever. Which is probably why it's not really discussed.

    Oh, and if you don't like the ABC link above, try it straight from the horse's mouth.

    --
    WWJD?
    JWRTFM!
  120. Multi-Proxy estimates by freality · · Score: 1

    The paper says the method used to calculate temperature trends is called "multi-proxy", where a number of observational sources are combinded to estimate a temperature, e.g. tree ring growth and coral calcification presumably happen at known rates with certain temperatures, so you can merge the indicated temperature from both observations (perhaps with some Bayesian component?).

    Well ironically, it looks like we're witnessing a meta application of that methodology. Where 1 reserach team yields one time series, and another yields another, both based on different calculations of multi-proxy estimates and different levels of certainty, we the public/policy-makers must yield another multi-proxy estimate on these results.

    Perhaps after a few teams have reviewed the results we can just pick a point in the middle and go with it. Scientific method 2.0? ;)

  121. No, it does not anger me. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    it sadens me that in spite of the mountains of evidence there are still people like you (and Mr Bush) that will go to any lenghts to descredit something on which there is a general concensus in the scientific community: there is global warming, perhaps made worse by human activity, something should be done.

    When the overriding short term policy is to "protect American jobs" no matter what, we know that long term vision will not be in long supply in certain countries.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  122. rubbish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    climate change is happening. Get used to the idea.

    I realize this fact is inconvenient for many; perhaps VERY inconvenient. But searching for scraps of evidence to avoid dealing with inconvenient realities is bad science.

  123. Mini Ice Age by Soul_destroyed · · Score: 1

    The whole global warming dispute seems to focus on the last 150 years. As this is from when accurate records began. The 1-2 degree centigrade rise in global temperature in the last century is undisputed, but how much of this is due to mankind. The finger of blame quickly points at the Industrial revolution and the use of fossil fuels. This is a contrubuting factor no doubt but how much is natural process? Ice Ages have recorded as every 20-60 thousand years and it would seem we are due one. Prior to such events there has been massive global warming recorded. Palioclimatology has suggested that mini ice and warming events can occur between these massive global events. Samual Peeps recorded in his 17th Century diaries that the Thames had frozen over and locals roasted a whole ox on the ice it was so thick! The point is we are coming out of a mini ice age which occured in the middle ages, sure the manmade greenhouse gases are going to add to this and possiably speed it up but as for glaicers and the pole caps melting i would`nt be to worried as given x years the ice sheet will encroach to the tropics and man will really have something to worry about. That is if we are still here. In stead of fighting a losing battle aganst tempuratue and CO2 increase, we should be learning how to adapt to these conditions. Our influnence on the planet and its processes is a mere glitch in the whole scope of things.

  124. The US is Efficient wrt Emissions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I did my own little study by collating US government data and GDPs of nations (CIA World Factbook IIRC) and greenhouse gas emissions (EPA and NOAA IIRC) . Of the top industrial 50 economies, (no I didn't look at Mauritius, many small countries had little energy production and would therefore be off the charts wrt to emissions efficiency, hardly a useful data point) the US emissions with respect to economic production ranked it at about 25. The question that I was trying to answer was, "How does US total greenhouse gas emission stack up when the fact that we are a highly industrialized nation is taken into account?"

    The answer, "Not too shabby." I wasn't really surprised. Anyone who works in energy consuming industries already knows that energy consumption adds to cost. Being the profit driven entities that they are, companies will try to drive cost out. That includes energy consumption. Reducing energy consumption reduces greenhouse gasses.

    So we were 25th in pollution per dollar. We are the largest economy and the 4 or 5th largest population. We get a lot of bang for our buck from the energy we consume (i.e. the greenhouse gas we produce).

    Now if you wanted to change that, we could shut down all our factories, all our cars, all our computers, all our refrigerators, all out research labs, all our aerospace, our entire industry, but some of us would have to make a few lifestyle changes. I would not accept this for my own self. We would have to turn America into a third world country. Some would like this.

    The worst was China. Their economic production was low compared to their emission of greenhouse gasses.

    I got my answer for myself. Pull the data and crunch your own numbers. You'll find the same thing I did.

    Later,
    Jason

  125. Your statement says absolutely nothing useful by StandardCell · · Score: 1

    You skirt around the issue of the human impact of global warming and don't even give us an alternative explanation. No, I don't think all these "evil companies" should be dumping nuclear waste into the ocean, but the onus is on an accuser (that is to say YOU) to make the case. Your appeal to emotion and invocation of FUD is precisely the type of fear mongering that is getting individuals in trouble in the first place.

    But that's ok. When these companies have to reduce their CO2 emissions on the basis of useless environmentalism, I'm sure the only people who will pay for it are millions of lowly employees, creating further social problems. Are you going to be there screaming at how so many people are out of work and the government needs to take care of it?

    I'm sure you will be. But the government will have created that problem as well. Rest assured, the only person that stands to profit from that sequence of events are people like you.

  126. National Post is Canada's pro business rag by wing03 · · Score: 1

    At one end of the spectrum, you've got Greenpeace, various environmentalists like ex-biologist turned enironmental crusader, David Suzuki who cries environmental foulness when big business wants to do something.

    At the other end, you've got the National Post, Albertans (like Texans) who might as well claim they've debunked global warming, business plans should go full steam ahead while a minimalist study (if any) is done to monitor impact.

    Given the track record of big business and our world, I'm leaning more towards the side of the crazy tree huggers.

  127. Trustworthy? by pfafrich · · Score: 1
    An important paper that re-examines historical climate data was published on 28 October in the respected journal Energy & Environment.

    I must say I have my doubts about the "respected journal Energy & Environment". Looking through the list of abstracts they all seem to be of the greenhouse sceptic camp. I've never heard of the journal before it is published by a very little known publisher. Certainly not on a par with Nature.

    The editor is interesting on her webpage she quotes "Environment becomes fashionable and I turn sceptic". Could I expect an unbiased paper in this journal. Only one editor? Most journals I know have half a dozen if not more. A lot of her own papers are published in her own journal, just a little bit odd!

    The first author is not attached to an institution, the second is in an Economics department (not where I would expect to find an experienced climate modeller). No funding was recieved for the study.

    The tone of the paper is strange, not what i typically expect to see. It seems intent on rubishing the data in every way possible. Most of the errors seem to be minor, a one year slip in time (as data is agrigated over a year it could be argued that this slip could just be a sampling error). Some questions about missing details of methodology used (if you've ever written papers with tight page limits you'll know that some details always get left out).

    The main results fig 7 and 8 are interesting. Their results show broard agreement with the critisied paper for years 1575-1980. It is only the years pre 1575 where there is marked disagrement. Its no suprise that most errors appear in earlier years when the data is presumably less relaible. I must say I'm sceptical about their pre 1600 data that is one heck of a temprature drop, do other sources show similar results?

    In particular the paper backs up the Mann's results from 1600 onwards. Especially the last 100 years where both show a rapid increase in temprature. Amounting to .3 to .5 degree change in global temprature in the past 100 years.

    So is this another slashdot classic from the bottom of the barrel? Let me know when it appears in nature.

    --
    There are four sorts of people in the world: fools, lunatics, idiots and morons. - Umberto Eco, Foucaut's pendulum.
  128. Gee what a surprise by mwood · · Score: 1

    I mean, nobody has ever questioned any of this before....

  129. Global warning by Alomex · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I had a chance to ask an expert on climate change and Nobel Prize winner about the climate change controversy. His response, summarized was:

    1. Evidence of some warming is incontrovertible.
    2. This warming may or may not be due to C02 emissions.
    3. At this point in time, since evidence is still preliminary, he estimates the chances of the greenhouse effect being a real, scientific fact at about 10%.
    4. In day to day life, we buy insurance for, say, a house fire, at much lower odds than that (chance of your house catching fire is 0.01%).
    5. Hence he supports a moderate version of the Kyoto protocol as insurance against the possibility of the greenhouse effect being real.
    6. That was his recommendation to President George W. Bush: sign Kyoto.
    7. Bush chose not to follow his advice.

    1. Re:Global warning by mikeee · · Score: 1

      Your friend was an idiot.

      First, you have to evaluate insurance by its price.

      More importantly, Bush couldn't sign Kyoto for the same reason Clinton never did - it would have to be approved by the US Senate first.

      Which will happen sometime after global cooling takes effect in Hell.

      All Bush did to stop pretending that we were ever going to ratify it.

    2. Re:Global warning by elefantstn · · Score: 1

      6. That was his recommendation to President George W. Bush: sign Kyoto.
      7. Bush chose not to follow his advice.


      Given his complete and utter ignorance of the American political process, I'll take it his Nobel Prize is no guarantee of any political knowledge?
      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    3. Re:Global warning by Alomex · · Score: 1

      Given his complete and utter ignorance of the American political process

      Care to explain this?

    4. Re:Global warning by Alomex · · Score: 1

      First, you have to evaluate insurance by its price.

      Which he did.

      Your friend was an idiot.

      He has a Nobel prize, you don't. Given the evidence thus far, I'll assume the converse.

      More importantly, Bush couldn't sign Kyoto for the same reason Clinton never did -

      On the contrary, he could sign it subject to ratification as it was always done with arms treaties during the cold war.

      In some cases the senate ratified, in others they didn't. The president can still choose to enforce the treaty in as much as he can through his executive orders (admittedly something that is more effectively done with the military than with pollution control).

      All Bush did to stop pretending that we were ever going to ratify it.

      Did I ever say otherwise?

    5. Re:Global warning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The big stumbling block here is not even Bush. It is the US Senate. If it were solely the President's job, surely Clinton would have entered the US into the Kyoto treaty.

      "[The President] shall have power, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to make treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur;" -- US Constitution, 1789

      This is not a technicality, and most other nations have a similar approval system (whether their citizens know it or not).

    6. Re:Global warning by Alomex · · Score: 1

      The big stumbling block here is not even Bush. It is the US Senate. If it were solely the President's job, surely Clinton would have entered the US into the Kyoto treaty.

      I see. As I said in my other reply the president can sign, as they often did in past arms treaties, and the senate can later choose to ratify or not to as has also happened in the past.

      Considering that he gave his opinion to Bush in an official capacity as advisor to the President in this isse, I'm pretty sure he was made aware of the various political options, although he didn't mention this point specifically during the conversation.

    7. Re:Global warning by tyen · · Score: 1

      In day to day life, we buy insurance for, say, a house fire, at much lower odds than that (chance of your house catching fire is 0.01%).

      The climate change expert is making an educated guess at the odds. The insurance figures are based upon actuarial tables built from empirical data. The scientific rigor used to evaluate probabilities in each scenario is drastically different, and not comparable at all, thus making the evaluation method used to peg the climate change probabilities unsuitable as the basis of declaring that billions of dollars be spent on a Kyoto Accord-style insurance policy.

      All who are pro-Kyoto Accord based upon the "insurance policy" reasoning should be seriously looking into weather futures (and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange is not the only weather futures exchange, Google it up). If you are certain about your probability levels and the market has not priced in those levels (which they have not, check the quotes), then there is a killing to be made. That no advocates of the Accord are putting up their own funds to bank on what they say are the facts or probabilities, makes me wonder why they are so eager to put up other people's money.

    8. Re:Global warning by Alomex · · Score: 1

      The climate change expert is making an educated guess at the odds. The insurance figures are based upon actuarial tables built from empirical data.

      Really? what reliable data do we have about the terror threat level of _today_, and how high would it be tomorrow? This does not stop the insurance industry from hazarding their best guess and allowing insurance against terrorist acts. In fact, 9/11 seems to suggest they underestimated the risk.

    9. Re:Global warning by Dr.+Scott · · Score: 1

      Expertise in one area of knowledge does not confer expertise in any other. Your expert knows about climate change science. His expertise therefore ends at point #3. For the next two points, one would consult an economist; for the last two, an expert in US politics. I don't think your expert knows much about either of those areas. It's perfectly reasonable to ignore his non-expert advise.

    10. Re:Global warning by Alomex · · Score: 1

      For the next two points, one would consult an economist;

      From Enron...

      for the last two, an expert in US politics.

      Like the ones who planned the "transition" to democracy in Iraq.

      It's perfectly reasonable to ignore his non-expert advise.

      Just like George Bush did...

    11. Re:Global warning by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 1
      3. At this point in time, since evidence is still preliminary, he estimates the chances of the greenhouse effect being a real, scientific fact at about 10%.


      So you're saying that the Kyoto "treaty", which would have placed more restrictions on the US than on China or Mexico, would have been a good idea? I would have figured that in order to meet Kyoto's goals for CO2 emission, the US would either have to shut down 5-10% of its power plants and build new nyu-ku-lar ones or get rid of the steel and oil industries. It seems a risky gambit against a danger that has 10% chance of happening.

      Let's make some safe assumptions. We'll be generous to the environmentalists, too. Lets say that your friend is right, and that there's a 10% chance of human-caused global warming at 15%. We have to assume that there is a chance that it has progressed to the point where it's irreversible. Lets call that chance 40% IF HAPPENING.

      This would mean that, with the figures I have pulled from my @nus, that we have a 6% chance of repairable global warming. Then lets assume that signers of the treaty do not constitute 100% of the world population. What then, if not everyone is trying to fix it? Is the potential damage to the economy worth the risk of not working/ not being needed?
  130. I have seen many articles like this by TimmyDee · · Score: 1

    It seems that every so often, on an increasingly regular basis, industry pundits put out "evidence" that global warming is a myth, or at the least that such temperature fluctuations that we are now experiencing have historical analogs. Looking over the article, I see very little real science about it. They cite ring width analyses as a measure of current climatological conditions, yet there is so much more to dendrochronology than just temperature (I myself have done a research project using dendrochronology). Also, they say that they replicated MBH98's procedures "as closely as we could using publicly available documentation." If this were a true scientific paper, the authors would have been in contact with the authors of the paper in question, receiving help and guidance in replicating their procedure. Science is not a secretive venture like business. Perhaps what concerns me most is the fact that this journal is not peer reviewed. Neither of the authors have any sort of background in climate history research, or atmospheric science for that matter. One is an economist and the other has been an officer on mining expeditions. Their concerns do not seem to lie in contributing to a larger body of science, but promoting their viewpoint for business interests.

    --
    Per Square Mile, a blog about density
  131. This paper is a piece of crap by geoff2 · · Score: 1

    David Appell has been tracking the story and has reports here. Moreover, the authors of the original study have published a response here. The original story should be updated to reflect these important facts, not just to report the fact that another crank published a similar paper two years ago.

  132. Speak for yourself by StandardCell · · Score: 1

    Maybe next you're going to tell folks that the CBC is an unbiased organization. I haven't heard of CBC broadcasting or publishing any contrary evidence with regards to global warming. David Suzuki and his ilk are the rah-rah people within that organization, and it's amazing how people who disagree with typical left-leaning points of view are regarded as second-class in Canada. Openly disagreeing with things like legalizing gay marriage or marijuana often gets you dirty looks from "average" people based on their false intellectual stoicism and superior enlightenment in Canada. That is precisely what you are doing in this case as well.

    Bear in mind the following, however. I don't know if you live in Alberta or not, but you better be sure that a great amount of Canada's wealth lies in Alberta. All those federal transfer payments and taxes on oil and gas up here are basically holding the country afloat. If Canada loses those, then one of two things will happen: either Canada will go deeply into debt and mash the economy, or the already half-rate social programs like medical coverage and eduaction will go the way of the dodo.

    Just because people are starting to speak out on Kyoto and human-induced global warming seems to make you incredibly uncomfortable. The onus is on the accuser to prove their case, and the social climate in most countries makes that difficult if not impossible due to the fear of losing government funding for their research (i.e. Canada and Europe). Couple that with an overall left-wing media, and it's easy to see that the only "climate cooling" is the one in which people are willing to challenge the scientific establishment.

  133. Bjorn Lomberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I waited for someone to bring up the idiot Lomberg, too bad it was reposted by the Slashdot editors. Since 2001, when that article was published, even the Economist (as pro-business and environmentally sceptical as you can get) have come around and admitted that
    a) Global warming is real
    b) It is likely caused by humans.

    I'd like to refer you all, and especially the Slashdot editors, to MEDIA KIT: Debunking Pseudo-Scholarship: Things a journalist should know about The Skeptical Environmentalist

    1. Re:Bjorn Lomberg by haapi · · Score: 1

      Lomborg is the poster child for "Lies, damn lies, and statistics."

      --
      Well, apparently, you only have to fool the majority of people for a little while.
    2. Re:Bjorn Lomberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, if only you had taken the time to actually READ his book you would know that the conclusions in his book are alot more diverse.

      The main idea about the book, is that he cannot understand how certain organisations can come up with the conclusions they do.

      If you had read the book, you would also know that the WRI that you refers to, is under heavy attack in his book. Alot of his critics is about the way they manipulate the media with doomsday stories, always seeing worst-case scenarios. Calling something from them a "media kit" is maybe abit optimistic...

      Yes, its easy to say im Pro-Lomborg or Anti-Lomborg, but reality is often alot more complicated!

  134. Hear Hear! by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
    Well put.

    Conrad Black isn't just a pawn of big business, he IS big business. (Not to mention that the National Post is one of the downright dumbest rags I've ever read. It's on par with the freekin' Toronto Sun with it's half-nude girl on the inside front cover.)

    Anybody who takes this kind of research without any comparative thought, or any digging into the allegiances of its authors, publishers and promoters, is being foolhardy. --Many people do not realize that having a well-researched and ground-breaking paper is only half the battle; you need to promote it or it will simply vanish into mist. And who, typically, has all the money for promotion. . ?

    The point of Kyoto was to reduce industrial air pollution. To say that reducing industrial air pollution is a bad idea because, "We don't have reliable proof that air pollution causes environmental damage," is either fraudulent or outright insane. --I'm not sure if there is a difference.


    -FL

  135. What about the Little Ice Age? by Phronesis · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The data presented by the researchers indicate that the late 15th century was warmer than the 20th. This is a bit strange, given that historical records from that period (e.g., diocesan annals, crop records, etc.) report sudden and significant cooling and glaciation starting around 1450. This is reflected in the "erroneous" record in Fig. 8 of the paper, but has been "corrected" out.

    So were all the 15th century records of cold weather and advancing ice phony? Was the world really warmer and milder than today? Was there a vast conspiracy in the late 1400s to record phony accounts of the weather in order that 20th century environmentalists would believe in Global Warming? I don't think so!

    1. Re:What about the Little Ice Age? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Diocesan annals, crop records, etc. describe local climate, not global climate.

    2. Re:What about the Little Ice Age? by Phronesis · · Score: 1
      When you assemble them, it tells you a lot about most of Europe. This fits nicely with proxy data of the sort the paper disputes.

      The paper discusses Northern Hemisphere climate much more than Southern hemisphere and restricts many of its claims to the NH, so European data is quite relevant. Moreover, the paper takes on European data explicitly in a number of places (charts claim to show errors regarding Paris, Greenland, and Central Europe.

    3. Re:What about the Little Ice Age? by Anthony · · Score: 1

      Stable Isotope analysis of coral by ANU's Research School suggests a global effect.

      http://wwwrses.anu.edu.au/environment/eePages/eeCu rrentResearch/research_Hendy2.html

      --
      Slashdot: Where nerds gather to pool their ignorance
  136. Small particles or carbon monoxide, u can't choose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well of course, it's great excuse for taxes and more taxes. There's unlimited profits in less then effective technology development and a hell of a lot more regulation for citizenship. Win win win.

    Canada (for example) undertook some heavy handed measures against young drivers making getting a drivers licence impossible for some and a royal pain for the majority. The inevitable conclusion was a poorer population amoung the young because of limited job prospects. The leftists thinkers of our society decided that not everyone should drive and rather then bring it forward honestestly, they decided to once again go the aristocrat route.

    Why cap (or collect 100%) waste coming from five or ten smoke stacks in every city when there's so much opportunity in unnecessarily burdening the population for fun and profit. Heh, they sold carbon monoxide (think space heaters and carbon dioxide (sounds like the preceding)) as the heaviest contibutors to human health. Small particles got pushed out of the picture entirely.

  137. Re:You have this backwards, or I am being trolled by NoCleverName · · Score: 1

    Problem 1. A rectangular vat 2mX2m in floor area is filled to height 2m and thus contains 8 cubic meters=8200kg water. A cubic meter block of ice is lowered into the vat; since it's mass is 917kg, where is the water level now? Ans: The block displaces 917KG liquid water, the volume of which is 0.89 cu m. The total volume of the liquid and displacing ice mixture is now 8.89 cu m. The height is 8.89/4 = 2.22 m. Problem 2. A rectangular vat 2mX2m in floor area is filled with 9117 kg of water. How high is the vat filled? Ans: Since water density is 1025 kg cu meter the vat contains 9117/1025 = 8.89 cu m of water. With a floor area of 4 sq m the height will be 8.89/4 - 2.22 m.

  138. Politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're getting into politics now. Is politics the same as biological science? Whenever you have an opponent who is supporting a non-popular belief (I.e. that God will take care of us all and that in a few years the believers will be transported in rapture to heaven and the rest of humanity will live in eternal hell on what was once earth, OR that we don't need no stinkin' biosphere) the opponents, unfortunately, will jump on that politician like rabid dogs. When someone appears weak, they are attacked in politics, and this is true anywhere. I don't think that can change.

  139. spit in the wind by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Mann, Bradley & Hughes (authors of the definitive 1998 study attacked by McIntyre and McKitrick) responded today with:

    "McIntyre and McKitrick ("MM") have [...] used neither the data nor the procedures of MBH98. Thus, it is entirely understandable that they do not obtain the same result. Their effort has no bearing on the work of MBH98, and is no way a "correction" of that study as they claim. On the contrary, their analysis appears seriously flawed and amounts to a gross misrepresentation of the work of MBH98."

    Scientific observers await the peer review of the MM publication to determine whose science-fu is stronger. Meanwhile, greenhouse deniers have yet to pull rabbits out of their (*ahem*) hats to explain how the Workweek Causes Climate Changes. Or they can join Timothy in celebrating propaganda like the obviously corrupt Economist. Just remember to wear your sunscreen.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  140. Arctic Ice Melt Won't Raise Sea Level by serutan · · Score: 1

    Just a minor point. The whole north polar ice cap could melt without affecting sea level, because north polar ice is floating. Water expands when it freezes, which is why a small portion of an iceberg sticks up out of the water. As the ice melts it shrinks again, occupying the same volume that it displaced when it was frozen. The water level around it will not rise.

    Of course, Antarctic ice is a different story.

  141. I will take that... by freeBill · · Score: 1

    ...as a "no, I don't care."

    The difference has gotten worse in the last five years because China has reduced its use of coal in that time frame. (Note that India has not achieved similar reductions.)

    --
    Eternal vigilance only works if you look in every direction.
    1. Re:I will take that... by lobsterGun · · Score: 1

      No, actually I'm interested in this, and I've run into a wall on this kind of research in the past (when looking for international literacy rates).

      Data from the 90's isn't that hard to find, but if you want more recent data, it just isn't out available. I don't know if it's a question of data taking time to analyse, or if GO's/NGO's just aren't publishing data that isn't favorable to their cause (I suspect it's mostly the former rather than the later).

  142. The National Post by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 1

    The National Post is barely better than a tabloid. Seriously -- this is a "newspaper" that has Celebrity gossip as its frontpage headline almost 50% of the time. This is not a newspaper with journalistic integrity.

  143. No vindication... by freeBill · · Score: 1

    ...but if this paper turns out to be wrong Bjorn will be quoting this research long after it's been discredited.

    That's his methodology.

    --
    Eternal vigilance only works if you look in every direction.
  144. Too much research money at stake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the einvormmentalists and environmental researches have just too damn much money to lose if their theories are proven false.

    The lazy journalist's story 'Environment dirty, man bad, corporations bad, what about the children?'

    1. Re:Too much research money at stake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hehe, yeah, because environmentalism is the way to big bucks. I don't doubt the effect of getting grant money and consulting money on science, but for the love of Jesus, don't think for a minute that the effect of money on environmental research can be comparable to the effect of money from oil and gas. Any relatively smart person who's going to let money infuence their decisions will not choose environmental engineering. A relatively naive person may believe all the lip-service towards the environment equals money, but beyond that, most people know it's a lot of shit talk.

      Oil and gas is one of the easier ways to make a relatively good salary... in Canada, at least. It doesn't matter whether you're talking about blue-collar work or a university professor.

      Now, that's not to say there's money as a gas station attendant, but in many areas related to oil and gas, there's a lot of money.

  145. Re:You have this backwards, or I am being trolled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    But do please continue on with your desperate clinging to a bogus idea, even after being proven 100% wrong. It's entertaining.
    But not very, where's a SCO story when you need one?
  146. Re:You have this backwards, or I am being trolled by HardCase · · Score: 1
    As others have pointed out much better than I have, only part of the ice is floating in the seas and supported by displacement, much of the rest of it is supported by land. Where this is the case, there's no equivalent volume of water that's being replaced by an equivalent volume of melted ice.


    You're kidding me, right? How much of the Arctic ice cap is supported by land? You do know the difference between north and south, right?


    Incidentally, others pointed out much better than you because you didn't point out anything of the kind! And you're still wrong because the volume of the ice doesn't matter. It's the MASS!


    -h-

  147. MOD PARENT UP by macdaddy · · Score: 1

    This guy made all the right points.

  148. People are the problem by newMe · · Score: 0

    One thing Enviroments refse to admit and deal with is that we'd have less polution if we had less people. As soon as people hit the Industrial Revolution level of technology (so ignore those subsistance farmers) they start dumping more and more crap into the air. And, as globalization allows more and more people to increase their standard of living, more and more polution occurs. So, if care so damn much about the environment, start supporting genocide. Fortunatly the French already support genocide for Americans.

  149. Tell that to the people killed by extreme heat ... by vlad_petric · · Score: 1
    Oh wait, I guess they're French so it doesn't really matter ...

    Let's face it - climate IS changing. It doesn't take a PhD to realize that each and every person on this planet converts chemical energy into thermal energy (those who have a car to a much higher extent than the others). Even without the greenhouse effect, that would still be a lot of heat.

    --

    The Raven

  150. Funding for grants is acquired... by freeBill · · Score: 1

    ...in a variety of ways, many them biased to greater or lesser degrees. It is true that catastrophic consequences increase the likelihood of funding. It is also true that catastrophic consequences increase the chances you'll get funding for a counter-study. This is a good thing. The reasons: catastrophic consequences are more important (both for society at large and for those who might be causing them).

    While it is true that ego is a big motivator in science (anyone who has read anthing about Newton would know this), it is also true that search for truth and knowledge is the best way to achieve this (as Newton also demonstrates).

    My rule of thumb is: If you see bias only on one side, you are perceiving your own bias, not the bias of the system. That's related to my sig as well.

    --
    Eternal vigilance only works if you look in every direction.
  151. Re:facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wind Power Potential?? Are you crazy? Well you sound like an enviromentalist hippie, so you probably are. Ok, I am just kidding, don't get all mad. I am an EE specializing power and renewable energy. Let me explain the problems with wind and solar to you.

    First off, Wind and Solar are what we call in the industry as UNDISPATCHABLE. What this means is, we cannont rely on the wind and the sun to always be there when we need it. Unlike a Fossil Fuel, Nuclear, Hydro, Geothermal plant PV and Wind power sources cannot be turned on when we need it. Let me explain why this is a problem.

    Power, unlike water or natural gas is delivered at the speed of light from generating station to your wall socket. There is no huge tank on top of a hill to store the power for when you need it. In the summer, water tanks are filled at night so there will be an available surplus for day use. In the winter natural gas can be pumped into tanks, or more likely formations closer to the end use when the demand is not high. There is no "tank" to store electricity. No, Batteries won't work either. Just trust me on this. So the problem is, you need to be able to meet the power demand with your power supply at any given instant. If the power demand outstrips supply, then you get a blackout and mass anarchy.

    Ok so lets say instead of the less than 1% solar and wind supply, we make that 20%. So we are humming along with our nice clean energy until, ooops, clouds cover 25% of our PV (let alone what happens at night), and the wind is not blowing at 25% of our wind turbines. So we have a shortfall in supply of 5%. Grid goes boom.

    Second, wind and especially solar PV are too expensive (capital cost). $ Per KW, solar PV comes in between $3000 - $7000 Wind $1000- $2000. A combined cycle plant $400-$600. Efficiency of these methods tilts the scale even further in favor of a combined cycle plant.

    PV and wind are great at supplementing the power grid. But to say they can replace large portions of the supply is ludicrous. Simply put, if you want to get rid of the coal and CO2 producing power generation methods, then Nuclear Power is the only answer.

  152. Re:This is Mann's fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Was this mentioned or implied in their original paper? If not, at least some of the criticism of MBH98 is legitimate.

  153. What a load of tripe by Yogurtu · · Score: 1

    Many environmentalists are not the wealthy type because they are closet slackers.

    Would you kindly point us to your sources, or are you just psychic? Or does "closet slacker" mean "not greedy enough to make a few bucks poisoning the planet"? I guess I must be full of jealously too.

    Their beef with the United States is the culture of consumption, the notion of of consumer capitalism.

    That's a bit empty for a culture, but it would only arouse pity if it wasn't so retarded for a long-term strategy; the planet just can't support permanent growth of the economy because it is finite. And consumer capitalism is not privative of the USA, but I have to admit it's there where it's most extreme.

    Environmentalists just hate people too much for people to trust their advice.

    If that was the case, why would they be fighting to ensure our continuity as a species? They could just sit and watch the show, as we blithely kill the planet off. I admit they get carried away in places, but by and large I'd have less hedonism and more chances of survival as a species.

    1. Re:What a load of tripe by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > why would they be fighting to ensure our continuity as a species?

      Because there is no fight to take part in. Our species is probably not going to be "wiped out" due to controllable ecological disaster. They don't just sit and watch, because everyone would slowly realize that they make almost no difference.

      Okay, honestly? I don't believe that. Environmentalists (real ones, not politicians posing as) do love the world, sometimes a bit too much, but too much love generally isn't bad. What I dislike is the offensive "blame-this-guy" kind of thing. They tend to automatically jump on things that follow their side, whether or not there is any basis on reality. They just assume it is, and anyone who says otherwise is either stupid, intentionally misunderstanding, or some other silly excuse.

  154. Re:Sea level rise by 2marcus · · Score: 1

    And, as long as we are correcting false impressions about sea level rise:

    The vast majority of current observed sea level rise, and projected sea level rise over the next century, is actually based on thermal expansion of the oceans. Eg, as the oceans warm, they expand.

    Some amount of current and near term projected rise is due to melting glaciers outside of Greenland and Antarctica.

    The total projected rise from the above causes by 2100 is between 20 cm and 1 m.

    In the longer term (multiple centuries), we may have to worry about melting of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, which would cause serious sea level rise (the Ross Ice Shelf collapsing might lead to several meters of rise by itself). However, in the short term increased precipitation over the centers of those land masses is actually projected to balance out increased melting at the edges...

    -Marcus

  155. the authors are clearly unbiased.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From McKitrick's website:
    "Do you have any ties to the energy sector or anti-Kyoto think tanks?

    McKitrick is a Senior Fellow of the Fraser Institute, a Canadian policy think tank that has taken a stand against Kyoto. McIntyre has worked many years in the mineral exploration industry. McIntyre is a shareholder of a micro-capital energy exploration company, CGX Energy, has acted in the past as a consultant to CGX and sub-leases office space from CGX."

    1. Re:the authors are clearly unbiased.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut up you fucking eco-terrosits-communist.

  156. Making decisions based on Expected Values by 2marcus · · Score: 1


    So, most rational people make decisions based on "expected value". You weigh the cost of your preventative measure against the probability of your bad outcome times the value of your bad outcome. Anybody who pays for insurance does this all the time - there is a small chance of me getting into a car accident. I am willing to spend some money every year so that in the (unlikely) case where I am sued for (potentially large) damages, my insurance company will cover me. Now, I don't have infinite money, so I am not going to buy 100 million dollars worth of coverage. But it might be worth it to buy 100 thousand dollars worth of coverage.

    So, we don't know how much damage climate change will cause yet. But it seems like there should be some amount (perhaps small, perhaps large) that we should be spending today to reduce emissions because there is a chance (perhaps small, perhaps large) that climate change will cause damages (perhaps small, perhaps large).

    And that amount spent should be designed to be equal to the reduction in the sum of (Probability(damage)*Amount(damage)) across all possible futures.

    (Of course, a policy has uncertain cost too... but how to incorporate that I leave as an exercise to the reader)

    (The controversy about the Mann study might imply that we should adjust our probabilities or projected damages down - however, keep in mind that it is only one study out of 100s, and this is only one critique...)

    1. Re:Making decisions based on Expected Values by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why are there so few people like you out there? why doesn't this make sense to everyone?

  157. same old FUD by danharan · · Score: 1

    I heard very similar arguments when in first year environmental science in 1995.

    Truth is, the vast majority of scientists working on the issue all agree: we're fucking up the climate. They disagree on details, but on the whole: we're putting a bunch of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, and this is NOT going to be a GOOD THING (TM).

    I don't even bother to check a scientists' funding anymore when they come out with such studies. There's been too many that were bought and paid for by the oil lobby that I don't trust a single one of them.

    So what if we're wrong? BIG DEAL. Some people chose not to expose their kids to second-hand smoke at a time when some doctors still insisted it was good for you. In the absence of complete information, do what seems sensible. Besides, people are already dying in measurable numbers from air pollution.

    Plus, our governments heavily subsidize (both directly and indirectly) fossil-fuel use, leading many to believe that we can exceed Kyoto targets at a profit.

    If we can make money and have cleaner air, why the hell are we worrying about models for?

    --
    Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
  158. Two main reasons by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    #1: The knee-jerk reaction. People get going on the "BUT THINK OF THE CONSEQUENCES!!!!!111111" People get caught up in the alarmism of what allegedly could happen that they loose sight of the reaitly of the situation. Not so common when it's just a computer crashing.

    #2: Agendas. Eco groups have an agenda, and often more than one. It is often to their advantage to push a view, even if the facts supporting it are not there.

    1. Re:Two main reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      #2: Agendas. Eco groups have an agenda, and often more than one. It is often to their advantage to push a view, even if the facts supporting it are not there.

      why does everyone feel the need to point this out about environmentalists? it's true of EVERY lobby. seriously, i'm curious. is this the best rhetoric you can come up with? that environmental lobbying groups are *gasp* lobbyists? i guess we shouldn't listen to them since they're trying to say something.

      also: what's so horrible about their agenda?

  159. When a man is right & you tell him he is wrong by Dragonfly · · Score: 1

    ...he also gets angry.

    Huh.

  160. A question of scale by wytcld · · Score: 1

    The environmental debate comes down to competing conceptions of how mankind scales against natural forces. For almost all of mankind's existence, we've been very small indeed. Logging, burning, hunting, foraging, agriculture changed local climates (logging in North Africa many centuries ago is thought responsible for much of the current size of the Sahara) and ecologies (the loss of the Wooly Mammoth is one I regret) but nature was still essentially so much bigger than humanity that the Earth on the larger scale wasn't much perturbable.

    Religions based much of their authority on the benevolence of the gods, as shown by the relative stability of the seasons. A big flood, for instance, would be taken as a sign that mankind had considerably fscked up in some god's eyes. The legacy of this is that many people still have a background belief that the constancy of nature and the weather is a gift from the supernatural, and that if we are virtuous it will all just work out.

    But the problem is that mankind has achieved much greater scale vis-a-vis the Earth, so that we really can do stuff like double the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, or log off the rest of the rain forests - and in fact are well on the way to doing so. Papers like the one we're discussing seem to have the background belief that we can do all this stuff, and still some god will take care of us by controlling the weather, if we just remember to pray and avoid offenses like birth control and abortion.

    But that's hardly a scientific view. Scientifically, large-scale changes in system variables are bound to create large-scale changes in system behavior. Mankind's actions control much larger-scale variables than ever before, and our capacity to create effects is increasing rapidly. While effects in complex systems can be hard to compute, it's only in a dream world that actions have no effects. If our science isn't up to predicting what large-scale effects will be caused by our ongoing large-scale changes, the conservative thing to do is to put the brakes on our changes until the science can catch up.

    For those who believe that a god will assure the constancy of the weather and ecosystems no matter what we do, take away their gasoline and let the god power their cars. Surely a god omnipotent and good-willing enough towards them to do the first can do the latter with no trouble.

    Meanwhile, let those who understand the premises of science be the ones trusted with technological processes.

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  161. CO2 per GNP? by 2marcus · · Score: 1

    The "only" fair metric to use?

    It is certainly a metric to take into consideration. But I will point out that most of what we produce so generously, we also consume. If I generate 1000 tons of CO2, produce a widget worth $1000, and then use that widget myself for my own pleasure, is that really better than Bob producing 10 tons of CO2 and producing no widgets whatsoever?

    GNP is _not_ a perfect measure of "good for society". (A standard example being that GNP includes both the sale of cigarettes and the hospital treatment for the cancer those cigarettes cause)

    Having said that, I don't actually think that the idea of using "intensity targets" (improving the CO2 to GNP ratio, not necessarily reducing CO2 emissions) (ala the Bush administration proposal) is necessarily a bad idea. Of course, the target he chose was practically business as usual, which I do object to...

    1. Re:CO2 per GNP? by clearcache · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Sure, we can measure environmental impact relative to GNP and celebrate the fact that we (in the US) are more efficient users of certain resources. I think that's something to be proud of.

      However, when the overall quality of the environment is concerned, GNP is a useless metric. If the environment is degraded to the point that sections of the planet are less livable, less able to sustain its inhabitants (human and other), does it really matter what the GNP is? Only humans are concerned with GNP...and we're a small part of the system.

      There needs to be a balance, and using GNP to justify resource (over)consumption is flawed thinking. Should we follow every tree-hugger's advice to the letter? Probably not. But there is some truth beneath the agenda...of both sides.

  162. Flawed arguments... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I would like to make several points that are only loosely related...

    If humans are causing global warming on Earth, then who is causing the global warming on Mars? That's right, over the last several decades the Martian polar caps have been shrinking at an unprecidented rate. This comes from the European Space Agency, not a suspect US government report.

    Human-caused CO2 from post industrial nations is an interesting scapegoat. No I'm not saying that CO2 is not a greenhouse gas. My point is that there are other greenhouse gases that have hundreds of times more effect than CO2. Then there is the fact that a large amount of the CO2 released into the atmosphere each year comes from natural, not industrial sources. Rotting vegitation (when not replaced by equivalent new plant growth) is a source for CO2. Supposedly ruminants (bovines, cows, deer, etc) are a large source of greenhouse gases. (Who is going to pay to put special gas-trapping diapers on all the cattle in India?) The forest fires in Indonesia a few years ago were the source of about 40% of the worldwide CO2 releases for the whole year. The fires in the Amazon might be another 10-15%. A single eruption of Mt. Pinatubo a few years ago released as much greenhouse gases as 10 years of industrial output. The CO2 output from manufacturing in developed nations may be only 10% of total CO2. On top of that, the manufacturing in developed nations tends to be much more effecient than the manufacturing in non-developed nations, producing a lot more goods per unit of CO2 released.

    If the Koyoto Agreement was really about controlling greenhouse gases then the "developing" nations would not have been excluded. If China can put a man in orbit, then why should they still be considered exempt from the agreement? The dirtiest industries have already migrated from the developed nations to the developing nations because of environment regulations (and the lack of them in the developing nations). The Koyoto Agreement is instead based on a view that there is a theoretical acceptable worldwide CO2 "pie" that is currently divided unfairly to the advantage of developed nations.

    All global weather simulations contain a "fudge factor" that is used to represent the unknowns that also contribute to the weather patterns. One interesting fact about the current simulations is that the fudge factor is more significant than the CO2 levels. If you take the various simulations and start them up from the year 1900 they do a very poor job of predicting todays weather. If you take two simulations that both assume global warming and start them up from the year 2000, one may predict that North Dakota will become a swamp, while the other says it will be a desert.

    Lawnmowers, ATVs, other 2 & 3 cycle engines, and *bar-b-ques* produce more polution in the US than cars made after 1990. I don't know about greenhouse gases, but they definitely produce more polution.

    One of the predictions for global warming was that the sea levels would rise with catastrophic results for the costal cities and island nations. Fortunately (or unfortunately, depending on your perspective) the sea levels have been dropping instead of rising. There are certain cities like Venice, Italy, and New York and New Orleans in the the US that are sinking, but that is a different issue.

    None of this says that global warming is not happening. It does seem to be happening, but not in the ways the scientists expect, from the causes they have identified, or with the effects that they predicted. Throughout history, when humans have tried solving one problem they have usually created other problems. Sometimes the new problems are less severe than the original ones and sometimes they are worse. Most of the time it is a mixed bag.

    It is one thing for you to decide that you are willing to give up some of your comforts for the betterment of something else. It is an entirely different thing to start dictating to everyone else that they should give up whatever t

  163. The whole in the ozone layer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is disputable as well. Yes, it's there, but it's quite possible that we didn't cause it. We discovered it, but that doesn't mean it's new.

  164. your opinion on this matter is now worthless by spamspam · · Score: 1

    because you failed to know that dihydrogen monoxide (h20 or water as you may know it) is a spoof. the website you linked takes about 2 nanoseconds to know that this is a spoof site. taking an additional 2 nanoseconds to look it up at snopes.com would have confirmed this as a spoof. so tell me why i should even listen to anything coming from your ignorant piehole about environmental issues being hijacked by socialists.

    i doubt you can even define socialism.

    1. Re:your opinion on this matter is now worthless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *Laughs* I think that was a gag on Penn and Teller's show 'Bullshit' when they discussed Envornmentalism. That show will probably piss you off, but it's worth a watch, there's quite a few humerous moment.

      The banning of water thing happened when they sent an attractive women with a petition pad to pitch the ban at an envornmentalist rally. Most of them signed without question (it must be good!). Some asked a question, but obviously didn't catch on or appreciate what was being said by her (she didn't lie, she just made it sound bad).

      Anyway.

    2. Re:your opinion on this matter is now worthless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jeez! Are you a dumbass or what! That was my point: that ignorant hippy-dippy tree-huggers fall for pseudo-science because they are too uneducated to understand much of anything.

      As another post here explained: Penn and Teller went out and got a bunch of idiots like you to sign a petition to ban the "dangerous chemical" dihydrogen monoxide. P&T had no trouble finding morons who wanted to "like, you know, save the world, man".

      As a result of your mindless knee-jerk reaction I hereby deem you to be one of those stupid hippies.

      As to "pieholes": stop breathing through yours.

  165. Read This New Study on Solar Activity by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

    The powers that be rejected this a week ago. Its a paper which will appear in PRL that did a reconstruction of Be data in polar ice to reconstruct sunspot data back an additional 800 or so years, to AD 850. They show that the period since 1940 has shown uniquely high solar activity . This too hits at the greenhouse theories. See the paper here

  166. He's an economist by Wesley+Everest · · Score: 1
    Why should anyone take his paper seriously? Look at his homepage -- he's an economist with an axe to grind (and funding). What do economists know about the earth's climate?

    Tune in next week when corporate shill plastic-surgeon writes a paper showing cigarette smoking cures emphysema.

    1. Re:He's an economist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's an economist--so what? The issue is whether Mann's graph can be reproduced using Mann's data and reasonable statistical procedures.

      The economist was unable to reproduce the graph. If he made an error, it should be easy enough to show. If not, then an explanation for Mann's original graph is needed.

  167. Then quit regulating markets by tjstork · · Score: 1


    You know, a lot of environmentalists decry American consumption on one hand and then vote to sustain a non-market ideology that lets people continue to believe they can do exactly what the environmentalists say they should not.

    The classic case in point is electricity. In the USA, there is this notion that electricity is a fundamental right and it should essentially cost for nothing. It doesn't. The price of electricity varies wildly based on the fuel supply and the amount of demand. It's pretty academic: the cost of power rises every day as everyone turns on the air conditioners and drops as night falls. Most consumers are shielded from these price fluctuations by their "democrat" friends. If people actually paid market prices for their power, they would probably be so horrified that that noontime A/C cost them an extra $50 a month, they wouldn't use it. Instead, you have utilities scrambling to build more power plants, to burn --all the time---, just to satisfy people running their air conditionrs at noon. It's insane.

    And, another thing, why shouldn't utilities be allowed to brown people out. You want to avoid new plant construction? Fine, at peak days, just shut off areas of the city.

    The same issues go for every other natural resource. Christ, the dems bitch about the price of gas and blame it on bush, but, right now, any real enviornmentalists would tell you that if Bush raised the price of gas to $5 a gallon to really soak the poor, it would be a dream come true for conservation.

    You can't have your cake of cheap energy for the poor and energy conservation at the same time. If you want people to conserve energy, it has to be valuable.

    --
    This is my sig.
  168. Environmentalists Increase Greenhouse Gasses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They do. Extreme environmentalists (I consider myself an environmentalist, pro-renewable-energy, anti-pollution) have hampered forest management in the U.S. so much so that catastrophes like the recent California fires are exacerbated and made much worse that they otherwise would be, and so release more CO2 into the atmosphere. It's sad. Moderate environmentalism is much saner, striking a balance that accepts the premise that humanity is part of the environment and has a responsibility to manage it wisely.

    1. Re:Environmentalists Increase Greenhouse Gasses by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > humanity is part of the environment

      Thank you. That is the primary reason I don't consider myself environmentalist in any way. Because I am the environment. The "whackos" don't seem to realize this.

  169. Re: Carbon Credits by CycleMan · · Score: 1
    I couldn't agree more - any economic model that included environmental costs of some kind would be an amazing leap forward and represent a huge (and needed) change in our attitude to the planet.

    As an economist, I agree that all costs need to be represented to make a truly best-case assessment of the right outcome. Where you will find the difficulty is deciding the cost per unit of CO2 gas emissions etc... and the consequences of our choices.

    What would you do if the result of your study said "Cows are the biggest drain on the environment due to their CH4 production"? Would you slaughter all cows?

    The second challenge, and a reason I am opposed to international government mandates, is deciding what enforcement process will come out of the analysis. Some allege that UN resolutions are passed by the many to punish the US for its success. I won't take that dramatic a stance, but will ask why the Kyoto Protocol ignores developing nations' contributions to pollution. As any tax collector knows, the more exemptions we create to our assessment structure, the shakier a foundation we have for collecting that assessment (i.e. a reduction in global pollution).

  170. Here is what the original authors have to say by horace · · Score: 1
  171. Re:You have this backwards, or I am being trolled by uncadonna · · Score: 1
    You're kidding me, right? How much of the Arctic ice cap is supported by land? You do know the difference between north and south, right?

    Greenland, actually, but I don't see where anyone was distinguishing between Arctic and Antarctic warming in this thread.

    --
    mt
  172. What about the 'Little Ice Age'? by Vancouverite · · Score: 1

    On page 18 of the PDF file of the report found here, there is a graph of temperatures that struck me as odd. So, I went and dug up some other information.

    Starting sometime between 1350 and 1450, the Northern Hemisphere at least (and indications are that the entire world did, see this reference article for more information) experienced an extended period of cooling known as the 'Little Ice Age'. This extended until somewhere around 1850. However, the graph in the paper shows the period from 1400-1500 to be the warmest period experienced, even warmer than the 20th century (with peaks about 1425 and 1485).

    So how did these folk come up with this, when climatologist using different methods (tree-rings, ice cores, isotope deposition in stalactites, etc) and cross-checking each other come up with an entirely different answer.

    The paper appears to have som valid points, but without an explanation of this serious anomaly, I must suspect that their data is 'spun' to match pre-conceived needs.

    Of course, when one considers the existance of the Little Ice Age, one must also wonder if the 'Global Warming' phenomenon is simply a return to a more normal average temperature. Is the 28% increase in CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere attributable to the intervention of mankind? Do the other Greenhouse gases that are released by mankind (particularly Methane) the real cause? Is it a combination of causes?

    All I can say for sure is that, if there is any significant chance that mankinds actions have caused the change in temperature, and that this increase will continue as projected, then expenditures now to limit or reverse these changes will be more economical than will letting the projected changes occur. If, for example, reductions in CO2 emissions for the next century would cost a projected 100 billion dollars, but would potentially prevent one trillion dollars in damages (how much would have to be expended to replace all seaside cities liable to oceanic flooding if the ocean's average level is raised by 5 feet?), then a 10% chance of the CO2 explanation being the true one is a break-even cost. If the change is 25%, then the CO2 reduction is, on the whole, a winner. Expend now to minimize your costs later.

    --
    We are the Music Makers, and We are the Dreamers of Dreams...
  173. Re:You have this backwards, or I am being trolled by HardCase · · Score: 1
    Greenland, actually, but I don't see where anyone was distinguishing between Arctic and Antarctic warming in this thread.


    Look at the parent post that started all of this:


    A recent study by Arctic researchers showed that the polar ice cap isn't just shrinking in terms of land mass [bbc.co.uk], it's shrinking in terms of depth too [bbc.co.uk], by 4cm a year.

    All that water's going somewhere, and that somewhere is the oceans. Global sea levels are rising, and you only have to look at the situation in Tuvalu in the Pacific [bbc.co.uk] or Venice, Italy [veniceinperil.org] to see that the threat of rising tides isn't a myth.


    "Arctic researchers", "polar ice cap". Pretty clear to me. Oh, and I think that somebody already mentioned that Venice's major problem is subsidence, not rising ocean levels.


    -h-

  174. Sing along: by xdroop · · Score: 1
    Just because you can spot the odd anomoly in a bunch of data does not render the whole thing untrue..

    Sing along:

    Coincidence does not prove causality.

    --
    you should read everything on the internet as if it had "but I'm probably talking out of my ass" appended to it.
    1. Re:Sing along: by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      Coincidence of what imply causality of what?

      Glaciers are certainly retreating rapidly, worldwide. There are very few growing glaciers. Sea ice is also retreating in both hemispheres.

      Looking at a glacier in rapid retreat is striking evidence at least of local warming. If like me you're too lazy, try this or google for 'glacier retreat'. (Note the mountain summit is over a mile square and the image shows ancient ice, not snow.)

      When you keep in mind that this is happening everywhere, you have a global warming at high altitudes at least to account for.

      --
      mt
    2. Re:Sing along: by xdroop · · Score: 1
      The climate is definitely changing; only a fool would deny that. The coincidence/causality falacy I refer to is certain communities deciding that the only possible explanation is man's increasing polution.

      This faulty reasoning seems to be followed up by the equally faulty

      • we must do something;
      • Kyoto is something;
      • therefore we must "do" Kyoto.

      It seems awfully ego-centric to assume that man is the root cause of everything. I'm sure if there was some way to do it, certain communities would be claiming that the Sun's atypical storm cycle was somehow caused by man (and President Bush in particular).

      It also ignores the pattern of climate change measured in the past. Fifteen thousand years ago the sea levels were 300m lower than they are today. (There was an Ice Age on at the time.) However, I bet if these communities were around then, they'd be blaming the end of global glaciation on the widespread, unregulated use of this "fire" thing.

      I am not condoning pollution in any way, it seems to be both a short-sighted policy that will have long term repercussions. And why depend on the global-warming hook? What's wrong with dirty air, dirty water, and dirty land as motivation to change behavior? They are all measurable, real, and immediate consequences of pollution.

      --
      you should read everything on the internet as if it had "but I'm probably talking out of my ass" appended to it.
  175. You want more examples? by jmichaelg · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Your point is valid - one sample doesn't represent a population. So let me sketch in a few more points...

    1. Club of Rome. Back in the early 70's there was an outfit called the Club of Rome. They ran their computer models and claimed that the world would run out of gas in 1985. Got a lot of press when they made their claim. None of them were around in 1985 to admit they were wrong.
    2. Ehrlich and Simon. In 1980, Julian Simon (Univ. of Maryland) challenged Paul Ehrlich (Stanford) to a bet. Erhlich had been harping on how with the exploding world population we were going to run out resources real soon and prices were going to skyrocket. Simon called him on it and let him choose any list of goods he wanted. If the basket of goods 10 years later was higher, Ehrlich would win, if the basket was cheaper (in real dollars) then Simon would win. Oil, gold, silver, wheat, and a lot of other goods went into the basket. Simon was right - the basket's price declined over the 10 year span.
    3. Global Warming. There's a graph that oxygen isotope variations over the past 500,000 years. The data are derived from ocean sediment cores and are a useful surrogate for temperatures. The isotope ratios are inversely proportional to temperatures and closely track interglacial warming periods. I can't find the original paper but you can see the data graphed on page 10 of this NOAA document. The graph shows a roughly 100,000 year cycle to global temperatures with periods warmer than today. We're right on track right now towards a global uptick just like the past 4 times over the past 500,000 years. We weren't around 410,000, 320,000, 200,000 or 120,000 years ago to cause the last temperature spikes but they happened anyway. The earth may be getting warmer right now but it's not likely that it's due to us pumping CO2 into the atmosphere. Look at the CO2 and Methane data and the temperature correlation isn't all that great.
    4. Weather forecasting. In 1963, Lorenz demonstrated that you can't make reliable long term weather forecasts even when you have a perfect weather model and all the data accurate to 6 decimal places. It was a key finding and yet you still have people making global warming forecasts for the next 100 years as if Lorenz hadn't already demonstrated they can't possibly know what they're talking about.

    The environmental movement has done a lot of good in making us take stock of how we're disposing of our waste. Los Angeles air and San Francisco Bay are a lot cleaner today than they would have otherwise been had it not been for the hoopla. But at the same time, you have to be very skeptical when someone tries to tell you we're going to destroy the earth if we keep doing what we're doing. In geologic terms, we've been around for a brief moment and the earth has managed some amazingly self-destructive feats without us and yet here we are.
    1. Re:You want more examples? by gowen · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It was a key finding and yet you still have people making global warming forecasts for the next 100 years as if Lorenz hadn't already demonstrated they can't possibly know what they're talking about.
      Repeat after me 100 times:

      Climate is not the same as weather
      Climate is not the same as weather
      Climate is not the same as weather
      Climate is not the same as weather
      Climate is not the same as weather...
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    2. Re:You want more examples? by jmichaelg · · Score: 1

      You can chant all you want but you're missing Lorenz's key point. His finding wasn't confined to weather systems. His observation applied to any system that can be described by self-referential, non-linear equations. He should have won the Nobel in Economics because self-referential, non-linear equations are the bread and butter of economists.

    3. Re:You want more examples? by gowen · · Score: 1
      His observation applied to any system that can be described by self-referential, non-linear equations.
      Correct, but the timescale you quoted only applied to weather systems. Lorenz's result has implications for climate models, but *not* on that timescale, merely on equivalent number of model iterations. And, this may come as a shock to you, climate modellers are well aware of the stability of their numerical models. I've sat through a great many highly detailed talks on precisely that subject.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    4. Re:You want more examples? by penguin7of9 · · Score: 1

      Club of Rome. Back in the early 70's there was an outfit called the Club of Rome. They ran their computer models and claimed that the world would run out of gas in 1985. Got a lot of press when they made their claim. None of them were around in 1985 to admit they were wrong.

      Yes, they were wrong because huge new oil and gas reserves were discovered. But their warning was well-justified: nobody could predict that those reserves actually were going to be discovered.

      Even with those reserves, many people believe that oil and gas production is at its peak and will slowly decline from here because we really are using up a finite resource.

      Ehrlich and Simon. In 1980, Julian Simon (Univ. of Maryland) challenged Paul Ehrlich (Stanford) to a bet. Erhlich had been harping on how with the exploding world population we were going to run out resources real soon and prices were going to skyrocket.

      Well, we solved that problem by simply not giving access to those resources to the billions of people added to the world population. So, yes, prices didn't explode for the people with access to resources, but the means by which we achieved that is roughly the equivalent of Soviet price controls.

      Weather forecasting. In 1963, Lorenz demonstrated that you can't make reliable long term weather forecasts even when you have a perfect weather model and all the data accurate to 6 decimal places. It was a key finding and yet you still have people making global warming forecasts for the next 100 years as if Lorenz hadn't already demonstrated they can't possibly know what they're talking about.

      Global warming isn't about "weather forecasting", which is short-term dynamics, it is about long-term average trends. Chaos is not involved in there. The only uncertainty in predicting global warming is what kinds of feedback mechanisms exist. Without positive feedback, current greenhouse gas levels have little influence on the climate, with positive feedback, current greenhouse gas levels are already responsible for a rise in temperature. Negative feedback is a possibility but seems unlikely and would only operate over a limited range of greenhouse gas concentrations anyway. But no matter which model you believe in, growth in greenhouse gas concentrations will sooner or later lead to devastating global warming; the only question is whether disaster results from current growth levels within a decade or within a century.

      The earth may be getting warmer right now but it's not likely that it's due to us pumping CO2 into the atmosphere. Look at the CO2 and Methane data and the temperature correlation isn't all that great.

      Again, you are barking up the wrong tree. Whether current greenhouse gas emissions have already caused global warming is an interesting academic debate with almost no policy implications. What matters is that continued growth in greenhouse gas emissions invariably will cause global warming at some point--we simply don't know when. And it is clear that the consequences will be devastating when that occurs and that it will be far too late to do anything about it (because the half life of CO2 in the atmosphere is of the order of centuries).

    5. Re:You want more examples? by penguin7of9 · · Score: 1

      You still fail to understand: Lorentz only showed that the detailed dynamics of that system were impossible to predict. But you could certainly predict such things as long-term average values. And that's what climate is concerned with.

      In fact, in the long term, global average temperature prediction mainly depends on how much energy comes in, how much goes out, and how much gets converted into heat. The major uncertainties we have are how the reflectance of the globe will change as temperatures change and what the lifetimes of various greenhouse gasses will be in the atmosphere. But we know enough about those to know with certainty that devastating global warming will occur if we continue along our current course. The only question is when.

  176. You have the logic backwards by apsmith · · Score: 1

    The greenhouse effect of CO2 is extremely well established - Arrhenius wrote about it over 100 years ago. That means that increased CO2 in the atmosphere acts as one force (among all the other things influencing climate) to increase temperatures. The logic that is involved here is: Humans have increased CO2 concentrations; increased CO2 acts as a force to cause temperature increases. Therefore human actions have acted to increase temperatures.

    I.e. the logic is A implies B, and B implies C, therefore A implies C. No question of correlation here, it's a logical truth.

    The logic you are assuming leaves out the "B implies C" part, i.e.
    A implies B, A B and C are all true, therefore A implies C. That's not logically valid, although used very frequently by so-called "conservatives", so it is easy for people who listen to those radio shows to get confused.

    The key point is, increased CO2 DOES tend to increase temperatures. Decreasing CO2 would tend to decrease them. Humans have increased world CO2 levels by 25% since the 1800's, and are on a trend to double world CO2 by 2050. Given that first B implies C statement, that's not good, not good at all.

    --

    Energy: time to change the picture.

  177. Do you really respect science? by olddirtyb · · Score: 1

    What I find most shocking is how people who claim to be real environmentalists are so against review of scientific work in this case. I personally think that manmade global warming may be a factor in our climate change, but I am keeping my mind open. Scientific breakthroughs are based upon people questioning theories that are in the mainstream. Questioning of prevailing theories also helps us root out the truth, one way or another. Mann may be right, but if he is, his work should be grilled by all. This includes people with an opposit agenda. Maybe Mann had an agenda? Who knows, thats why there is scientific review. There is absolutely no reason to shoot down this opposing body of work before anyone has even looked at it. I think the USA today article explains my point better than I can put it into words. "In an interview, McKitrick said, ''If a study is going to be the basis for a major policy decision, then the original data must be disseminated and the results have to be reproducible. That's why in our case we have posted everything online and invite outside scrutiny.'' Mann never made his data available online -- nor did many of the earlier researchers whose data Mann relied upon for his research. That by itself raises questions about the U.N. climate-change panel's scientific process." Questioning is the key to learning.

  178. 10 years mean NOTHING on a geologic scale... by weedenbc · · Score: 1

    As was mentioned elsewhere in this thread we have to stop being so damn nearsighted on this topic. You show me a trend of a couple of millennia or even several hundred years and I will start to take it seriously. You'd think people actually believe the Earth just popped into existence a couple thousand years ago.

    --

    "Trying is only the first step towards failure." - Homer
  179. What about the 1000's of papers proving it? by apsmith · · Score: 1

    Every time some miniscule issue comes up that doesn't have any significant bearing on the main question of humans=>CO2=>warming, like this (rather dubious) article, it gets trumpeted in headlines all over the place. Where are the headlines for the thousands of mainstream articles and studies that show every single climate model with increasing CO2 resulting in increasing global temperatures, greater warming in the north, greater instability in weather generally, and in short exactly the pattern of change we have seen for the last decade?

    This is a really serious issue - there is OVERWHELMING scientific evidence for human causation of global temperature increases over the last century, and for an acceleration of the change in the last ten years. Take a look at this graph of CO2 concentrations over the past 1000 years, from the site of an organization that looks at the "positive side" of climate change! Anybody who doesn't find that graph extremely worrying has been drinking way too much of the happy juice.

    --

    Energy: time to change the picture.

  180. But what if the cost is not in the production? by Spamalamadingdong · · Score: 1
    I've never really understood the "limited resources" argument. "We should pretend there's a shortage now, in order to postpone the date of the real shortage". It doesn't make sense.
    It does make sense if you consider that changing takes time and effort, and you can reduce your net costs by moving early and decreasing the price rise due to demand. All of this is pertinent to oil.

    Of course, the argument can be even simpler than that depending on the flexibility of suppliers. Suppose that OPEC's ability to reduce production is about 10% of US demand, and that the world demand will pick up that 10% if the price of oil falls from $30 to $20/bbl. If we reduced our demand by 20%, the net demand reduction would reduce our expenses from 1 * 30 to 0.8 * 20, or about $16 per pre-cut barrel. The marginal saving would be $14 saved / 0.2 barrels saved = $70/bbl. You can consider that the true economic cost of oil, and that's not including the cost of fighting terrorists financed by oil money, cleaning up oil spills, and any other ecological problems which result.

    It's not like we're going to wake up one morning and world oil production is suddenly at zero, thus destroying civilization as we know it in some sort of Mad Max parody.
    You don't need a shortage of a raw material for it to cause you problems. For instance, London woke up one day and found that their plentiful supplies of coal were literally choking the city to death with the smoke. There was no shortage of phosphates to soften water for laundry detergent, but the amount being dumped into rivers was killing Lake Erie.

    Los Angeles found that the hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides generated by the cars there, combined with heat and sunlight, made very nasty smog. Fortunately it was a local phenomenon, and engines could be altered to either generate different products or convert them to non smog-generating gases. But when the problematic product is CO2 and the area affected is the whole planet, you don't have those options.

    Moving to those technologies now, while oil is still cheaper and the infrastructure is already well in place, would have an even bigger impact on the cost of living. Furthermore, it would have a huge impact on economic growth. We'd be saving our children (or grandchildren, or whatever) the cost of conversion, by taking that cost on ourselves. But it seems likely that our descendants will have more wealth available to pay those costs than we do.
    You are making the assumption that our use of oil has no costs that they'll have to bear, that the continued investment in oil infrastructure won't be an even greater financial hurdle for them to leap, or that the lack of experience with alternatives won't impose greater expenses and more onerous difficulties than beginning the process now, when we recognize the need and have the ability. I believe that all three of these assumptions are questionable at best, and the first is definitely false for both ecological and geopolitical reasons.
    Another thing is, they're called "resources" because we use them for stuff. If they just sit there, not being used, they're not resources and there is no shortage. Saving resources for future generations makes no sense. There's no reason to think they have any greater need for iron (say), than we do, or that they'll make better use of it than we are.
    That's true to a point, but some "resources" can only be used so fast without being overwhelmed or destroyed. Examples include the ability of a forest to produce wood, the ability of a river to break down organic matter, or the capacity of the earth's systems to sequester carbon dioxide. Overuse of the resource for one purpose can deplete or destroy its capabilities to produce other goods (wildlife, fish, a consistent and livable climate). It behooves us not to push things too far, especially before we've got good reason to believe it won't do any harm (as opposed to the current situation of having good reason to believe it will).
  181. Read this... by NorthDude · · Score: 1

    http://www.solcomhouse.com/yellowstone.htm

    I'm in no way an expert in this field, I just happened to read this a few days ago...

    --


    I'd rather be sailing...
    1. Re:Read this... by Fess_Longhair · · Score: 1

      Thanks. I did my googling, and found that Toba is the "supervolcano" that had a potentially large, short-term climate impact about 72K years ago. It sits smack on the equator. As I said, this is where volcanic eruptions have the largest impact. I think it's unlikely that Yellowstone would have the same effect (yes I've seen the hype on popular pages).

  182. Icesheets make a stunningly sensitive thermometer by 2901 · · Score: 1

    If you assume that it is +40 C at the equator and say -50 C at the pole, thats one degree centigrade per degree of latitude. Now a degree of latitude is over 100Km. So if it all averages out over a long time and you have an icesheet on level ground then the edge of the ice moves 1km for every hundredth of a degree change in long term average temperature.

    Any claim about a glacier depends on local circumstances making it less hyper-sensitive that icesheets in general.

  183. Yesterday by NorthDude · · Score: 1

    I wanted some ice to put in my drink and to my surprise, when I opened my freezer, the ice as melted!!!! Is this due to global freezer warming?

    --


    I'd rather be sailing...
  184. Could you point me to evidence? by roystgnr · · Score: 1

    Looking at my post, it's apparant that I've simply responded to Cally's unsubstantiated arrogance by adding my own sarcastic arrogance. That wasn't very helpful of me, and thank you for not continuing the trend.

    What I'd like to see instead, is some evidence on the topic. In particular, I've run into the theory that solar variability changes the Earth's temperature, which changes the CO2 solubility in the oceans, which causes the striking correlation we see between prehistoric temperatures and CO2 levels. I like this theory because it gives a possible explanation not only for our recent 1 degree/century warming, but also for the fact that the planet has been, even in geologically recent times, much warmer and much cooler than it is today despite the lack of any anthropogenic causes for that variation.

    So is there strong evidence contradicting this theory that I don't know about?

    1. Re:Could you point me to evidence? by uncadonna · · Score: 1
      For direct evidence of my assertion I can direct you to http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/244.htm

      As for refuting the theory you propose I can offer the following off the top of my head. To attribute warming to solar variability you not only have to account for why the relatively large greenhouse forcing was ineffective but also why the relatively small solar forcing was effective. Occam comes clearly down on the side of greenhouse forcing.

      In fact, solar forcing does provide (through orbital effects) the clock for natural ice age cycles, but no one has any idea how to make this forcing sufficient to trigger climate variation of the size we see without invoking an amplification through greenhouse forcing.

      So the effect you propose (opr something like it) is real enough, but it doesn't mean the greenhouse gases aren't involved. On the contrary, greeenhouse effect changes are the only way we know to understand the big changes in temperature, even though radiative changes seem important in setting the timing.

      The world is a complicated system, but the basic physical principles are known.We count watts in. We count watts out. They equilibrate. Watts in are effected by the sun. watts out are effected by the atmosphere. Both effects are first order important.

      It's hard to refute your theory in more detail because as you quote it it's a bit vague.If you could find someone asserting it in a peer reviewed publication I could help you track down any debate it engendered. I'm guessing that if you find this in print it will be in advocacy press, not in a real science journal.

      --
      mt
  185. ??? == Solar_Rejuvinator!! Phase 2: SOLVED by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was playing Master of Orion, and while there wasn't much I could do about Sol's transformation from fertile to steppe, I could infact build a Solar Rejuvinator. So all we need to do, is develope terraforming where we put up a little tower and pay one 1 Billion Credits in maintinance, and figure out how to invent a solar rejuvinator. Simple, no?

  186. The real question is: by AB3A · · Score: 1

    ...How much of global warming is due to human activity?

    And the only honest answer you can get is "Gosh, we just don't know." Is the earth warming? There is a preponderance of evidence that it is. Yes, an argument could be made that global warming may be a statistical artifact. But I tend to think there is plenty of reason to be concerned.

    The problem is that we don't know what to do about it. We can't just shut down our dirty industries and go live in caves. We can only work our way out of it. That is why I think the Kyoto accords were bad medicine.

    Those who are really concerned for the environment will take care to build cleaner, and more effcient processes and put the dirty ones out of business. You can't regulate this problem away, folks. The fix has to be economically viable. And it can be.

    So STFU and get to work.

    --
    Nearly fifty percent of all graduates come from the bottom half of the class!
  187. Energy & Environment is not a 'respected journ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's hardly a 'journal', in the sense of peer-reviewed scientific journals.

    E&E isn't peer-reviewed.

    Hell, they've published articles by an *astrologer*.

  188. "USAToday also has a story" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's not a story, dummy, that's an op-ed.

    A story tries to be balanced. An op-ed is just an effort to further an opinion.

    Sheesh.

    The anti-environmental types are clinging to this shitty piece of data manipulation and trying to spread it as far as they can, as quickly as they can, before it gets torn to shreds.

    People will remember the gist of the claim; they'll never hear about the rebuttals.

  189. Maybe it's the sun? by GlenRaphael · · Score: 1
    I don't see how you can dismiss things like the retreat of glaciers around much of the globe (to sizes unprecedented in history or the recent archaeological record) and claim that nothing is going on.

    Maybe the main thing that's "going on" is that the sun has gotten warmer lately. After all, Mars is losing ice coverage too...

    --
    I play Nerd-Folk!
  190. One things that is real is the decimation of fish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the big fishes of the ocean have been decimated--this is real, not imagined or usign poor data. It is also not renewable unless we stop and we aren't stopping fast enough.

  191. Actually, its much worse than the mass exinction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    at the end of the mezozoic. (The "dinosaur" extinction wasn't all that big a deal compared to other mass extinctions) It's comparable to the mass extinction at the end of the Cambrian period, according to my General Zoology professor. This is a die-off on a scale that hasn't been seen in 500 million years, and most can be directly traced back to one species, Homo sapiens, that in itself is remarkable, and is probably unique in history.

  192. Mann Rebuttal by lymond01 · · Score: 1

    A rebuttal to the commentary ummarized by a friend of mine at the Union of Concerned Scientists:

    1. The journal Energy & Environment is not a science journal and does not follow standard practices of scientific peer review. . The journal has the explicitly political agenda to be "a forum for skeptical analyses of 'global warming'".

    2. The author of the paper, Steven McIntyre, has no prior track record of research on climate issues or any record of training in this field.

    3. The paper is said to be a direct criticism of Michael Mann, et al's paper "Northern Hemisphere Temperatures During the Past Millennium: Inferences, Uncertainties, and Limitations" published in the mainstream climate research journal, Geophysical Research Letters in1999. In stark contrast to standard peer review practices, neither the authors of this study nor any leading paleoclimate scientists were asked to review Mr. McIntyre's paper.

    4. Contrary to this non-peer reviewed paper in a non-scientific journal, a number of studies have been published over the last several years by independent scientists using different data sources and methodologies replicating the basic finding that the late 20th century Northern Hemisphere average temperatures are anomalous in the context of the past 1000 years.
    Bradley and coworkers in the prestigious journal "Science" published the most recent study coming to this conclusion only a couple weeks ago. The list of recent studies supporting this conclusion includes, but is not limited to, the following:

    Bauer, E., M. Claussen, and V. Brovkin, Assessing climate forcings of the earth system for the past
    millennium, Geophys. Res. Lett., 30 (6), doi: 10.1029/2002GL016639, 2003.

    Bradley, R.S., M.K Hughes and H.F. Diaz., Climate in Medieval Time. Science, 302, 404-405, 2003.

    Briffa, K.R., T.J. Osborn, F.H. Schweingruber, I.C. Harris, P.D. Jones, S.G. Shiyatov, S.G. and E.A.
    Vaganov, Low-frequency temperature variations from a northern tree-ring density network. J.
    Geophys. Res., 106, 2929-2941, 2001.

    Crowley, T.J., Causes of Climate Change over the Past 1000 Years, Science, 289, 270-277, 2000.

    Crowley, T.J., and T. Lowery, How Warm Was the Medieval Warm Period?, Ambio, 29, 51-54, 2000.

    Folland, C.K., T.R. Karl, J.R. Christy, R.A. Clarke, G.V. Gruza, J. Jouzel, M.E. Mann, J. Oerlemans, M.J.
    Salinger, S.-W. Wang, Observed Climate Variability and Change, in Climate Change 2001: The
    Scientific Basis, edited by J.T. Houghton et al.., pp. 99-181, Cambridge Univ. Press, New York,
    2001.

    Gerber, S., F. Joos, P. Brugger, T. F. Stocker, M. E. Mann, S. Sitch, and M. Scholze, Constraining
    temperature variations over the last millennium by comparing simulated and observed atmospheric
    CO2, Climate Dynamics, 20, 281-299, 2003.

    Hegerl, G.C., T.J. Crowley, S.K. Baum, K-Y. Kim, and W. T. Hyde, Detection of volcanic, solar and
    greenhouse gas signals in paleo-reconstructions of Northern Hemispheric temperature. Geophys.
    Res. Lett., 30 (5), doi: 10.1029/2002GL016635, 2003.

    Jones, P.D., K.R. Briffa, T.P. Barnett and S.F.B. Tett, High-resolution palaeoclimatic records for the last
    millennium: Integration, interpretation and comparison with General Circulation Model control run
    temperatures, Holocene, 8, 455-471, 1998.

    Jones, P.D., M. New, D.E. Parker, S. Martin, and I.G. Rigor, Surface air temperature and its changes over
    the past 150 years, Reviews of Geophysics, 37, 173-199, 1999.

    Jones, P.D., T.J. Osborn, and K.R. Briffa, The Evolution of Climate Over the Last Millennium, Science,
    292, 662-667, 2001.

    Mann, M.E., Jones, P.D., Global surface temperature over the past two millennia, Geophysical Research Letters,
    30 (15), 1820, doi: 10.1029/2003GL017814, 2003.

    Mann, M.E., Ammann, C.M., Bradley, R.S., Briffa, K.R., Crowley, T.J., Hughes, M.K., Jones, P.D., Oppenheimer, M., Osborn, T.J., Overpeck, J.T., Rutherford, S., Trenberth, K.E., Wigley, T.M.L.,
    On Past Temperatures and Anomalous Late 20th Century Warmth, Eos, 84, 256-258, 2003.

  193. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  194. Re: Carbon Credits by HiThere · · Score: 1

    Well, you wouldn't want to slaughter ALL of them. But you might let some of them re-evolve toward their natural state (not to their natural state...we don't need something more dangerous than a buffalo around). And you might tax them heavily to pay for repairing the damage they do. And you could consider applying that tax at a place where it would be spread evenly over all beef sellers, so that you wouldn't penalize domestic farmers over importers.

    Just because something has bad properties doesn't mean that you don't want any of it. You die without Selenium, but that's a poison. What you do is limit the amount, so that you balance "almost optimally" between the benefits and the costs. *If* you can figure where that point is.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  195. Butterflies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Couldn't help but get reminded of the "butterfly-effect".
    http://www.cmp.caltech.edu/~m cc/chaos_new/Lorenz.h tml
    [QOUTE]
    The "Butterfly Effect" is often ascribed to Lorenz. In a paper in 1963 given to the New York Academy of Sciences he remarks:

    One meteorologist remarked that if the theory were correct, one flap of a seagull's wings would be enough to alter the course of the weather forever.
    [/QOUTE]

    Imagine all the 'chaos' added since the Industrial revolution, traffic, higher populations by improved medical care, ...

  196. Even if this new development didn't happen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kyoto would still be a stupid idea. Why? because Kyoto won't do shit to stop global warming. If it is occurring, it's not as large as chicken little environmentalists are predicting, it's going to happen whether we do anything or not, and we'd better just adjust to climate change (as mankind has throughout history). The whole thing is a total waste of time.

  197. For those who doubt global warming is a reality... by ninejaguar · · Score: 1
    ...please re-visit this scary piece.

    The conservatives (really the wrong name in this case as conservation isn't their deal) who argue that global warming is a liberal plot are reminiscent of the unfortunate citizens of Hy-Brasil as it quickly sinks in Eric The Viking. Remember, as the water starts collecting around your ankles, "Stay calm! This is NOT happening...I've already appointed the Chancellor as Chairman of a committee to find out exactly what IS going on, and meantime I suggest we have a sing-song!"

    = 9J =

  198. Wow a Communist AND a Racist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    American exceptionalism-believe it 'cause its true.
    We are the best.

  199. Re: Carbon Credits by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

    Not slaughter them, just raise the cost of beef to reflect the damage they cause, thereby reducing demand and eventually reducing the number of cows.

    The reason developing nations have looser targets in Kyoto is because we in the west have already been through our industrialisation phases where we move from agricultural societies to mass production societies. Asking the developing world to stop in their tracks would basically mean we have taken a hugely disproportionate share of the world's wealth and then we expect others not to develop to try to take their share.

    --
    Read Pynchon.
  200. Great News! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow this is great news. So we really don't have to worry about burning up as much oil as we want to after all. Haha suck on that environmentalist!

    I guess this paper means that all the funny weather the world has been experiencing over the last decade will go away. No more drought, forest fires, severe storms. Just think of all the damage that could have been saved if these guys published earlier.

    1. Re:Great News! by _xen · · Score: 1

      You did check out the links provided by the parent poster, didn't you? Turns out this paper is a total sham, and the supposed warming in the 15th Century is only apparent when you censor out that data that shows it wasn't so. In an argument about climatic science between climatic scientists and economists, the scientists win, go figure!

      It's a bit of a moot point really, since most scientists prefer to go by the instrumental record, which only dates back to the mid 19th Century, excatly because of the methodological uncertainties inherent in divining 'global' temperatures before that time.

      In any case I wouldn't be banking on calmer weather any time soon ...

  201. Re:This is Mann's fault by henrygb · · Score: 1
    While 159 and 112 do not appear in the original paper...

    My point was that 112 did appear twice but 159 did not appear.

  202. Greenhouse with sauce by leonbrooks · · Score: 1
    The big sources of greenhouse gasses aren't power plants so much as factories, the ones that make the things than we use to maintain our standard of living.

    Not quite. The biggest sources are herd animals bred largely for meat, and the land that they're run on can no longer support the dense and biodiverse foliage that once bound up those gasses. If you are simply after low greenhouse emissions, mandate strict vegetarianism. No meat, no dairy.

    IRL, you also want to go after outright poisons. Good luck shutting down Monsanto and getting all of the farmers to revert to hardier and seed-savable but less productive crops so they don't need so many poisonous fertilisers and *icides. After that, you can start in on getting people to abandon their cars by doing stuff like arranging accomodation so that almost all workers can live near their factories and/or offices.

    But before that, you'll have to shoot all of the economists, because 99.9% of them confuse chewing up resources and generally "doing stuff" with being productive and producing lasting, functional goods. Their idea of a healthy economy is one that's producing mountains of useless and disposable crap instead of one twenty times smaller that's carefully producing stuff that lasts forever.

    --
    Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
  203. original paper correct: blame an Excel screwup by jmason · · Score: 1
    Stop the presses -- the original paper looks like it was correct, as far as review of the M&M results reveals so far. It seems a screw-up somewhere resulted in exporting 159 columns of data into a 112-column Excel spreadsheet, which screwed up the analysis for this . (Blame MS! ;)

    Also, theirs is not the only paper that supports the 'hockey stick' graph anyway -- there's quite a few others, too.

    But anyway -- we're jumping the peer-review process heavily here. USA Today stories are supposed to happen after the peers do the reviewing ;)

  204. Re:What most people fail to consider in these deba by Dirtside · · Score: 1
    Remember, we didn't have any such restrictions when we went through this stage.
    Yeah, but we weren't really up on the idea yet that our behavior could have long-term climatic consequences for the planet. Now we do know that we can affect things. (Whether or not our actions *are* having long-term consequences is another story.) Nonetheless, if we were certain that polluting was a bad idea, we shouldn't let others do it just to "be fair" since we got to do it. (We might want to let them do it for other reasons, as you pointed out -- getting them up to speed, industrially, for example.)
    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  205. Yeah, facts. How about you post some? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And when you post 'em, stand behind 'em with your name or at least a pseudo. Then you'll get a serious response, Mr. Coward.

  206. You think so? Look at the figures, guy. by Tau+Zero · · Score: 1
    I want to take issue with this and similar statements:
    Pinatubo expelled more CO2 into the atmosphere than the entire history of industrialized civilization.
    You could not be more wrong. Pinatubo emitted on the order of 42 Mt of CO2 and 17 Mt of SO2. In contrast, in the year 1999 the state of Ohio consumed about 57.5 million short tons of coal. If we assume 88% carbon, that is 50.6 million tons of carbon which would burn to (50.6/12*44) = 185 million tons of CO2, or about 4.5 times as much as Pinatubo emitted. And Ohio does this every year, and it is one state in the United States, which is only one of many coal-consuming nations...

    Pinatubo was spectacular, but its CO2 contribution wasn't even a blip on the scale. Worse, even a trivial amount of research would have dispelled your misconceptions. Don't you know how, or don't you care?

    --
    Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
  207. what is wrong with you people? by ylikone · · Score: 0

    Yeah, pumping chemicals and toxins into the atmosphere isn't going to hurt anything. Also, the moon landing was faked. And the earth is actually flat.

    --
    Meh.
  208. Chewbacca Defense by rdosser · · Score: 1

    Ah, the beloved Chewbacca Defense: if we don't like your science, we'll take you into a fractal realm of debate over increasingly small issues. This issue is - at least on this page - now hopelessly muddied, which is what they wanted: they can now say "see, there's no consensus."

    Here's some clarity: global warming projections are not based on one paper, nor on one excel spreadsheet. Those who dispute the theory of human-induced warming are outnumbered by those who used to dispute it. Scientific debate increasingly supports the viewpoint, and the only remaining force opposing it is money.

  209. The Doomslayer by Pooua · · Score: 1
    The Economist article, "The truth about the environment," is highly similar to an older article that ran in Wired magazine, "The Doomslayer."

    Feb 1997
    Wired: The Doomslayer

    Aug 2nd 2001
    Economist: The truth about the environment

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  210. Clinton inaction and Photo Op'ing of Kyoto Accord by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bill Clinton signed the Kyoto Accord to get a lot of pro-environment PR coverage and never ever submitted it to the Senate for ratification.

    He knew it would not be ratified and kept it out of the Senate so that the crisis issue that 'the USA has not ratified the Kyoto Accord' could be replayed over and over the entire globe with much political points earned by liberal, socialists, and Anti-US politicians around the world.

    Clinton was all about photo opportunities but never about doing anything.

  211. Re:You think so? Look at the figures, guy. by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

    As I stated in a reply to a sibling post, I was in error about the CO2. I meant total pollutant gases. For that, I apologize.

    However, your assumptions on coal are suspect. It assumes that the total amount of carbon in coal is converted to CO2 during combustion. Is none of it converted to other chemicals? Is there no "soot"?

    While I easily confirmed your Pinatubo emissions in several places, I could find no references on the amount of industrial CO2 emitted per year. The closest I got was to a percentage change of CO2 ppm, and it included non-industrial sources.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  212. No, you are.. by adeyadey · · Score: 1

    There is a saying in England about "teaching your grandmother to suck eggs". Of course its hard to say that global temprature rises are 100% for sure connected to CO2, but the bulk of credible scientific opinion concurs that it is *probably* the case.

    And why are we taking the risk, especially when we have good alternatives (wind power, etc) which are starting to offer pollution free cheap energy?

    The US position on the Kyoto treaty is appalingly short sighted ..

    --
    "You lied to me! There is a Swansea!"
  213. The experiment by suitti · · Score: 1
    It seems that we are collectively engaged in a climate control experiment. At the moment, there is no goal. It looks like time to buy property at high elevations.

    Kyoto holds the promise of a goal.

    --
    -- Stephen.
  214. Environmental evaluation: talk small scale by therye · · Score: 1

    I wonder if there is enough of a open dialog yet for the whole earth/human condition to be fully appritiated. Our cultral memory is still stuck in a synical stretch. Are we yet ready to critisise that what we own dear to our lives,(your cars?) Until we evaluate our own lives in both a linear and cyclic fashion, with both short and long term objectives fully balanced, not until then will we deliver a better anthill for the next generation.

  215. Bias easy to explain by misean · · Score: 1

    Environmentalists are biased for a very simple reason, common to all human beings: self-interest. Levels of government funding and charitable donations are directly related to the perceived threat posed. Environmentalists, whether working in academia or Greenpeace, obtain more money, and increase their job security, by overstating the threat. Another, non-financial gain is the increased respect and appreciation society affords individuals working in this field, which is also proportionate to the perceived danger.

    This happens without overt personal malice necessarily involved, since individual environmentalists may feel it is justified (as well as their jobs and status) in order to avert a catastrophy they really believe lies in the future. However, the effect is still malicious, since the data does not support the increased funding and higher social status.

  216. Re:You think so? Look at the figures, guy. by Tau+Zero · · Score: 1
    If I posted after your concession, my apologies; I didn't look around after I started composing.
    However, your assumptions on coal are suspect. It assumes that the total amount of carbon in coal is converted to CO2 during combustion. Is none of it converted to other chemicals? Is there no "soot"?
    No, not really. Coal plants burn with enough excess air to get very good combustion. There is some carbon lost that gets incorporated into the ash, but if I understand correctly you're talking about single-digit percentages.

    However, you're still clinging to a false impression here:

    I meant total pollutant gases.
    There you're certainly wrong too. 17 megatons of SO2 doesn't appear to be much, when you consider that the Wabash River plant in Terre Haute recovered about 11,000 tons of pure sulfur per year from a coal-burning plant that only produced about 260 MW net. If we take a rough figure of 500 GW for the coal-fired generation capacity of the USA and scale accordingly, that would be 22 million tons of sulfur per year which would make about 44 million tons of SO2 - close to 3 times the emissions from Pinatubo's 1991 eruption. So no, it would take a LOT of volcanoes to equal human outputs even of SO2.
    --
    Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
  217. you're still missing the point by penguin7of9 · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter whether current temperature trends are due to human greenhouse gas emissions. What matters is that greenhouse gas emissions will, in the foreseeable future, cause warming. That's not anything people are debating, it's elementary physics. The only question is how soon and how much.

    Why do people like you want to submit the entire world to this kind of risk? How can you justify that given that any benefits are distributed very unevenly? And, in fact, where is the factual evidence that continued increases in greenhouse gas emissions even help our economy?

    The unproven and dangerous thing is what proponents of the current economic policy are advocating: emitting climate-changing gasses into the atmosphere, putting the world at risk, and without any clearcut evidence that it is either safe or economically beneficial to do so. Show us your proof and evidence.

  218. M&M and science by tprugh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Global warming believers and deniers alike should welcome the paper from McIntyre and McKitrick, and the argument it has started. This is normal science at work: observation, accretion of data, and the formulation and challenging of theories. Here at Worldwatch Institute we're hoping people will remember that the data "M&M" refer to are but one element of a much larger case, built up over many years, supporting the conclusions that the Earth is warming and that human economic activity (especially burning fossil fuels) has a lot to do with it. Even without the threat of climate change, there are so many other reasons for a rapid conversion away from fossil fuels--local pollution, health effects, impending shortages, security--that it would still make great sense. (Incidentally, the claim that the disputed Mann data were "a pillar of the Kyoto accord" is not true; they were published the year after the Kyoto Protocol was drafted.) A lot more information on these topics is available via our website (www. worldwatch.org); click on Energy.

  219. Nonsense by jmichaelg · · Score: 1
    Lorentz showed that small perturbations could lead to unexpected outcomes. If the system you're modeling has a growing or shrinking non-linear component, you can't make any long term forecasts as to how the model will behave.

    What's worse is making statements like know with certainty when there are so many unknowns. The only people who know with certainty are charlatans selling snake oil.