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Severe Arctic Ozone Loss

iONiUM writes "The BBC reports that 'Ozone loss over the Arctic this year was so severe that for the first time it could be called an "ozone hole" like the Antarctic one, scientists report. About 20km (13 miles) above the ground, 80% of the ozone was lost, they say. The cause was an unusually long spell of cold weather at altitude. In cold conditions, the chlorine chemicals that destroy ozone are at their most active.' This is the first time in observational history that the Arctic ozone has been depleted to such extensive levels (abstract). This will mean high UV problems for Russia, Greenland and Norway."

259 comments

  1. Note to self... by kannibal_klown · · Score: 1

    Note to self... Don't sun-bathe in the arctic... and wear layers.

    Honestly though, it's been a while since I've seen much news about the Ozone layer. I hope people haven't forgotten that the damage done (or being done) is a problem.

    1. Re:Note to self... by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 1

      Note to self... Don't sun-bathe in the arctic...

      Good advice for anybody living around the arctic circle, as "a day out basking in the sun" there translates into a 6 month exposure and an epic sunburn.

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    2. Re:Note to self... by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, I really wonder though. The sun is rarely up in the sky at these latitudes, so it is very highly unlikely that the sun's rays will go through the ozone hole and hit you. The rays that hit you go through the atmosphere much lower than the hole, so there should be no (or little) danger - at least, related to the ozone hole mentioned.

      That, and the fact that the lower the sun is in the sky, the less UV you get since it goes through the atmosphere at a steep angle traversing the ozone layer on a diagonal which is much longer than the thickness of the layer itself. So all in all, I don't foresee big UV problems for Russia, Greenland and Norway.

      I'm not a scientist though, so don't blame me if you get a sunburn.

    3. Re:Note to self... by nharmon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How much are you willing to bet that this will be used to try to debunk global warming because there is an area that has colder then average weather.

      As much as I would be willing to bet that this will be used to try to prove global warming because there is an area that has colder than average weather.

    4. Re:Note to self... by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 2

      We can deal with only one problem at a time. And Carbon won by popular vote.

      Actually, the ozone layer won, because we actually did something about it back in the 70s and 80s. But you are right, the next problem came along and everybody thought the hole in the ozone layer was solved.

      How much are you willing to bet that this will be used to try to debunk global warming because there is an area that has colder then average weather.

      I would not bet a thing. This bozo already beat you to it!

    5. Re:Note to self... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm from a Eastern Canada, Newfoundland to be exact. This past summer has been crappier than normal and I think it's all because of the Labrador current. This is a current of water that brings the melt water from the ice cap and Greenland glacier South. As the amount of water from the North increases, the colder the on land temperature get's. This year, there was an iceberg the size of Manhattan floated south so I suspect that the ocean on the grand banks is colder.

    6. Re:Note to self... by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Well we have band CFCs. But the way they where band had nothing to do with the environment and more to do will felling "green". Take the small particle accelerator at my old physics institute. It used 3 tons of CFC for cooling. By law they had to no longer use this 3 tons. So we asked what do we do with these 3 tons of CFCs? "Just release it into the atmosphere" we were told. In the end that was what was done since nothing else was legal.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    7. Re:Note to self... by Cimexus · · Score: 1

      Frustrating, isn't it. Irritates me no end when someone hears that we just had, for example, "the coldest August day in x years" (or coldest month/year/etc), and then starts ranting about how global warming must therefore be completely made up.

      Never mind the fact that for every minimum temperature record that's getting set around these parts nowadays, there's at least 5 maximum temp records being set (no matter which time scale you look at - daily, monthly, yearly). As you say, that 'probability curve' has been shifted upwards. Noticeable even in my lifetime (and I'm not that old) - it's generally hotter and drier here (south-east Australia) than it used to be (on average), despite the fact that yes, we still get cold and wet days/months/years.

      Not that I'm not one of those global warming panic merchants - I don't buy into the extreme scenarios. But anyone with a decent understanding of basic statistics can't argue with the fact that it is, globally, on average, getting warmer over time (and at a much faster rate than has historically occurred due to natural cycles, outside of major extinction events). The cause of that and impacts of that are up for debate, but I really don't think the raw numbers are.

    8. Re:Note to self... by JustOK · · Score: 2

      isn't it always half a degree colder in NL than elsewhere?

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    9. Re:Note to self... by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      I hate to break it to you, but the original paper in question actually cites stratospheric thermal isolation due to increased levels of CO2 as a possible cause of the lower temperatures. It doesn't go into any depth, because that's not what the paper is about, but that's not an idea that comes from nowhere.

    10. Re:Note to self... by praedictus · · Score: 1

      Dont be so sure, the worst sunburn I ever got on my face was in the subarctic back around 1990 or so. Low sun + snowcover = lots of reflected UV rays. The few bits exposed to the sun got right crispified, most of the crew suffered from some degree of sunburns till we ended up getting some sunblock flown in with the provisions.

      --
      Watashi wa chikyubutsurigakusha desu.
    11. Re:Note to self... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's always 10% wetter in The Netherlands than elsewhere. But that has more to do with rising groundwater than precipitation.

    12. Re:Note to self... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note: CO2 as possible cause. Every paper I've seen lately has that phrase. Its just about meaningless since it gets peoples attention... and they hope more money to 'study' their pet research. Whether it is true or not, its lost its importance.

    13. Re:Note to self... by siride · · Score: 1

      The cold is not in the troposphere, it's in the stratosphere. Cold stratosphere is usually correlated with warm temperatures in the troposphere, which is exactly what we've had, and has had a lot to do with the greater than average ice melt this season.

    14. Re:Note to self... by ErikZ · · Score: 0

      Oh, I'm sure it is getting warmer. Or colder. Or whatever. It's dynamic like that.

      But now people want to DO SOMETHING about it. That's where things are getting crazy.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    15. Re:Note to self... by dintech · · Score: 1

      I know you're being flippant, but the damage you allude to is that being 'close' to an ozone hole causes elevated UV levels. Melanoma city, man. This has been a problem in Australia for some time because of the antarctic ozone hole. And test cricket.

    16. Re:Note to self... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alaska is the only place I've ever gotten sunburned on a hike that started at 19:00.

    17. Re:Note to self... by siride · · Score: 2

      This isn't like that. Stratospheric cooling due to heat trapped in the troposphere is an easy phenomenon to see and is clearly related to the basic expectations of global warming.

    18. Re:Note to self... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the summer it is up for more than 12 hours. Some places get 24hrs of light.

    19. Re:Note to self... by gtall · · Score: 1

      I'll bet those CFCs were even banned.

    20. Re:Note to self... by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      The other thing to remember about high latitudes is that, in the summer, the sun is up for longer periods of time. Sometimes 24 hrs a day. UV damage is due to total amount of radiation - intensity x time (IIRC)[citation needed]. Of course, reflection off of snow / water / ice increases the intensity dramatically.

      However, the limiting factor for suntans in anything but the high arctic is corporal dissolution by mosquitos - the sun doesn't have much of an effect in 15 minutes.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    21. Re:Note to self... by ColdWetDog · · Score: 2

      CFC might be a good name for a band. I've heard worse....

      If a bunch of people presumably smart enough to run a particle accelerator can't figure out how to recycle CFCs - something every car mechanic on the planet figured out decades ago - you should check your dosimeter reports very carefully.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    22. Re:Note to self... by BlueScreenO'Life · · Score: 1

      Apparently you haven't visited Norway's Lofoten Islands (north of the Arctic circle) in summer months.

      Among many other awesome views (recommended) there's a couple of gorgeous beaches with white sands and emerald blue waters that make for perfect sunbathing spots. And yes you can get sunburnt really bad.

    23. Re:Note to self... by gtall · · Score: 1

      The only reason we haven't frozen our asses off or the fact life had a chance to evolve is because of heat trapping gases in the atmosphere. So dumping a lot more of them into the atmosphere couldn't possibly affect the climate. Errrmmm...now what the hell is up with Venus? The Venusians didn't get the memo that heat trapping gases don't count?

    24. Re:Note to self... by sarhjinian · · Score: 1

      I see what you did there.

      --
      --srj/mmv
    25. Re:Note to self... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything is related to the basic expectations of global warming.

      If it's colder, it's AGW, if it's hotter, it's AGW. More rain, less rain...wait for it...AGW.

      Smell test no pass.

    26. Re:Note to self... by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      True. But my point is that the ozone hole shouldn't make matters worse.

    27. Re:Note to self... by riverat1 · · Score: 2

      The cold in question is in the stratosphere, not the troposphere. It hasn't been particularly cold on the surface.

    28. Re:Note to self... by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Agree. People always forget about the snow reflection factor. Gave myself snow blindness for a day by using the wrong sunglasses (this was before every pair of sunglasses were UV blocking). And water does a nice job, too (stupid canoeing trip fried my nose so bad I looked like Jimmy Durante).

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    29. Re:Note to self... by jbengt · · Score: 1

      It used 3 tons of CFC for cooling. By law they had to no longer use this 3 tons.

      If this was a closed system, I call BS.
      If it was an open system, they were releasing the CFCs into the atmosphere, anyway.

      Nothing in the law prevented one from continuing to use an existing closed system with CFCs in it, though eventually, it would get very expensive to replace the CFCs since they quit manufacturing them. I designed several projects where old chillers were replaced or refurbished in anticipation of the CFC ban, and one of the fundamental spec items was to recover the refrigerant and hand it over to the Owner for their use in maintaining old equipment. There's nothing especially hard about doing that.

      Also, refrigerant is typically measured in pounds (in the US). Are you sure you mean 6,000 lbs of CFC, or do you mean a 3-Ton system (36,000 btu/hr) with CFCs. If the latter, it is a small system and any Joe Blow refrigerant technician could recover the CFCs.

    30. Re:Note to self... by Genda · · Score: 1

      Simple thermodynamics. Pour energy into a open system and it will take that energy up to a point then go into perturbation. We are now at the point of perturbation, the system rings, swinging wildly from colder to hotter with increased frequency (remembering higher frequency is another way energy can be expressed.) The average heat in the system rises, more heat and more water in the atmosphere mean harder rain, bigger storms and deeper snow. Same place gets floods and droughts and the weather switches up unpredictably. All of that is a sign of global climate change. Welcome to the future.

    31. Re:Note to self... by Genda · · Score: 2

      The proof is in frequency, average temperature, average rain fall and yes greenhouse effects mean heat is trapped at the surface and the stratosphere get's dramatically colder.

      This is also the argument proposed by some scientists that suggest such huge differences in localize temperature, could themselves become a powerful heat engine, creating a scenario for a hyper-cane or some weird weather phenomenon like it. Such a storm would be much taller than normal and pull supercold air down through its eye, flash freezing whatever the storm tracked over. However models for these odd beasties don't look at all like the disaster movies, instead they are only a few tens of miles in diameter (more like supercells gone wild as opposed to normal hurricanes.) The real problem is that they would horribly chew up the remaining ozone, and it would take more than a few of these storms to to create a global ozone depletion problem.

    32. Re:Note to self... by treeves · · Score: 1

      Well, there were the Divinyls ("I Touch Myself"), so organic chemical names have been used as names for bands before....

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    33. Re:Note to self... by TapeCutter · · Score: 2

      The cold in question is in the stratosphere, not the troposphere. It hasn't been particularly cold on the surface

      Polar amplification (faster warming of the polar troposphere) and stratospheric cooling are both successful predictions of the much maligned climate models. By successful I mean they were found in 1980's models and have since been observed in the real world.

      Stratospheric cooling has something to do with pressure, I don't fully understand the physics but it goes something like this....A GHG molecule in the stratosphere can travel a further distance before hitting another atom/molecule and is therefore more likely to lose energy by emitting absorbed photons into space rather than passing the energy to another particle via a collision (heat)....As I said I don't fully understand the mechanism so corrections/expansions to my description are welcome.

      Of course psudeo-skeptics such as Bob Carter dishonestly use stratospheric temperature records to claim the surface is cooling.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    34. Re:Note to self... by TapeCutter · · Score: 1
      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    35. Re:Note to self... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Polar amplification (faster warming of the polar troposphere) and stratospheric cooling are both successful predictions of the much maligned climate models. By successful I mean they were found in 1980's models and have since been observed in the real world.

      Exactly.

      I've had a hard time wrapping my head around the stratospheric cooling as well. One small factor that doesn't have much to do with global warming is that the thinning of ozone layer means less capture of the incoming UV radiation which would have been later emitted as IR radiation. I used to think that was a bigger factor than it turns out that it is.

      But I found this blog post on Skeptical Science that helped me understand it better. Basically it's saying that the biggest factor is that the increase in CO2 concentration increases the chance of a collision between the CO2 and other molecules in the atmosphere. Those collisions often leave the CO2 molecule in an excited state which then drops back down to the unexcited state by emitting an IR photon which has a better chance of leaving the atmosphere than in the troposphere because of the thinness of the atmosphere. That's sort of what you said. The second biggest factor is that the increase in CO2 throughout the atmosphere means more of the IR in the bands that CO2 absorbs gets captured in the troposphere so less of it gets through to the stratosphere to warm it. There are some interesting comments on the blog post as well.

    36. Re:Note to self... by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Yea, But CFCs is the best band in the world...

      Clicked the wrong button on preview....

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    37. Re:Note to self... by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      It was the law. NZ law. We could not sell, give it away or otherwise.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    38. Re:Note to self... by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      In NZ there was/is a law preventing just that, we even applied for a exemption since the accelerator was getting decommissioned in just a few years anyway. It was denied. You can BS all you like. It was the law. Oh you do realize there is more than one country in the world right... with different laws and use the metric system, as in 3 metric tons.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    39. Re:Note to self... by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      You fought the law and the law won :)

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    40. Re:Note to self... by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link, I've found the SS site to be very informative in the past.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    41. Re:Note to self... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ask people in Northern Europe if it's been cold this year.

      Yeah, I'm one of them. Take your phony temperature fantasies elsewhere.

    42. Re:Note to self... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Well, when I said it wasn't particularly cold on the surface I was referring to the Arctic region, not Norther Europe.

      Dueling anecdotes: Ask the people in the South-Central US if it's been hot and dry this year.

      I'm not one of them but I know some who are.

    43. Re:Note to self... by KingBenny · · Score: 1

      really? i thought they plugged all those holes up with the excess space debris that's floating around

      --
      Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
  2. I don't see the phrase global warming by GeneralTurgidson · · Score: 1, Funny

    My American mind doesn't trust the scientific integrity of this article.

  3. Re:Global warming by Nulukkhizdin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Global warming due to CO2 == heat is trapped in the troposphere => less heat lost => colder stratosphere.

    If the global warming was due to the Sun, the whole atmosphere would be warming.

    On the other hand, Venus has runaway greenhouse effect and its stratosphere is abnormally cold.

  4. Chlorine? by funehmon · · Score: 0

    Carbon, you are out. Green = low chlorine footprint.

  5. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I dare you to move to Australia and walk around topless in the sun all day every day. Or even with a shirt on. Stand in the shade, where the sun's not shining directly on you.

    Yeah, it's a myth designed to impinge on your freedom to be an arsehole.

    I would suggest that you're free to be one, but you don't need that freedom to become one. You're already there.

  6. Re:Global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The air has been exceptionally cold up there? Where is all that global warming everyone is speaking about?

    Mr. Republican/Tea party member, the correct term is "Climate Change". Enjoy the rest of your science bashing day.

  7. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Ozone layer has nothing to do with global warming. It is something entirely separate.

  8. Re:Where have I seen this before by JoeMerchant · · Score: 2

    since the environuts have lost the polar bear debate

    In whose mind? Compare global warming awareness today to 10 years ago - there are significant policies in place and continued effort at carbon emission reductions....

  9. Re:Where have I seen this before by Peter+H.S. · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > But hey make up your mind, is this Arctic cold snap caused by Global Warming too, or what?

    Yes. The colder air than usual in the stratosphere is caused by the fact that greenhouse gases insulate so much that less heat escape to space. Common sense actually. So yes, this phenomenon is a very good indication that the greenhouse effect is both real and increasing.

    Really, only the anti-science loony fringe denies global climate changes now a days, the scientific evidence for man made influence on the present climate change keep on coming, and is getting confirmed from many different sources. AFAIK, not a single scientific study trying to find other causes than human influence, have succeded in explaining what is going on.

    --
    Regards

  10. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know I shouldn't feed the trolls, but, yes, it is: http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/globalwarming.html#q7

    The average yearly temperature for the entire world is increasing slightly, but at the same time the extremes in hot and cold are becoming more severe over the past two decades (just slightly fewer cold than hot).

  11. Now what do I have to do to fix this? by BetaDays · · Score: 0

    Now what do I have to stop doing to fix this?

    --
    Paul: Father... father, the sleeper has awakened! - Dune
    1. Re:Now what do I have to do to fix this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing, all the protocols and products causing this were banned years ago. It just takes 75 years for the atmosphere to clean itself.

      What is this high latitude countries to worry about the whole, it will move all the way to the Mediterranean, so all of USA or Europe or Russia has to worry about it and keep out of the sun.

      Now, start taking vitamin D tablets.

    2. Re:Now what do I have to do to fix this? by JTsyo · · Score: 1

      Get rid of all swimming pools.

    3. Re:Now what do I have to do to fix this? by Larryish · · Score: 1

      Stop breathing, man. You have to stop breathing!

      Think of all the animals and stuff, man!

      Of course I only mean the cute animals. All the scaly animals can just go die.

      Now, if you will excuse me, I have to go put another Grateful Dead sticker on the new BMW that my parents bought me.

  12. Re:Where have I seen this before by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    So the ends justify the means.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  13. Re:Where have I seen this before by scharkalvin · · Score: 1, Interesting

    In this case you are wrong. Global warming has EVERYTHING to do with the hole in the ozone layer. Greenhouse gases that cause global warming also cause a cooling in the upper atmosphere and THAT is the cause of the ozone hole, because the CFC chemicals that destroy ozone are activated by low temperatures.

  14. Re:Global warming by Cwix · · Score: 0

    The air has been exceptionally cold up there? Where is all that global warming everyone is speaking about?

    Texas? Good spot for it IMHO.

    --
    You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
  15. Re:Global warming by ArcherB · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The air has been exceptionally cold up there? Where is all that global warming everyone is speaking about?

    Mr. Republican/Tea party member, the correct term is "Climate Change".
    Enjoy the rest of your science bashing day.

    Can you point to a time... any time in history when earth was NOT experiencing "Climate Change"?

    --
    There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
  16. Re:Where have I seen this before by forand · · Score: 2

    Wait, so you link to articles about an accelerated loss of the ozone layer in the Arctic due to cold weather then say nothing came of it in the comments to an article discussing the first hole in the Arctic ozone layer? Using your timeline this seems like a rather reasonable progression of events but the tone of your post makes it sound like this is par for the course.

    Holes in the ozone layer can have very significant effects on humans in regions were those holes exists. The ozone layer protects the surface of the Earth from some of the UV flux emitted by the sun. UV light is known to cause skin cancer in humans. Having a hole above a populated area of the world (unlike where the Antarctic hole usually forms) can have lasting effects on those populations. These effects may not be obvious for years due to the varying timelines for cancer development.

    Please just try to address information objectively before imposing your beliefs on it. Be critical of any argument put forward and prepared to change your view point to fit new facts. Skimming an article and asserting it is the same old thing when it is blatantly not serves you and those who listen to you poorly.

  17. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds interesting, do you have a site where I can learn how to do it?
    Or learning how to fuck a wombat on your own is part of the fun ?

  18. Re:Global warming by gatkinso · · Score: 1, Informative

    Venus stratosphere ranges between 385C and 75C.

    This is abnormally cold to you?

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  19. Re:Where have I seen this before by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    I think we need to thank GWB for these efforts for carbon emission. He allowed our Gas prices to go over $4.00 a gallon. Causing people to look towards more fuel efficient cars. Compare that to Clinton who kept gas prices really low causing almost every American to get huge SUVs.

    The reason why the emission reductions are working now is the fact for most businesses it means saving money because fuel is too expensive. And saying you support a green movement is just good PR which sound better then we cannot afford to pay the energy bill.

    If energy is cheap we will use it more. Most of us would love to drive large 4 wheel drive trucks vs. the small hybrid car but economics has forced us to make a trade off. Unfortunately a bad economy is good for the environment.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  20. Re:Where have I seen this before by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

    This is all well and good, but is this climate a recent turn of events or is it like that since as long as you can remember?

  21. Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by gatkinso · · Score: 2

    The concentrations of O3 in question are quite small. Would manufacturing (or capturing surface ozone, which is a pollutant when here with us surface dwellers) O3, lofting tanks on high altitude balloons over the poles and releasing it help?

    I realize how insane this sounds.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    1. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm tired of hearing about a high ozone polution days in my city.

      If it's such a small quantity as we're always told, why can't they fly some up there in a U2 or weather balloons?

    2. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the first comment I've read on Slashdot that exuded an interesting level of creativity. Way too many CS dorks here with their collective shitty comic t-shirts sense of humor who just repeat tired memes and laugh at things like "Whoever made mercurial should be shot!"

      Thanks for making this place fun again.

      To go off your initial suggestion, I wonder if an unmanned solar powered craft could disperse this ozone more uniformly and more precisely. Balloons seem like a cool method if you can control their x,y,z coordinates easily (which would require some sort of compensation motors).

    3. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've heard crazier ideas:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_sunshade

    4. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. Because it's a natural occurrence and has absolutely fuck-all to do with Human activity.

    5. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. Likewise, when a big asteroid is going to collide with Earth, it wasn't caused by human activity so we shouldn't do anything about it. It's natural!

    6. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 2

      Ozone has a very short half life; it breaks down quickly. It is why it is used as an oxidation sanitizer. It is also very unhealthy to be around. I can smell O3 coming from printers that need their Ozone filters replaced, but it is supposedly odorless. The funny thing is, I can't smell anything else very well.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    7. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It sounds about a quadrillion times less insane than the Space Nutters ranting about how we need to leave this rock.

    8. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by mikael · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is that the concentration of ozone is between 2 and 8 parts per million, while the "hole" is when this distribution falls to 30% of these values.

      It's like having a very thin layer of UV absorbing glass around the atmosphere that happens to be becoming worn thin in places.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    9. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how about write a letter to the govement and ask to plant more tree's and increase the prices of CFC's so people won't buy as much.

    10. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do not need to make ozone as much as you need to remove the Chlorine (CFC, etc) from the atmosphere. IIRC my Chemistry the CFC's keep attacking O3 and never breakdown themselves, not in the reaction at least. Most chemical reactions consume both reagents, one usually to completion if the other is in excess quantity. CFC's do not fall victim to this, that is why they are so dangerous to the ozone.

    11. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      1. Ozone is created by UV in upper atmosphere
      2. Ozone is destroyed by UV in upper atmosphere.
      3. #1 + #2 are a partial differential equation with a static solution of pre-industrial ozone levels.
      4. CFCs release chlorine in upper atmosphere for extended period of time destroying ozone for a *few decades*
      5. AGW results in warmer lower atmosphere and colder upper atmosphere as more heat is "trapped" in lower layers of the atmopshere thanks to extra CO2
      6. #5 (aka, low temperatures in upper atmosphere) result in faster action of CFCs (#4) thus depleting the ozone layer faster.

      What is the solution? Time. Don't make more CFCs. Ozone layer will recover - see #1-#3.

      Any attempt at replenishing ozone is utterly futile. The problem was releasing CFCs into the atmosphere in the first place. It's the same with AGW. Recapturing CO2 from the atmosphere and storing it is utterly futile and inefficient. Allowing it to be released in the first place is the problem that *will* bite us in the ass, just like CFCs of the 1960s-1980s are biting us now. AGW will just take longer and it will bite our grandkids and their grandkids much harder than us.

      Ozone layer should fix itself by 2100 or so. Without the CFCs ban, ozone layer would have been completely gone by 2050s at latest, and it would not start to replenish itself for at least a century after that (if CFCs were banned in 2050).

    12. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      What a moronic comparison, traces of O3 to an earth-killer.

    13. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by tragedy · · Score: 1

      I've never heard it claimed before that ozone is odourless. It has a pretty distinct smell.

    14. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks, this was interesting.

    15. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      From EPA ...

      EPA says it is Blue and has a smell http://www.epa.gov/docs/ozone/science/sc_fact.html "Ozone is a molecule containing three oxygen atoms. It is blue in color and has a strong odor."

      EPA ALSO says it is colorless and odorless. http://www.epa.gov/earth1r6/6pd/air/pd-l/ozone.htm "Ozone is an odorless, colorless gas composed of three atoms of oxygen. "

      --
      Seems that it is and isn't odorless. Kind of like Schrodinger's Cat of Chemistry ;)

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    16. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by tragedy · · Score: 1

      I'm getting: "The requested item was not found on the EPA's Web Server." Heh. Maybe someone from the EPA is actually reading this thread and fixed the page in the meantime. I do believe you that the page was there and they made the mistake of calling ozone odourless. They were probably cutting and pasting something about O2. In any case, calling ozone odourless is definitely a mistake. O2 is horrible enough (just look at forest fires), ozone is a really nasty caustic, poisonous gas. Great to have in the stratosphere. Not so nice at ground level.

      Maybe it is a Schrodinger's Cat of Chemistry. It is odourless and has an odour at the same time depending on whether or not it's burned out your lungs and killed you yet. Maybe for that to apply we have to be in a box with some ozone?

    17. Re:Possible to manufacture ozone and seed? by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Those might be old links, I never checked. HAHA. I pulled that from Wikipedia Topics discussing the very same discussion we're having here. Is it, or is it now, odorless?

      Those that claim it is odorless are saying what people smell is the residue of O3 breaking down organic matter. Regardless, both you and I can "smell" it, and it does have a "distinctive" odor, residue or not.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  22. Re:Where have I seen this before by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So the ends justify the means.

    Ozone hole deniers and global warming through CO2 deniers are both the same, people who refuse to believe that physics works.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  23. Re:Global warming by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 0

    Can you point to a time... any time in history when earth was NOT experiencing "Climate Change"?

    Can you point to a time... any time in history when earth was NOT experiencing "people dying"? So why do you mind being killed?

    --
    Fandroids hate facts.
  24. Re:Where have I seen this before by Dunbal · · Score: 2

    it would be nice to be able to reach through the screen and tear him a new asshole, or rip off his head and shit down his neck

    This is the hallmark of pretty much all fanatics everywhere. Well done. Why don't you throw in a couple Allahu-ackbars too, before you decapitate me?

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  25. Re:Where have I seen this before by GameboyRMH · · Score: 0

    Careful. Many of the more hardcore wackjob denialists think that anyone who wants to reduce carbon emissions is a crypto-communist-revolutionary (they call them "watermelons" - "green on the outside, red on the inside") who wants to commit genocide against the denialists as part of their plan to create a socialist one-world-government. Don't give them any ammo.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  26. Re:Where have I seen this before by _merlin · · Score: 2

    Yes. The colder air than usual in the stratosphere is caused by the fact that greenhouse gases insulate so much that less heat escape to space. Common sense actually. So yes, this phenomenon is a very good indication that the greenhouse effect is both real and increasing.

    I am not a climate scientist. I am a former telecommunications engineer (I contributed to 802.11n standardisation process) who now works in market making (gotta follow the dollar when you have young mouths to feed). Explain to me in a way that I can understand why insulation that reduces heat escaping into space causes air in the stratosphere to be colder than usual. By my uninformed logic, I would expect air to be warmer if less heat is escaping.

    Not trying to troll - just looking for an explanation that makes sense. I'm not uneducated, stupid, poor or unwilling to learn. I don't work in an industry that stands to lose if we have to cut back on carbon pollution. I'm just a curious guy who wants to know why the logic that appears to be contradicted is wrong.

  27. Re:Global warming by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    I don't think you get what the parent was talking about:

    http://pastebin.com/BBquTAt3

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  28. Re:Global warming by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 2

    Can you point to a time... any time in history when earth was NOT experiencing "Climate Change"?

    Can you point to a time... any time in history when the earth experience warming on the scale that it is now when it should have actually been cooling.

    The people who spend their lives studying the climate are quite familiar with the way it changes over time. You didn't really surprise them with this stunning revelation. The problem is not that it is changing, but the rate of change.

    But then you knew that, because it has been pointed out to you time and time again and yet you still spew out the same uninformed one-liners that are supposed to counter the volumes of research that has been done on this subject. But you might as well keep it up, because the surveys show that it is actually working. It appears that stupidity is catching after all.

  29. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But the important question here is, would the wombat give pleasure or take pleasure....

  30. Re:Where have I seen this before by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

    I think we need to thank GWB for these efforts for carbon emission. He allowed our Gas prices to go over $4.00 a gallon

    Agreed - I was astonished that people voted for his re-election as prices were spiraling upwards. Though, I don't think there was a single green thought at the highest levels that year, as I recall, the oil companies posted all time record high profits that year.

  31. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Err.. Your common sense isn't working.

    What you say would be true if the greenshouse gases suddenly appears and blocks heat from escaping. As it is it only delays heat from escaping quicker. If all the heat coming from the sun did not also escape as heat, it would not take long before earth was hotter than the sun..

  32. Re:Where have I seen this before by trout007 · · Score: 1

    I think what he is saying is that the heat trapping layer is below the stratosphere. So IR comes in heats the ground. If there is a layer of insulation it prevents the heat from traveling up into the stratosphere.

    Kind of like if you heat your house in the winter the more insulation the colder the attic is.

    --
    I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
  33. Re:Global warming by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    Yea you guys always find excuses.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  34. Re:Global warming by lemonhead_bastard · · Score: 0

    Venus is not a good analog. Sure it's hot as hell, but it's atmosphere is many times larger than ours (93 times denser). CO2 makes up an very small percentage of our atmosphere (approx 0.0387%) versus 96% on Venus. You do make a good point about the warming by the Sun, however. But you would also need to factor in changes in wind patterns and other factors before you can completely negate any solar effect.

  35. Re:Where have I seen this before by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    Not to mention that Bush decided not to have the US sign the Kyoto agreement.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  36. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am not a climate scientist, but I think the basic gist is that if greenhouse gases are to blame for heating at the surface, then cooling happens in the upper atmosphere to compensate. The heat that would normally pass through the stratosphere on it's way out isn't getting there.

    For example the surface of Venus is many times hotter than that of Earth (due to greenhouse gases), but it's upper atmosphere is many times cooler.

  37. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here we go with the non-anthropogenic climate denier trolls...
    Since every year for over 30 years, the world has been ending "in the next 5 years unless we act NOW", it would be nice if once in a while this actually came true and killed some of these morons who believe cavemen in SUVs caused the last ice age. But alas, such climate disasters don't exist.

    Seriously, anthropogenic climate change is the original "this is the year of Linux on the desktop" joke. Except it's not even funny, when you get idiots like the parent and their AGW crusades. I mean you have a prophet and his holy book which is full of contradictions and proven lies, you have the political influence, the groupthink, forcing schools to teach children one unproven belief and not any counterpoints, the extreme irrational hatred of anyone who doesn't believe, even to the point of murdering non-believers, the refusal to debate actual arguments and instead assert being right regardless of fact, the constant plea for donations in order to repent for the sins of man, the use of pseudo-science and misrepresentation of scientific opinions.

    If it walks like religion, quacks like religion, then AGW is the biggest and most dangerous bullshit of a religion around, and martyrs like Tsingi only prove the point further.

  38. Re:Where have I seen this before by Tsingi · · Score: 1

    Careful. Many of the more hardcore wackjob denialists think that anyone who wants to reduce carbon emissions is a crypto-communist-revolutionary (they call them "watermelons" - "green on the outside, red on the inside") who wants to commit genocide against the denialists as part of their plan to create a socialist one-world-government. Don't give them any ammo.

    You see, that's where they win all the time. They can say anything they want. But aside from the one world government, that all sounds good.

    Besides, with free trade we already have what amounts to a one world government, it's hardly socialist.

  39. Re:Where have I seen this before by Goboxer · · Score: 1

    I don't know much about climate myself, but I do know that the atmosphere is several layers of chemically goodness.

    If the heat is trapped below the area where most of the ozone resides than the heat wouldn't get to pass through the ozone layer on its way out into space, thus not being able to warm it. When I tried to look up the phenomena in an article I read recently all they said was that it was generally accepted that increased surface temperature results in chillier atmosphere (which is not a helpful explanation) http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2011-10/so-now-there%E2%80%99s-ozone-hole-over-arctic-what-does-mean.

  40. Re:Where have I seen this before by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The Ozone hole has never got close to NZ or Australia. In fact it has never been within a 1000 miles.

    --
    The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
  41. Re:Where have I seen this before by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    Too bad the anti-science loony fringe also includes some left wingers that appose nuclear power at every turn. We could have been totally off coal decades ago.

  42. Better Links by juggledean · · Score: 2

    It was a Nature article. The Weather Underground has a thoughtful discussion.

  43. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're missing the point and all things considered I'm guessing that you're doing it on purpose. How witty of you.
     
    Oh, and if you're not missing the point on purpose I really hope you're not in a possition to make any real decisions.

  44. Re:Global warming by JTsyo · · Score: 1

    Sure, that's easy. For the vast majority of Earth's history people weren't dying. Say 4 billion BC to 2 million BC.

  45. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're an idiot and proof that just because you agree with a scientist, doesn't make you smart.

  46. Re:Global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good thing we have those thousands of contradictory climate "models" to prove just how unsurprised these studiers of the climate are.

  47. Re:Global warming by x6060 · · Score: 1

    Reductio ad absurdum. Try a better argument.

  48. Re:Where have I seen this before by phyzz · · Score: 1

    The stratosphere is the layer of the atmosphere where temperature goes hotter the higher you go since the ozone gas releases heat when broken into monoatomic oxygen and diatomic oxygen by the ultraviolet rays of the Sun.

    I suppose the parent estimated that some heat was also absorbed from the troposphere (the layer directly below the stratosphere, and the lowest of the layers, where all meteorological events take place). Since the greenhouse gases are in the troposphere, they shield the stratosphere from the heat radiating from the Earth back to space.

    --
    phyzz
  49. Re:Where have I seen this before by Dunbal · · Score: 0

    No, see, these morons have a very rudimentary understanding of science, ie the went to see a movie called "An Inconvenient Truth". Apparently clouds are formed in the arctic on cold days (go figure, I've lived in Canada many years and on really cold days you don't get clouds at all because it's hard to get water vapor to condense and supersaturate the atmosphere at those temperatures but let's ignore this science for a second). These "cold clouds" then prevent light from reaching the surface but AT THE SAME TIME trap heat underneath them, causing the stratosphere to cool down. Or was it heat up? Now let's ignore the second fact - that the stratosphere starts at above 30,000 feet (not many clouds at that height except the odd thunder-head but most of these morons have never flown in an airplane either). But somehow through the miracle of magic (and I guess convection currents? I'm not a meteorologist), this affects the ozone layer some 90,000 feet above THAT.

    Now I won't argue that our global climate is not a dynamic system - it is very dynamic and chaotic. I won't even argue against a warming trend for the past 40,000 years or so when glaciers covered most of our land masses. I mean it's pretty obvious the average temperatures are increasing. What I will argue against however is the constant use of bullshit to try and convince people that they should hate themselves for existing, in the name of global warming. I am sure that recent volcanic activity alone has affected the global climate far more than human activity. I am sure that there is a positive correlation between cold weather and ozone holes.

    However the tail does not wag the dog, and the cart does not go before the horse. A lot of these idiots really need to get back to basic chemistry and read up on Le Chatelier to understand why temperature changes can affect all sorts of equilibrium states, be it the Co2-Bicarbonate equilibrium between the atmosphere and the oceans, or the oxygen-ozone equilibriums in the stratosphere. But no it's easier to wave pitchforks and call people names instead of actually learning a bit of science.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  50. Re:Global warming by Cimexus · · Score: 4, Informative

    No, of course he can't. Climate changes due to natural events and cycles. I don't think anyone denies that.

    However, he can point out that according to the best figures we have, the climate is currently changing at a far greater rate than has occurred previously (outside of major extinction events), and that that pace of change cannot be explained by natural causes alone. We are seeing changes over decades-to-centuries time frames that would normally take millennia (or longer).

  51. Re:Global warming by Nemyst · · Score: 2

    Actually, Venus is a good example because people best undersand extremes. If you want to demonstrate the effects of greenhouse gases, what better way than to point to a planet where they compose the vast majority of the atmosphere? Venus is what would happen if all of the Earth's atmosphere were to be replaced with greenhouse gases.

    If you look at, say, Mars and Venus, you have the two opposites. Earth stands somewhere along the two; global warming is inching us closer to Venus. We'll never actually reach Venus levels, obviously, but the comparison is still apt.

  52. Re:Where have I seen this before by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    So true. After all, that agreement really put the brakes on China stinking up the planet.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  53. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He allowed our Gas prices to go over $4.00 a gallon

    Wait.. WHAT? YOU GET CHEAP GAS??

    Overhere (we buy in Liters), we get it at 5EUR a gallon. With the current exchange currenty that's make 6.5 USD/Gallon for diesel.

  54. Springtime Phenomenon by Nate_weather_guy · · Score: 1

    Why is this being reported now? The ozone depletion is a springtime phenomenon. The high exposure to UV at high latitudes would be experienced during the late spring and summer.

    --
    For lack of a better sig, this one has to do.
  55. awesome abuse of moderation bro by drinkypoo · · Score: 0

    "Troll" does not mean "that with which I disagree"
    It means "That which you do not believe but are saying just to get a rise out of people"
    As opposed to flamebait, "That which you know will lead only to a flamewar but which you say anyway"
    Now, you could argue that my comment above is flamebait, but there is no way in which it is a troll, because PHYSICS WORKS.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    1. Re:awesome abuse of moderation bro by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

      Perhaps if there were "WTF" moderation since physics has less to do with the ozone hole than environment and chemistry. But yes, flaimbait would have been more appropriate.

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    2. Re:awesome abuse of moderation bro by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Perhaps if there were "WTF" moderation since physics has less to do with the ozone hole than environment and chemistry. But yes, flaimbait would have been more appropriate.

      Chemistry is a subset of physics. Environment is made up of matter, which falls under physics. Please try again. Or on second though, don't.

      P.S. When I spell a word correctly and you spell it incorrectly in your ignorant reply, you look even more ignorant than you would have anyway.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:awesome abuse of moderation bro by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

      Never mind...Troll was indeed appropriate.

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    4. Re:awesome abuse of moderation bro by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      In the end it all boils down to physics.

  56. Re:Where have I seen this before by Tsingi · · Score: 1

    ... martyrs like Tsingi only prove the point further.

    Just because it makes me angry that assholes like you don't care that we are destroying the earth. Which I will admit, is exactly what you want. You win that one.

    I fail to see how that makes me a martyr? Or how me being pissed off proves or disproves anything?

    What it proves is that you will jump on anything and call it proof.

  57. Re:Where have I seen this before by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    I think the Chinese take the attitude "we will when you will". But hey if Chinese manufacturing bothers you so much, go ahead and boycott Chinese products and I dunno, go live in the forest or something.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  58. Re:Where have I seen this before by Kjella · · Score: 1

    Yes. The colder air than usual in the stratosphere is caused by the fact that greenhouse gases insulate so much that less heat escape to space. Common sense actually.

    You have a very optimistic understanding of what common sense is. Most people don't seem to understand that local and regional climate variations can be a lot bigger than global variations. Take for example my country of Norway, if I compare us to say Siberia or Alaska we probably have 3-4C warmer climate because of the Gulf Stream, while the estimates on global warming are something like 0.8C in the last 100 years. If global warming fucks up that, our country and most of Northern Europe could end up being a colder place even if the world in total warms up. Also precipitation will change around the world, which leads to huge changes. For example one I thing I heard was that warmer poles means more humid air and more snowfall, weighing up for increased melting. But the world has still gotten warmer as a whole. There's lots of things like that where people point to a local phenomenon and say see, global warming is false. That's roughly as far as common sense goes, I'm afraid.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  59. Re:Where have I seen this before by Barefoot+Monkey · · Score: 1

    Conversely, by my similarly-uninformed logic I expected air to be cooler if less heat is escaping into it. Probably because I automatically assumed the insulation to be below the stratosphere while you assumed it to be above. I'm sure someone will tell us where greenhouse gasses actually accumulate and then we won't be as uninformed.

  60. Temps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let me guess...the unusually cold temperatures were caused by global warming...lol

    1. Re:Temps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Let me guess...the unusually cold temperatures were caused by global warming...lol

      Um, yes.

      Do try to keep up...

  61. forced us to make a trade off by SquirrelDeth · · Score: 0

    Exactly we have been forced to buy poor quality under powered cars (there was a hybrid built in Canada in 1926 that got 56 mi/gal) at a ridiculous price because it is the only way to afford to drive. Meanwhile we see that the people telling us it is good we can't afford to buy my gas for a larger vehicle because we are saving the environment are the ones driving the fancy cars and flying their jets because their emissions are ok . Meanwhile the ones telling us what to do for our own good are the ones over charging us for fuel, shitty cars and electricity. They are charging us more money for less product and laughing all the way to the dealership to buy another fuel guzzling car because they can now afford to own one more car. And hey since we don't pollute as much they can pollute more now.

  62. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, it is all crap. Living through all of these chicken little scenarios has made the world jaded. Overpopulation was a huge crisis, but then it wasn't. Global cooling due to smog was a huge crisis, but then it wasn't. Acid rain was a huge crisis, then it wasn't. The Ozone layer was a huge crisis, then it wasn't.. now it is again. Whatever, if there were coherent science around it then we'd all be able to understand and fix the problem. For every environmental "scientist" that spits out his granola and runs down the street without bothering to put their sandals on, there is a person who no longer gives a damn. These people have cried wolf way too many times and people are sick of listening. I'd love for them to be right but now that we have given up Freon and other ozone depleting gasses the ozone hole gets bigger? Do they actually know why? No, they don't.

  63. Re:Global warming by lemonhead_bastard · · Score: 0

    I think the two atmosphere's are substantially different to the degree that extrapolating data from Venus and applying it to Earth is invalid. It may make for good PR, but it doesn't equate. In Venus you have substantially thicker atmosphere and substantially more Solar radiation. What Venus does show is that atmosphere can affect temperature because it's hotter than Mercury. However, I think the case is attempted to be made too often that Earth is going to turn into Venus because of human activity, and I think that is a mistake.

  64. Re:Where have I seen this before by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2

    I am sure that recent volcanic activity alone has affected the global climate far more than human activity.

    Well, you're DEAD WRONG. Volcanoes emit about 1% as much CO2 as human activities. Look it up. The main effect of volcanoes is *cooling* caused by ash, which only lasts a couple of years max.

    Every time you see someone mention volcanoes as the culprit in a discussion about GW, you can be sure that they don't have a frigging clue what they're talking about, and everything they post can be safely ignored.

  65. Re:Where have I seen this before by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2

    You are correct. The environuts won the polar bear debate when they got them listed as a "threatened species", even though there are more polar bears today (by a factor of several magnitudes) than at any time since scientists started counting them.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  66. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "But hey make up your mind, is this Arctic cold snap caused by Global Warming too, or what?"

    Um...yes, obviously?

    The upper atmospheric cooling is predicted in global warming models. The Earth does not heat or cool evenly, different parts will heat faster. The models even predict that parts of the planet's surface will cool down while most of the planet warms up--and those areas are, in fact, showing trends of cooling instead of warming.

    That the parts that are cooling were predicted correctly by the models is verification that the models are most likely correct.

    Here is a link to a well-documented article on the liberal blog Daily Kos. You can believe it or not, as you choose, but, as I said, it is well-documented and you can check his sources if you actually care to remove your ignorance and idiotic bias:

    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2010/06/15/876231/-Breaking:-Global-Cooling-Proven

  67. I call bullshit by Sooner+Boomer · · Score: 1

    From TFA: "In cold conditions, the chlorine chemicals that destroy ozone are at their most active." This is wrong, because chemical reactions slow as temperatures decrease. It is an axiom in chemistry that the rate of the reaction halves (or doubles) for each 10 degree C drop (or increase) in temperature. A far as I can tell, there has been no high altitude sampling that has detected any CFCs in the Artic. This is just more environmental fear mongering and finger pointing without scientific proof.

    --
    Chaos maximizes locally around me.
    1. Re:I call bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds dubious, but what if: slowing down the reaction of the chemicals (as you mention), allows more chemicals to reach the ozone, increasing the number of reactions.

    2. Re:I call bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a degree in chemistry, and I've never heard any such rule of thumb. So, I call bullshit on you. Furthermore, anyone who knows anything about chemistry knows that for damn near any chemistry rule, there is an exception.

    3. Re:I call bullshit by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      In general chemical reactions will happen faster in higher temperatures. As with almost everything, this is not always the case. Some reactions have more complex kinetics required to make them happen, which can be faster or slower with an increase in temperature.

    4. Re:I call bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, had you read TFA, you would have noted the following:

      “In the 2010-11 Arctic winter, we did not have temperatures that were lower than in the previous cold Arctic winters,” said Walker. “What was different about this year was that the temperatures were low enough to generate ozone-depleting forms of chlorine for a much longer period of time. Arctic ozone loss events such as those observed this year could become more frequent if winter Arctic stratospheric temperatures decrease in future as the Earth’s climate changes.

      Please note the much longer period of time comment.

      But hey, never let an alternative explanation be considered when you can espouse a contrary opinion.

    5. Re:I call bullshit by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      If I remember correctly "It has been a long time since Chem class so I could be wrong" those tend to complex organic reactions which is not the case here.
      Since Ozone is constantly being created and destroyed in the upper atmosphere I am guessing that the lower energy means less 03 is being created so the balance between creation and destruction shifts.
      Or it could be that the colder temperatures causes the Chorine compounds to stay stable longer and do more harm.
      Or any combination. So yes the report is probably full of it saying that the temperatures speed up the reaction but the colder temps cold be contributing to the increased destruction of O3.
      or maybe you are right.
      Thing is that a good reporter would have seen that as counter intuitive and explained it so, in other words typical science reporting.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    6. Re:I call bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From TFA: "In cold conditions, the chlorine chemicals that destroy ozone are at their most active." This is wrong, because chemical reactions slow as temperatures decrease. It is an axiom in chemistry that the rate of the reaction halves (or doubles) for each 10 degree C drop (or increase) in temperature. A far as I can tell, there has been no high altitude sampling that has detected any CFCs in the Artic. This is just more environmental fear mongering and finger pointing without scientific proof.

      I would say that if the can make such a straighforward and unambiguous assertion that maybe they may know a few more chemistry axioms than you do. It's also axiomatic that when liquids freeze, they shrink - unless that liquid happens to be H20.

      Politics can "know" stuff. Science can't afford that luxury. So where's the real BS here?

    7. Re:I call bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if there are 2 competing processes, 1 creating, 1 destroying, and they have different temperature dependence, then 1 many dominate over the other at lower temperatures.

    8. Re:I call bullshit by tbannist · · Score: 2

      This is just more environmental fear mongering and finger pointing without scientific proof.

      Exactly how would that be different from what you're doing?

      Other than the people supposedly doing the fear mongering and finger pointing are scientists and have evidence, where as you aren't, you don't, and you have already demonstrated the depth of your ignorance on the topic. You are demonstrating the classic symptoms of the Dunning-Kruger effect.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    9. Re:I call bullshit by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      Alright, you forced me into actual reading. Apparently the low temperatures reduce the rate at which the chlorine-oxide intermediate reacts with nitrogen dioxide to remove the chloride free-radical from the system. Sooner-Boomer made me mad with his "those professional scientists don't even know high school chemistry" bullshit so I went off half-cocked.

      Sorry.

    10. Re:I call bullshit by Sockatume · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That applies to a solitary chemical reaction. Atmospheric chemistry deals with equilibria. Equilibria shift with temperature.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    11. Re:I call bullshit by choongiri · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's mostly true that reactions dependent on kinetics speed up with temperature. Ozone holes, though, are a very very different process. The ozone hole results from surface reactions on polar stratospheric clouds. The colder it gets, the easier it is for those clouds to form, and the more severe the rate of ozone depletion.

      Do some homework before calling "bullshit".

      (I am an atmospheric chemist, I am not your atmospheric chemist, etc...)

    12. Re:I call bullshit by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      No need to be sorry. I am not a chemist I just got all As in it back when a Vax was a fast machine. It is the people writing the story that did know what they where talking about.
      I work from the basis of when I get some vague news story where the science seems wrong it is probably the reporter that blew it.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  68. Another thing I can't bring myself to care about! by chrishillman · · Score: 2

    WTF? So we banned CFCs in the 80s to save the ozone layer but in a cruel twist of fate the increase in CO2 causes the air down here to get warmer and the air way up there to get colder and that makes the CFCs more efficient and therefore better at destroying the ozone? Yeah? So we are supposed to... do... what? How do we know that banning all carbon would not have some other unforeseen issue? These people have no idea what they are talking about or they do but are not saying anything productive. It will be news if one of these guys knew how to fix any of this mess or had something productive to say. The truth is that we are fracked no matter what and we should really focus upon what we will leave in the fossil record and enjoy the time we have left!

  69. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What I will argue against however is the constant use of bullshit to try and convince people that they should hate themselves for existing, in the name of global warming.

    What an awesome strawman!

    I am sure that recent volcanic activity alone has affected the global climate far more than human activity.

    So much for relying on facts & science. Man makes about 150 *times* more co2 than volcanoes. Per year.
    http://volcano.oregonstate.edu/education/gases/man.html

    Or volcanic CO2 production is about 1% of man-made CO2 production (as of 4 years ago):
    http://hvo.wr.usgs.gov/volcanowatch/2007/07_02_15.html
    Maybe you should go back and actually look at what these changes might make to the chemical & temperature balance of the atmosphere.

    But, no, we're not affecting anything by dumping that much CO2 into the atmosphere.

  70. Re:Where have I seen this before by Bartles · · Score: 1

    Actually the United States signed the Kyoto "agreement" in in 1997. It has not been ratified by the Senate.

  71. Re:Where have I seen this before by nedlohs · · Score: 1

    You only just noticed that you have higher gas prices in europe than america? Well you are a special kind of retarded aren't you.

  72. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CO2 level is a third-order variable in the atmosphere. It's not even worth putting into your model.

  73. Re:Global warming by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

    Well I for one think that "finding excuses" as you put it is a lot better than putting your fingers in your ear and going lalala until people stop trying to talk to you.

  74. Re:Where have I seen this before by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    Volcanoes emit about 1% as much CO2

    You know that CO2 is nowhere near being the "worst" greenhouse gas, right? Why are you even discussing CO2 when you should be discussing methane and water vapor?

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  75. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, see, these morons have a very rudimentary understanding of science, ... But no it's easier to wave pitchforks and call people names ...

    Calling names and completely confusing correlation with causation... Yep, your super-informative post has enlightened me to the fact that you are indeed among the woefully uninformed blowhards contributing at the very least to the hot air mass that permeates this issue. Thanks!

  76. Re:Global warming by greg_barton · · Score: 1

    Considering the surface temperature is 460C, sure.

  77. Little more detail by mps01060 · · Score: 5, Informative
    These aren't traditional clouds that you see in the troposphere (lowest layer of the atmosphere). To get an ozone hole, you need VERY cold temperatures. This happens after during polar night when there is no sunlight for about half the year. The stratosphere is so cold that it can form ice crystals that contain nitric acid. These crystals act as surfaces where ozone destruction takes place. Once the sun rises at the pole (March equinox for the northern hemisphere), the UV light "splits" compounds like CFCs into reactive materials such as Chlorine. The ozone destruction reaction still will not work efficiently without the initial nitric acid/ice crystal surfaces. This is why we don't often see this happening in the Arctic, while the Antarctic shows this signal annually.

    http://www.noaa.gov/features/02_monitoring/arctic_thinning.html

    The "coldness" of the pole is related to the strength of the winds (polar vortex) around the pole in the atmosphere. The south pole generally has strong winds circling it, which works to cut off the south pole's atmosphere from the rest of the world, especially during the southern hemisphere winter. Part of the reason for a stronger vortex is due to ocean surrounding the south pole on all sides, with land masses far away. In addition, the southern hemisphere in general has more ocean compared to land than the northern hemisphere.

    In the northern hemisphere, the polar vortex generally has more waves or pertubations in the polar vortex, which help to mix in air from lower latitudes. Some of this is caused by planetary waves that propagate vertically in the atmosphere. These planetary waves are formed generally due to land masses and mountains affecting the atmospheric flow (not this simple but this is the general idea). Generally, the factor that causes the difference in the north and south polar vortices is land mass.

    Now relating this all to climate is a bit tricky. It has been seen that as the troposphere warms (lowest layer of the atmosphere), the stratosphere cools. This has been seen in observations in the last 30-50 years (you may argue that 50 years might not be enough to define a long-term trend). The reason for this cooling is basically radiative balance (though I'm oversimplifying it here). If the troposphere warms due to increased greenhouse gasses, then the atmosphere above must cool above it. There cannot be more heat coming in than is leaving the Earth. A good analog to this is Venus. Venus has huge concentrations of greenhouse gasses. We know its surface is very hot (over 400 degrees C), while its upper atmosphere is much cooler than Earth's (gets down below -110 degrees C, compared to about -80 C on Earth).

    The tough part is separating the stratospheric cooling due to greenhouse gasses and ozone destruction from CFCs (although we may know this answer once all the CFCs are out of the atmosphere in the future). Increased greenhouse gasses will warm the troposphere and cool the stratosphere. This will lead to more polar stratospheric clouds, leading to more reactions sites for ozone destruction. More ozone destruction means less UV light is absorbed by ozone in the stratosphere. Less UV absorption means a cooler stratosphere which further intensifies the problem.

    1. Re:Little more detail by siride · · Score: 1

      If I hadn't already commented in the article, I'd mod you up. Finally, someone who knows what they're talking about and doesn't want to post some knee-jerk denialist garbage.

    2. Re:Little more detail by anethema · · Score: 1

      You just did! Oops.

      --


      It's easier to fight for one's principles than to live up to them.
    3. Re:Little more detail by siride · · Score: 1

      Where did I post knee-jerk denialist garbage?

  78. Re:Where have I seen this before by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

    Nice attempt to distract attention from your lack of knowledge on the subject by switching topics. Back to the point: Volcanoes are not significant sources of methane or water vapor either.

    Methane released by human activities is a significant problem.

    Water vapor has a half life in the atmosphere of a couple of days. It's levels are an *effect*, not a cause.

    (Of course I should have taken my own advice, saved futile effort, and ignored your post.)

  79. Re:Where have I seen this before by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

    So, how exactly did a level of CFCs that are now a fraction of a percentage point of any modern-era level -- to the point where they're now banning fucking *asthma inhalers* -- somehow cause the largest "ozone hole" in recorded history? This seems to suggest that we've either gone completely overboard trying to banish every last trace of something useful in an act of complete futility and political masturbation, last year was an epic flaming catastrophe with millions of halon-extinguished fires (since that's pretty much the only significant source of CFCs left), or CFCs don't have nearly as much to do with it as originally speculated, and the "holes" are going to keep occurring regardless of whether or not CFCs continue to exist.

    This is not to deny that the phenomenon exists, or that CFCs have no impact, but rather to point out that the worldwide banning of CFCs might have ultimately caused a phenomenon that's going to occur anyway to now be 99% as large as it might otherwise have been instead of 100%, and call into question whether that small improvement was actually worth the expense and misery of its opportunity cost. As someone who got hit with a $1,800 AC repair bill ~9 years ago for something that should have been a $65 refill (because they had to basically tear out and replace the car's entire air conditioner), I have a bit of an axe to grind over this matter. Frankly, I'm not convinced that I've gotten $1,735 worth of added ozone value in return for my investment.

    There's a difference between arguing that CFCs shouldn't have been phased out at all, vs arguing that the extreme and expensive measures taken to banish them almost overnight regardless of cost or benefit instead of simply requiring that new equipment be CFC-free going forward were worth it.

  80. Re:Where have I seen this before by Dunbal · · Score: 0

    On the contrary it is you who distract: the topic is the ozone hole and cool arctic temperatures. You introduced CO2. TFA does not mention CO2. I did not mention CO2 until after you post. Will you deny that volcanic activity (regardless of the specific gas/dust involved) can cool the planet?

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  81. Whose bullshit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about 30 seconds with google before flinging your "bullshit" around?

    > This is wrong, because chemical reactions slow as temperatures decrease.

    It's surface chemistry on ice, so the reaction won't happen at all until it
    gets cold enough to make ice condense out of that dry stratospheric air.

    http://www.theozonehole.com/ozonedestruction.htm

    > A far as I can tell, there has been no high altitude sampling that has detected any CFCs in the Artic

    It's been going on at least a decade. First page of search results:

    http://www.atmos.washington.edu/~beckya/nobackup/Stratospheric%20paper%20(GRL).pdf

    "Isotopic measurements (O and O) of CO along with
    concentration measurements of SF, CClF (CFC-11), CClF (CFC-12) and
    CClFCClF (CFC-113) in stratospheric samples collected within the
    Arctic polar vortex are reported."

  82. Show me a model by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    Don't just explain a new observation with a few quips. I can do that too: Cold air more dense than hot - should cause thermals which will cause more mixing, leading to a more uniform distribution of heat in the atmosphere - not increased stratification. There. Now remember, it's not fair to say my hypothesis is less valid than yours because they are both pulled out of someones ass. They shouldn't make such claims without a reasonably validated mathematical model.

  83. Re:I call bullshit - you are wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are referring to room temperature reactions in which your rule of thumb is generally true. Chlorine, however, is a free radical that at roughly -80C one chlorine radical breaks down hundreds of thousands of ozone molecules when the wind conditions create intense collisions. SInce ozone holes are not new, what is unknown is how severly the ozone layer depleted without the presence of chlorine. The good thing is that in warmer conditions when UV rays hit the upper atmosphere's oxygen molcules, ozone is created. The ozone layer is a self healing system. Move along. Nothing to see here.

  84. Re:Where have I seen this before by icensnow · · Score: 2

    You're lying in bed at night in a cool room with one blanket on. The blanket is warmer on the bottom next to you and cooler on the top. The top of the blanket is still warmer than the air in the room and it loses heat. Put on a second blanket. You get warmer underneath the two blankets, the top of the blanket layer is cooler than before, and less heat escapes into the room. The troposphere without additional CO2 already has about a dozen blankets on, because we're 33K or so warmer at the surface than our effective radiative temperature into space, and the recent excess CO2 is just adding another blanket to add a few more K to the surface warming. But the main point for this is that the stratosphere is mostly outside the blankets and is getting less heat.

  85. Re:Where have I seen this before by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 2

    You are incorrect. http://www.skepticalscience.com/polar-bears-global-warming.htm

    The polar bear population was estimated in the 50s and 60s to be 5k-10k. This was based on anecdotal evidence of hunters and explorers, so it likely underestimates the population back then. Today, it's estimated to 20k-25k. That is not even one order of magnitude, let alone several.

    Additionally, a scientific analysis of polar bear sub-populations shows that the number of increasing sub-populations is declining (only 1 of the 12 sub-populations with sufficient data is increasing), the number of stable sub-populations is declining (3 now), and the number of decreasing sub-populations is growing (8 now); 7 sub-populations lack sufficient data.

    That suggests population loss is accelerating - even after they are listed as a threatened species.

    --
    :(){ :|:& };:
  86. Re:Where have I seen this before by siride · · Score: 1

    Well, except for the fact that CO2 is actually fairly effective at absorbing IR in certain windows, so it's not a minimal effect. Moreover, the change in energy budget from increase CO2 has knock-off effects on the other, more potent greenhouse gasses, specifically H2O. It's these positive feedbacks that drive a lot of the climate change, not just the direct effects of CO2, although those aren't minimal either.

  87. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The idea that this would happen to Europe came from 3 years of measurements of Atlantic buoys, showing that the conveyor was slowing down. Unfortunately anyone who knows anything about science knows that 3 years worth of data is not really anything to write a paper in Nature about (unfortunately Nature don't realise this, as their editorial board is run by activists, not scientists). So, it turns out that no, the conveyor is not slowing down after all. A new ice-age for Europe has been postponed. It will happen though, as we're in an inter-glacial now. So really the fuss about a globally averaged temperature rise of a few tenths of a degree is just so much "noise" in the grand scheme of things.

  88. Re:Where have I seen this before by _merlin · · Score: 1

    I think we have a winner, and thankfully it wasn't a car analogy!

  89. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, he didn't say, "Volcanos Cause Global Warming" he said, "I am sure that recent volcanic activity alone has affected the global climate far more than human activity." You said warming.

    But you're correct, the amount of CO2 belched out by the things is nothing compared to the tonnes of Ash consisting of fun elements like Sulfer, Uranium, Mercury, etc, etc it shoots up into the atmosphere. I'd like 5 years of a Coal power plant in an afternoon and it does effect climate in a very measurable way.

    It's also worth noting....that things go back to relative normalcy after a year or two.

  90. Re:Where have I seen this before by bunratty · · Score: 1

    The outside of a mug with hot coffee inside is hot. The outside of a thermos with hot coffee inside is room temperature. It's pretty simple, isn't it?

    --
    What a fool believes, he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away.
  91. Re:Where have I seen this before by siride · · Score: 1

    Actually, all the things you listed except for global cooling have been problems and have either been addressed, or we've learned to live with them. Overpopulation is a problem, even if it's not in your neck of the woods. A lot of the world is poor and has too many people living in cramped quarters to effectively provide for them. Acid rain is still a problem, though mitigated by programs to reduce SO2 output, but nobody talks about it because it's not exciting enough to be newsworthy. The ozone problem was fixed to a degree because we actually took action and reduced or eliminated the usage of chemicals that lead to ozone depletion.

    The common thread in all these things, though, is not that we had fake problems, but that the media presented them as worse or further reaching than they were, and then stopped reporting on them once they weren't fun anymore. The folks who actually deal with these problems continued to do so and either made progress, or haven't really, but you don't hear about it because we've just come to accept the negative results. We're okay with India and China because that's just how it is and those aren't our countries, so we don't really have a stake in changing them. That doesn't make it not a problem.

  92. Re:Where have I seen this before by tbannist · · Score: 1

    Actually, it's the hallmark of frustrated people everywhere. Some of those people are frustrated fanatics, some are not.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  93. Re:Where have I seen this before by siride · · Score: 1

    So because the media can't portray complex scientific problems correctly means that global warming or the ozone hole aren't actually issues?

  94. Re:Global warming by siride · · Score: 1

    This is a spurious argument. There's no "should" here. Life has been affecting the climate since nearly the beginning, and vice versa. That we're doing it is no worse than any other life form changing the climate, local or global. The difference between now and history is that we are able to determine that our activities are going to change the climate in a way that's likely to be detrimental to our life and to other life forms that we care about, and we've also determined that we can avoid that outcome. Other than that, there's nothing *wrong* with climate change.

  95. Re:Where have I seen this before by Alioth · · Score: 1

    The heat is being trapped in the troposphere, and hence not reaching the stratosphere. The more heat that gets trapped in the troposphere and cannot escape into the stratosphere, the less thermal energy there is in the stratosphere. Therefore the troposphere's temperature increases (the troposphere is where the climate we care most about basically happens) and as a direct result the stratosphere's temperature decreass.

  96. Re:Another thing I can't bring myself to care abou by siride · · Score: 2

    The CFCs are still a problem that had lessened, but because of abnormal temperatures in the Arctic, their remaining effects were magnified a great deal.

  97. Plenty of Ozone in the big cities... by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

    Someone just needs to get a really big tube and suck the air out of the mega cities like New York, LA, Chicago and Goose Creek, South Carolina and pump all that ozone saturated air into the polar regions.

    Yeah, I know... can't be done- it's just sad how our world is seeing ozone missing where it is needed- and causing harm where it isn't.

    --
    "That's the way to do it" - Punch
  98. Re:Global warming by ArcherB · · Score: 1

    No, of course he can't. Climate changes due to natural events and cycles. I don't think anyone denies that.

    However, he can point out that according to the best figures we have, the climate is currently changing at a far greater rate than has occurred previously (outside of major extinction events), and that that pace of change cannot be explained by natural causes alone. We are seeing changes over decades-to-centuries time frames that would normally take millennia (or longer).

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_Thames_frost_fairs

    The river Thames rarely freezes today. I believe the last time was in 1963 and even then it was extremely rare. Of course, during the "little ice age" that started ending a couple of hundred years ago, it was a yearly occurrence as shown by the annual fairs that were held on the frozen river. So, in less than 200 years, the river has gone from freezing annually to almost never freezing. Note that this "little ice age" ended before the industrial revolution took off, and well before the SUV.

    The point is that this level of warming has gone on for centuries and well before man could be blamed for it. Although, that won't stop man from believing that he has an effect. People are arrogant in that way. Men do a dance and it rains. Men believe that the dance CAUSED the rain and begins to repeat the dance whenever rain is needed. The climate warms, but instead of looking for natural causes, man looks at what HE is doing that could be causing it. It's the rain dance thing all over again.

    --
    There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
  99. Re:Where have I seen this before by dylan_- · · Score: 2

    So, how exactly did a level of CFCs that are now a fraction of a percentage point of any modern-era level -- to the point where they're now banning fucking *asthma inhalers* -- somehow cause the largest "ozone hole" in recorded history?

    Because it can take up to 2 years for a CFC molecule to make its way up to the ozone layer. And after that, it's not the CFC that directly breaks down the ozone, it's when the molecule itself is broken down by radiation that it then reacts, which can take decades. So banning CFCs won't instantly fix the problem; it takes time to see the results - perhaps till around 2030-40.

    --
    Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
  100. Re:Global warming by Sockatume · · Score: 1

    Great rationalisation. So many uses! Nuclear testing:

    Can you point to a time... any time in history when earth was NOT experiencing "radioactive heating"?

    Mass poisoning:

    Can you point to a time... any time in history when this town was NOT experiencing "heavy metal exposure"?

    Taking a dump on your lunch:

    Can you point to a time... any time in history when your body was NOT experiencing "coliform bacteria in the digestive tract"?

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  101. Hooray! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ozone depletion leads to surface cooling.

    Sounds like we just solved global warming!

    I'm going to go buy sunscreen and parkas.

  102. Re:Where have I seen this before by rubycodez · · Score: 0

    You are wrong, we haven't been observing the "ozone holes" long enough to even know if they are influenced by man, the data only goes back mere decades. This nonsense is driven not by science but the three H's of Hysteria, Hype and Hoopla. It's been a great business model for Al Gore and for Goldman Sachs and others who profit from the market conditions this creates. A "climatologist" (not a science degree found in any proper school) is a politically agenda-driven and elite paid beneficiary, ditto for the ozone holers.

  103. Re:Global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The vast majority of the earths atmosphere is already populated by greenhouse gases. Water vapor is 100 times more abundant in the atmosphere. And water vapor is a greenhouse gas.

  104. Re:Where have I seen this before by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

    So, how exactly did a level of CFCs that are now a fraction of a percentage point of any modern-era level -- to the point where they're now banning fucking *asthma inhalers* -- somehow cause the largest "ozone hole" in recorded history?

    So, how did you jump to the conclusion that CFC levels are the only factor affecting ozone levels?

    As someone who got hit with a $1,800 AC repair bill ~9 years ago for something that should have been a $65 refill (because they had to basically tear out and replace the car's entire air conditioner),

    Uh no. Because Freon is $50/lb, or more and your car would take probably 1.5 lb or more, the freon alone would cost you $75. Of course, it's only that expensive because we outlawed its production in this country, but seriously, you will only come off as a luddite if you rail against that. Harmful compounds are harmful.

    It's too bad you had to pay $1800 for a conversion, which basically consists of dismounting the compressor and dryer, draining the compressor, removing the orifice tube, blowing solvent through the lines, putting some oil in the compressor and a new dryer, installing the orifice tube and the compressor, and recharging the system with any A/C-specific tools except the connection that comes with the fill kit. You might need a separator for snap lines, but you can get a plastic cheapie set for under ten bucks.

    You were robbed, but that's not R-134a's fault.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  105. Re:Global warming by siride · · Score: 1

    We're warming ON TOP of the post-Little Ice Age warming. You are attacking a strawman.

  106. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firstly, I'm one of those people who is naturally suspicious of everything the greenies say. But there are some things that so obviously have negative externalities that allowing the condition to continue is a clear and present danger.

    The issue with CFCs is they are a reliable way of carrying chlorine up to the stratosphere. Chlorine is the big deal in killing the ozone layer, but ground-level emissions of chlorine aren't a problem because chlorine reacts with something nearby and doesn't threaten the ozone layer. CFCs are stable and don't react. The only time they break down is when exposed to UV radiation. The first significant exposure to such radiation happens to be at the ozone layer (duh), which promptly liberates the chlorine atoms which then go to town munching on ozone.

    But the mechanism by which this happens is slow. CFCs are *very* heavy molecules. They love to hug the ground. They eventually make their way to the stratosphere, but it will take *decades* for their to be any significant churn.

    As someone who got hit with a $1,800 AC repair bill ~9 years ago for something that should have been a $65 refill (because they had to basically tear out and replace the car's entire air conditioner), I have a bit of an axe to grind over this matter. Frankly, I'm not convinced that I've gotten $1,735 worth of added ozone value in return for my investment.

    Understand that I am being sincere in saying this: that is unfortunate and I feel bad about that. The rules were changed on you mid-course, essentially, and that wasn't fair to you[1]. But, if your air conditioner needed a refill[2], it was leaking CFCs. It was harming others in that condition. It is no different than if you had to get a replacement muffler -- you don't *need* it to get the full utility of your vehicle, but it is necessary so it doesn't wake up the whole neighborhood.

    [1] On this note, DuPont exerted a lot of political pressure to get its substitute, R-134a, approved and made mainstream. So the change of rules also has a hint of corruption. DuPont's unethical behavior doesn't invalidate the fact that CFCs are bad.

    [2] 9 years ago would be 2002. The cars on the road of the era (at least in the United States) would have R-134a air conditioning as original equipment, or would have leaked enough refrigerant to have been retrofitted prior to 2002. Not saying that your anecdote is a lie, but it goes against the numbers.

  107. Well here's the problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The question becomes, what is normal?
    Is it natural for this layer to fluctuate in this way and what are the unintended consequences of making changes.
    Just because we haven't seen it in our lifetime doesn't mean it isn't a natural reoccurrence every so many YYYY years.

    For example, maybe the Earth retracts the ozone to react to changes in the quantity of CO2 in the atmosphere in order to melt the ice caps faster to dilute the ocean so it can trap more CO2. By stopping this process we could unintentionally oversaturate the oceans and suffocate ourselves.

    All I'm saying is, this requires more in-depth research before just tossing a solution out there and hoping we didn't make a mistake.

  108. Re:Where have I seen this before by haruchai · · Score: 1

    If you think the world is "back to normal" you've been living in a very weird world for the last 30 years.

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  109. I call BS on your BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really if you want to learn something do a bit of Googleing...

    For example, see

    http://www.ace.uwaterloo.ca/arcticozonedecline.html

  110. Re:Global warming by tubs · · Score: 1

    I perosnally think we all orginally lived on Venus, and then because of all our gas guzzling cars screwed the atmosphere, the socialist governernment, Illuminiati, Masons and United Nations got together, put us all to sleep, then transferred us over to earth, which they had terraformed to be the same as Venus. Thats the real reason that there have been few probes sent to Venus, we'd see all of the cities and everything.

    They're currently looking at Mars to do the same thing.

    --

    try to make ends meet, you're a slave to money, then you die

  111. Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go buy yourself a new bottle of sunscreen. Other than that, who gives a fuck other than the environazis and PETA-morons?

    1. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Who cares?

      In 1977 when I heard my first college lectures re human effects on Earth's climate and ecology, nobody cared because nobody outside academia knew.

      Now, the only people who don't believe humans negatively effect global climate are ignorant or falling for junk science produced by carbon-emitting industries. Fine, bash the liberals who belive in AGW, but then go look who funds the science that "disproves" AGW and you'll find the likes of Exxon-Mobil. It's just like the tobacco industry had alleged "scientists" (moral reprobates all) who "proved" that nicotine wasn't addictive and that smoking was unrelated to cancer, COPD, emphysema, and the like.

      But the rest of us care, and care a lot that we actually leave a habitable planet for the future.

      If you don't care about global warming or protecting the environment, then I hope you don't have kids who plan to have kids, because the lives of those grandkids will look pretty nasty when ocean level rise eats the productive land near the sea's edge (you got the money to build seaport infrastructure in the middle of NY state when NYC is underwater? or to rebuild fish-breeding areas once the rivers estuaries are all sunk too deep?), when they can't go outside much without being eaten by the sun (didn't used to happen in NZ or AU, but it does now), and they can't eat much because climate change has screwed global agriculture.

      And yes, I am a trained scientist. In the US, where lately ignorance is strength, that either makes me useful or an fool, depending on your level of know-nothingism.

  112. Re:Where have I seen this before by Bardwick · · Score: 1

    Economics has *ZERO* to do with buying hybrid cars. You have no return on investment before the car falls out of warranty. Buying $10,000 in replacement batteries after 3 years.. yeah, that's going to sting a bit. You spend $40,000 for the hybrid, I spend $10,000 to subsidize, the manufacturer loses money and there is zero return. This could possibly explain why it is impossible for hybrid cars to survive in a free market economy (at this point). I'm all about hybrid/effiecient cars, I hope someday they actually become affordable.

  113. Re:Global warming by dylan_- · · Score: 1

    Venus stratosphere ranges between 385C and 75C.

    You got a cite for those figures?

    --
    Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
  114. Re:Where have I seen this before by YttriumOxide · · Score: 1

    The hole itself hardly needs to be "over" NZ or Australia to have an effect. Whenever the ozone depleted air wanders a bit (when the hole "breaks up"), it reduces the levels of ozone for quite a distance around. More info...

    Growing up in Southern NZ, I was always confused by how kids on TV got to play outside all day on a really hot and sunny day whereas for us, that'd mean a horridly painful sunburn in an hour or less. The news weather reports would tell us the temperature and "burn time" for the day - often a matter of tens of minutes even when the temperature was barely high enough to not be wearing a coat.

    --
    My book about LSD and Self-Discovery
    Also on facebook as: DroppingAcidDaleBewan
  115. Re:Where have I seen this before by gtall · · Score: 1

    Think the Chinese take the attitude that "if you do, we'll think of another reason not to". The Chinese government doesn't give a flying rats ass about the environment. They are only interested in development and how that translates into power.

  116. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Global warming of about 0.8 deg C over the last 100 years. Mt. Pinatubo's 1991 eruption cooled the earth by 0.6 deg C. Looks to me that one good volcanic eruption can cancel an entire century of global warming. Now add up all the volcanic eruptions we've had in the last century... I think you'll find they affect the climate a lot more than than man-made CO2.

  117. Does this relate to magnetic pole shift? by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 1

    IIRC, The North and South poles create a magnetosphere (shield) around the globe which protects us from cosmic rays (and to a large extent, gamma rays created through solar flare activity).

    The magnetosphere attracts electrons from the cosmic rays which enter the earth's atmosphere at the poles. It is at the poles where the electrons react with molecules in the atmosphere to produce the Northern Lights.

    Question is: Is it possible for Pole Shift activity to affect the location of the Ozone hole? If so, that would seem to suggest that the Ozone hole is going to get dragged around relative to Pole Shift.

    --
    Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
  118. When is a Hole not a Whole Hole? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

    The Science News story has some words of caution of equating this 'hole' to the Antarctic hole:

    Geir Braathen, senior scientific officer with the World Meteorological Organization in Geneva, concurs that âoescientists have not agreed on any threshold ozone loss, like 250 or 260 Dobson units [for a hole].â Still, this atmospheric chemist cautions, âoeI would be careful about calling the Arctic depletion an ozone holeâ because it might lead people to think it's comparable to what emerges in the Antarctic. And it isnâ(TM)t.

    Antarctica's hole recurs annually, whereas mega-thinning in Arctic ozone is novel. Antarcticaâ(TM)s ozone also thins at some point to zero in a band many kilometers high. At no altitude has Arctic ozone ever fallen to zero â" even in 2011. Finally, Braathen points out, the aerial expanse and depth of the Antarctic hole greatly dwarfs the Arctic region that experienced substantial thinning earlier this year.

    âoeGoing into this Arctic spring, many of us â" myself included â" really thought this might be the year that we would see a real Arctic ozone hole,â observed Susan Solomon, of the University of Colorado, Boulder, at the recent American Chemical Society meeting in Denver. "But in the end," she says, "I think itâ(TM)s fair to say that we didnâ(TM)t.â

    It may be a matter of semantics, she concedes, but there was a rapid resupply of ozone from outside the Arctic vortex (that swirling wall of winds in the stratosphere that largely corrals a patch of atmosphere, rendering it vulnerable to ozone-destroying chemical reactions). Such a resupply does not occur in the Antarctic vortex, she notes; and that's what permits its stratospheric ozone concentrations to plummet to zero over a several-kilometer height.

    So, although the new paper clearly demonstrates that at some altitudes Arctic ozone was efficiently destroyed, Solomon says, âoeI wouldnâ(TM)t call this an ozone hole.â

    (sorry, Slashdot still protects us against dangerous quotation marks)

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    1. Re:When is a Hole not a Whole Hole? by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

      ...the aerial expanse and depth...

      Shouldn't that be 'areal'? Unless he's talking about antennae, of course.

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
  119. Re:Global warming by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    The record says otherwise, unless you limit your timeframe to, say, 800 years or so...

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  120. Huh, I thought we fixed that? by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    Didn't we fix this problem by getting rid of CFC's or something?

    1. Re:Huh, I thought we fixed that? by ShadowRangerRIT · · Score: 1

      IIRC, CFCs can stay active for up to fifty years. So we've got a while before the effect of the ban becomes pronounced. Heck, we only just banned CFC based asthma inhalers this year. I remember being really surprised that my inhaler was CFC based a few years ago.

      --
      $_ = "wftedskaebjgdpjgidbsmnjgcdwatb"; tr/a-z/oh, turtleneck Phrase Jar!/; print
  121. Re:Another thing I can't bring myself to care abou by compro01 · · Score: 2

    What we are "supposed to do" is just wait.

    the ban only took effect in 1996 (phasing out was started in 1991), with some CFCs (CFC-13, 111, 112, various halon variants, etc.) only getting fully eliminated last year.

    The issue is that CFCs are very long lived. It takes decades for them to break down. We won't really start seeing the effect of the bans on the ozone layer for another 20-30 years. Until then, we just have to deal with it.

    --
    upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
  122. Re:Where have I seen this before by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2

    Global warming of about 0.8 deg C over the last 100 years. Mt. Pinatubo's 1991 eruption cooled the earth by 0.6 deg C. Looks to me that one good volcanic eruption can cancel an entire century of global warming. Now add up all the volcanic eruptions we've had in the last century... I think you'll find they affect the climate a lot more than than man-made CO2.

    It can cancel it ... for a couple of years. Then of course when the ash and sulfur falls out of the atmosphere, temperatures go right back up. We don't get the biggest volcanic eruption in a century as an annual event.

    FFS - does anybody here have reasoning skills beyond a 3rd grade level?

  123. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hint, it's been decades. But since you were probably born less than a decade ago, you wouldn't know that.

  124. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As his user id is in the four digits, and those were from 1999, no he is definitely more than 10 years old.

  125. Re:Where have I seen this before by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

    I don't remember the exact year offhand, I guess it might have been closer to 15 years ago. I just remember that the car was manufactured and bought the final year CFC-using air conditioners were legal, and the repair happened about 5 years later. In retrospect, I probably should have taken the car to get fixed by some random mechanic in his driveway in Hialeah (who could have refilled it with used refrigerant recovered from a junkyard car), but I made the mistake of taking the car to the dealer and got completely raped, just like a few million other Floridians who had no idea at the time how expensive something that was historically a minor band-aid repair job you did to older cars in their final year or so of life before trading them in had just become (the AC in question wasn't completely broken... it had just lost enough refrigerant over the years to eventually start icing up regularly, and really needed only a fairly small amount to top it off).

  126. Re:Where have I seen this before by fnj · · Score: 1

    A meaningless slogan (the ends justify the means). Some ends justify some means. I know this may shock you. Please note, this is not in reference to any particular means being justified by any particular ends. I'm just tired of the meaningless slogan.

  127. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, lets see. Canberra is further away from the equator than Irving TX, and I did it there ALL summer long. Perth is about the same. SO, yeah, if you want to make a bet and pay my way, I will be more than happy to take it on provided that it is the south and not the north.

    Or, are you just a wanker that carps here and has had it far too easy.

  128. Re:Where have I seen this before by fnj · · Score: 2

    How about you deal with the science and cut the smug egotism, asshole. Some scientists believe the climate is warming due to human activity released CO2. Some do not. Either say why you believe the first group of scientists, and why you are not bothered by the politics and the lying which have been exposed - or SHUT THE FUCK UP. Your choice. Demonizing those who do not willingly accept force-fed imperatives is not productive. Yeah, I can't force you to do this, any more than you can reach across the internet and tear me apart.

    I can think of valid arguments supporting anthropogenic climate change, but I cannot think of a proof. I can also think of both positives and negatives if the change does occur, for WHATEVER reason. What I haven't seen is any indication of is a complete cost benefit analysis of tearing apart the world economy and grossly lowering the standard of living of those most vulnerable. Hey, there may be an analysis which could convince rational people of the advisability of radical action but, like, IT NEEDS TO BE DEVELOPED AND DEBATED RATIONALLY.

    Passion can be a useful and laudatory thing, but it has to be harnessed. And it ain't easy, believe me. Just look how we both got all worked up now.

  129. Confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It was my understanding that cold air was rushing out of the Arctic due to global warming. Now this article says that this is a result of the ozone getting too cold?

    1. Re:Confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      re-read the posts about insulating properties of atmospheric layers at different altitudes...

  130. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Holy Fuck...you are citing the DailyKOS? The biggest group of whack jobs on the planet? Now I've seen everything.

  131. Re:Global warming by Mashiki · · Score: 1

    If anything it's been more stable(warmish) in the last 4k years than it has in the last 400k years. The data is there, people just like to scream that *DOOM* the end has come. The norm is very warm like now followed by a fast drop off and long interglacial periods in a 10-30k range, which are cyclical.

    --
    Om, nomnomnom...
  132. Re:Global warming by spmkk · · Score: 1

    If you want to demonstrate the effects of greenhouse gases, what better way than to point to a planet where they compose the vast majority of the atmosphere?

    That's disingenuous fear-mongering, not demonstration. If you try to educate people by screaming, "OMG the earth is becoming Venus! 0.0388% is higher than 0.0387%, and that much closer to 96%!! We're all gonna fry!!!", don't complain when they don't take you seriously - you've invalidated your own point.

  133. Re:Where have I seen this before by ShavedOrangutan · · Score: 1

    If it were legal to use a 90% new stuff / 10% old stuff mix of refrigerant, the trace R12 would properly carry the oil through the system and it would have been a $65 repair with a 90% reduction in CFC.

    Won't be a problem for much longer since E10 fuel is destroying older cars.

    --
    Godaddy is a scam and a ripoff.
  134. If nothing else ... by Bob-taro · · Score: 1

    ... this proves that the ozone problem is bipolar.

    --
    Prov 9:8 Do not rebuke mockers or they will hate you; rebuke the wise and they will love you.
  135. Re:Where have I seen this before by tragedy · · Score: 1

    So, now we've got people denying that CFCs damage the ozone layer? The anthropogenic climate change deniers can at least appeal to a tiny minority of authorities who agree with them. Is there anyone intelligent who doesn't believe that CFCs damage the ozone layer?

  136. Re:Where have I seen this before by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    There are answers on stratospheric cooling here.

  137. Re:Where have I seen this before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't know the difference between climate and weather. The effects from the volcanic ash are strictly temporary.

  138. Didn't Roland Emmerich make this movie by kgeiger · · Score: 1

    wherein swirling holes of stratospheric cold freeze the Earth -- The Day After Tomorrow?

    --
    Vision with execution is hallucination.
    1. Re:Didn't Roland Emmerich make this movie by mps01060 · · Score: 1

      I know I'm really reaching back here, but I remember that movie driving me nuts during the "freezing" scenes. If air from the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere descended to the surface, it would descend at the dry adiabatic lapse rate, which is ~10 degrees C per km of height. The top of the troposphere is ~10 km above the surface and the temperature is around -60degrees C. This means that air that descended from there (assuming its dry) would compress and warm adiabatically to +40 degrees C by the time it reached the surface. People would be suffering from heat stroke rather than freezing.

  139. Canada's Conservative Government to the Rescue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    No problem. The Canadian Government has already thought of the solution. They are firing all the scientists researching the ozone hole.

    No scientists. No knowledge of the ozone hole. No problem.

    Go Conservatives Go!

    1. Re:Canada's Conservative Government to the Rescue by DemonGenius · · Score: 1

      Bravo my man, bravo!

  140. Re:Where have I seen this before by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

    You're speculating on the return of the decision to ban CFCs. Sure, it's your right to do so, and it sucks that you got ripped off by your mechanic (he could have instead directed you to someone who would refill the CFC refrigerant, since only *production* was banned -- it would have cost a bit more than $65, but you could have done it).

    But I think before you continue speculating that there is very limited return on the ban of CFCs, you should probably do some research on the subject. I think you'll find it illuminating.

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  141. Re:Where have I seen this before by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

    FFS - does anybody here have reasoning skills beyond a 3rd grade level?

    You do realize you're arguing on slashdot with Dunbal, right?

    What else would you expect?

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  142. Clear the air by schizz69 · · Score: 1

    Attach electric arc ozone generators to all commercial airliners at 30k feet, that should provide a much needed O3 boost, and help ensure the major polluters are doing something constructive to off set their evil ways.

  143. duh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What hole? Do you mean the Arctic hole that was healed by the super beings known as the Humaniods from the planet Sol? The gods of this galaxy? Get with the times baby.

  144. Re:Global warming by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

    Reductio ad absurdum. Try a better argument.

    That was my point - the argument was already absurdly reduced.

    --
    Fandroids hate facts.
  145. Re:Where have I seen this before by riverat1 · · Score: 2

    Problem with that is no model has ever worked without including the effects of CO2.

  146. Re:Where have I seen this before by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    Too bad nuclear power is one of the most expensive ways to produce power and requires such high government subsidies to be viable at all.

  147. Re:Where have I seen this before by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    Even the global cooling thing was addressed. A couple of the papers on global cooling in the 1970's were concerned with the increase in industrial aerosols causing cooling. Pollution controls reduced those aerosols although they're coming back a bit with China. But China will clean up sooner or later as well.

  148. Re:Where have I seen this before by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    Its funny how the subject is joke science and here you show up to quote some joke science. Nuclear power has a High capital cost (price to install the reactor) but very low operating cost. Wind has an even higher captital cost per Kwh and only actually provides power for about 1/4 of the year.

    http://www.world-nuclear.org/uploadedImages/org/info/projected_electricity_costs_finland_2003.png

  149. Re:Where have I seen this before by siride · · Score: 1

    By your silly logic, we can't make any pronouncements about gravity and physics because we've only studied them for a tiny fraction of the time that they've existed and operated in the universe.

    The tactic of saying "we haven't been around long enough" is, for the deniers, just a way of moving the goal posts.

  150. Re:Global warming by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    There is very little water vapor in the Earth's atmosphere above the tropopause. I believe CO2 is usually more abundant there.

  151. Re:Where have I seen this before by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Ozone is formed by UV light hitting regular oxygen.

    It is reasonable to assume an area would have a lower level of ozone after several months of total darkness.

    The term 'Ozone hole' has always triggered my hysterical headline detectors. I'm sure the level isn't 0.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  152. Re:Where have I seen this before by tragedy · · Score: 1

    Ozone is, as you say, formed by UV light hitting regular O2. Ozone is also destroyed by UV light. So there's a state of dynamic equilibrium. In areas like the poles, the dark and cold do tend towards there being less ozone naturally, but CFCs make it much worse. It's fairly well understood. To give you and others like you the benefit of the doubt, I should have asked "is there anyone intelligent [and educated in the relevant areas] who doesn't believe that CFCs damage the ozone layer?"
    Also, of course it's not an absolute lack of ozone. That would be ridiculous, but it's enough of a difference to have a noticeable effect on the ground. I grew up in New Zealand, so I have some experience with this. I didn't burn all that much, though. I had a full body covering of overlapping freckles to protect me.

  153. Re:Where have I seen this before by rubycodez · · Score: 0

    I'll agree halogens and their oxides can pull apart an ozone molecule, but the proof that the man-caused ozone depletion hysteria is utter rubbish lies in the fact that the models used to predict the hole's size based on man's emissions turn out to be useless, wrong, and often the opposite of what is observed.

  154. Re:Where have I seen this before by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    You have to include the cost of decommissioning the plant at the end of its life and the cost of dealing with the waste products. And one way or another the potential liability costs if things go south. The biggest reason that no new reactors have been built since the 1970's is the cost not regulation or TMI syndrome. Huge up front costs with a long time to pay it off. Coal plants are cheaper and faster to get on line.

  155. Re:Where have I seen this before by tragedy · · Score: 2

    Well, I live and learn. Today I've learned that, although overshadowed by climate change denialists in the larger environmental debate, there are anthropogenic ozone depletion denialists as well. And they have research from "think tanks" to back them up.

    Predicting the size and shape of the ozone hole basically amounts to weather prediction plus additional complicating factors. Weather prediction is hard enough already, so if no-one has an exact model that predicts the size of the ozone hole, I can understand that. It hardly proves in any way that man-made CFCs aren't a major factor in the destruction of stratospheric ozone. The simple fact is that pretty much all natural substances that can also cause the same problem are water soluble and have a very short stay in the atmosphere to begin with and a very hard time even getting to the stratosphere.

    In any case, in four decades or so, when the long tail of the CFC ban has actually taken effect. We can compare notes again and see how the ozone is doing. Either that, or we can start using CFCs again, and look at the ozone layer in five or six decades. If we take the first route, and it turns out that the ozone layer hasn't really changed, then we say whoops, our bad and start using CFCs again. If we take the second route, and it turns out that the ozone layer is gone, we'll then have to ban CFCs again and wait another half century for it to come back again.

    There's this whole thing about erring on the side of caution if you must err that the denialist types never seem to get. Like the people who deny that we'll ever run out of energy-positive fossil fuels (some of them insist that the fossil fuels aren't actually biogenic, and it's possible that they're at least partly right, but I'm still going to refer to them as fossil fuels). Even if they're right, which seems less and less likely with every passing year, it makes sense to conserve as much as possible, just to be on the safe side.

    The denialists tend to be in such awe of the sheer size of the earth that they can't imagine how human action could ever damage it in any way and seem to remain blind to all the obvious evidence right in front of their eyes. The fact is, there's only about 5 and a quarter acres of land for each human on earth. There's about 715,000 tons of atmosphere per person and 193,000,000 tons of water per person. All that seems like a lot, except for the 5 and a quarter acres. Considering the ~11 kilowatts (counting all sources, not just the ~300 watts of home electrical use) of per person power usage in the US. The 5 and a quarter acres seems like a fairly small amount for a single person to be able to mess up. As for the atmosphere, those numbers mean that a single person accounts for about .1 ppm of their share of the atmosphere by body mass. Doesn't seem like that much until you consider how very small changes in some atmospheric variables can cause some pretty big changes. Consider that 11 kilowatts of power use again and consider each person's share in all their household goods, their housing, all the infrastructure they have a share in, etc. Just think about how many times their weight in garbage a single human produces in a year. As for the water, well there, a single human being by weight is .35 ppb, so it should seem like we're on safer ground, but consider that maximum contamination levels for mercury are about 2 ppb. Then consider all of that garbage over a lifetime along with the energy use, then consider the fact that mercury bioaccumulates, we eat seafood, and that mercury is only one of the contaminants that we have to worry about. Considering all of this, I have to conclude that the world is big, certainly, but the parts we inhabit just aren't that big compared to the sheer size of the human race and our civilisation. We certainly exist on a scale big enough to alter the world, and do so faster than it can bounce back. Anyone who thinks otherwise is deluding themselves.

  156. Re:Where have I seen this before by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

    And if you in fact checked why, it has nothing to do with the ozone layer hole. It has to do with the fact that we have about the same latitude as Spain, and are 1000 miles away from anywhere so there is a *lot* less particulate matter (dust) and other aerosols to scatter things. I assure you there is plenty of other places where an hour outside gets you a really bad sunburn. I have personally seen it in southern and Central France, Spain, Croatia, Italy, Japan hell even Austria.

    Also Sunburn is not a measure of UV. If you look at actual UV data, NZ and Aussie do not look any different to other places with similar Meteorology/Climatology.

    By the way the Universities in NZ have quite (or at lest had when i was) big group working on this with yearly trips to Antarctica to study it. I have seen the data but missed out on a trip :/

    --
    The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
  157. UV at night? by hicksw · · Score: 1

    Why is there a UV problem at NIGHT? Does the Arctic ozone hole reach to latitiudes where the sun rises at that time of year?

    This is not an intentional troll. I just don't understand why this is considered to be a problem.
    --
    Sometimes I stare into space and it doesn't recognize me. - P S Mueller

  158. Re:Where have I seen this before by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

    Think the Chinese take the attitude that "if you do, we'll think of another reason not to".

    And yet China actually does more than the US. Stop blaming China for your inaction.

    --
    Fandroids hate facts.
  159. Re:Where have I seen this before by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

    Yes. The colder air than usual in the stratosphere is caused by the fact that greenhouse gases insulate so much that less heat escape to space. Common sense actually. So yes, this phenomenon is a very good indication that the greenhouse effect is both real and increasing.

    Explain to me in a way that I can understand why insulation that reduces heat escaping into space causes air in the stratosphere to be colder than usual. By my uninformed logic, I would expect air to be warmer if less heat is escaping.

    This isn't about "heat" escaping, it's about infrared radiation escaping. Earth absorbs radiation from the sun and radiates IR as blackbody radiation. Greenhouse gases absorb IR, then re-radiate it in all directions, effectively trapping some of it. More greenhouse gases means more IR gets blocked below, so less IR reaches the stratosphere, at least in the short term (couple of decades).

    --
    Fandroids hate facts.
  160. Re:Where have I seen this before by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    So you agree that 'hole' is just a simplification and that UV is involved in creating and destroying ozone.

    It follows that for the correct definition of hole there was almost certainly a hole there every winter prior to CFCs. That is the point. We don't know how much Ozone was at the poles in spring prior to CFCs.

    If the 'hole' is a natural phenomenon we will be waiting forever for it to close. We don't know what normal was.

    The earth certainly has a carrying capacity for CFCs in the atmosphere while still maintaining enough ozone. Nobody is suggesting going back to using it for spray cans. Still I prefer working fluids in my cooling systems that are non-toxic. The new refrigerants are not perfect.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  161. Re:Where have I seen this before by tragedy · · Score: 1

    Of course 'hole' is just a simplification, I don't think anyone has ever disputed this fact. And UV light both creates and destroys ozone.

    It does not, in fact follow from those facts that there was almost certainly a hole there every winter prior to CFCs (not that there wasn't, it just doesn't follow from those facts). The fact that UV light destroys ozone as well as creating means that, when the light is absent for the winter ozone is no longer created as readily, as you said in the grandparent post, but it's not destroyed as readily either. So, how the balance is maintained is a complex issue, not a simple one. It is known that ice clouds form in the polar cold and the ice crystals make up a reaction surface where a lot of chemistry takes place that destroys ozone. There probably are other natural chemical reactions taking place that destroy ozone on the surface of those crystals, so there probably has always been a 'hole' in the ozone around the poles. We also know that CFCs, and quite possibly other man-made chemicals, promote the destruction of ozone in those conditions. So, even if the ozone hole is natural in part, CFCs pretty definitely make it worse.

    I currently live at almost the exact same latitude that I lived at when I lived in New Zealand, it's just Northern latitude now rather than Southern Latitude, but the UV is nowhere near as much of a problem here as it was there. Enough of my relatives and their friends and acquaintances have died from skin cancer in New Zealand that I'm quite happy if the ozone layer is as thick as possible. The CFC ban seems to be the wise thing to do in that circumstance.

    I would probably be ok with CFCs being used as refrigerants in sealed systems if there were actually some sort of sane end to end system for appliances. For unsealed systems prone to leaking like car air conditioning, then it's right out. As for working fluids for cooling systems that are non-toxic... You are aware that R12 refrigerant, a CFC, while not particularly toxic by itself, turned horribly poisonous on the slightest exposure to heat or flame.