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Rapid Arctic Melt Called 'Planetary Emergency'

Freshly Exhumed writes "Drawing on new data released Wednesday by the National Snow and Ice Data Center that the Arctic ice pack has melted to an all time low within the satellite record (video), NASA climate scientist James Hansen has declared the current reality a 'planetary emergency.' As pointed out by Prof. David Barber from the University of Manitoba, 'The thaw this year broke all the records that we had previous to this and it didn't just break them, it smashed them.' So, not sure why your mainstream press isn't covering this story? 'It's hard for the public to realize,' Hansen said, 'because they stick their head out the window and don't see much going on.' Thankfully, some people are noticing, as Bill McKibben's recent Rolling Stone article, Global Warming's Terrifying New Math has gone viral."

757 comments

  1. Press coverage by crazyjj · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, not sure why your mainstream press isn't covering this story?

    Uh, I saw this on both the PBS Newshour and CNN yesterday. Not sure how much more "mainstream" you can get (unless you expect People magazine to do a story too). Now, if by "not covering" you mean "aren't running around like Chicken Little alarmists screaming 'WE'RE ALL GONNA DIE!'" then that's true, yes. But in a world with much more present and pressing issues like war, hunger, unemployment, recession, etc. you can't very well expect every newspaper to lead with a "Average Global Temps Expected to Rise By 1-2 Degrees Celsius Over the Next 50-100 years" headline.

    Yes, it's noteworthy. Yes, we certainly need to address it. But, no, it's not the kind of thing that has people immediately scared or in present danger, nor the kind of thing that has the press running out with cameras to get the dramatic shot. It's more the long-term story that sort of simmers in the background.

    --
    What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    1. Re:Press coverage by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I like the part about sticking your head out the window only to see that nothing is happening, while all my life I've been told that the ice caps will melt and sea levels will rise a meter or more immediately when it starts, and enough to flood out the US east and west coast for hundreds of miles in eventually. Why is some part of Florida not underwater?

    2. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But in a world with much more present and pressing issues like war, hunger, unemployment, recession, etc. you can't very well expect every newspaper to lead with a "Average Global Temps Expected to Rise By 1-2 Degrees Celsius Over the Next 50-100 years" headline.

      Or in short "people can't be bothered about long-term problems."

      And it's really too bad because an individual has far more power to do something about global warming than any of those problems you listed.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    3. Re:Press coverage by arpad1 · · Score: 3, Informative

      There is another polar ice cap. Anyone know what's happening there with regard to ice coverage?

      Seems to me that if you're telling only half the story you can't possibly be telling more then half the truth.

      If that.

      --
      Minutus cantorum, minutus balorum, minutus carborata descendum pantorum.
    4. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well, Fox is doing its best to headline stories casting doubt, etc. on the President. They've really been pumping this whole Embassy thing, pushing a lot of attention to the new info about the guy released from Gitmo and repeatedly mentioning how Obama wanted to shut it down. Of course they do their best not to draw attention to the fact that Gitmo is still running and the guy was released under Bush's watch. But global warming is, according to them, a Liberal Conspiracy so they're doing their best to ignore the whole thing.

      But ya, all the Liberal and more-or-less 'Neutral' news services have at least mentioned it, it's mostly just the Conservative networks keeping mum. Give it a few days (at most) and you'll be able to see plenty of bullshit coming out of Fox talking about how the data is bad, it's not happening, and it's all part of a plot to take your guns, make you smoke pot, worship Satan, and convert to Islam.

      Ok so maybe that's a little overly sarcastic, but Fox really has been pissing me off lately. I'm fairly Conservative, and I don't appreciate how they've been whitewashing the news over the last couple of months.

    5. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Archimede principle: ice occupy as much space in water as it does once it has melted. The level of the oceans will only raise if inland ice melt such as in Antartica or Groenland.

    6. Re:Press coverage by GeekWithAKnife · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Noteworthy: over the next 50 years my anxiety will rise 1-2% about it.

      --
      A 'singular oddity' is an event that cannot be explained and only happens when you are alone.
    7. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares if the Arctic ice cap fully melts. Are you sorry that the U.S. Great Lakes glaciers melted many million years ago? Climate is always changing. Unless someone shows why preserving things as they currently are is essential, there is no reason to wail about things changing.

    8. Re:Press coverage by demachina · · Score: 2, Informative

      As global temperatures rise, ocean temperatures rise and they are almost certainly going to push more water in to the atmosphere in the form of clouds and rain on land. Earth does have natural mechanisms to adapt to climate changes. More rain could mean floods, could mean places that aren't getting enough precipitation like the Sahara will get more and be more habitable. The Sahara hasn't always been a desert. The people who live there might LIKE climate change.

      Some researchers are contending that half the sea level rise we've seen to date is due to cities and farms pumping water out of ancient aquifers on an industrial scale. If you had more rain civilization wouldn't be so dependent on depleting aquifers. When aquifers are gone it will take a really long time before they come back.

      Yes there is a danger of a runaway greenhouse effect but its also true that the Earth doesn't have "one true" climate and we shouldn't pretend that we are going to lock it in to one. Its always changed over time, sometimes dramatically and unless man is going to start teraforming we aren't going to lock it down now.

      Me personally I'm OK with global warming, of course I'm heavily invested in harbor and beach front property on the northern coast of Canada, or at least it will be beach front when sea level rises 9-10 meters.

      I always like to "look on the bright side of life".

      --
      @de_machina
    9. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Or you could stop eating beef and dairy products or buy from suppliers that use the genetically engineered low-fart cows. Or you could plant some trees or put renewable energy devices on your house or get a shorter commute or replace flying with telecommuting or make your next car electric or see if there's an option to buy renewable power in your area or phase in lower-power devices in your home or maintain/reuse things instead of replacing them...but yeah it's hopeless and there's nothing an individual could do.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    10. Re:Press coverage by NatasRevol · · Score: 0, Troll

      Plus all the ice above the water...

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    11. Re:Press coverage by NatasRevol · · Score: 2

      genetically engineered low-fart cows.

      The next coming fad. Low-fart diets!

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    12. Re:Press coverage by bondsbw · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And it's really too bad because an individual has far more power to do something about global warming than any of those problems you listed.

      Bullshit.

      You want to know why conservatives push back on global warming? Because the alarmists are claiming just what you are saying, that I (a hard working taxpayer who doesn't have the money to buy a new Prius) needs to go completely out of my way to do something that will make practically ZERO change to the current situation.

      Yet removing one container ship from the shipping industry would be the equivalent of removing 50 million automobiles.

      I heard the other day that our oil exports now exceed our oil imports. My question: why aren't we just using the oil we have, instead of shipping it across the ocean? Economics aside for a minute... this is having a huge impact to global warming, yet I'm the one being blamed?

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    13. Re:Press coverage by i+kan+reed · · Score: 3, Informative

      Whoops, you just misinformed everyone. Saltwater is more bouyant than freshwater, and due to the nature of how ice appears in the ocean(the evaporate, snow, accumulate cycle) the icebergs and ice shelves that are melting are made of freshwater. The impact is that they actually do raise the sea level more as water than the displacement caused by ice. Now, it is true that it's far less than 1:1 for visible melted ice:sea level rise, but to say there is none is misinformation.

    14. Re:Press coverage by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 4, Interesting

      the kind of thing that has the press running out with cameras to get the dramatic shot

      Until a few years ago, tornadoes were a rare event in New York City, something that happened once in a while and made big news.

      Now, tornadoes are becoming seasonable for New York. Yes, really, it is frequent enough to be considered seasonal, although I suspect the media won't report it that way for another 5 years. To give you an idea, there were two tornadoes in nearby suburbs this year, multiple strong tornadoes in 2010, a tornado in Brooklyn in 2007, and prior to that, one in 2006 in a nearby suburb, and in NYC in 2003, 1995, 1990, 1985, and 1974, and a few very rare ones before that. This is a becoming a clear change in New York City's weather patterns: tornadoes strike in the late summer and early autumn.

      The news has not gotten into a panic over it, probably because it is still being reported as "rare," but it is not really "rare" anymore; it happens, and people in New York City and the nearby areas are going to have to learn how to deal with tornadoes. The tornadoes are also becoming stronger; eventually they will be so strong that the dramatic shots of the storm and the aftermath will be unavoidable.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    15. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Last time I checked, there's a fair amount of ice above the level of the water. Melt that ice and it doesn't stay above the water - it moves down, into the water, thus raising the water level.

      How did your post get modded informative? Because you cite Archimedes principle? Just sad...

    16. Re:Press coverage by Rockoon · · Score: 3, Informative

      Well, it sure looks to me like the amount of ice at the other pole has been growing.

      ..the graph, however, only goes to 2008. I am sure someone will reply with data on only part of Antarctica (West Antarctic, or the Antarctic Peninsula) that shows it shrinking rather than growing, but that was also true before 2008, which the graph covers.

      Cherry picking? The world is never short on records being broken. To convince others of your beliefs, simply trumpet those records that support you and dont mention those that don't.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    17. Re:Press coverage by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 5, Informative

      Um, no. You've just shown you don't understand buoyancy. A given piece of ice, when it melts, *will take up only as much space as the part of the ice that was underneath the water.* Ice floats because a volume of ice weighs less than the same volume of water. It only displaces in water the volume of its weight in water, and so it floats. And therefore, when it melts, it shrinks exactly enough that the water doesn't rise an inch.

    18. Re:Press coverage by h4rr4r · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I as a pretty far lefty must agree. It is like water conservation, consumer water use is practically negligible. This is the only utility I know of the more you buy the cheaper it gets, agriculture pays next to nothing for the water and yet uses the vast majority of it. This means in the end the only lettuce I can buy is the stuff from what should be deserts or the local hydroponic. I do buy the 4x the cost hydroponic stuff because they reuse the water and I am in an area with lots of water. I can understand how you could not afford to buy that food or just would not want to pay that price.

      The problems are even real solutions will involve you paying a little more or waiting a little longer I am ok with that are you?

      Are you ok with paying another $10 on an smartphone or waiting another week to get it because the container ship was wind powered? Or just keeping your "old" phone 1 year longer?

      That is what real change would look like. I am fine with it are you?

    19. Re:Press coverage by fredrated · · Score: 1

      Didn't read the article, did you?

    20. Re:Press coverage by JustOK · · Score: 1

      Tides are likely to be affected

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    21. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      Nope still the same amount. Something floats when the mass of the water displaced equals the mass of the object floating. So when that ice mass melts, it will fill in the region that was used to be displaced. So the ice is displacing a volume equal to volume that ice would be if it was melted.

    22. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      Not if it's floating; the buoyancy and weight cancel out the extra volume. It's only if it's being *held* out of the water by land that it'll contribute to the sea level.

    23. Re:Press coverage by trout007 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You missed the point. Floating Ice by virtue of it floating is displacing the same amount of liquid water it contains when melted. Experiment.

      Take a Styrofoam cup. Fill it with ice. Pour enough water to float the ice and reach the rim of the glass. Some ice will be floating above the rim. Wait for it to melt and no water will spill.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    24. Re:Press coverage by Stormthirst · · Score: 1

      Isn't the shipping industry going backwards slightly, and looking into using essentially very big kites to help power their ships?

    25. Re:Press coverage by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      Water expands as it freezes. The amount above the water is that expansion.

      Sure you could make the argument about icebergs being fresh water, but the difference will not be huge.

    26. Re:Press coverage by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      I've never seen this before, two "Informative" posts in a row, both of which are misinformative. That's bizarre.

      GP was taking that into account, but was wrong for other reasons.

    27. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Water actually occupies more space when it is frozen.

    28. Re:Press coverage by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 4, Informative

      The difference between the density of saltware and freshwater is only 2.5%. The level rise would be miniscule; probably not even detectable.

    29. Re:Press coverage by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      He means that if the ice floats, it floats because 3kg of water is displaced by a 3kg ice block that's bigger than 3kg water. When you melt the ice, you have 3kg water, which takes up exactly the amount of space that was displaced. So if you have a liter of ice above water and two liters below water, if you melt all three liters it suddenly takes up two liters of space (the density of ice versus water is not on that ratio, but it does work out that way: it's X big when frozen, and Y big when melted, where Y is the volume of water displaced when it floats in water).

    30. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other news, "Antarctic Ice Levels Hit Record High"

      http://www.dailytech.com/Antarctic+Ice+Levels+Hit+Record+High/article8871.htm

    31. Re:Press coverage by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Funny

      When they start building trailer parks in NYC? We know that is what attracts tornadoes.

    32. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2

      Was expecting a challenging point-by-point rebuttal; got weak pooh-poohing; leaving dissatisfied.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    33. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Melt water from sea ice and floating ice shelves could add approximately 4 centimeters (1.57 inches) of sea-level rise.
      http://nsidc.org/news/press/20050801_floatingice.html

      I think Florida is still safe (until the ice in Greenland and Antarctica melts).

    34. Re:Press coverage by NatasRevol · · Score: 0

      You guys are too easy to get wound up. Just look at all these responses of NO YOU'RE WRONG.

      It was a joke, guys.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    35. Re:Press coverage by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But in a world with much more present and pressing issues like war, hunger, unemployment, recession, etc. you can't very well expect every newspaper to lead with a "Average Global Temps Expected to Rise By 1-2 Degrees Celsius Over the Next 50-100 years" headline.

      Well, if there is a chance that the average global temperature increase causes more war, hunger, unemployment and recession (the possibility is definitely there), you probably should expect that.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    36. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it growing decade after decade... like the Artic is losing decade after decade?

    37. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The assasination of an ambassador is a major international event, and cause belli for war. Blame the vitcim is wrong when the republifucks do it to rape victims, and it's wrong when the president does it to his own country.

    38. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So you don't like my ideas of individual responsibility and you want to regulate shipping vessels Mr. Conservative? I'm all for it. I'd heard early news of that study on the large container ships and now that the results are in, I agree something has to be done right now.

      As an individual though you have no power to do that, you can only vote and hope a majority supports you, or vote with your dollars which is a good token effort but may be a complete joke in effect.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    39. Re:Press coverage by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 3, Insightful

      True, but the changes will cause problems for civilization even if the earth becomes lush and habitable again. Where we can grow food changes, which will severely disrupt food production and distribution. Communications and shipping networks would become more/less viable, etc.

    40. Re:Press coverage by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      The ice caps that will cause siginificant sea rise are the several km thick continental ice flows covering Greenland and Antarctica. Melting sea ice does not cause flooding because it is already displacing the water it floats on.

    41. Re:Press coverage by BeansBaxter · · Score: 1

      Wow an AC commenting on press bias. I'm surprised.

    42. Re:Press coverage by afidel · · Score: 3, Informative

      We're exporting finished oil goods and importing crude. One of the biggest reasons for the recent change is that we have VERY cheap natural gas from shale. Mexico is sending crude to US refineries where they are using cheap natural gas to crack the crude into the useful components like gasoline and then they are shipping the finished products back to Mexico. This is more efficient than using some fraction of each barrel to power the cracking process. Since natural gas produces less CO2 per BTU it's also better for the environment even when you account for the transportation. In some instances the invisible hand really does lead to a better solution =)

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    43. Re:Press coverage by deanklear · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But in a world with much more present and pressing issues like war, hunger, unemployment, recession, etc. you can't very well expect every newspaper to lead with a "Average Global Temps Expected to Rise By 1-2 Degrees Celsius Over the Next 50-100 years" headline.

      This is why humanity is doomed. The stresses introduced by shrinking resources, exploding populations, the competition to control fossil fuel reserves, and increasingly unpredictable weather patterns are major causes of war, hunger, and economic distress, but we continue to address the symptoms rather than the disease causing them.

      Bill Hicks said it best: "We are a virus with shoes." And it looks like we're in danger of killing our host.

    44. Re:Press coverage by Ecuador · · Score: 2

      Actually. there will be a small rise due to the melting of floating ice: floating ice is mostly fresh-water ice and fresh-water has a higher density than ocean salt water.
      But you are right, most of the rise we are warned about would be due to the melting of grounded ice on Antarctica and Greenland.

      --
      Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
    45. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people don't want things to change because if the climate changes drastically it will be very disruptive to the global social/economic order. Insurance costs for instance are going through the roof because of the natural disasters we've been having. In the future, millions of people will die or be displaced because of natural disasters due to global warming. Even food prices will go through the roof because of droughts and flooding brought on by climate change. Who the heck would want more weird weather and huge natural disasters? While natural disasters might be great for headline news it is not great for the people who are personally effected. Maybe you haven't been personally affected yet because of where you live but others have been and do care because it is directly affecting them now not 50 years from now.

    46. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which ones have you done?

    47. Re:Press coverage by Vintermann · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The Sahara hasn't always been a desert. The people who live there might LIKE climate change.

      Oh for heaven's sake this is descending into parody. No, the people who live there will NOT like climate change. More intense droughts (due to higher temperatures) and more devastating rainfall (due to increased moisture level in the air, following temperatures) will create a very unstable situation in the Saharan countries. If some of them luck into more pleasant conditions for a while, they will be swamped by refugees from droughts and wars created by the misery.

      There is no honest way to spin a 2 degrees C temperature increase for the world as something positive.

      Some researchers are contending that half the sea level rise we've seen to date is due to cities and farms pumping water out of ancient aquifers on an industrial scale.

      For one, this is not at all clear. For another, it's not good news if it is - then we can expect even more sea level rise than projected.

      If you had more rain civilization wouldn't be so dependent on depleting aquifers.

      Rain doesn't work that way. It comes in many forms which are more trouble than good. A steady stream of meltwater through spring is a good thing, a flash flood isn't. Some areas are going to get drier, some are going to get far too much water.

      its also true that the Earth doesn't have "one true" climate and we shouldn't pretend that we are going to lock it in to one.

      Straw man. Yes, climate changes, same as species die out naturally. But if it's happening a hundred times faster than it naturally does, and we are the reason, and we are dependent on things staying the way the are (or at least having a long time to adapt), then "it happens naturally" is a damn thickheaded thing to say.

      It's like shrugging over a bloody corpse on your doorstep and saying "everyone dies eventually, it's no big deal!" rather than figuring out what happened and whether you are in danger.

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
    48. Re:Press coverage by Kjella · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Or you could stop eating beef and dairy products or buy from suppliers that use the genetically engineered low-fart cows. Or you could plant some trees or put renewable energy devices on your house or get a shorter commute or replace flying with telecommuting or make your next car electric or see if there's an option to buy renewable power in your area or phase in lower-power devices in your home or maintain/reuse things instead of replacing them...but yeah it's hopeless and there's nothing an individual could do.

      While every ounce helps the main issue is that there's billions of people that want the same standard of living as the top 1-2 billion and the corresponding CO2 emissions. If you don't have a car and can barely afford one you take the cheapest, not the most environmentally friendly. The small fraction of people of the world that don't have any more urgent matters to think of than their carbon footprint is dwarfed by the vast masses that want a modern home and a modern life instead of living in a shed.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    49. Re:Press coverage by bondsbw · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That article I linked talks about wind powered ships. It claims what is probably obvious, that most of the fuel is used near the ports to get the ships up to speed and to slow them down. Another reply below mentions kite-based "hybrid" ships that claim to reduce 20% of fuel consumption emissions.

      I'll put these numbers together: 20% savings over 90,000 ships is equivalent to taking 18,000 container ships out of the ocean. That is the equivalent of 900 billion cars. Since there are just over one billion cars in the world, I'd say there couldn't be a more obvious solution.

      And these hybrid ships don't cost any more or take longer to sail across the ocean. With $2000 in fuel savings, we could see the price of shipped goods reduced instead of increased.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    50. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the southern ones would have to melt, not thickening like they are in this article. http://www.usatoday.com/news/science/cold-science/2002-01-18-wais-thicker.htm

    51. Re:Press coverage by bondsbw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I love the idea of individual responsibility. Corporations are individuals, and they need to be held responsible.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    52. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. Who modded this informative? It's blatantly wrong.

    53. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One tornado ever 3-5 years is seasonal?

    54. Re:Press coverage by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      The level of the oceans will only raise if inland ice melt such as in Antartica or Groenland.

      Which ARE in fact, melting due to climate change, if I remember correctly.

    55. Re:Press coverage by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      I'm aware of this, I even highlighted that in my own post, without the hard numbers. The GGP was also dissembling on the front of where sea level rise is purported to come from, but I was addressing the direct misinformation in the post, rather than the more nuanced explanations for why sea levels are actually projected to rise: thermal expansion and secondarily near-polar ice shelves. The point was that the post contained an outright fabrication.

    56. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Low-power devices, short commute, small cars, don't eat much beef, I enable telecommuting professionally. Other options are not available or too expensive currently (but I'm a broke Gen. Y'er) except planting trees, but my country is already overrun with foliage.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    57. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Ice is fairly unique in that it expands when it freezes instead of contracting like most things. If it's truly just floating ice.. when it melts it will contract and even out. Floating ice that melts has no affect on water levels.

    58. Re:Press coverage by smooth+wombat · · Score: 0

      I thought we were against personal responsibility on this site. Every time I talk about taking personal responsibility for one's health by not smoking, not doing drugs, not getting drunk every weekend, I get panned.

      So we want people to take personal responsibility for their lives when it comes to global warming but not when it comes to their health.

      It would be nice if people would make up their minds as to when we're supposed to be responsible for our actions and when we can let others pick up the tab.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    59. Re:Press coverage by INT_QRK · · Score: 0, Troll

      Why? Seriously why is this an "emergency"? What are we supposed to do about this "emergency"? What is our "emergency" response? What about the Antarctic ice surplus? Should we send some tugs down with big axes, break off a few chunks and haul them up to the arctic? This is equine excrement. Really, Hansen.

    60. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Grass fed beef is a far more environmentally friendly solution than GM cows or just trying to eat less.

      http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1953692,00.html
      http://blogs.reuters.com/environment/2010/04/08/grass-fed-beef-packs-a-punch-to-environment/
      etc.

      We raise pork, chicken, and sheep on pasture. I have my first grass fed calf in my freezer right now and it's the best beef I've ever tasted by a wide margine - it's all in how the animals are managed. If you care about how your food effects the environment, the best thing you can do is find a farmer doing things responsibly and buy directly from them. If you buy in bulk it will be cheaper than you get at the store, and the farmer will get to keep more of the money by cutting out all the middle men - this allows them to continue to produce better quality environmentally friendly products. It's a huge win for everyone in the long run.

    61. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2

      Cheap doesn't have to be environmentally unfriendly. A small car with a 4-stroke carbed engine and no catalytic converter is actually way better than a 2-stroke bike (or probably an SUV with a large-displacement engine). Within a decade or two electric vehicles will cost about the same as ICEs. There's not a whole lot of money to be saved by making things dirtier.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    62. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And antarctic ice is setting records: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/09/20/there-could-be-more-antarctic-melt-worries/

    63. Re:Press coverage by Layzej · · Score: 5, Informative

      As global temperatures rise, ocean temperatures rise and they are almost certainly going to push more water in to the atmosphere in the form of clouds and rain on land. Earth does have natural mechanisms to adapt to climate changes. More rain could mean floods, could mean places that aren't getting enough precipitation like the Sahara will get more and be more habitable.

      There will undoubtedly be areas that benefit from global warming, but sub-tropical areas such as the Sahara, Mexico, and the southern U.S. will not. Sub-tropical areas are getting dryer. Sub-polar regions are getting wetter. This is due to the amplification of the global hydrologic cycle and it is expected to continue as the atmosphere gets warmer. The linked video describes the process: http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/09/05/799721/climate-change-how-the-wet-will-get-wetter-and-the-dry-will-get-drier/

    64. Re:Press coverage by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      Isn't the shipping industry going backwards slightly, and looking into using essentially very big kites to help power their ships?

      hehe. they've been looking into that stuff since they invented the steam engine.

      so don't hold your breath.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    65. Re:Press coverage by Cyfun · · Score: 0

      Not entirely true, because water expands when it freezes, hence why ice floats. Not to mention all the ice and snow that has built up over frozen parts of the ocean.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, dot slashes YOU!
    66. Re:Press coverage by INT_QRK · · Score: 1

      Worry not. Antarctic ice is at an all-time high.

    67. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the two tornadoes in Queens and Brooklyn two weeks ago.

    68. Re:Press coverage by buchner.johannes · · Score: 2

      Well, it sure looks to me like the amount of ice at the other pole has been growing.

      Has the amount of ice on Antarctica doubled in area and doubled in thickness? Has the reflection rate of the ocean there changed from 8% to 98%? Is the growth in Antarctica exponential?

      --
      NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
    69. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That graph shows that "SEA ICE" has been growing. Antarctica is a continent, AKA Land. So where is the sea ice coming from? Is it calving off the land? That would be bad.

    70. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      That's not what the second link says:

      To begin with, there is greenhouse gas emissions, the argument most often invoked to promote grass-feeding. Yet grass-fed meat is more, not less, greenhouse-gas intensive.

      In this, simple chemistry is the Draconian ring master, dictating that every decomposing carbon-containing molecule ends up as methane if the decomposition is anaerobic, as it is in the largely oxygen free rumen, and as carbon dioxide if the decomposition occurs in the presence of oxygen, as befalls most cellulose not digested by ruminants.

      Since grazing animals eat mostly cellulose-rich roughage while their feedlot counterparts eat mostly simple sugars whose digestion requires no rumination, the grazing animals emit two to four times as much methane, a greenhouse gas roughly 30 times more powerful than carbon dioxide.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    71. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fresh water has a LOWER density. this is the reason why something FLOATING in salt water is more buoyant. Salt water = more dense

    72. Re:Press coverage by msauve · · Score: 1

      ...and ice is 8.3% less dense than water. So, no, the full volume of ice floating above sea level doesn't raise the sea level when it melts, but about 30% (2.5/8.3) of that volume does.

      That's significant enough that the previous "correction," claiming melting sea ice doesn't raise the sea level, is not close to correct.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    73. Re:Press coverage by Larryish · · Score: 0

      It's like shrugging over a bloody corpse on your doorstep and saying "everyone dies eventually, it's no big deal!" rather than figuring out what happened and whether you are in danger.

      ... and then assuming that all the neighbours got together and murdered the person?

      GW I don't have a problem with.

      AGW on the other hand; do you people realize exactly how BIG this place is?

    74. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Florida is still safe

      I hope you are wrong.

      Nothing would please me more than seeing Florida sink beneath the waves.

    75. Re:Press coverage by GigsVT · · Score: 3, Insightful

      With 50-100 years to adapt, I'm sure it'll be fine. We survive much more immediate disruptions from natural disasters every year.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    76. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Addendum: Oh and of course maintain/reuse. I'm a master at that.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    77. Re:Press coverage by dpilot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There will certainly be winners as well as losers in climate change. But there are 2 things to remember about this.

      First, our current agricultural systems are "optimized" (for some definition of optimized, though not a very optimal one) around climate patterns as they exist. Even if climate change were to increase the arable land, it would most likely be different land that became arable, and at least some existing arable land will cease to be so. It will take time to adapt our agricultural usage to the new areas. In the short term, this adaptation will likely be uncomfortable.

      Second, one of the predictions about a warmer climate is that things will become more extreme. Continental interiors are expected on average to get dryer, coastal areas on average to get wetter. And as some say, there will likely be more water evaporating, so the rainy areas may get a LOT more rain, while the dry areas may still get dryer.

      Finally, making any predictions is dicey at best. Even, or especially the climate scientists are cagey about exact predictions, because they know how inexact the whole thing is. Which is odd, because one of the skeptics' prime complaints is that there are not exact, testable predictions, and they don't seem to understand that fuzzy statistical answers are also testable.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    78. Re:Press coverage by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Woosh, that joke sail over your head.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    79. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes there is a danger of a runaway greenhouse effect but its also true that the Earth doesn't have "one true" climate and we shouldn't pretend that we are going to lock it in to one. Its always changed over time, sometimes dramatically and unless man is going to start teraforming we aren't going to lock it down now.

      I can never tell if deniers are genuinely confused, or if they're trying to confuse others. Of course Earth's climate is dynamic, but that's no argument for doing nothing. Your argument is as valid as a glutton eating a bucket of fried chicken and exclaiming, "People have always died of heart disease and it's silly of me to suppose I can stop that."

    80. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The press is conveniently ignoring that Antarctica has record levels of ice this year.

    81. Re:Press coverage by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      How did you get two replies, both cited, one that the ice in antarctica is growing and one that it's shrinking?

    82. Re:Press coverage by Tastecicles · · Score: 0

      yeah, this is a cyclic phenomenon that occurs approximately every twelve months.

      --
      Operation Guillotine is in effect.
    83. Re:Press coverage by aurum42 · · Score: 4, Informative

      No. The *sea ice* around Antarctica, which changes seasonally, has been showing a build-up for a variety of reasons, but the land ice mass, which is what's really important in terms of sea levels, has been decreasing. See here: http://www.skepticalscience.com/antarctica-gaining-ice.htm

      --
      "The slave who knows his master's will and does not get ready...will be be beaten with many blows."Luke 12:47-48
    84. Re:Press coverage by drooling-dog · · Score: 1

      Please someone, mod parent up.

      I'm not nearly as annoyed by people who ignore evidence, as by those who simply turn it upside-down.

    85. Re:Press coverage by Plekto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The big deal is that the warming water in the oceans warms up the surrounding land masses and they lose their glaciers and ice.

      Greenland is actually turning green again it's getting so warm as of late.

    86. Re:Press coverage by Plekto · · Score: 1

      Oh, don't worry. We'll have killed off our oceans long before then at this rate. The real issue nobody seems to be dealing with is our oceans and how polluted they are.

    87. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually. there will be a small rise due to the melting of floating ice: floating ice is mostly fresh-water ice and fresh-water has a higher density than ocean salt water.
      But you are right, most of the rise we are warned about would be due to the melting of grounded ice on Antarctica and Greenland.

      Fresh water has a lower density than salt water. A given mass of fresh water has a greater volume than an equivalent mass of salt water, hence the slight rise in level when fresh water ice melts in salt water.

    88. Re:Press coverage by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 0

      But in a world with much more present and pressing issues like war, hunger, unemployment, recession, etc. you can't very well expect every newspaper to lead with a "Average Global Temps Expected to Rise By 1-2 Degrees Celsius Over the Next 50-100 years" headline.

      That's a shame, because global warming is likely to lead to a ten-fold increase in war, hunger, unemployment and recession.

      --
      Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
    89. Re:Press coverage by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      People aren't that stupid.

      Despite all the federal reserve attempts to "stimulate" the economy, people are still inexplicably (as far as Keynesians are concerned) paying down debt and acting with financial responsibility, and even driving less.

      On the whole, people act in a rational way, just not in the way that central-control manipulators necessarily want them to.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    90. Re:Press coverage by Hatta · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sounds like trying to empty the ocean with an eyedropper. In order to stop climate change reducing the amount of CO2 we produce is not enough. Ceasing CO2 production is not enough. We have to remove CO2 from the atmosphere.

      That means we need to stop using fossil fuels entirely. We also need massive CO2 sequestration projects, which can only be funded with public money. None of that is going to happen, because reducing energy consumption puts people at a competetive disadvantage, and we live in a world based on competition.

      There truly is nothing an individual can do to even slow climate change. All of your suggestions amount to nothing more than rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. The entire world has to come together to solve this problem, and we all know how likely that is.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    91. Re:Press coverage by Plekto · · Score: 1

      When a full blown hurricane hits D.C., then they'll pay attention. Any bets on how many years before that happens?

    92. Re:Press coverage by ls671 · · Score: 1

      The Dead Sea seawater has a density of 1.240 kg/L, which makes swimming similar to floating. Pure water is 1 kg/L

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

      --
      Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
    93. Re:Press coverage by Tastecicles · · Score: 1

      um... how? Tides are solely influenced by gravitational interaction with the Moon and the Sun.

      --
      Operation Guillotine is in effect.
    94. Re:Press coverage by AnotherAnonymousUser · · Score: 3, Funny

      I've seen people answering both sides of this saying the other is wrong. Can we get some further discussion and consensus on this? I'd love to know in one way or another.

    95. Re:Press coverage by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I assume you are pointing out that when water has salt in solution it is more dense than water without salt in solution. However shallow thinker when you add fresh water to salty water, you do not have fresh water plus salty water, you have slightly less salty water. Sea water while salty is far from saturation point, and salt will not automatically appear in the melty ice to balance out sea water, the two will mix and you will achieve balance, no change in sea level.

      So it has to be ice melt from land. The real problems the scientist are alluding to is a huge rise in methane as a result of thawing permafrost, rotting flood caused debris and rotting storm debris. Huge rises in methane have caused scientists to re-evaluate the nature of the end of the last ice age, rather than being gradual from start to finish. It was gradual in the beginning, the rapidly accelerated due to increased methane levels and the slowed again until it re-stabilised. So whilst the total remains the same rather than slow all the way through, slow, fast, slow is likely more accurately. That fast bit in the middle could be quite destructive as it allows significantly less time to adapt to the changes.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    96. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no honest way to spin a 2 degrees C temperature increase for the world as something positive.

      I live in Canada you insensitive clod!

    97. Re:Press coverage by budgenator · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Except that Antarctic sea-ice is about as much above average as Arctic sea-ice is below average, they tend to run counter-cycle to each other; net change is probably nill.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    98. Re:Press coverage by Hillgiant · · Score: 1

      There needs to be a "-1 lame attempt at humor" mod.

      --
      -
    99. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you on the ditching of beef and dairy. Well... cow dairy anyway... there's many, many other less ecologically destroying animals that can give milk. Nuts to low-fart cows, let's just get rid of them altogether.

      Plant trees... well, I suppose you can plant acorn seeds and cross your fingers, but otherwise most people don't have the money to buy a hundred pre-potted, pre-grown baby trees they can put in the ground. Still, shoving seeds into the ground is more than pretty much anyone does.

      Renewable Energy on the house? Oh, well let me just go pull a spare 50k out of my wallet that I've had kicking around in there. This is a nice thought, but guess what... not all of us have thousands upon thousands of dollars to spare, never mind that most renewable energy things are extremely hazardous and create a ton of waste to make to begin with (looking at you, solar panels). A good bit more research into this will be needed before it's viable for the common man, aka: living paycheque to paycheque.

      Shorter commute? Oh yeah, let me just go buy a new house. I've got an extra half-mil kicking around beside that 50k I mentioned before. Guess what... just "buying a new house" isn't exactly a viable option for like... 99% of people.

      Replace flying with telecommute? Awesome idea, needs to be done more, but you don't need to convince us... I'm sure most people on slashdot are on board with this one. Try convincing the old, rich people running the corporations you're dealing with. Good luck with that. If you can pull it off though, all the better.

      Electric car? Let's see... my old car breaks down. I can spend... under 10k on something that will get me to work to get that next paycheque I need to eat and have shelter... or I can spend 5 times that for an electric car. Guess this would work if I planned to live out of said car, but I don't think my wife will be on board with that one. A LOT more manufacturers need to get on board with electric vehicles, otherwise they will always, always, always be out of reach of the everyman. Get them at a comparable price to a regular beater, and now we're talking.

      Renewable power? Maybe it's a US thing, but where I am, you have two choices for power. Yes, or no. 100% of ours is hydroelectric if that helps though. Low power devices? Every single bulb I have is a coily one, so I'm good on this front. I could maybe turn the computer off more often... that's about it. Otherwise, I simply don't use much power.

      But no, there's quite a bit an individual person can do. Because of course, all individuals are part of the 1% and can afford all of that. That's what 1% means, right? It's short for 100%?

    100. Re:Press coverage by tmosley · · Score: 1, Informative

      Antarctic ice coverage is at record highs for this time of year.

      Soo much sea ice.

      Weather is not climate, for fucks sake. One year of record this or record that is not a trend, and the short thirty year trend in declining sea ice in the Arctic is mirrored by the rise in sea ice in the Antarctic over the same time period. This looks like a natural cycle to me, especially given the assertions I have heard about an open Northwest Passage during WWII.

    101. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You could:

      1) Try it yourself
      2) Google it
      3) Re-take 5th grade and pay attention this time

    102. Re:Press coverage by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Those are marketing numbers. Let's see if it pans out.

    103. Re:Press coverage by ls671 · · Score: 1

      Nah, it's slashdotters filling their freezer, making ice cubes for parties to come, that prevent the sea to rise. Antarctic ice is negligible compared to that. Wait until these parties are over, you will notice the sea level raising drastically. You will see...

      http://slashdot.org/anniversary.pl

      --
      Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
    104. Re:Press coverage by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Making too big of a deal will only make the problem worse.

      Getting average Joe slob will not help. Half will demand that this is just a Liberal Lie to get us to stop driving cars. The Other half will demand we go back to living like cave men.

      Putting political pressure on our leaders will only get them to act more partisan.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    105. Re:Press coverage by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      I believe your analysis is misleading. The density of the ice does not affect the change as long as the ice is less dense than the water and is free-floating. Only the density of the freshwater melt matters. The melt raises the ocean level 2.5% of what the whole of the ice on land melting into the ocean would raise; the amount of the free-floating ice above the water is irrelevant. You can calculate the expansion in terms of what ice is above the water when you know the ice's density (which you did), but changes in ice's density do not change the actual expansion as long as the ice floats.

    106. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      The world's cars, planes, cows and homes are no eyedropper. You're right that government action and sequestration will be needed, but it will take radical change before anything happens. The effects of global warming will have to be in Average Joe's face and a generation of climate skeptics might have to die off. International cooperation will be needed. Until then individuals can act to buy some time.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    107. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, it sure looks to me like the amount of ice at the other pole has been growing.

      That is a good link, and if you remove the "ant" from the URL you can see the opposite graph. Open them both up and toggle between the two. Which graph do you think has the more dramatic trend?

    108. Re:Press coverage by SiChemist · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I originally thought you were right, but a quick google search produces this article:

      http://phys.org/news5619.html

      TL;DR: Freshwater ice floats higher in salt water because salt water is more dense.
      "When freshwater ice melts in the ocean, it contributes a greater volume of melt water than it originally displaced."

    109. Re:Press coverage by aclarke · · Score: 1

      Me personally I'm OK with global warming, of course I'm heavily invested in harbor and beach front property on the northern coast of Canada, or at least it will be beach front when sea level rises 9-10 meters.

      I always like to "look on the bright side of life".

      I keep telling my wife we need to buy up James Bay waterfront property ... not that it's available.

    110. Re:Press coverage by infodragon · · Score: 2

      They aren't that stupid, they just choose to be! There was a /. article a few months back that showed that giving evidence that contradicted someone's beliefs had the effect of reinforcing their beliefs. That on top of that you have many that just don't care, don't understand, or just want to be distracted. They exist on both sides.

      Based on what is readily available, linking the ice melt in the north to global warming is incorrect. This does not mean there is no global warming, I personally believe the earth is still warming from the mini-ice age that just ended http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Ice_Age.

      Below are reports on what is going on. Both state facts that can be shown to draw separate conclusions. The really interesting thing is we are past the 2nd standard deviation for antarctic ice growth, which is exceeding the amount of ice lost so we are in a net positive. Just try to explain this to the average Joe and watch them lose interest really fast! Use a car analogy and you still don't get anywhere. Once evidence is shown that seems to conflict most humans ignore it because understanding the complexity exceeds the effort to survive the next week.

      Earth Loses Its 'Air Conditioner': Arctic Ice Cap Shrinks to Record Low Level
      http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/science/july-dec12/icemelt_09-20.html
      http://nsidc.org/news/press/2012_seaiceminimum.html

      Polar sea ice could set ANOTHER record this year
      Exceptionally large amounts of it down south right now
      http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/09/21/arctic_antarctic_sea_ice_record/

      --
      If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you.
    111. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did 18,000 container ships become 900 billion cars? Citation needed.

    112. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I know renewable on a house is expensive right now. By "shorter commute" I was thinking a closer job rather than a closer house. Electric cars are already falling into the same price range as ICEs. Look at the Mitsubishi-i for example. For the people who buy new cars those are a good option.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    113. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Could have sworn I put quotes around "skeptics." I think it's more fargone than "hacker" now anyways.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    114. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it is normal, acceptable human practice for the very miniscule and insignificant to be ignored and unmentioned.
      but i will take your bait...
      that very miniscule difference will be made up for by increased humidity in the atmosphere. if X amount of arctic ice displaces (.9876)X amount of water, sea level will not rise when the ice melts due to 'global warming'. the difference will be made up for by water in warmer regions evaporating and staying in the atmosphere as humidity and eventually condensing to form rain.

      global warming = less ice, more humidty, more rain, more arable, livable land = singing and rejoicing

      the only problem is that 'weather' will be drastic, chaotic, and destructive until a new balance is formed within nature and we adapt to the new weather patterns...but that really isn't a 'climate' problem. it's part of nature's coping mechanisms. if that drastic weather reduces human numbers significantly, it will prevent further 'global warming'. if it does not, or if we don't curb our activities that increase or lead to 'global warming' we will end up with 'global boiling'.

    115. Re:Press coverage by hey! · · Score: 4, Informative

      As other have pointed out, melting ice that is is *entirely floating* (important proviso) does not alter the level of the water body it is floating in. Adding water to that body -- in liquid or solid form -- does. So sea level rise is produced entirely by water that is on land (mainly in glaciers or ice sheets) entering the sea.

      But melting sea ice can still raise sea levels through effects on land ice that are indirect but potentially dramatic. The greatest concern in the Arctic is sea ice loss leading to warmer summer temperatures as the Arctic Ocean reflects less summer sunlight back into space. Higher temperatures increase the rate at which land ice enters the sea, for example by glaciers calving icebergs. Since sea ice itself is affected by warmer summer temperatures, you have a positive feedback mechanism that can result in rapid, dramatic changes in the Arctic like we're seeing here.

      As for looking out your window, even a dramatic change in sea level like the half a meter might not look like much on a nice day. The beach that once stretched hundreds of yards from your door might only be ten yards wide. But the big change you'll see isn't in your routine daily view, it's in extreme events. The once-in-a-decade hurricane surge which once would have brought the sea to your doorstep now sweeps your house away. These events will have huge economic impacts. People take note of past flood events, and build right up to a line the reckon is unlikely to get flooded except maybe once in a hundred years. Move the hundred year flood line just ten or twenty meters back and suddenly a lot of stuff is routinely flooded every few years.

      Now I live in Boston, which has a rolling landscape and enormous three meter tides (the record high tide is almost exactly 5m). The way people have built here, ten or twenty centimeters in sea level rise will have little effect on us. A city that is built on flat terrain adjacent to an ocean body with small tides is more vulnerable. Cities like New Orleans or Galveston. On a day to day basis there things would look unchanged from present, but when a big ten year storm rolls through turning everything on its head, the area over which it does that is greatly increased.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    116. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When they start building trailer parks in NYC? We know that is what attracts tornadoes.

      I thought it was other way around, tornadoes sow trailer parks in their tracks - people can't recover economically after tornado destroys their proper housing and then afterwards live in trailers indefinitely.

    117. Re:Press coverage by Ecuador · · Score: 1

      Yes, of course, my bad...

      --
      Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
    118. Re:Press coverage by eth1 · · Score: 1

      Or you could stop eating beef and dairy products or buy from suppliers that use the genetically engineered low-fart cows. Or you could plant some trees or put renewable energy devices on your house or get a shorter commute or replace flying with telecommuting or make your next car electric or see if there's an option to buy renewable power in your area or phase in lower-power devices in your home or maintain/reuse things instead of replacing them...but yeah it's hopeless and there's nothing an individual could do.

      The problem is, most of those suggestions are untenable for people without a lot of extra money (IOW, 95% of the world's population).

      - Stop eating beef: no real downside, and health benefits, too
      - Plant trees: costs money - a little or a lot depending on what you plant, and whether you're responsible for keeping it watered/maintained
      - Add renewable energy devices: costs a lot of money
      - Get shorter commute - costs a lot of money (figure 10% of the value of your house if you have to sell, plus moving costs)
      - Replace flying with telecommuting - situational, but most companies won't pay for the peons to fly anywhere if they can teleconference any more
      - Electric car: costs a lot of money
      - Renewable power: costs more, usually
      - Low power devices: often cost more, or don't work as well
      - Maintain/reuse: these days it's often cheaper to replace rather than fix, unless you can do it yourself

      So, yeah, there's stuff you "can" do, but the negative impact to the individual is way out of proportion to the positive impact it produces, so no one is going to make that choice unless forced or they have a ton of extra resources to burn.

    119. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you need to add salt to that water, then add 'unsalty' ice.

    120. Re:Press coverage by LateArthurDent · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But in a world with much more present and pressing issues like war, hunger, unemployment, recession, etc. you can't very well expect every newspaper to lead with a "Average Global Temps Expected to Rise By 1-2 Degrees Celsius Over the Next 50-100 years" headline.

      Or in short "people can't be bothered about long-term problems."

      And it's really too bad because an individual has far more power to do something about global warming than any of those problems you listed.

      Yes, but nobody wants to do the one and only thing that we can do to help the situation.

      Because the solution is NOT to use less energy. The solution is to have less kids and lower the population. Individually, I hope that we're all using twice more energy than we use now in the future. Because it'd be great to have that flying car and robot maids. That's the nature of technology, we use more energy to increase our quality of life.

      Environmentally, that's not a problem if the population has decreased to 10% of the current population. Total energy usage will be down.

      Do you want to help the environment and lower your carbon footprint? Stop having kids.

    121. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Also, salt water and fresh water(ice) have different densities, so ice melting on the ocean will cause the ocean to rise. Not much, but we are talking about a lot of ice.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    122. Re:Press coverage by PIBM · · Score: 3, Funny

      Hotter summer; check -- even got a pool since it's now useable !
      Less rain; check -- got to use that pool much more than it would have been possible a few years ago !
      More snow in the winter; yay, we can ski even more !

      So, that totally depends on where you are looking from :)

    123. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no honest way to spin a 2 degrees C temperature increase for the world as something positive.

      AFAIK one of the main reasons Russia hasn't acted much is that they will have more improvements than detrimental effect (at least economically), but other than that I can't really think of anywhere the outcome might be a net good.

    124. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Are you stupid? Seriously, do you think they are talking about Cyclic event, or melting and temp rise ABOVE normal cyclic events?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    125. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 1

      " Earth does have natural mechanisms to adapt to climate changes."
      yes, but it has certain bounds, and we are starting to exceed them. One of those bounds is glaciers and artic ice; which are melting. When that's gone, we loose all the advantage they had provided.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    126. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fact, just yesterday the reports were that the Antartic Ice Cap also set a record - for largest ever!

      http://www.infowars.com/antarctic-sea-ice-sets-another-record-for-most-ice-ever-this-time-of-year/

      Obviously gravity is just pulling all the ice down to the south pole... ;)

    127. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 0

      You're mind, it's small.

      This isn't an event that will go way on it sown. We must start discussing how to deal with it, and start ignoring anyone who doesn't have a testable alternative reason for the current climate change.

      Why do you think it will stop in 50-100 years? It will be accelerating.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    128. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until a few years ago, tornadoes were a rare event in New York City.

      Citation Needed

    129. Re:Press coverage by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yes, Antarctica seems to be at record highs in ice levels. Hansen is just being sensationalistic, as normal.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    130. Re:Press coverage by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      The articles are also a decade apart based on a cursory glance at the dates in the link

    131. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until a few years ago, tornadoes were a rare event in New York City, something that happened once in a while and made big news.

      What is your point? New York City did not come with a written guarantee to be tornado free at all times. Climate changes. If the planet were getting colder New York City would be subject to some other inconvenient weather phenomenon; perhaps frequent droughts or a lost month of growing season.

      New York, Washington and the rest are long overdue for a nice big hurricane. When that happens the starbucks climatologists will go full retard with their warmist training.

    132. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " But if it's happening a hundred times faster than it naturally does, and we are the reason, and we are dependent on things staying the way the are" Citation?
      Please google arctic ice history and tell us how many time the Arctic ice has had similar melting.
      We say it is happening naturally because otherwise idiots like you will tax us $50 trillion dollars to try and change something that cannot be changed. Get it yet?

    133. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to wikipedia:

      If the transfer of the ice from the land to the sea is balanced by snow falling back on the land then there will be no net contribution to global sea levels. A 2002 analysis of NASA satellite data from 1979–1999 showed that while overall the land ice is decreasing, areas of Antarctica where sea ice was increasing outnumbered areas of decreasing sea ice roughly 2:1.[8] The general trend shows that a warming climate in the southern hemisphere would transport more moisture to Antarctica, causing the interior ice sheets to grow, while calving events along the coast will increase, causing these areas to shrink. A 2006 paper derived from satellite data, measures changes in the gravity of the ice mass, suggests that the total amount of ice in Antarctica has begun decreasing in the past few years.[9] Another recent study compared the ice leaving the ice sheet, by measuring the ice velocity and thickness along the coast, to the amount of snow accumulation over the continent. This found that the East Antarctic Ice Sheet was in balance but the West Antarctic Ice Sheet was losing mass. This was largely due to acceleration of ice streams such as Pine Island Glacier. These results agree closely with the gravity changes.[10][11]

      Or are you suggesting something else?

    134. Re:Press coverage by hazah · · Score: 1

      NISUS
      Next. Crucifixion?

      CHEEKY
      Eh? No, freedom.

      NISUS
      What?

      CHEEKY
      Eh, freedom for me. They said I hadn't done anything, so I could go free and
      live on an island somewhere.

      NISUS
      Oh? Oh, that's jolly good. Well, off you go then!

      CHEEKY
      Naah. I'm only pulling your leg. It's crucifixion really.

      NISUS
      Oho, I see. Very good very good. Well, out of the door...

      CHEEKY
      [cheerily] Yeah. I know the way. Out of the door, one cross each, line on
      the left.

      NISUS
      Line on the left, yes. Thank you. Crucifixion? Good.

    135. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I do. I know exzaclt how big it is. I know home many cubim meters of atmostphere we have.

      In one can find that out.

      Here is some stuff you should know:
      Humans emit 29 gigatons of CO2 per year. ONly 40% of which is absorbed into the CO2 cycle. So around 17 gigaton of CO2 remains in the atmostphere.

      Do you know how slow geologic change is? It's SLOW, and the massive change we are seeing has happened in about 100 years. Screaming fast geologically speaking.

      AGW is real, provable, and solid science.

      You sound like a goldfish in a 100 gallon take think this place is huge, our shit could never cause a chemical change in our atmosphere.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    136. Re:Press coverage by hazah · · Score: 1

      Our production and distribution is already severely disrupted by political interests. Nothing will change in that regard.

    137. Re:Press coverage by QuantumSam · · Score: 1

      This is a bunch of hog-wash. The Antartic ice has steadily grown each decade over the last 33 years and is at an all-time high. The cause of the recent melt off in the artic is due to storms pushing the ice into the lower latitudes.

      As a matter of fact NOAA is showing 28% more ice than the 2007 minimum. We have only been monitorinf since 1979, so we are in reality talking about 33 years of monitoring.

      Current Arctic ice shifts are not "proof" of man-made global warming, nor are they unusual, unprecedented or cause for alarm, according to multiple peer-reviewed studies, data analyses and experts.

      As a matter of fact there is evidence in Russia that the artic ice coverage had been far lower in the 1930s.

      So what does this mean? it means Hansen is a fear mongering scumbag, the media is clinging on his every word, and we should be skeptical about all these extremist claims.

    138. Re:Press coverage by Zordak · · Score: 5, Funny

      or waiting another week to get it because the container ship was wind powered

      I am interested in this new-fangled "wind" shipping you are championing. How would the ship capture the wind power and convert it to momentum? I'm thinking you could have huge sheets of canvas that could pick up wind pretty easily, but I'm stymied where you go from there. Funnel it into some kind of huge turbine or something? Maybe we'll have the technology for this in 10 to 20 years, but I'm not convinced we have it today. And when we get the technology, doesn't that mean that the ship will be at the mercy of the winds? What will happen if the wind stops? You could have a ship sitting in the middle of the ocean for days, "becalmed" to coin a term, with no way of making forward progress. And what if the Somali pirates got their hands on this cutting-edge technology? Ships could be vulnerable to attack on the high seas. You would almost have to arm the ships with some kind of heavy weaponry to fend off hostiles. Also, what are you going to do about scurvy?

      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    139. Re:Press coverage by 1u3hr · · Score: 0

      Yet removing one container ship from the shipping industry would be the equivalent of removing 50 million automobiles.

      A complete bullshit denialist talking point.

      Freighters use dirty oil, they produce much more sulphur oxides than cars burning noral gasoline. They certainly do not produce 50 million times as much CO2 as a car as you imply.

      yet I'm the one being blamed?

      Of course not. You're perfectly innocent. Just drive down to the 7-Eleven in your SUV and buy a beer and relax. Vote for Romney and he'll make it all go away.

    140. Re:Press coverage by zifn4b · · Score: 1

      Or you could stop eating beef and dairy products or buy from suppliers that use the genetically engineered low-fart cows. Or you could plant some trees or put renewable energy devices on your house or get a shorter commute or replace flying with telecommuting or make your next car electric or see if there's an option to buy renewable power in your area or phase in lower-power devices in your home or maintain/reuse things instead of replacing them...but yeah it's hopeless and there's nothing an individual could do.

      I don't disagree that these things aren't without merit but you know what no one likes to think about in the midst of all this debate? The main problem is the rate at which our populate is increasing. All of our technological advancement which has been driven by our primitive instinct to survive and multiply has made us consume the resources on the planet much more effectively. No matter what you do to make it more efficient, it will just cause us to feel like we can increase our population more to consume more resources, making all those efforts in vain. You really just can't win. Wake me up when someone really wants to get serious about functioning better together as a civilization to grow in a responsible way.

      --
      We'll make great pets
    141. Re:Press coverage by jovius · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ice mass is decreasing while sea ice is increasing. The effects are connected, and both result from the warmer air.

      Antarctica is melting and thus contributing to the total sea level rise - http://www.skepticalscience.com/antarctica-gaining-ice-intermediate.htm

    142. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "There will undoubtedly be areas that benefit from global warming".. ug.. wrong.

      Or maybe instead of wrong I should say 'briefly, maybe' Because if we don't stop spewing all the CO2 really soon, there is no reason to think the atmosphere will stop warming during our life time. Once the earth gets to a place where there is a strong enough cycle to absorb the extra CO2. Of course the situation has to get bad enough where the cause of the problem is removed.

      Lets be clear, this isn't about destroying the earth. We would be hard pressed to do that. It's about keeping it habitable for humans.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    143. Re:Press coverage by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Except your invisible hand is just moving the deck chairs. The cheap shale gas isn't going to last very long (yes, natural gas is 'better' for the environment than oil or coal) and just encourages more growth which is the underlying cause of the problem.

      Capitalism is a fine method for optimizing short term issues, long term not so much. Anything to do with external costs or problems, not so much.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    144. Re:Press coverage by hey! · · Score: 5, Informative

      The Antarctic is a different situation entirely than the Arctic. Much of the sea ice there is annual, and winter ice doesn't have the effect on local weather that summer ice in the Arctic does.

      In any case climate models do not predict a dramatic change in Antarctic sea ice. The change is predicted to come first in the Arctic then the Antarctic. The reason is that the Arctic ocean is surrounded by land. The Antarctic ocean is surrounded by vast extents of moderating ocean. Region-wide changes under a warming scenario would come to the Arctic before the Antarctic. The Antarctic would see local changes, depending on the prevailing winds.

      This is similar to the situation in temperate continental weather. Under an AGW scenario not every place gets warmer; some get cooler. What you get is a very subtle shift in averages over large areas of the globe punctuated by unusual events like drought and excessive rainfall. If you throw all that into a pot you get a slight change in the global average. It'd be better to call "global warming" "more energetic global climate".

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    145. Re:Press coverage by hazah · · Score: 0

      I can never tell what it is you're peddling. Do *what*????

    146. Re:Press coverage by strikethree · · Score: 0

      Or you could stop eating beef and dairy products or buy from suppliers that use the genetically engineered low-fart cows.

      Go fuck yourself. I am NOT going vegetarian. The world can burn first. I am unsure if there is a way to buy meat from "low-fart" cows, but I do not see any meat in the store labelled that way.

      Or you could plant some trees

      I already have trees around my house. Had to kill one of them because the roots were going into the sewage line.

      put renewable energy devices on your house

      What? A windmill to power some outside lights? Some solar panels whose construction is as bad as belching coal smoke and which will barely pay for themselves over their lifetime? I will think about it.

      or get a shorter commute

      Yeah, there are tons of jobs that are available closer to my house than my current job. Not. Oh wait, you mean sell my current house and move into a cramped and VERY expensive apartment in the city so I can stand near a bus stop for half an hour in freezing rainy weather so I can spend 45 minutes crawling through a circuitous route to where I need to go. Gotcha. I will get right on that.

      Electric car

      Sure, if I lived in that cramped and expensive apartment in the city.

      see if there's an option to buy renewable power in your area

      Good idea. I will check. Nope. Next idea please.

      phase in lower-power devices in your home

      I bought low power/energy saving devices from the time I bought my home. I know things improve every year but I am not willing to buy a new refrigerator every year. I am sure my next fridge will be ever more efficient.

      maintain/reuse things instead of replacing them

      I already do. Do you have any idea how much it costs to replace stuff? Of course, the LCD with the screwdriver through it does not appear to fixable but I am holding on to it in the hopes that I can fix it at some point.

      but yeah it's hopeless and there's nothing an individual could do.

      While all of us can and should ensure that we are living as efficiently as we can, it really is a drop in the bucket. Nuclear power is, in theory, a panacea for much of our atmospheric pollution. Building more efficient transportation is also a solution... however, those things are FAR beyond the average person (who makes $20 a day I am told) to do anything about.

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    147. Re:Press coverage by Hatta · · Score: 2

      The effects of global warming will have to be in Average Joe's face and a generation of climate skeptics might have to die off.

      By then it will be too late. Complex dynamic systems have all sorts of non-linear properties. e.g. as surface ice melts, we decrease planetary albedo increasing the amount of energy absorbed by the planet. That means that even if we reduce atmospheric CO2 to below 350, the planet will be hotter for the same amount of solar radiation. And that's just one of many potential tipping points. By the time the really bad shit happens, it will be way too late.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    148. Re:Press coverage by zifn4b · · Score: 1

      genetically engineered low-fart cows.

      The next coming fad. Low-fart diets!

      Beano to the rescue! We can save the world!

      --
      We'll make great pets
    149. Re:Press coverage by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      Eventually the ice over Greenland will melt. It will take a bit longer, but 'bit' is on the order of a few years maybe, not decades or centuries. Then you'll see some of your sea level change, though it won't be quite so dramatic even still.

      As someone pointed out, the biggest issue with arctic ice melting is the lowering of the Earth's albedo, causing it to absorb significantly more energy from sunlight. This will accelerate the warming trend and may cause significant parts of the antarctic to start melting. And almost all of that ice is ice on the ground, not water, and that WILL cause very dramatic sea level changes.

    150. Re:Press coverage by JustOK · · Score: 1

      and the amount of water

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    151. Re:Press coverage by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      Without going into detail, you need to review your freshman chemistry. The part about solutions.

    152. Re:Press coverage by hazah · · Score: 1

      You get panned because you generalize. Each of the activities has a potential for irresponsibility, non of them mean the person is irresponsible. Labeling them as such is insulting. I suggest that you point it out to yourself, keep it to yourself, and stop throwing labels around at strangers who do not know who you are, or why they should listen to you.

    153. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ....but the main media is ignoring the sea ice records being set in the Antartic. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/09/21/arctic_antarctic_sea_ice_record/

    154. Re:Press coverage by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      This is not bait. At no point did I say ocean levels rise due to melting ice. The fact that you don't know that's not the cause is your own failing. I was merely correcting a falsehood. There are 2-3 more outright falsehoods in your post, but I'm on the phone, and you're an intransigent moron.

    155. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Non of which show AGW to be wrong. You take a piece of data* and then claim AGW is a scam? no it isn't, and you sound like an idiot.

      "what scares me about the sheer audacity of the sea level rising doomsayers is that any "hard" science they have is based on measurements taken at the edge of the Pacific Rim"
      Which is a lie. They take the data from MANY places. Liars like you are hurting the conversation. Here is a clue: There is no scientific debate on this matter. Just like there is no real scientific debate around whether or not the Earth revolves around the sun. IN both case, there are people who don't believe the science, but that doesn't make either issue controversial.

      *which you don't seem to understand

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    156. Re:Press coverage by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      Yes, all scientifically valid, but you're still arguing against a pointless myth. Melting water doesn't cause ocean-rise in significant quantities, thermal expansion does.

    157. Re:Press coverage by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Humanity isn't doomed at all. Business As Usual is doomed. The old Chinese curse "May you live in interesting times" is likely to become an obvious phenomena. You might see half of the human population (and 90% of everything else) go extinct. But there will still be humans screwing things up (again) for a long, long time.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    158. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 1

      more water means more extreme tides.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    159. Re:Press coverage by msauve · · Score: 1

      You're right. I had a brain fart. The difference in (fresh/salt) density simply causes the ice to float 2.5% higher in the ocean (8.3+2.5=10.8% exposed). When it melts, its volume goes down 8.3%. The difference is offset by the fact that the ocean's density is reduced by the influx of fresh water.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    160. Re:Press coverage by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      But in a world...

      Whenever I read these words, my inner voice gets gritty and moves an octave lower automatically.

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    161. Re:Press coverage by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      When in trouble,
      Or in doubt,
      Run in circles,
      Scream and shout.

      (Heinlein)

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    162. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is not a joke, that's just trolling.

    163. Re:Press coverage by na1led · · Score: 1

      I stopped eating meat 2 years ago. If we eliminated Beef, it would do more than removing all the cars, and all that freed up land could be used to grow food that could feed the whole world.

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    164. Re:Press coverage by Burz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you take a little time to read science journals and environmentalist sites on this subject, you'll see that the "alarmists" are actually some of the most respected researchers in climatology. And note they are not focused on telling people to "buy a new Prius". Policy wonks create rebates for things like hybrid cars in large part because they know a huge chunk of their constituency won't reconsider the consumer "growth" lifestyle they inherited from 100-year-old industrial technology.

      yet I'm the one being blamed

      You and I are part of the problem, but the only place I see climatologists and enviros blaming the average consumer is in the results at the polls. The solution requires collective responsibility and so it has to be done in the political sphere. But we keep voting for people who scarcely ever mention the greatest environmental problems.

      (OTOH, someone who believes the solution to global warming is primarily one of individual responsibility then get going and buy that Prius!)

      The statistic you cite refers to refined petroleum products (the US has a very large refining capacity), not crude for which we are still very much in the negative. The problem you point out is one of the downsides of globalization, and enviros are very much in conflict with big industry over the tendency toward excessive shipping.

    165. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, god forbid we get tricked into improving the planet for nothing.

    166. Re:Press coverage by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1

      How is saying someone that smokes should be responsible for their own actions? How is saying getting drunk every weekend is irresponsible?

      Those aren't generalizations. Those are facts. We know the effects of smoking and constantly drinking too much. We know what happens when you shoot heroin or smoke crack.

      People chose to do those things. No one forced them. It is irresponsible, despite all the evidence, to keep doing something which is known to produce issues at some point.

      And no, I shouldn't have to keep quiet when I'm the one who gets penalized for other people being irresponsible. You want to smoke? Fine. Just don't expect me to pay to have your lung removed or undergo cancer treatment because of your choice.

      It's funny how people seem to think they can do what they want without any repercussions, the liberal/libertarian viewpoint generally espoused here, yet somehow, despite them wanting to do what they want, these same people seem to think I need to be their caretaker when their choices land them in trouble.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    167. Re:Press coverage by na1led · · Score: 1

      Educated, and wealthy people are avoiding meats like beef, because they understand the health benefits. It's the middle class and poor in this country that can't resist.

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    168. Re:Press coverage by na1led · · Score: 1

      Actually your wrong. Removing Beef from our diet does more than you think. It frees up a lot of land to grow other foods, or trees which help clean up CO2. Less meat also means less fuel needed to transport. Beef requires a lot of energy and resources just for the benefit of taste.

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    169. Re:Press coverage by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      That's because you haven't bothered to pay attention to the time frame attached to these predictions. No one who actually studies the situation would say that.

    170. Re:Press coverage by scot4875 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So, that totally depends on where you are looking from :)

      Yes, if the AGW debate has taught us anything, it's that people can take selfish, greedy, short-sighted looks at just about anything.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    171. Re:Press coverage by radio4fan · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yet removing one container ship from the shipping industry would be the equivalent of removing 50 million automobiles [gas2.org].

      This claim is about SOx and particulate matter, so is concerned with acid rain and smog, not global warming.

    172. Re:Press coverage by moj0joj0 · · Score: 1

      Woosh, that joke sail over your head.

      I see what you did there...

    173. Re:Press coverage by scot4875 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's a good thing you're smarter and more insightful than all the people who actually study climate change. This little factoid (every AGW denier seems to have one) clearly must have escaped them all.

      Why don't you write a paper exposing this fact? You could turn climate science on its head and in 100 years be remembered as "Tastecicles, one of the greatest scientists of the 21st century."

      For as pro-science as Slashdot tends to be, it's amazing how quickly throw scientists under the bus as soon as their research forces them to examine their ideologies.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    174. Re:Press coverage by bzipitidoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've seen this argument many times. You think we are too insignificant, too small to affect the big bad Earth in any way? You really think so? Why do you think that?

      More like, it's that you want to believe it. Then you won't have to change, and it won't be your responsibility or fault. Change isn't always bad, you know. For instance, no one misses the old CRT monitors. Flat screens are so much better in pretty much every way, including power consumption. I'd like to see traffic lights and cars get some brains. I don't like waiting at red lights. It's all the more annoying when the light is making you wait for nothing. There are many other little things we can do, and they all add up.

      What will happen is war. After we've screwed up and melted the ice on Greenland and Antarctica, a lot of people on the coast will have to move. Crops will fail as weather patterns change. It will make the dust bowl of the 1930's look like a picnic. Many of us will face starvation. If the Arab Spring shows anything, it's that when food runs short, people fight. Can we keep the nuclear weapons in the silos? If we use nukes, we may well kill ourselves off. We will instantly halt global warming and replace it with nuclear winter, and starve because we won't be able to grow any crops. A very few of us may survive that. May. Once our population has been drastically reduced by famine and war, things will stabilize. It won't be pretty, but that's the future we're looking at if we do nothing about global warming.

      It doesn't have to be that way. What should we do? What can we do? Get ready for the changes, since we can't stop some of them now. It's too late for that. But first, we owe it to everyone to at least have a discussion about this problem.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    175. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I hate to nitpick, but sea ice is nearly pure water while seawater is not pure water (it is 2.5% more dense). There is actually a small difference due to this. This is a minor effect compared to land ice melting or the thermal expansion of the oceans due to global warming, but it is measurable. If you melt sea ice, the ocean level will rise slightly.

    176. Re:Press coverage by trout007 · · Score: 4, Informative

      There is a big flaw in this experiment. You have to look at salinity change. In the example you linked to it looks like half salt water and half ice. So the final mix is 1/2 the salinity. Assume the density started at 1.03 kg/L the final mix would be 1.015 kg/L. When the fresh ice is floating it is displacing it's weight in salt water.

      So assume .5 kg of salt water at 1.03 kg/L and .5 kg of ice at .92 kg/L.
      The volume as indicated by liquid level would be 1kg/1.03 kg/L = .97 L

      OK now you melt the fresh water and it mixes to get 1.015kg/L solution = .985L

      OK it goes up about 1.5%. This looks reasonably close to what their experiment showed.

      But lets do it in a 10:1 and a 100:1 mixture of sea water to ice

      Both start at 5.5 kg/1.03 kg/L = 5.34 L
      5kg salt water .5 kg ice = (5 kg * 1.03 kg/L + .5 kg * 1 kg/L )/5.5kg = 1.027 kg/L
      5.5kg/1.027 kg/L = 5.36 L or 0.5 % increase

      50kg salt water .5 kg ice = (50 kg * 1.03 kg/L + .5 kg * 1 kg/L )/50.5kg = 1.0297 kg/L
      5.341 L or 0.02 % increase

      The rise keeps going down with the increase in ratio of sea water to ice.

      For reference the world sea ice varies but from what I can find is around 3x10^4 km^3.
      The volume of the ocean is 1.3x10^9 km^3. So using these values:

      Ice mass
      3x10^4 km^3 * 1000 kg/m^3 = 3.000x10^16 kg
      Sea Water mass
      1.3x10^9 km^3 * 1030 kg/m^3 = 1.339x10^21 kg

      Initial Volume (3x10^16 kg + 1.339x10^21 kg)/1.03 kg/L = 1.300029x10^21 L

      Final Density (1.339x10^21 kg * 1.03 kg/L + 3x10^16 kg * 1 kg/L )/(1.339x10^21 kg + 3x10^16 kg) = 1.029999 kg/L
      Final Volume = (3.000x10^16 kg + 1.339x10^21 kg) / 1.029999 kg/L = 1.300030x10^21 L or 7.7x10^-7 increase.

      The surface area of the oceans is 361x10^6 km^2 which is 3.61x10^14m^2
      The initial average depth of the ocean is 1.300029x10^21 L / 3.61x10^14m^2 = 3601.188 m
      The final average depth of the ocean is 1.300030x10^21 L / 3.61x10^14m^2 = 3601.191 m

      So the ocean rise from all fresh water ice melting and mixing would be 2.7mm

      Just to mess it up further there are various temperature and salinity gradients in the ocean by location and depth which require a more complex analysis than I will write here.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    177. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Please google arctic ice history and tell us how many time the Arctic ice has had similar melting.

      Irrelevant, because the history of humanity on this planet spans a much shorter timespan than that of the arctic ice. Much of that time we'd not survive as a species under the prevailing conditions.

      This is an argument for controlling our impact on the climate as much as possible, rather than the converse.

      We say it is happening naturally because otherwise idiots like you will tax us $50 trillion dollars to try and change something that cannot be changed. Get it yet?

      Citation. Please. The only figure even approaching $50 trillion that I've ever seen is the $20 trillion or so in lost profit for the oil companies that'll not materialize* because of emissions cuts.

      *By "not materialize", I mean "not materialize in the time frame of unchecked and fast-as-possible extraction rates of today", as opposed to over the undoubtedly longer period of time that the reserves would last, while still being extracted to service demand that we know will never go away, but at least at a rate were we can try and mitigate the damage of CO2 emissions with sequestration, etc.

      Get it yet?

      Unfortunately, yes.

      Whatever happens, don't expect you to pay for it.

    178. Re:Press coverage by Larryish · · Score: 2

      Hyberbole much?

    179. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're mind, it's small.

      Ok, that was a little funny.

      Also, we already have an alternate reason, complete with millions of years of documentation. Earth's climate changes, with or without us. The question is if we'll adapt to very minor variation. We will of course.

    180. Re:Press coverage by Raenex · · Score: 1

      There's not a whole lot of money to be saved by making things dirtier.

      Then tell that to countries like China and India and see what they say in response.

    181. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet removing one container ship from the shipping industry would be the equivalent of removing 50 million automobiles.

      Impressed; didn't know they have such a cargo capacity!

    182. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you can't very well expect every newspaper to lead with a "Average Global Temps Expected to Rise By 1-2 Degrees Celsius Over the Next 50-100 years" headline.

      Especially when 20 years of cooling has been predicted to start in two years. Oh, wait... it was also predicted that this year there would be NO ice in the Arctic ocean.

    183. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Cherry picking"

      Rule #1 for Scientific Simulation experiments--[Political] scientific simulation experiments that is.

    184. Re:Press coverage by fnj · · Score: 4, Informative

      I heard the other day that our oil exports now exceed our oil imports.

      If what you heard is talking about CRUDE oil, which is what counts, then what you heard is WRONG. It is astonishing that anyone would believe such an absurd claim.

      For the 4 week period ending September 14, crude oil trade was:
          imports, 8.986 million barrels per day
          Exports, 0.040 million barrels per day
          Net, 8.946 million barrels per day IMPORTS

      What you heard was probably talking about oil PRODUCTS, which were indeed a net outflow:
          Imports, 2.206 million barrels per day
          Exports, 2.838 million barrels per day
          Net, 0.632 million barrels per day EXPORTS

      reference

      Oil products are gasoline, blending components, distillates, kerosene, jet fuel, propane, and so on. Almost the entire volume of these products comes from, you guessed it, crude oil. So the USA imports crude oil, processes it, and exports a large proportion of the resulting products. Corporations are making money by importing the raw material (crude oil), refining it and processing it into various products, and selling these products overseas. Economics 101, to be sure, but what it means is that some substantial portion of the USA crude oil imports (far from the major portion, however), are not necessitated by domestic use.

    185. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No worries. We're all hallucinating being alive anyway, since we all died of Global Warming the last time the exact same thing happened to the Arctic ice...in the 1800s.

    186. Re:Press coverage by hazah · · Score: 1

      The lakes aren't just yours, you know...

    187. Re:Press coverage by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Until a few years ago, tornadoes were a rare event in New York City, something that happened once in a while and made big news.

      http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/images-frequency-make-nyc-twisters-notable-17195890 :

      "Most people wouldn't say New York and tornado in the same breath.

      But two twisters that touched down in the nation's biggest city on Saturday are the latest of about 60 small tornadoes that have hit the area in the past half-century, the years for which complete data are available. Saturday's pair brings to 10 the total number of tornadoes since 2007 in New York City, according to the National Weather Service.

      To some, the tornadoes of the past few years might appear to be an uptick in the trend. Not so fast, said meteorologist David Stark of the weather service.

      "In the past five years, there's been a slight increase in the number of tornadoes in the area, but it's too short a period of time to say it's a growing trend," said Stark."

      http://www.wunderground.com/climate/extreme.asp :

      "We currently do not know how tornadoes and severe thunderstorms may be changing due to changes in the climate, nor is there hope that we will be able to do so in the foreseeable future. Preliminary research using climate models suggests that we may see an increase in the number of severe storms capable of producing tornadoes late this century. However, this research is just beginning, and much more study is needed to confirm these findings. The lack of an increase in violent EF4 and EF5 tornadoes in recent decades implies that climate change has not yet increased tornado activity."

    188. Re:Press coverage by hazah · · Score: 1

      While I admire Mr. Hicks with a passion, he's not always correct in his assessments.

    189. Re:Press coverage by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      Yet we have government paying for wind and solar subsidies that can never self-sustain under current technologies. Liquid Thorium Fluoride Reactors could power the entire continent but would remove the subsidies feedback to payoff politicians. Also, thorium is far more common than any sort of carbon-based energy source and is currently considered waste material in most mining applications. Somehow I'd rather promote more industrial engineering efforts toward realistic solutions than continued efforts toward proven failure in wind and solar.

    190. Re:Press coverage by fnj · · Score: 1

      Correct. And do you know how much greater the volume is? Two and one half percent (2.5%). A very slight difference. Not like it's twice as much or something. People might want to know this qualification.

    191. Re:Press coverage by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      +1 Insightful. Sorry bank is empty.

    192. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I won't deny that dumping and improper handling of hazardous waste are profitable but that's not really what we're discussing.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    193. Re:Press coverage by riverat1 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually the Arctic sea ice melt is about three times greater than the increase in Antarctic sea ice. Antarctic sea ice has not increased because it's been getting colder in Antarctica because it hasn't. It's really kind of an interesting and complex explanation.

      One part of the explanation doesn't have much to do with global warming but rather the Antarctic ozone hole. Ozone is a greenhouse gas and the hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica causes the stratosphere to cool. This increases the strength of the circumpolar winds around the continent which pushes the ice around opening up polynyas exposing more open water to subsequently freeze thus expanding the ice area.

      The second part does have to do with global warming. "The Southern Ocean consists of a layer of cold water near the surface and a layer of warmer water below. Water from the warmer layer rises up to the surface, melting sea ice. However, as air temperatures warm, the amount of rain and snowfall also increases. This freshens the surface waters, leading to a surface layer less dense than the saltier, warmer water below. The layers become more stratified and mix less. Less heat is transported upwards from the deeper, warmer layer. Hence less sea ice is melted." The paper on that effect is (Zhang 2007)

      One other interesting fact, the Antarctic sea ice melts (nearly) completely every year before reforming the next winter as opposed to Arctic sea ice which has multi-year sea ice (for a few more years anyway). The reason being is that the Arctic is an ocean surrounded by continents and the Antarctic is a continent surrounded by ocean.

    194. Re:Press coverage by demachina · · Score: 0

      You apparently missed the parady in my post dude. It was partially to draw out the self righteous people like yourself who are willing to declare with absolute certainty that they KNOW what is going to happen.

      You have absolutely no more knowledge of what's going to happen to the world's climate in the next hundred years than I do or do the global warming deniers.

      When you chicken littles start claiming that mantle of certainty, and prognosticating the planets imminent demise you just make yourselves look comical. Its why so many people are getting weary of the global warming chicken littles, they are so consistently self righteous and smug.

      Yes there might be a run away green house and calamity at every turn but I kind of doubt it. The world could turn in to a tropical paradise with abundance for all, I kind of doubt that too.

      Chances are it will probably be somewhere in the middle.

      Thanks to fracking the U.S. is dramatically reducing its green house gas emissions, and is apparently running ahead of the Kyoto accords it rejected. its also doing it without punitive taxes or other economic damage. It now appears the U.S. may never build another coal fired power plant, and will probably start shuttering some. Coal fired power plants can't compete economically with gas any more, and gas produces less CO2 than coal, though there is a risk the U.S. will just export all its coal to China to burn.

      At the current rate solar will pass coal in economics in the next 10 years and gas in 20 years. It is very possible that we will solve much of our dependence on fossil fuels in the next few decades and without crippling economic engineering by the chicken littles.

      --
      @de_machina
    195. Re:Press coverage by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      Seriously? Have you been to Donovan's or Morton's lately? I'd be shocked to see many middle-class people there at $150 a plate.

    196. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Stop spreading incorrect information.

      While there is more antarctic ice, the increase is over water, not on the land.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    197. Re:Press coverage by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      That would go a long way to washing away a lot of the problems our country has.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    198. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So is there a line where antarctic should wait until summer ice at the other pole entirely disappear? Regarding your faith into predictions, here is infamous Jim Mercer's 1978 article in Nature which predicted 5-10C increase in the antarctic during next 50 years. You see, polar amplification is entirely symmetric effect, if it works at one pole, it should do at the other as well.

    199. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 1

      wrong.

      YOu aren't being 'bamed'. It's a problem we all have a stake in. all of us. You, me, everyoine. we all did our bit.

      YOU can make changes to your lifestyle to reduce CO2.
      YOU can be a voice for greener alternatives.

      " change to the current situation."
      and there you go showing you can't think long term. Every time someone does something to help, even a little bit, it influences the people are round you.

      Yes, cargo ships are a problem. Yes, that should be addressed. But that's not the ONLY thing.

      Conservatives are pushing back becasue the oil industry gives them a shit town of money, horse a shit ton of lobbyists, and has even gone so far as t apply pressure to have science books changed.

      Hell, just stop letting ship use low grade fuel would help a lot.
      We aren't using the oil we have because the oil companies in the US make more money selling it to China. DO you think that pipeline they want to build down from Canada is for US oil use? no, it's to eventually sell the oil to China.

      Frankly, we should not allow petroleum energy exports. Our gas would be cheaper and other countries would need to put more money into alternative solutions. Of course that would never happen because conservatives don't want any regulation on business becasue, apparently, they will all play super nice, and all the dumping, burning killing, and stealing that happened throughout all of history wold stop if there just weren't regulation in place to try and make it stop.

      Again, we all had are stake in this. it' snot all equal. Do address original comment: YOU can change buy not guying one of those cars that come across on a boat.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    200. Re:Press coverage by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Archimede principle: ice occupy as much space in water as it does once it has melted. The level of the oceans will only raise if inland ice melt such as in Antartica or Groenland."

      Actually, the majority of sea rise predicted by IPCC would be due to thermal expansion.

      Nevertheless, I find it hard to credit the existence of a "Global Emergency" merely on Hansen's word. He has used every weather event for the last 10 years, it seems as an excuse to cry disaster.

      Even for pro-AGW advocates, Hansen is a rather extreme alarmist. His views are not those of the majority.

    201. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you stupid?

      Not sure why you need to ask. You're stupid, so you should recognize your own.

    202. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Are you ok with paying another $10 on an smartphone or waiting another week to get it because the container ship was wind powered?

      yes. 10 dollars AND a week would be fine. Of souse, in most cases the wait would be hidden becasue it would be reflected in the release date. So you wouldn't order it and then wait. While it's technically longer, no one would even notice it.

      "Or just keeping your "old" phone 1 year longer?"
      I do that was well. If I don't keep it, it gets passed to someone who needs a phone.

      Everyone lining up to get a phone just to get a new phone irritate me..a lot. It's like the hexagon in THX 1138

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    203. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      First, our current agricultural systems are "optimized" (for some definition of optimized, though not a very optimal one) around climate patterns as they exist. Even if climate change were to increase the arable land, it would most likely be different land that became arable, and at least some existing arable land will cease to be so. It will take time to adapt our agricultural usage to the new areas.

      Yes, changing climate patterns will make our current agricultural system less tenable, since it has been optimized for current rainfall and temperature patterns. And yes, there will be some adaptation. However, what makes you think we will be able to get the same amount of food out of new areas? Soil formation takes a very long time, with some types of soil taking centuries to form. Even if the rainfall moves to another area, there is no guarantee that the soil in the new areas will be useful for agriculture.

      I'm posting as AC because I moderated.

    204. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you keep parroting "more intense droughts"? The effect of air humidity increasing with temperature is well known according to the Clausius–Clapeyron relation.

    205. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 1

      no one here is against personal responsibility. YOU just think every person live on an island unto themselves, and that everyone has an equal chance.

      How funny that you have that post, and a Quote from DDE. It really shows how you can only look at the immediate surface of any situation. Anything deep or complex and you get confused and nonsensical. Anyone look at the history of your posts can see that.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    206. Re:Press coverage by Medievalist · · Score: 1

      How about, just for a start: stopping fracking and undersea drilling, eliminating income tax, and taxing all releases of geologically sequestered carbon into the atmosphere?

      That would open up hundreds of thousands of new jobs, overturn our existing brown energy political puppetmasters (who, let's face it, are big fans of torture as well as pollution, so fuck them) and since the carbon taxes would compensate for the loss of federal income tax revenues, but shift the majority of the cost of governing onto an asset basis (homeless people don't have furnaces, and walmart has very inefficient heating) we'd have a more equitable system of taxation that didn't punish people for bettering themselves.

      That's just off the top of my head. Maybe it wouldn't work, OK, but the fact is there are hundreds of alternatives to drill baby drill and all of them are better than just ignoring climate change.

    207. Re:Press coverage by budgenator · · Score: 4, Informative

      The Sahara is a desert because it's in the desert belt, the same latitude band is a desert all around the world, both north and south. This is caused by Hadley Cells, which are an integral part of the planet's heat pump. In the Equatorial band, Solar Equatorial band that is, warmed air rises, the wind increases the evaporation of sea water, the water vapor being lighter than air provides positive feedback increasing the upward circulation and lifting vast amounts of heat in the form of water vapor above the CO2 saturation point where it condenses and falls out as rain. The dry air moves pole-ward and descends over the horse-latitudes at about 30 degrees north and south, causing the desert band. This feedback does cause the desert band to expand a bit but causes tremendous amounts of cooling for the planet providing negative feedback to the heating.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    208. Re:Press coverage by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      Civilization, not species. Gas stations, air ports, police, fire, medical care, etc suddenly cease functioning because of food shortages everywhere. A lot of people die. A bunch of other people get a better life, some others work out how to adapt. Eventually the food supply shifts and civilization branches out again.

    209. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is exactly one trailer park in NYC. It's located in Staten Island, just north of the Goethals Bridge-

      http://goo.gl/maps/SkWBv

      NYC is probably not of sufficiently high trailer park density to draw tornadoes in this way. It'll have to be global warming, then.

    210. Re:Press coverage by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Warming water has to melt all of the sea ice first (there's a lot of contact area), since melting ice cools water. But, yes.

    211. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "genetically engineered low-fart cows"

      Cows don't fart methane, they're ruminants, so they burp it.

    212. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Antarctica is losing land ice at an accelerating rate. Sea ice around Antarctica is increasing.

      All of this is, of course, a non sequitor. The temperature is still going up, regardless of normal cycles. This is due to an increase in, primarily, CO2 in the atmosphere. CO2 trapping energy is a fact.
      Hell, if the ice started piling up on the poles, so what? the temperature is still going up, and eventually it will al melt. SO, how about we work to reduces, and eventually stop, man made CO2. Actually 60% of what we emit isn't absorbed back into the CO2 cycles, so we just need to get below that point.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    213. Re:Press coverage by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Oh, it will. The political interests won't be able to supply enough food to quell mass riots, but not enough to let people get too comfortable. The mass riots will be damning.

    214. Re:Press coverage by HapSlappy_2222 · · Score: 1

      Here's the utter, unequivocal, honest truth:

      I don't care, or at least don't spend a moment worrying, other than looking into interesting science behind what's happening. So far as I know, there is literally nothing I can do about it that I don't already do. I recycle, I drive a car that gets pretty good gas mileage, am intelligent enough to know that ditching that car for a hybrid will be a net loss in efficiency, I vote responsibly (if I can), I don't waste much, and what I do waste I try to mitigate. I pick up litter. I smoosh my beer cans. I shower instead of bathe. It's about all I can do, and I'm good with that, and refuse to feel guilty about the rest of the world. What it comes down to is be personally responsible, but at the end of the day, don't worry, be happy, and if the reaper cometh, greet him with open arms, for that is reality.

      I had a friend who used to preach about the conditions in El Salvador. According to her hands-on stories, it was and is a very rough place, and she's probably right about that. I always thought that sucked, and if true, the stories of what the CIA et. al. did in the 80s are disturbing. But I have 2 kids to feed right here in my very own house. I can't care about El Salvador because it's too far outside my monkeysphere. Sorry. As always, when something affects me locally, I'm gonna ride things out and look out for my family, and I guess I just assume other people will too. Sure I'll donate to the Red Cross, but that's why I donate to them; they're equipped to deal with not only the problems, but also the sympathy of it all. And I'm not gonna feel guilty about that for 1 second. If I did, where does it end? Am I the whole world's martyr? Fuck that.

      Some smarty-pants out there comes up with a "here do this everybody!" with resounding science, or barring that, something that won't take food off my table or put too many pains in my ass, I'm on board, but I'm not sacrificing my ability to provide for my wee ones to go all activist. Just not gonna.

    215. Re:Press coverage by arpad1 · · Score: 1

      Any reason you're trying to divert the subject from the lack of any mention of Antarctic ice conditions to me? I'd be flattered if it weren't so painfully obvious that you'd prefer the question go unasked.

      --
      Minutus cantorum, minutus balorum, minutus carborata descendum pantorum.
    216. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sea ice reflects approximately 90% of solar electromagnetic radiation back into space. Liquid water absorbs approximately 90% of incoming solar electromagnetic radiation. Thus if the ice melts in the summer, the Arctic will get warmer. The ocean in the North will get warmer. That will inevitably lead to a warming of the neighbouring Greenland ice sheet as well, which WILL cause sea level rise.

    217. Re:Press coverage by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "giving evidence that contradicted someone's beliefs had the effect of reinforcing their beliefs"
      which is why people should be taught critical thinking skills and the ability to apply it to a topic. You can divorces the facts from you emotional beliefs.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    218. Re:Press coverage by dpilot · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. I posted as I did on this because the GP sort-of indicated that climate changes would be a net-zero, with new agricultural areas gaining as much as old agricultural areas lost. I was simply thinking in best-case terms, that farmers would have to move their equipment. The big problems would come when that equipment (and especially) labor have to move across national boundaries. I wasn't even thinking in terms of soil formation, actually anticipating that the "gain" areas would have built soil in the geological past, that land was effectively "fallow" while it was permafrost, and it would be plow-ready. That is of course, once the territorial wars settled down, and assuming those wars don't damage the very land they're fighting over.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    219. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is called "Turning a blind eye"

      Namely when your bullshit "science" site says "Arctic Ice melts because PEOPLE AAAAGHHH!!!! Antarctice Ice builds up for a variety of reasons, however, including but not limited to..."

      "Skeptical Science"? May as well call it "Confirmation Bias Society"

    220. Re:Press coverage by jonadab · · Score: 0

      > Greenland is actually turning green again it's getting so warm as of late.

      Yes, but note that "again" part. It's not global warming so much as global rewarming.

      A thousand years ago, Greenland was farmland; then the Little Ice Age came along and buried it under ice and snow. That's coming to an end now. This is not happening suddenly. Out climate has been in a warming phase for about half a millennium. For all we know it could be another half millennium before it starts cooling again. Or not. The only thing that's really predictable about weather and climate is that they change over time.

      Personally, winter is my favorite time of year, so I'd kind of prefer a cooling phase, where the winters get better and better and the summers milder and milder. Ever since I was in third grade, I've had this dream that one fine November morning we'll wake up to find the snow reaches up to the second-story windows, and school will be canceled, and we can play in the deep, deep snow and dig tunnels through it all over town, for weeks and weeks and weeks. It would be awesome.

      However, I now fear that may not happen. Also, I'm now too old to care very much one way or the other about school being canceled, anyway.

      (Of course, if the US would only ratify the Kyoto protocol and other preposterous liberal action points then we'd get cold winters back, obviously. Because, umm, see, we have to protect the environment, and, umm, scientists have done studies, and, umm, haven't you seen Al Gore's exciting movie? Yes, yes, it's a natural cycle that's been going on since well before recorded history, granted, but [waves hands] don't you see, it's our fault, and we have to fix it, by passing laws that make no sense! Anybody who disagrees with our politics must hate the environment and want to drown everything like in the movie Water World, or turn it all into a waterless desert, or one great big worldwide glacier, or maybe all three of those things at once. Terrorists.)

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    221. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and with only a modest 10% more cloud cover, we could block 10% of the energy/heat from the sun, effectively stopping global warming.

    222. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i think this issue could be used a long long long time, for political reasons. its the new abortion....

    223. Re:Press coverage by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It claims what is probably obvious, that most of the fuel is used near the ports to get the ships up to speed and to slow them down.

      Not buying it without someone doing the math. A vessel that big has a lot of hull and it's going a long distance and it's not going very fast.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    224. Re:Press coverage by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      How is saying someone that smokes should be responsible for their own actions? [...]
      People chose to do those things. No one forced them. It is irresponsible, despite all the evidence, to keep doing something which is known to produce issues at some point.

      These people are addicted and they were led to begin smoking in part by an industry which knowingly expends funding in order to make more people addicts through various types of manipulation which are known to work. You can say the same thing about alcohol.

      It's funny how people seem to think they can do what they want without any repercussions

      You mean like how advertisers take advantage of people's weaknesses to sell them products that are going to kill them or which they otherwise should avoid buying? Yes, that is pretty horrible. That's why Bill Hicks said if you work in advertising, kill yourself, and not as a joke. Obviously there is a grey area when it comes to that tiny percentage of advertising which is entirely factual, but it amounts to a rounding error and can safely be ignored.

      Car companies want to sell you a gas guzzler because they make more selling it. Oil companies want you to buy the same gas guzzler for obvious reasons. And the government is complicit, having held back emissions and mileage improvements, and generally acting as an agent of these and other corporations.

      We're all in this together, and acting like some people just decided to take up smoking and just decided not to quit is going to make it worse for all of us. Maybe you should try a little empathy. Maybe that's as hard for you as it is hard for some people to quit smoking, but if you can't manage it, it's difficult to imagine why anyone should take anything you say seriously when clearly you're ignoring the fact that humans are animals, and not machines.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    225. Re:Press coverage by budgenator · · Score: 1

      $2000.00 in fuel, that's not even round-off error in the price of shipped goods

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    226. Re:Press coverage by Tastecicles · · Score: 1

      but... the amount of water remains the *same*. Only its *state* has changed.

      --
      Operation Guillotine is in effect.
    227. Re:Press coverage by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 1

      Except for the melt water from land-locked ice masses. Which, of course, are not yet a topic of immediate interest in the context of polar ice loss. However, the loss of a dense ice sheet may, and probably will, accelerate glacier calving and thereby loss of the Greenland ice.

      --
      Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
    228. Re:Press coverage by jonadab · · Score: 0

      > Some researchers are contending that half the sea level rise we've seen to date

      We've seen sea level rise?

      Where?

      Based on every map comparison I've ever seen, the coastlines have changed since three thousand years ago in only three notable ways: rivers have washed a bunch of sediment into their deltas; volcanic activity and coral have changed some islands; and humans have made some small-scale changes on purpose (turning Tyre into a peninsula, digging canals across certain notable isthmuses, draining about a quarter of the Zuiderzee, building airports off the Kansai coast, etc.)

      (There's also tectonic drift, but that seems to be fairly slow these days.)

      Where is this "sea level rise" of which you speak?

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    229. Re:Press coverage by hazah · · Score: 1

      How is saying someone that smokes should be responsible for their own actions? How is saying getting drunk every weekend is irresponsible?

      Are you asking me or are you being rhetorical?

      Those aren't generalizations. Those are facts. We know the effects of smoking and constantly drinking too much. We know what happens when you shoot heroin or smoke crack.

      That's not the generalization I was referring to. Yes, we have an understanding of the chemistry involved.

      People chose to do those things. No one forced them. It is irresponsible, despite all the evidence, to keep doing something which is known to produce issues at some point.

      I contend that irresponsibility is not the only reason. That is your generalization. Chronic abuse, and use, are two different ball games.

      And no, I shouldn't have to keep quiet when I'm the one who gets penalized for other people being irresponsible. You want to smoke? Fine. Just don't expect me to pay to have your lung removed or undergo cancer treatment because of your choice.

      I don't expect you to. Like you wouldn't expect me to if you broke your leg skiing, or kayaking, or any other activity that has potential for injury. This is what a civilized healthcare system is for.

      It's funny how people seem to think they can do what they want without any repercussions, the liberal/libertarian viewpoint generally espoused here, yet somehow, despite them wanting to do what they want, these same people seem to think I need to be their caretaker when their choices land them in trouble.

      What are you blathering about? "Seem" seems to be the key-word here, and it only seems that way because you're relying on your bad assumptions. I'm neither "Liberal" nor "Libertarian" nor "Insert your stereotype here". I am a thinking, learning, adapting human being. As such, this view-point can only be mine. If some conservatives, liberals or libertarians (I don't know anyone that would fit into any of these molds to any significant degree) agree, then it's a happy coincidence. So please, keep your enlightenment about what I should do to yourself.

    230. Re:Press coverage by hazah · · Score: 1

      I can't do any of those things. Sorry.

    231. Re:Press coverage by hazah · · Score: 1

      Should clarify. I'm not in a position to do any of those things, Sorry.

    232. Re:Press coverage by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      Yes, but that's a discernibly secondary factor. The problem is there's a whole debate centered on a fictitious concern, which fundamentally serves no purpose but to have people argue. I think the pro-science side is losing the public debate(and they are) because they all feel a compelling need to argue against any falsehood, which makes them vulnerable to trivial side-tracking.

    233. Re:Press coverage by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > For instance, no one misses the old CRT monitors. Flat
      > screens are so much better in pretty much every way

      Actually, I'm still waiting for LCD technology to advance to the point where it can produce a display I can stand to use. Granted, most people don't seem to notice that they can't reproduce color worth beans, that indeed the same color looks very different at the bottom of the display versus at the top of the display and changes quite a lot if you move your head even an inch. Most people must be more than half blind, I guess.

      For those of us with actual *working* vision, CRT monitors are fortunately still around, although they are admittedly becoming something of a specialty item.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    234. Re:Press coverage by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Antarctic sea ice has been growing somewhat for reasons that I explain here. The Antarctic ice sheet has been shrinking and the net for all Antarctic ice is less ice in the region.

    235. Re:Press coverage by ubrgeek · · Score: 1

      > Why is some part of Florida not underwater?

      Bad luck, I suppose.

      --
      Bark less. Wag more.
    236. Re:Press coverage by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 1

      I absolutely do agree. And I declare myself guilty of letting myself being sidetracked in the manner you describe.

      --
      Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
    237. Re:Press coverage by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > There will certainly be winners as well as losers in climate change.

      This implies, of course, that if we could get a pretty good handle on how it works -- enough to be able to have any significant amount of control over it and to know what impact our actions would have -- we could then develop climate change technology into a competitive platform for pushing things in a direction that benefits us and our allies at the expense of our enemies. Perhaps in the twenty-third century wars will be fought using climate change as a strategic vector.

      Currently, however, we appear to be groping around in the dark taking wild guesses, not able to clearly determine what effect if any has already resulted from what we have done in the past and completely unable to predict with any clarity what the results will be if we do X, Y, or Z in the future. Even if we could agree on what objective we wanted to achieve, we would not know how to go about it.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    238. Re:Press coverage by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Sea ice in Antarctica mostly just freezes from the ocean water although that might be aided somewhat by ice calving off the ice sheet. Unlike the Arctic the Antarctic sea ice melts (nearly) completely every year and reforms the next winter. The that Antarctic sea ice is increasing are kind of complex as I explained here. Overall the Antarctic region is losing more ice than it is gaining.

    239. Re:Press coverage by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      you'll see that the "alarmists" are actually some of the most respected researchers in climatology. And note they are not focused on telling people to "buy a new Prius".

      This is an example of a strawman argument.

      (I never said the alarmists are the researchers. I said the alarmists are people who claim that the specific action of purchasing a fuel-efficient vehicle will save the world.)

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    240. Re:Press coverage by G00F · · Score: 1

      Based off pollution:http://gas2.org/2009/06/03/one-container-ship-pollutes-as-much-as-50-million-cars/

      Having the equivalent of 18,000 less ships * how much each ship pollutes relative to cars 50,000,000,000 = 900,000,000,000.

      I think its overstated how many of those ships there are, however they all pollute a lot more than cars, and woudl be the easiest, cheapest bang for buck that can actually return as an investment relatively quick.

      --
      The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive
    241. Re:Press coverage by Stirling+Newberry · · Score: 2
      It's pretty clear that the denialists have been armed with the talking point of confusing north from south. Let me break it down into grunts for you: the hydro-dynamics of the north polar region are dominated by a thin, lower in volume and mass, ice cap, covering water, and the hydro-dynamics of the south polar region dominated by a thicker ice pack over rock and isolated bodies of water. There are a number of salient differences, one of which is the difference between the volume of ice pack and the size of ice coverage, as well as the size of cyclical variation, which swamps the long term trend in the short run. Much of the denialist bullshit that you and others spew relies on blatant peak to trough cherry picking, as well as failure to cyclically adjust correctly, however the evidence for the trend has been out there for almost a decade at this point ( http://www.sciencemag.org/content/302/5648/1203.short )

      Since you don't know the difference between north and south, water and land, surface are and volume, humidity and temperature, maximum and average, it is a complete waste of time to even discuss anything with you. Merely to note that you are yet another anonymous far right wing troll on the internet, who may or may not be being paid to preach genocide on the internet. Next to that truth, there's nothing anyone can say that is worse.

      However, in the off chance anyone is reading this far, some useful actual science can be found at:

      1. "Modelling the influence of snow accumulation and snow-ice formation on the seasonal cycle of the Antarctic sea-ice cover" http://www.springerlink.com/index/R23VXQQD8VPTJ5W0.pdf
      2. "Snowfall-Driven Growth in East Antarctic Ice Sheet Mitigates Recent Sea-Level Rise" http://wuos.org/content/308/5730/1898.short
      3. "Variability of Antarctic sea ice 1979–1998" http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2002/2000JC000733.shtml
      4. "Recent Antarctic ice mass loss from radar interferometry and regional climate modelling" http://www.nature.com/ngeo/journal/v1/n2/abs/ngeo102.html
        1. High impact peer reviewed journals, as opposed to squibs from the far right wing WSJ editorial page. As Samuel L. Jackson might say, "Science, m****rf*****r do you speak it?" (Go on troll mods, rate me down, it's something you'll be ashamed of one day, smothering the truth to protect the lies. But being nice doesn't stop people who do evil for money or kicks, only the shunning of society.)
    242. Re:Press coverage by Burz · · Score: 2

      That is misrepresenting what climatologists are saying, in high "Neocon Weatherman" fashion.

      First, the science doesn't have to be "exact". It only needs a significant probability that the climate and ecosphere will be destabilized: in this case, causing a runaway greenhouse effect. What climatologists have presented appears to be way beyond a significant probability. We are seeing positive feedbacks already and it's only 2012.

      Second, the longer timescales that are involved, the greater the certainty for predictions. That's a big part of what makes climatology different from meteorology, the latter being much more chaotic due to short time scales. Don't confuse climate with weather, or apply assumptions from the latter onto the former.

      Third, the great preponderance of archeology and paleontology supports AGW in that we appear to be heading toward a Permian-like extinction event via extraction of fossil fuels instead of a burst of volcanism. I know we're on Slashdot, but do you think humans can survive a "Great Dying" of 90% of all living things? It would be the height of hubris to think so, whether you think we have "high technology" on our side or not.

      Fourth, there is no "test" other than to stick with the status quo and watch temperatures and extremes rise according to prediction (and predictions from the 1980s are looking remarkably accurate). We could theoretically keep watching until 2100 to meet a denier's idiotic requirement of 'testability'. One problem... The basis for our entire existence cannot be corralled into a test nor can it be re-tried. For this reason, the Precautionary Principle applies as much as it does for the theory of nuclear winter. The stakes are too high to let the scenario play out.

      There will certainly be winners as well as losers in climate change.

      Honestly?! Presenting the outcome of massive pollution as a zero-sum game?

      This isn't 'Monopoly' we're discussing. I suppose the onset of the Dark Ages had its "winners and losers" too, with many more of the latter. But that was childs' play compared to what we may be setting ourselves up for this time.

    243. Re:Press coverage by Medievalist · · Score: 1

      Exactly the problem I have! The best I can do is refuse to vote for Barack "drill baby drill" Obama or Mitt "drill baby drill" Romney.

      And because I'm in a US state where there's no chance of Obama losing, I don't have to make any "lesser evil" sorts of calculations, I can just vote for Jill Stein and thumb my nose at both major party bozos.

    244. Re:Press coverage by jonadab · · Score: 1

      My question would be, how on earth are you going to make a wind-powered ship take only one extra week to get across the ocean?

      As a rule, for a wind-powered ship carrying any significant amount of cargo, 6 knots is about the best you can expect to do with any consistency at all, and that's with a tail wind. A modern panamax container ship can easily do twice that speed against a head wind, fully loaded. On a trans-Pacific voyage, that difference will add up to at least 40 days, perhaps half again that.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    245. Re:Press coverage by dpilot · · Score: 1

      I was being charitable. I was trying to cede just about everything possible, and maintain that there is STILL a problem.

      I will take exception to one thing you say. You say we're headed for an extinction event. We're not - we're already well into it. It's simply that most of the species dying out are of concern only to scientists - they're not on of the few dozen food or pet species that most people think about.

      As for "will humans survive"? Absolutely. We are one of the meanest, nastiest predators on the planet. After an extinction event, if there is any large animals around, humans will likely be among them. But civilization won't survive, and the humans that are around will be part of a pack or a tribe, not a society.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    246. Re:Press coverage by lgw · · Score: 0

      So, Medievalist, what you're saying is that technology is bad and we should return to a medieval lifestyle? I think you may have some bias here.

      For the past 40 years I've heard one alarmist after another saying we should all do things his way, and pay lots of money somewhere, because we're all gonna die. It gets old.

      Meanwhile, technology keeps getting better, standards of living keep growing worldwide, the portions of the world still struggling with basic sustenance and civilization keep shrinking, more stuff keeps getting made more cheaply by robots, and alarmists keep declaring "but this time for real, we all gonna die, I'm totally serial here!"

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    247. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's going to be even less than that. Obama promised if he's re-elected he will stop the oceans from rising.

      Problem solved!

    248. Re:Press coverage by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 1

      Isn't it fascinating how you NEVER get an answer when you post a reply to a "and what have you done" question? It seems to be out of their perceivable reality that someone can actually live comfortably while reducing his environmental impact.

      --
      Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
    249. Re:Press coverage by BooMonster · · Score: 1

      But what does it do when Arctic ice is at all-time lows and Antarctic ice is at all-time highs?

    250. Re:Press coverage by Burz · · Score: 1

      Humans have never adapted to nor lived in the conditions that would occur under a not-so-unlikely Great Dying. Without civilization and the technology that comes with it, our chances are slim to none.

      For that matter, why should we care only for our own species? Why should a hand or foot care that the body dies?

      Misanthropy also should not be a part of the outlook on the situation. We have a certain chance to avoid 'X' degree of catastrophe; a chance that is narrowing over time. Denigrating our own species prevents us from using the opportunity that's available.

    251. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now I can stop feeling guilty about doing nothing.

      Phew! Thank you!

    252. Re:Press coverage by hazah · · Score: 1

      Not in US, but I vote "no confidence".

    253. Re:Press coverage by BooMonster · · Score: 1

      I simply see food production shifting north, one or two sections of land per decade. I mean really. A guy whose land was better fit for grazing realizes that he can probably make more money planting some orchards or other cold-tolerant crops. A guy whose farmland was productive a decade ago switches to a warmer weather crop, or from farming to grazing, or from oranges to apples.

      It's not like everyone is just going to lay down and die on October 11th, 2045*.

      Relax.

      *date chosen at random.

    254. Re:Press coverage by hey! · · Score: 1

      [note 1] So is there a line where antarctic should wait until summer ice at the other pole entirely disappear? [note 2] Regarding your faith into predictions, here is infamous Jim Mercer's 1978 article in Nature which predicted 5-10C increase in the antarctic during next 50 years. [note 3] You see, polar amplification is entirely symmetric effect, if it works at one pole, it should do at the other as well.

      (1) Straw man.
      (2) Cherry picking.
      (3) Citation needed. "Stands to reason" doesn't count. Look at a map, or better yet, a globe. The Arctic and Antarctic are geographically very different.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    255. Re:Press coverage by bzipitidoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No hyperbole. War is what will happen if we do nothing. You obviously don't think matters could come to that pass. Sounds naive and childish to me, this refusal to take responsibility for this problem. I would rather not wait until matters have deteriorated to the point that we're at the final option: mass death.

      However, we will do something. What, I don't know. Wait until even the dimmest bulbs in our society see that we have a big problem, then spring into action with typical muscular and very costly solutions. Wall off our coasts, like the Netherlands? Huge water projects? More dams, canals, desalination plants, sewage reclamation, and the like to deal with droughts? Powered removal of CO2 from the air? Easier solutions like cutting down carbon emissions now appear to be politically impossible, thanks to people like yourself. Expect you'll claim it would wreck our economy. If so, you couldn't be more wrong. It will stimulate the economy.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    256. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Sorry, there is no single more pressing problem than global warming.
      Actual wars can be stopped, hunger can be solved by just giftting surplus food to the ones who need it.
      If global warming is notmstopped *now* billions of people will die from it.
      That is compareable to a world wide nuclear war.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    257. Re:Press coverage by mysticalreaper · · Score: 1

      I heard the other day that our oil exports now exceed our oil imports. My question: why aren't we just using the oil we have, instead of shipping it across the ocean? Economics aside for a minute... this is having a huge impact to global warming, yet I'm the one being blamed?

      No you didn't hear the word "oil". You heard that the US is a net exporter of Gasoline, Diesel, and other fuels. These are refined products, not crude oil. Since 2008, the cunsumption rates (demand) for gasoline, diesel, and other fuels has fallen, as part of enonomic contraction. Thus, large refineries, especially on the Gulf coast near Houston, TX (Galveston, Texas City) have spare refining capacity. So, they buy crude, and refine it to produce gasoline and other products. Just as crude oil is traded globally, so is gasoline. The purchasers are nations with no refineries, like the Bahamas, or areas will less refining capacity than needed, like Equador or Argentina.

      US consuption of oil has fallen from about 21 Mbbl/day to 18 Mbbl/day (rough). US production of oil is about 5 Mbbl/day. The US is nowhere near being an oil exporter. But, the US is importing some oil, refining it, and then exporting the refined products, like this:

      1. Import oil
      2. Refine into gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, etc
      3. Export for profit!

      So, this is a good business for the oil refiners, and puts money into the US economy. It does not mean that the US is oil independent, not even close.

      Also, the cost of shipping oil across the ocean is insignificant compared to the value of the product to the end user. Ocean transportation is a tiny component of carbon emissions. I'd guess less than 1% off the top of my head.

    258. Re:Press coverage by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      No it doesn't... The outline of the coast has more to do with tides than the water quantity. The largest tides are areas where there is a long inlet that is oriented east-west. For example, it is disputed but the Great Lakes have very small tides, but the largest of them are superior and erie (longest east-west dimensions) whereas the largest quantities of water are in superior and michigan.

      http://www.great-lakes.net/teach/chat/answers/100100_tides.html
      http://www.epa.gov/glnpo/factsheet.html

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    259. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Because the melting of the ice that is on LAND has only started right now. In the article we are talking about ice wich is swimming on the sea anyway, if it melts nothing is happening .... (How dumb are people iour days?)

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    260. Re:Press coverage by dpilot · · Score: 1

      You mistake me for admiring the situation. I don't. As for another really bad scenario... Let's say that there's a "Great Dying" among humanity before the impact on the rest of the world gets too bad. That's not worst-case, but it's certainly bad enough. It's not unreasonable to guess that we could well be knocked back to wood and charcoal for energy. The easy oil, gas, and coal are already gone. The easy mining is gone, but the junkyards of today are the mines of tomorrow - assuming there are enough "low alloys" that we can still work using charcoal. Climbing out that that hole, back to a technological society is going to be darned tough.

      A large part of the problem is with TPTB. They've made their fortunes and power on the status quo, and they're reluctant to accept change. The fear here is they they're taking us with them. The annoyance is that their power and money will give them a better chance to weather out the chaos on some south-seas island.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    261. Re:Press coverage by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      Also, salt water and fresh water(ice) have different densities, so ice melting on the ocean will cause the ocean to rise. Not much, but we are talking about a lot of ice.

      Also when water warms from 0 C to 4 C it's density increases by 0.01%.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    262. Re:Press coverage by Bigby · · Score: 1

      The heat island affect of Newark, Jersey City, and Manhattan, causes the strong storms and tornadoes seen in Brooklyn. The same thing happens in Columbus, OH. When you deforest and lay down pavement, it generates a lot of heat in the late afternoon. Then you find tornados on the East/Northeast of those places.

    263. Re:Press coverage by Atticka · · Score: 1

      This was also broadcast last night on CBC News, its getting a lot of coverage here in Canada!

      --
      No sig here...
    264. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Yeah, +5 informative and just wrong.
      It is the opposite around.
      For exactly the reason that you mention.
      A floating iceberg is displacing an amount of water equally to its weight.
      Is that amount of fresh water is dissolved into salt water, the level of the combined water is becomming lower!

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    265. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Its the opposite. Sea water has the higher density. (Wich should be pretty obvious if you think a bit about it)

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    266. Re:Press coverage by danbert8 · · Score: 0

      You don't have any evidence to suggest that it will accelerate indefinitely. It may be accelerating now, but all the historical data on weather, temperature and atmospheric composition show cyclical effects. At some point the warming will level off and eventually a cooling cycle will begin. The earth will have warm periods and it will have ice ages in the billions of years it has left. The question is, where are humans best off in this cycle? Is it in the middle, at the warm end, or at the cold end. We are still technically in the cold end since there is ice that persists at the poles year round.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    267. Re:Press coverage by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      "There is no honest way to spin a 2 degrees C temperature increase for the world as something positive."

      Depends on your time scale. Over 10-20 years probably not, but over 100-200 years, definitely.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    268. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only problem with the "stop having kids" argument is that is will soon descend into a "let's kill all the poor/undeserving/not as worthy as us" argument.

      After all, if there are too many people on Earth now, why not take immediate action?

      The point is, your argument is bullshit. There's enough room for everyone. There's just not enough room for everyone living like Americans. If you want to safeguard your egoistical way of life, then indeed you will have to kill a lot of people. Definitely. But those people are as worth of being alive as you are.

    269. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      I doubt YOU will adapt the next 50/100 years. You likely die before that.
      For the rest of mankond it is also a question if they survive the next 20 - 50 years or if they die in a flood caused by global warming.
      Doing nothing right now means every new norn child (especially in the developing countries) has no real chance to even live to 50 ... or more years.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    270. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be new here.

    271. Re:Press coverage by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      That assumes that technology won't improve in the interim where we are using natural gas. If we discover cold fusion during the gas period then our long term CO2 usage will go down and we may never return to getting the majority of our power from oil or coal and we saved a ton of CO2 from going into the atmosphere by tapping the gas. The invisible hand is keeping costs and damages low today so that hopefully tomorrow we will have cheaper and less damaging forms of power tomorrow.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    272. Re:Press coverage by Wraithlyn · · Score: 1

      If you don't have a car and can barely afford one you take the cheapest, not the most environmentally friendly.

      I'm not sure why you're implying these two choices are at odds with each other.

      A fuel-efficient car is both cheap and environmental. Any decision that involves total cost-of-ownership will take fuel efficiency into consideration.

      --
      "Mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices, is to some extent present in every electron." -Freeman Dyson
    273. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      That is a missconception.
      There is basically no CO2 absorbed into a CO2 cycle (whatecer that is supposed to mean).
      Yes, there are CO2 sinks, but this is mainly a simple question of dissolving CO2 into the ocean.
      There is no real sink. Every which 'disappears' now will come back later. Like CO2 converted into wood, it comes back when the tree dies and rotts.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    274. Re:Press coverage by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      I hate to nitpick, but sea ice is nearly pure water while seawater is not pure water (it is 2.5% more dense). There is actually a small difference due to this. This is a minor effect compared to land ice melting or the thermal expansion of the oceans due to global warming, but it is measurable. If you melt sea ice, the ocean level will rise slightly.

      Ice has a density of 0.9170g/cm^3 at 0 C, when it changes to water it has a density of 0.999841g/cm^3 it reaches a peak density at 4 C of 0.999973g/cm^3 even at 30 C its density is 0.995646g/cm^3. That is a 10% increase in density from melting, ice melting in water lowers the volume.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    275. Re:Press coverage by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      Well it is more of that they are. The problem is we Americans have some irrational fear of diesel. As such we require far more gasoline than diesel in our economy. Thus most of those oil product imports are gasoline whereas most of those exports are diesel. When you refine crude you don't get to pick which one you refine, you get some of both gasoline and diesel. So we import crude and gasoline to fulfill our gasoline needs and then export the diesel we created but don't need.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    276. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      As far as Incan tell with my fading eye sight: the moon orbit has not changed the last 30 years.
      What exactly was your point again? I believe I lost track or missed a significant idea ...

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    277. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Sahara is a desert because man kind made it a desert. About 2500 years ago it was the main agriculture area supplying all the mediterian lands with grain.
      The term 'desert belt' was coined after the observation that, well, it seems deserts mark a kind of belt ...

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    278. Re:Press coverage by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      This is incorrect but only because you forgot that the melting ice will cool the surrounding water, lets say we have 30g of ice at 0 C and 70g of water at 1 C, if that was in a graduated cylinder the volume will be 99.99cm^3. Now when the ice melts the water will get colder 0 C, so now we have a volume of 99.98cm^3.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    279. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Erm, if a significant amount of ice melts on Greenland, god prevent all of it, the sea level will rise several yards! If all,of it melts it is about 15 yards.
      So Florida is gone then ....

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    280. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, dude, you are making assumptions not supported by evidence. The sun has a cycle too. Every day it rises. You cannot assume it will rise tomorrow based on this evidence alone. New inputs make a system behave in new ways. Make the cycle vary from the past. Think harder.

    281. Re:Press coverage by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Antarctic sea ice is at high levels, the Antarctic ice sheet is losing ice and overall the there is a net loss of ice in Antarctica. I explained why the Antarctic sea ice is increasing here.

    282. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      The point is not abot removing something, but about changing something.
      Power plants could be renewable. Cars could use renewable enery. There could be public transport not needing cars. There could be no need for any powered ship, sailing ships work fine. Etc. Etc. Etc. you can define how you want things to be run ... there is no magical reason why X% are unemployed or Y% are starving, or why energy mainly comes from burning stuff ...

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    283. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hear! Hear!

    284. Re:Press coverage by Burz · · Score: 1

      Let's say that there's a "Great Dying" among humanity before the impact on the rest of the world gets too bad. That's not worst-case, but it's certainly bad enough.

      That's part of our political dilemma: We've become so good at exploiting the rest of the biosphere that I fear we won't register the danger until so much of the rest is gone that it'll be too late. Capitalism is an externalizing force that shifts the pain to "other", not realizing much of that other is directly underneath, supporting us.

      TPTB are as deluded as anyone else. Their situation engenders the tendency to insulate one self from emerging facts. We saw that during the reign of neoliberalism up through 2008 where they actually seemed to act on their neologisms of "frictionless economy" and limitless growth. Then terrorism, war and bumping up against the supply of fuel spooked them and put them into an increasing pattern of hoarding (running away from investment). Most American consumers today share their group psychology with the uber-rich, unfortunately, although I'd say the preponderance of irrationality still lies with the so-called 1%. The crux of what makes them irrational, to over-value the status quo, is an unwarranted assumption that AGW will be like disasters of the past with plenty of environmental 'high ground' (even outer space) they can buy into as the need arises. They mostly haven't considered the possibility of extinction.

    285. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that is funny. Mod this guy funny. We can't survive without technology. Funniest thing all day.

    286. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 2

      You and your parrent are mixing up POLUTION with CO2.
      Ships are really bad as pollutants regarding sulfur and soot etc. But they don't emmit much CO2. Ships are in fact the most enery efficient way to transport goods.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    287. Re:Press coverage by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Wait for it to melt and no water will spill.

      Easy. Just bump the table.

      That's what some people are waiting for to solve the global warming problem anyway.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    288. Re:Press coverage by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      There is already evidence that the melting of Arctic sea ice is causing an increase in extreme weather over the continental US. Apparently the additional heat and open water cause the north polar jet stream to slow down increasing the amplitude of the meanders which brings colder weather further south and warmer weather further north and because of the slow down the extreme events linger a bit longer over any particular location. I think it's naive to think that the melting of Arctic sea ice won't have effects elsewhere, especially in the Northern Hemisphere.

    289. Re:Press coverage by steelfood · · Score: 1

      You're made of 78% water. You need to drink at least 8 cups of water a day to replenish you daily loss. But you'll drown in an inch of it.

      That which appears to be benficial is not always. There's a ready the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Stability is more important than having more fresh water. In many places, it is more important than freedom and human rights. Because with instability, you can't even begin to talk about social luxuries while you're trying to survive.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    290. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      The question is not how much energy you use (well except for retards who simply don't grasp that using less is more efficient) but how you produce it!

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    291. Re:Press coverage by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      You know how nobody finds Joe Biden's jokes funny? Well take that principle and apply it.

    292. Re:Press coverage by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      When you consider that the drop in temperature that caused the Little Ice Age was only about -1C then +1 or 2 C doesn't sound so great.

    293. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the last 2 degree rise was certainly beneficial...

    294. Re:Press coverage by LateArthurDent · · Score: 1

      The only problem with the "stop having kids" argument is that is will soon descend into a "let's kill all the poor/undeserving/not as worthy as us" argument.

      No, it does not. Because even the "stop having kids" comment I made was a voluntary action. If you want to do something for the environment, stop having kids. If you don't, then don't. Just know that nothing else you do is effective in turning the tide.

      After all, if there are too many people on Earth now, why not take immediate action?

      Because the immediate action you propose is unethical? That's like saying, "I need money now, why not take immediate action and steal yours?"

      The point is, your argument is bullshit. There's enough room for everyone. There's just not enough room for everyone living like Americans.

      Is there really? Let's say all of us in the first world cut our energy usage by half, which is pretty much unreasonable. The population now is 7 billion. In the 60's the population was 3 billion. How long before the population doubles and we're back where we started? You've just bought yourself 20 years, maybe. At the cost of cutting our energy usage by half

      And that's not even considering that the developing world is going to catch up to the first world in energy usage very soon.

      If you want to safeguard your egoistical way of life, then indeed you will have to kill a lot of people. Definitely. But those people are as worth of being alive as you are.

      I don't know where you got that idea that we need to start murdering people, but you need to chill, dude.

    295. Re:Press coverage by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Change isn't always bad, you know.

      While I don't disagree with your general premise, this is one point that I can't really let slide. Don't forget that the past 150 years can be categorized by massive, massive change in human society. Living standards, population, you name it, civilization is vastly different today than it was 1870, far more dramatic of a difference than, say, 1250 AD from 1100 AD or 350 BC from 500 BC.

      The change has already happened. We're at the very tail end of it. The golden age is waning. And it is, if this continues, bad.

      It's like hitting the lottery jackpot. It's great for a little while when you can party every day and night without having to work, but the money is almost spent and now it's time to pay back those social dues. There's a reason jackpot winners have a tendency to end up in a worse financial situation than before winning. And that's where civilization will be if we're not careful.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    296. Re:Press coverage by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Antarctic sea ice has increased. I explained it here. The Antarctic ice sheet has been losing more ice that the sea ice is increasing so the net is negative.

    297. Re:Press coverage by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't the different densities not matter because of the whole thing with it displacing the same amount of water because of its mass? To explain it another way, if it is more dense then it will displace more water when ice but then the same when melted and if it is less dense then it will also displace less water and the same lesser amount when it melts. Plus dense fresh water sinks which then allows it to mix quickly which then evens out the whole thing.

    298. Re:Press coverage by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      This is a bunch of hog-wash.

      I assume you are referring to the stuff you wrote after that line.

    299. Re:Press coverage by ravenshrike · · Score: 0

      Of course, the loss of land ice is surmised to be from the increased volcanic activity on the antarctic continent and not from global warming.

    300. Re:Press coverage by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Finally, making any predictions is dicey at best.

      Perfectly true. But so far, predictions that have been tested against facts have been shown to be much too optimistic. So forgive me if I don't take comfort in in uncertainty.

    301. Re:Press coverage by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Really, it comes down to consumption and waste. Yeah, the economy runs on people buying things. Big companies will take a big hit. But that's not really the economy. Big companies are doing plenty well (look at the stock market), but the economy is stil lin the dumps.

      So it's not really necessary at all to keep buying things. Conservation comes in many forms. Boiling filtrated water is probably better than drinking soda. Eating a variety of fruits and vegetables is better than juice and vitamin supplements combined. Using glass bottles for milk, instead of throwing away plastic or cardboard containers. Turning old clothes into rags, instead of buying paper towels and throwing away old clothes. Buying groceries instead of buying pre-made food, or worse, eating fast food. Buying in bulk helps too, but usage must still be moderated, especially when the thing costs so little per unit.

      You can't save on everything. Toilet paper, and bread for example. But where you can, it should be done. Consume less, and there will be fewer things transported. There will be fewer factories. More of what gets produced will be used and not go to waste. That is the kind of behavior that will reduce emissions. It is also the same kind of behavior that will drive Walmart out of business (which is a good thing--large businesses have a tendency to drive small business out, and reduce employment opportunities, even if more people make fewer overall with small businesses).

      It is the kind of change that needs to happen to cut emissions. Replacing an existing car with a Prius is no more than a feel-good thing for people who can't do the math but want to feel helpful. It's a completely useless gesture, if not even more harmful. The cost to manufacture, ship, and ultimately dispose of the Prius probably dwarfs any gas savings from using the existing car for a few more years and performing the proper upkeep.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    302. Re:Press coverage by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      A steady stream of meltwater through spring is a good thing, a flash flood isn't. Some areas are going to get drier, some are going to get far too much water.

      Since this IS civilization we are talking about and we can perform some form of central planning, how about we stop building homes in flash flood channels? Just a thought.

    303. Re:Press coverage by fm6 · · Score: 1

      It may well be that the effects of sea level rise due to global warming have been grossly exaggerated. Alas, I suspect we'll all be too busy dying of starvation to celebrate.

    304. Re:Press coverage by SiChemist · · Score: 1

      The published paper appears to account for this effect. I only skimmed it, because it's beer-thirty.

    305. Re:Press coverage by compro01 · · Score: 1

      Now ask the question "where is the sea ice coming from?".

      Answer : It's falling off the land.

      Now ask why it's falling off the land and what the results of ice that was on the land now being in the sea are.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    306. Re:Press coverage by SiChemist · · Score: 1

      And now they do! Thanks!

    307. Re:Press coverage by steelfood · · Score: 1

      It'd be better to call "global warming" "more energetic global climate".

      How about Climate Destabilization?

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    308. Re:Press coverage by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      That's nice and all. I think what gets people worked up is when some of the "solutions" are worse then the problem. We don't just need to act; we need to act intelligently.

    309. Re:Press coverage by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      There are vast socioeconomic consequences of people not having kids. The collapse of Social Security is one great example.

    310. Re:Press coverage by tbird81 · · Score: 1

      I don't get it either. Are you able to explain?

      "Plus all the ice above the water..."

      How is that funny?

    311. Re:Press coverage by huckamania · · Score: 1

      So basically back to normality for humanity. 50 would be old in just about any past civilization.

      For the majority of mankind, if the oceans do rise, it will mean less time to get to the beach. I don't think the rest of mankind is waiting around to drown in a flood.

    312. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Yet removing one container ship from the shipping industry would be the equivalent of removing 50 million automobiles [gas2.org]"

      That's SO2 *pollution*, not CO2 output. Shipping is *the* most efficient means of transporting materials, energy-wise, and per-tonne and per-km, it's probably a lot more efficient than a diesel truck.

      "I heard the other day that our oil exports now exceed our oil imports"

      If you are living in the US, then you are profoundly mistaken. I don't think the US has been a net exporter of oil since the 1950s or 1960s. "Why aren't we just using the oil we have?" The US is something like the third largest producer of oil in the world, but people are demanding more than twice that. The US does export some oil, which it has to replace by imports, but I think it's only around 5% of production. As for why even that much goes out, it's due to market, refinery capacity, and transportation issues.

    313. Re:Press coverage by phantomfive · · Score: 1
      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    314. Re:Press coverage by jfengel · · Score: 2

      You really can go ahead and do the experiment trout007 described.

      You'll find that he's right: floating ice does not raise water levels when it melts. That's how buoyancy works. The total mass of above and below the water line equals the volume in the space below the water line. The water all around that space is capable of holding up exactly that much water in that space. The ice, being less dense than water, has overflow when it fills that space, which rides above the water line.

      When the ice melts, it exactly fills the space below the water line. If you had filled it exactly to the rim, it will melt without spilling a drop.

      Ice which is supported, rather than floating, will cause a rise when it melts. You can see that by putting a fork over the glass and letting the ice cube melt. The water level will rise.

    315. Re:Press coverage by tbird81 · · Score: 2

      What to do?
      Panic, panic, panic, panic, panic!?

      "Don't worry about a thing
      'Cause every little thing gonna be all right"

    316. Re:Press coverage by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Except your invisible hand is just moving the deck chairs. The cheap shale gas isn't going to last very long (yes, natural gas is 'better' for the environment than oil or coal) and just encourages more growth which is the underlying cause of the problem. Capitalism is a fine method for optimizing short term issues, long term not so much. Anything to do with external costs or problems, not so much.

      Except that reality proves you wrong. Natural gas will last longer than you give it credit for, and capitalism is already making solar more and more cost feasible every day. It will surpass fossil fuels within a decade, by natural market forces. Hawaii is already there (solar being cheaper than fossil fuels). Not saying capitalism is perfect, but the free market is doing a FAR better job "fixing" this problem than government tinkering is.

    317. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's "casus belli" -- and the "for war" is redundant; the Latin literally means "case for war". Or were you in too much of a hurry to get to the ATM machine before the rest of the hoi polloi?

    318. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention oil. Russia is poised to capture any oi reserves once the shipping lanes open up in the arctic. Norway is looking at the same. NATO has been doing exercises in the netherlands to prepare for such a war (not that it definitely will come, just look at the central europe war that never came).

    319. Re:Press coverage by trout007 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link.

      In case anyone wants to read the .pdf a free copy is on his page here. http://home.comcast.net/~pdnoerd/NoerdlingerBrower.pdf

      I reviewed it and I think he made the same error I mentioned above. I ran my own numbers on his calculations and got the same answers. I am going to e-mail him the analysis I wrote above and ask him for comment.

      Thanks

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    320. Re:Press coverage by theqmann · · Score: 1

      ah, but don't you have to account for local variances, since all the fresh water from the ice won't be evenly spread across the entire water body instantly? couldn't the ice cause a temporary higher rise in the local vicinity untill the salinity equalizes?

    321. Re:Press coverage by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Ice expands when it freezes, when it melts in a pool of liquid water, the level of the water doesn't change; so the ice above the water line is irrelavent. Technically ice in saltwater actually reduce the water level slightly as it melts.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    322. Re:Press coverage by microbox · · Score: 1

      The way people have built here, ten or twenty centimeters in sea level rise will have little effect on us.

      Because of the interesting relationship between gravity (of ice masses) and sea-levels, the east cost of the USA will experience the bulk of global sea rises. If it is 1m globally, it may be 5m on the east coast. If the modest current forecasts are true, then Boston will be fine; however, scientists and the IPCC are conservative. Anything could happen. (Including little-to-no sea rise.)

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    323. Re:Press coverage by budgenator · · Score: 1

      I think you'll find that your saharan agricultural area was more properly called the Nile River valley. One of the reasons Egypt was a military super-power back then was because of the quality of the crops grown in the Nile river flood plain, which was due the the extreme fretility because of the anual flooding of the Nile

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    324. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think we all want the climate to be ideal for human habitability. That said, the current interglacial period has lasted 11,400 years, which looks to be longer than the past three. I doubt we can expect it to naturally last much longer.

      So, since I'm a cynical optimist, what if AGW prevents the next ice age? Another mass extinction*? A repeat of the Toba catastrophe that dropped the human population to the mere thousands?

      * Humans are currently causing a mass extinction. What I mean is an ice age on top of the current mass extinction. A mass extinction from both factors would likely be the worst mass extinction in Earth's history.

    325. Re:Press coverage by dpilot · · Score: 1

      That's a little out of context. Sometimes I think the climate skeptics want to hear a prediction like, "On October 5th there will be a Cat-5 hurricane making landfall 60 miles north of Galveston, Tx.

      I understand what you said, and I agree with you. I also said that predictions will be "statistical", though I guess I didn't add what you did, that the predictions have been optimistic.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    326. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you need a box of tissues when you were done composing that? I'm impressed you could write so well one handed.

    327. Re:Press coverage by microbox · · Score: 1

      Because the solution is NOT to use less energy. The solution is to have less kids and lower the population.

      Alternatively, educate everyone, lift them out of poverty, and population increase flat-lines. This can be achieved with technological advancement.

      I'm all for limiting population growth though. If the above doesn't solve the population explosion, then we *will* need to prevent growth at some future stage, or exponential growth will devolve into something nasty, akin to bacteria fighting over an agar dish with nuclear weapons (i.e., anti-biotics.)

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    328. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's my favorite show on the DIY network. Extreme Tidal Makeover! Whoo hoo.

    329. Re:Press coverage by microbox · · Score: 1

      Seems to me that if you're telling only half the story you can't possibly be telling more then half the truth.

      Well, this is pretty sad if you think that. These masses of ice are not floating in the ocean. So there is a fundamental difference. Also, there is no rule that says everything must be symmetric with climate change.

      fyi, east antartica is growing (a tiny bit), and west antartica is shrinking (faster.) If they *do* melt, it will take decades to hundreds of years past the tipping point, which we probably haven't yet reached. If they *do* melt, it really will be a catastrophe. Even a 1% chance of them melting is not worth the risk.

      We will probably see dramatic changes on Greenland before Antarctica -- not least because Greenland is now part of a much warmer north pole.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    330. Re:Press coverage by LateArthurDent · · Score: 1

      Alternatively, educate everyone, lift them out of poverty, and population increase flat-lines. This can be achieved with technological advancement.

      Oh, absolutely. I actually don't think we'll have a serious problem, because I figure that will happen naturally.

      I was merely making a point that if you're an environmentalist and you want to make a big impact, the best thing you can do is limit the number of kids you have. You don't even need to be kid-free. Limit yourself to one child. Want to raise more? Adopt.

      I'm all for limiting population growth though. If the above doesn't solve the population explosion, then we *will* need to prevent growth at some future stage, or exponential growth will devolve into something nasty, akin to bacteria fighting over an agar dish with nuclear weapons (i.e., anti-biotics.)

      As with any population, if it grows over what the environment can sustain it, a correction will happen. I'd rather not have humanity fighting it out for resources on that scale, but I'm pretty optimistic that we won't get to that point.

    331. Re:Press coverage by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

      All of your suggestions amount to nothing more than rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic

      And your attitude is like turning the Titanic around for another go at the iceberg. I'm glad we have defeatist people like you around, or else we might slip up and do something useful!

    332. Re:Press coverage by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      In that case, the surrounding water will also be WARMING the ice/new-water and balance out. Try again.

    333. Re:Press coverage by trout007 · · Score: 1

      I mentioned that in the bottom. I don't claim to be smart enough to figure out the real sea rise if all of the sea ice melts. I am just attempting to prove the author of this particular paper is incorrect and that his experiment was not applicable to sea level rise.

      I am not a PhD so I don't know how to go about publishing a paper to refute this. Any ideas? Should I e-mail the author? Contact some right wing denier website?
      Anyone have any ideas?

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    334. Re:Press coverage by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Hmm, yeah that would make sense if comparing the arctic and antarctic made sense.

      But it doesn't. Not even close actually. They're governed by different dynamics you see. If you crack open a book or read a few papers on the subject, you'll realize why the antarctic having more sea ice really doesn't make much of a difference while the arctic having less sea ice ostensibly does.

      To give you a start, look at the cause and effects of the albedo changes for both poles. In the arctic, you have less ice during peak insolation, which greatly increase albedo and thus energy absorption. At the same time, the antarctic has an increase in ice in the depths of antarctic winter when there is no insolation at all. Now which one do you think has a greater impact on the global energy budget?

      --
      ~X~
    335. Re:Press coverage by fm6 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sorry, I thought you were talking about the general problem of predicting climate trends.

      The metaphor I like is that of driving near a cliff on a foggy day. You can't prove that you're headed towards the cliff, but that's not a good reason to assume you're not. So you need to slow down, even if makes you late for work.

    336. Re:Press coverage by fnj · · Score: 1

      I think it's more of an irrational dislike of diesel engines rather than an irrational fear of diesel fuel, and it's not universal. I have a RATIONAL dislike of gasoline engines, because I know in the USA you can't get actual pure gasoline to put in them any more. Instead you have to put heavily ethanol-tainted fuel in them, and performance goes to crap, particularly for classic cars, but also seriously so for all gasoline engine cars. OTOH, diesel fuel is still quite pure, and if there is a biodiesel component, which is true more and more, it has very little to zero deleterious effect on performance. As a result, I have driven predominantly diesel cars for the last 30 years, and have had only a diesel car for the last 13 years.

      With modern refining techniques it is possible to vary the fractional output with respect to the various products, so you aren't stuck with a fixed arbitrary percentage of gasoline and another fixed arbitrary percentage of diesel fuel. But yes, it's true the USA refines more diesel fuel than it consumes, the excess going to Europe and other areas.

    337. Re:Press coverage by loneDreamer · · Score: 1

      Do all those and, with real sacrifice, lower your total energy consumption by say, 30% (and I believe I'm being generous). Then have a policy of 4 kids per couple instead of two (replacement rate) and by the time you die your progeny of 28 (4+8+16) instead of 6 (2+2+2) will be spending enough that your lifetime sacrifices will mean nothing. It will keep growing exponentially worse from there.

      Not that I'm saying you're wrong, because you are not. Just saying that the parent is also right, and even more so.

    338. Re:Press coverage by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what your point is. The Arctic 80N+ temperatures are interesting to look at but they don't have anything to do with what's happening in the Antarctic.

    339. Re:Press coverage by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of a visit I had to Disney's Animal Kingdom theme park a few years back. Now, I was depressed by the sad, sick-looking animals, but I didn't get angry until I got to the parts of the park where they started giving me condescending lectures on conservation. About how I should recycle...when their park generates more waste in a day than I will in a lifetime. And about how I should take short showers and turn off my lights to save energy...when their park uses more energy in a day than I will in a lifetime.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    340. Re:Press coverage by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      True, but they are interesting.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    341. Re:Press coverage by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      And they're shit to drive.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    342. Re:Press coverage by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Great, so lower population then? Meaning less CO2? Ah, nature's wondrous balancing act.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    343. Re:Press coverage by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      We're not selfish, we're more than happy to accommodate more tourists at our new up and coming mega ski and pool resort. The people in the Sahara are more than welcome here :)

      But more to the point, I have moved around the world several times, each time it was because of the weather, and I finally found a nice place to stay. It's not very hard and not very expensive.

    344. Re:Press coverage by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Economics aside (which do play a MASSIVE role in the oil trade), the problem is crude oil is made up of many different components. No oil company actually wants to make fuel oil (or bunker fuel depending on which part of the world you're in). It's a cheap product with crap margins. You try and refine every last bit you can into your most expensive products (Diesel, Jet, Premium Petrol, Petrol, Propane, Fuel Oil and Bitumen, in pretty much that order), but you sell what is left over at a discount.

      The reason why it is economical to move things around the world is because fuel oil is a shit by-product of refining petrol, and not one we have a shortage of. It does serve it's purpose though. All the sulphur, mercury, and other nasties that need to be cleaned out of petrol and diesel often get mixed into jet and fuel oil. If you start cutting down on the number of ships you will only serve to further drive the fuel oil price down since we can't make less of it without a massive investment in upgrading capabilities at refineries (hydrocrackers, fluidized catalytic crackers etc).

      Also that website is talking about general pollution and not greenhouse gasses. Sulphur Oxides are not greenhouse gasses. They are however quite smelly and cause localised pollution which is why there are very strict regulations about emissions in confined urban centres (i.e. Australian diesel requires less than 10ppm Sulphur components), but there's very different regulations for fuel spread over the world (jet fuel limit is 400ppm, and fuel oil limits are measured in % in some places). It is also why ships which need to travel into a ports located up river closer to a city are required to switch fuel on the way in.

      It's nasty but it's not global warming.

    345. Re:Press coverage by Troed · · Score: 1

      In science, observation beats models:

      Scientists are now seeing signals that the Sahara desert and surrounding regions are greening due to increasing rainfall.

      If sustained, these rains could revitalize drought-ravaged regions, reclaiming them for farming communities.

      The green shoots of recovery are showing up on satellite images of regions including the Sahel, a semi-desert zone bordering the Sahara to the south that stretches some 2,400 miles (3,860 kilometers).

      Images taken between 1982 and 2002 revealed extensive regreening throughout the Sahel, according to a new study in the journal Biogeosciences.

      http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/07/090731-green-sahara.html

    346. Re:Press coverage by Troed · · Score: 1

      Mass Gains of the Antarctic Ice Sheet Exceed Losses

      Zwally, H. Jay; Li, Jun; Robbins, John; Saba, Jack L.; Yi, Donghui; Brenner, Anita; Bromwich, David

      Abstract:

      During 2003 to 2008, the mass gain of the Antarctic ice sheet from snow accumulation exceeded the mass loss from ice discharge by 49 Gt/yr (2.5% of input), as derived from ICESat laser measurements of elevation change. The net gain (86 Gt/yr) over the West Antarctic (WA) and East Antarctic ice sheets (WA and EA) is essentially unchanged from revised results for 1992 to 2001 from ERS radar altimetry.

      July 2012

      http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20120013495

    347. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen people answering both sides of this saying the other is wrong. Can we get some further discussion and consensus on this? I'd love to know in one way or another.

      Sorry: I've nominated this page for speedy deletion, so the talk page is locked. This will be black holed soon enough. Original research! And, of course, *notability*, people!

    348. Re:Press coverage by Layzej · · Score: 1

      awesome!

    349. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question has been asked and answered, and if you want to see something "painfully obvious" I will refer you to your own unwillingness to learn anything from the mass of answers shattering your argument.

    350. Re:Press coverage by Guignol · · Score: 1
    351. Re:Press coverage by Guignol · · Score: 1

      "In science, observation beats models:"
      Very well said. However,
      You must still define what you observe and what is the experiment
      In this case, the experiment is not over and the catastrophic claims will be refuted then, if there is still anyone to make the observation

    352. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Definitely not detectable by idiots stupid enough to make that claim.

    353. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah we do. some of us study it you fucking idiot. we do mass and energy balances on its main components all day long. other people (you) dwell in their ignorance and refuse to commit to the study it takes to comprehend big things.

    354. Re:Press coverage by Larryish · · Score: 1

      âoeWhoever undertakes to set himself up as a judge of Truth and Knowledge is shipwrecked by the laughter of the gods.â
      -- Albert Einstein

    355. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but nobody wants to do the one and only thing that we can do to help the situation.

      Because the solution is NOT to use less energy. The solution is to have less kids and lower the population. Individually, I hope that we're all using twice more energy than we use now in the future. Because it'd be great to have that flying car and robot maids. That's the nature of technology, we use more energy to increase our quality of life.

      Environmentally, that's not a problem if the population has decreased to 10% of the current population. Total energy usage will be down.

      Do you want to help the environment and lower your carbon footprint? Stop having kids.

      Honestly, you need to use your brain.

      Sure, stopping having kids will quite obviously cut down the population. But do you know how long our civilization would last if everyone stopped having kids? about 50 more years tops.

      But I know you're not implying that everyone should stop having kids, just most people. Even then, our population would shrink down to a fraction of what it is now, and some other country that encourages high birth rates (i.e. any country that is primarily muslim) would move in and take over. End of these United States. As it is, the birthrate in America is less than the sustainable rate, meaning our population is going to be steadily decreasing already. You should be proud. I'm concerned.

      If you seriously want to decrease the population for the betterment of society, you could start with yourself. Just saying. But no, it's not THAT important. Just important enough to put our country back into the dark ages.

    356. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I do read the science journals. Not the ones that publish repuked crap, but the ones that are publishing basic research.
      You mention "some of the most respected researchers in climatology". Question: Respected by whom? The miscreants of East Anglia U? Michael Mann [a la 'hockey stick'?] The wonks who push the UN Framework on Climate?

      There are others who , quite correctly, hold that there is no proof of global warming for at least the last decade. The satellite records strongly support that, so the term has morphed from 'global warming' to climate change. Same dog and pony show under a new name. In the end, it all adds up to an insider circle that is busy garnering government grants for 'research'. They, being insiders, determine who gets the grants and what is reported. The press, having given up the pursuit of journalism, is happy to regurgitate what they find in the (few) journals they actually read or spread the information they receive from Reuters or the AP.

      Try looking for Watts Up With That?{wattsupwiththat.com/} You might actually bump up against a report of reproducible research!
      He has posted several charts of Arctic sea ice and its anomalies.Yes, they do show a steady decline over at least a decade. They also show that the extent of sea ice in March 2012 was almost the same as in March 2002! All we can say about this summer's decline is that it happened. We have no definitive conclusions about why, but we can point to the severe North American drought and dig for answers.

      Remember, too, that the earth is still recovering from the Little Ice Age. Talking 'Climate" in decade terms is simply inane. That's weather! Climate is centuries.

    357. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because its not clear why everybody is freaking out? What exactly is the consequence of melting? If there were consequences why wouldn't the headline be the consequences? Like "thousands dead, low ice in arctic likely cause?". There are no headlines like that, no starving children, no houses overturned, no animals dead, no sea level rise, no nothing because the major thing that might happen if the pole melted is that in the summer months some ships would be able to pass and possibly some additional mining activities might occur mostly good. There is no documented bad single thing that will happen or they would at least mention it. Instead we get arctic ice melting as if we all know this is far worse than the ice that melts in my ice water everyday. But remind me again what are the proven obvious documented bad things that are happening because more ice than usual melts in the north pole?

    358. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am an independent write-in candidate for president. My plan is to instigate the building of ten thousand hybrid clipper ships wherever there is water and people need work. College stew dents will get their undergrad education crewing the ships and pay to be there.

      On the issue of having to wait ten days for a wind driven clipper to deliver your smartphone, the supply lines are almost always full with warehouses loaded with pallets of goods. Ten thousand hybrid clippers is 2-3 million jobs wherever there is water and people need work. Every one does not want to grow up to be a slash dot geek.
      http://michaelslevinson.com

    359. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol, you're a total faggot.
      I'm drinking a beer right now and stepping out for a smoke as I type this reply up. Your nerd tears over other people enjoying life and not being autistic retards is hilarious. Sorry you've never felt the touch of a woman and only know the love of your pillow waifu you autistic faggot.

      LOL

    360. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the queen had balls she'd be the king.

    361. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also transportation is not the biggest segment produces. Producing ghg, i believe heating, cooling, and lighting buildings is responsible for 50%of emissions.

    362. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't have a car and can barely afford one you take the cheapest, not the most environmentally friendly.

      So, the solution is to reduce the price of things that are environmentally friendly, and raise the price of things that aren't. Taxing carbon emissions (effectively making them more expensive) would go a long way toward that, but everybody seems to hate that idea for some reason.

    363. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

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

    364. Re:Press coverage by Larryish · · Score: 1

      I allow the world to live as it chooses, and I allow myself to live as I choose.

    365. Re:Press coverage by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      The standard climatologist assumption is that technology will remain exactly where it is today, that people are too stupid to move away from water coming at them at a rate of a few inches per year, and that the market won't switch to other energy sources when fossil ones get expensive.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    366. Re:Press coverage by company+suckup · · Score: 0

      There will undoubtedly be areas that benefit from global warming,

      Well of course. That's why I've been busy buying up ocean-front property in Des Moines.

    367. Re:Press coverage by trout007 · · Score: 1

      Not that anyone is going to read this but I read the report again and my analysis and his matched up except for one thing. He started with an ice volume of nearly 700,000 km^3 while I used 30,000 km^3 which is how he got his conclusion of around a 45mm rise and I got 2.7 mm. So I retract my statements that the paper is flawed. I actually e-mailed the author and he was kind enough to respond to my questions.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    368. Re:Press coverage by cavebison · · Score: 1

      The other reason that "Average Global Temps Expected to Rise By 1-2 Degrees Celsius Over the Next 50-100 years" is not relevant to the average person, is that "Global Social and Economic Collapse By The Mid-21st Century" is first on the list.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Limits_to_Growth
      http://www.csiro.au/files/files/plje.pdf (CSIRO's recent validation of the above)

      1. Global socio-economic catastrophe
      2. Global temperature rise by 2 degrees
      3. ???
      4. Profit.

    369. Re:Press coverage by cavebison · · Score: 1

      Or in short "people can't be bothered about long-term problems."

      This has been pretty much borne out by every failed civilisation throughout human history, whether it's the Incas or the Athenians. Even modern Greece is now seeing the results of poor forward thinking. In my view, our economic system works well during boom times - ie. most of the 20th century - but completely fails when times are tough. Mainly because economic theory is based on a small sub-set of human behaviour in a small sub-set of environmental conditions.

      We've managed to work out a good "growth" strategy, but I don't think we actually have a "survival" strategy. They're two different things; and people behave differently in those two different situations.

    370. Re:Press coverage by cavebison · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Somebody should do a study to compare the difference in benefit between
      a) direct reduction of water/electricity/fuel use by an individual, and
      b) global reduction of the same if consumers *bought less stuff*.

      For example, if everyone who already owns an iPhone 4 refused to buy the 5, what would that resource saving (assuming they weren't manufactured in the first place of course) be equivalent to, in terms of individual usage?

      What I mean is, industry uses far more resources than individuals, and people resist the "green" message because it often means more costs or inconvenience for the *consumer*. But if we just didn't buy so much crap, maybe we'd have *more* impact than if we cycled to the shops instead of driving. That sort of thing.

    371. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shhh! Greenland was never green! There was NO Medieval warming period. None! Otherwise the hockey stick graph would have showed it.

    372. Re:Press coverage by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      in a world with much more present and pressing issues like war, hunger, unemployment, recession, etc. you can't very well expect every newspaper to lead with a "Average Global Temps Expected to Rise By 1-2 Degrees Celsius Over the Next 50-100 years" headline

      Of all the problems you list, global warming is the only one the general public can do anything about.

      (In fact it pretty much *has* to be the general public, barring an energy breakthrough...)

      --
      No sig today...
    373. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the solution is NOT to use less energy. The solution is to have less kids and lower the population. Individually, I hope that we're all using twice more energy than we use now in the future. Because it'd be great to have that flying car and robot maids. That's the nature of technology, we use more energy to increase our quality of life.

      Environmentally, that's not a problem if the population has decreased to 10% of the current population. Total energy usage will be down.

      Do you want to help the environment and lower your carbon footprint? Stop having kids.

      slashdot people, ignore this rebel. have more kids.
      prevail to cause the less fortunate to reproduce less.

    374. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a suspicion that the main stream press hasn't covered this because they haven't had a chance to sell their beachfront homes and summer homes yet. They'd certainly wanna wait till they've done that before they start doing the chicken-little dance as the prices they can get will certainly drop. Maybe Obama will cover the difference with tax-payer money? After all, it's not his money. It's Other People's Money.

    375. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      You are mixing up the Nil River Area with the sahara, or?

      Hint: Nil river goes from south to north.
      Sahara goes from east to west.

      The whole northern stripe "which is now desert" was once the corn granary of the mediterranean empires, name them how ever you want. They are desert NOW but where not until roughly 300 AC.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    376. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...or waiting another week to get it because the container ship was wind powered?

      Wind powered ships would never work. The amount of power you can collect from a wind turbine is too little to propel a ship. The turbines would cause too much drag, reduce the space available for cargo and make the ship top heavy and more likely to capsize in rough seas.

    377. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't believe your lies.

      There is obviously foul play going on when the styrofoam cup discreetly turns into a glass part way through the experiment.

    378. Re:Press coverage by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      What's shit to drive? Surely not catless uncarbed 4-stroke small cars, some of the most fun vehicles ever made fall into that category.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    379. Re:Press coverage by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Yeah, my bad. I was drunk when I replied that and read "carbed engine and no catalytic converter" as "diesel engine and no turbo." And that would be shit to drive. But is not what you said. The lesson, kids, is don't drink and post.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    380. Re:Press coverage by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Do you mean this, Europe map 220BC.PNG where there's a narrow strip on the south Mediterranean coast labeled Carthage? That stripe is insignificant compared to the whole of the Sahara Desert.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    381. Re:Press coverage by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      No, I mean the 300 miles deep stripe from maroco to egypt covering the northern edge of the african continent.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    382. Re:Press coverage by tbird81 · · Score: 1

      Thanks, but I'm wondering why it's funny!

    383. Re:Press coverage by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      People aren't that quick and flexible and organized. When the first crops fail there will be a dip in available food, and then panic. Half-empty supermarket shelves lead to a mad buying rush, and empty markets. That leads to riots, fire, destruction, disrupted distribution.

      I know this from experience: it happened here two years ago, and that was just from one day of rain; people went out to "stock up" for a big storm, the supermarket shelves were visibly understocked after that, so everyone rushed to the markets to buy everything else. Then, they rioted, smashed windows, tipped over shelves in aisles, and the markets had to close for a week for repairs. The surrounding neighborhoods were unaffected, so people drove out to get food.

      I always have a survival stock for several weeks. I like stews and I can them like a motherfucker, so I've got a pantry full of oxtail stew and pumpkin soup and such. Also lots of flour 'cause I make my own bread. Lots of Brita filters--a year's supply, they're like half as much if you buy 10 at once than if you buy 3 at once--so I have clean water despite municipal supply issues (high lead content). I make beer but don't drink a lot and don't like high alcohol content beers, so oddly enough I have a cellar supply of water--lower alcohol beers and cider (just apple juice + english cider yeast, something like 3% ABV).

      Obviously, I didn't notice the extremely temporary food shortage. A month or two out would be bad for me. All these "survival" people stocking food like crazy might last a year on their grain, if people don't realize they have all this food in the first week. All these people who bought land so they can have a farm think that their security force consisting of Farmer John, his wife, and some shotguns is going to protect their interests from starving rioters; won't happen.

      If the surrounding neighborhoods hadn't been unaffected (people here are uneducated and rowdy), food distribution disruption from the panic buying would have lead to wide-spread food distribution disruption. Let's say the world food supply dips because suddenly crops fail--people don't really look and say, "Oh climate change, next year I need to plant beans"; they plant wheat and the wheat fails to grow, and they scratch their heads. They do it again next year, because they're retarded (this is happening right now in Texas, but the drought is actually over so it should work; they threw seed so many times hoping for rain and no rain came). Then they go, "Uh, need a new crop."

      In the mean time, food is scarce. Not quite scarce enough that we can't ration it around, but there's a visible supply sag. The problem here is the mass of people on this planet go, "OH NO WE ALL GONNA DIE!" Then they start rioting and damaging the food distribution system. If they can get close to the farmers, they'll steal all the grain (needed to plant new grain) and slaughter the livestock for food. What now?

      The point is if things shift enough that we have to reorganize the global food production and distribution system, very bad things will happen in the process. It's doable, it'll work, but a lot of stupid shit will happen along the way and a great many people will die. With that in mind, have you noticed we're trying to stop the change rather than analyze it and adjust ahead of time to avoid such panic?

    384. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. Because, an icecap stays where you put it, consolidated, much of it pointing high into the air. If you melt all the icecaps, lets seen how much flooding that happens due to the massive rise in the water level.

      You're doing the math by weight, but it needs to be done by area. if you take a m2 of ice and put it in a swillimg pool, half of that m2 isnt in the water and therefore doesn't displace or raise the sea level. You melt that, and the water rises by the water contained in the 50cm2 that stuck out above the water, assuming that that was the amount visible above the water.

    385. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FU
      Answers like this are why no one cares -
      where do u live?
      Ask the farmers how nice it's been for them?
      or the folks running the firelines on all the land that's been scorched.
      Desert SW - had snow in mid-Spring when they NEVER get snow, except in the mountains
      West coast? - more rain than any other year in history
      Midwest/prairies? - worst drought in 100+ years
      Southern states - most damage caused by storms and tornadoes in history - heaviest rainfall in 9 states recorded
      Easter seaboard - 1st time in history that NONE of the major ski locations had opened before January 1 (usually open in November)

      More and more and more can be read - and it comes from ALL sources of news -just not those that folks like u choose to ignore or never ready....
      Please leave the country and join the ME network over in China

    386. Re:Press coverage by Medievalist · · Score: 1

      So, Medievalist, what you're saying is that technology is bad and we should return to a medieval lifestyle? I think you may have some bias here.

      No, I didn't say that, but I do have to admit I'll have a huge advantage if any of the doomsayers' predictions come true in my lifetime.

    387. Re:Press coverage by PIBM · · Score: 1

      Wow; I know that things are hard at some places, even in our country we've had unusual stuff happen. We've had our first tornado so far north ever recorded. Last year we had a record rainfall with something close to 6 inches of rain in an hour with high winds that left my basement in ruins and we were without power, phone and internet for over 4 days. It's evident that the weather is changing.

      I was merely pointing out funnily that there are some positives about some of the changes. I wish all the big countries like the USA, Russia and China would stop emitting so much pollution, but from here we have no control. The only thing 'weather related' that I will really speak out against is those proposition to throw stuff in the air to try and control the effects of what we threw there before...

      Even though some of the effects are nice, I do miss the very cold winters, when going outdoor would freeze the water vapor you were exhaling and create an ice face mask that you had to melt to remove :)

    388. Re:Press coverage by bar-agent · · Score: 1

      The rest of the world is filled with idiots, like the rest of the country, and they will screw things up so that you cannot live as you choose.

      --
      i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
    389. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A much better TL;DR is a simple quote from the very beginning of TFA:

      "Noerdlinger demonstrates that melt water from sea ice and floating ice shelves could add 2.6% more water to the ocean than the water displaced by the ice, or the equivalent of approximately 4 centimeters (1.57 inches) of sea-level rise."

      So yes, technically it's true the oceans will rise if the Arctic melts. But from a practical standpoint the argument of "the Arctic melting doesn't matter" is still quite valid, IMHO.

    390. Re:Press coverage by comnonsense · · Score: 1

      The sky is falling , the sky is falling! Americans are such sheep , no matter how much blatant fraud the politicians trying to scare us into allowing them to bankrupts us commit such as the emails in England or how many scientist say humans could not cause a big enough percentage of this so called crisis to matter and nothing they could do would change it enough to measure they are begging for their freedoms and prosperity to be surrendered to politicians. The global crisis is not the weather it is the political climate.

    391. Re:Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Antarctica has broken the record for the greatest sea ice extent ever measured at either pole.

      http://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2012/09/30/sea-ice-sets-all-time-record-high/

      NSIDC seems disinterested in their own data, choosing instead to write stories about Penguins being threatened by declining Antarctic sea ice.

      If current trends continue, the Earth will be completely covered with ice much faster than the climate models predicted.

  2. I don't believe this is happening by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Therefore it isn't happening.

    1. Re:I don't believe this is happening by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      Stick your head out the window. Feel how much hotter it is. It's happening.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    2. Re:I don't believe this is happening by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was cold outside yesterday, therefore global warming is bullshit.

    3. Re:I don't believe this is happening by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      So move!

      It was 85F in Colorado yesterday. Global warming is melting us!

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    4. Re:I don't believe this is happening by fnj · · Score: 1

      Funny, I just did that and it's noticeably cooler than it was yesterday. Does that mean it's not happening? /sarcasm

    5. Re:I don't believe this is happening by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's hard to believe that a deity that created the whole universe in 144 hours could have his plans ruined by a little melting ice. If people would just read their Bibles more, they wouldn't find so much to worry about!

    6. Re:I don't believe this is happening by fm6 · · Score: 1

      OK, double stupid points for you. First, you need to learn what sarcasm looks like.

      Second, you need to understand the science of global warming. Hot days are not evidence of anything. Global warming does not mean the whole planet is turning into Miami — we're looking at an average increase of 6 deg C over the next century. So it's not like the planet is really that much hotter overall. The danger comes not from the heat itself but from environmental changes due to this small increase.. And these are drastic.

  3. And I am willing to bet by IWantMoreSpamPlease · · Score: 0

    The US will be "punished" because of this, despite the fact the emerging 3rd world has a pass on pollution because of past environmental treaties.

    You watch, our taxes will go up again, so corporations can "clean up their act" (and pass the cost onto us)

    --
    So rise up, all ye lost ones, as one, we'll claw the clouds.
    1. Re:And I am willing to bet by Howitzer86 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If anything, I expect the third world to be punished the most. When the rising tide and drought becomes too much for them to handle without taking on debt from nations and corporations all too eager to lend, some of them could effectively return to a more occupied colony-like status.

    2. Re:And I am willing to bet by Hentes · · Score: 0

      Well they did have a much better life in the colonial times, and in fact Chinese businesses has already started recolonizing them.

    3. Re:And I am willing to bet by Stirling+Newberry · · Score: 0

      The third world emits a great deal less carbon per capita. As for being able to pass the cost on, that is what you right wingers wanted: plutocracy where coporations can buy the legislature. Stop complaining about a problem that you are an advocate for, its intellectually dishonest.

    4. Re:And I am willing to bet by Hentes · · Score: 0, Troll

      The US has been sabotaging the Kyoto and other emission controlling treaties for as long as they existed.

    5. Re:And I am willing to bet by BeansBaxter · · Score: 1

      Drought? I thought there would be more water....

  4. Nothing we can do by cod3r_ · · Score: 2, Funny

    Brace yourselves. The end is near.

  5. balance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    But at the same time Antartic sea ice is being added per http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamestaylor/2012/09/19/antarctic-sea-ice-sets-another-record/

    1. Re:balance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't the amount of Antarctic "land" ice be more important in this context?

    2. Re:balance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, you'd be ok with one of your balls shrinking and the other one swelling, as long as mass balance was preserved? Just want to be clear on what you're getting at.

    3. Re:balance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As about twenty other people have already pointed out, this sea ice is "being added" by melting off the continental glaciers. The total mass of ice on Antarctica is steadily shrinking. Sure, as it flows into the ocean it'll spread out along the surface and its "extents" become larger. Then, during the southern summer it melts because it's a couple of meters thick instead of a kilometer.

    4. Re:balance? by hawkfish · · Score: 1

      See this explanation: above

      (I didn't realise that Forbes was considered a reliable source of climate data. In fact, after reading some of their business reporting, I'm not sure what they can be considered a reliable source of...)

      --
      You will not drink with us, but you would taste our steel? - Walter Matthau, The Pirates
    5. Re:balance? by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      It's not really accurate to say that Antarctic sea ice is being added. This is because the Antarctic sea ice melts (nearly) completely every year and reforms the following winter. There is no multi-year ice in the Antarctic like there is in the Arctic. I explained why the Antarctic sea ice is increasing here.

    6. Re:balance? by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      But at the same time, you're quoting a forbes article written by someone who doesn't have a clue about climate, let alone specialization in arctic or antarctic climates.

      This isn't a game where one ice cap can balance out the other. They're governed by different dynamics and have radically different impacts. THere are number of papers addressing both phenomena. I suggest you start there.

      --
      ~X~
    7. Re:balance? by buglista · · Score: 1

      The Arctic has lost around 3x what the Antarctic has gained - so the answer to your question is "no", no balance. http://www.skepticalscience.com/arctic-antarctic-sea-ice.htm

  6. Please Be Quiet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now, if by "not covering" you mean "aren't running around like Chicken Little alarmists screaming 'WE'RE ALL GONNA DIE!'" then that's true, yes.

    Do you know what a straw man is? Did you read the Rolling Stone piece? Can you point out where he said that?

    But in a world with much more present and pressing issues like war, hunger, unemployment, recession, etc

    Buddy, if you think we've got hunger now ... just wait until we can't ship enough alfalfa, hay and ruffage to Texas for their cattle. You like that burger? You better hope Texas and Oklahoma aren't aflame again next year.

    It's more the long-term story that sort of simmers in the background.

    That's bullshit. That mentality leads to apathy and people never address it. We've tried to hold summits and make this a clear and present issue but people like you just want to put it on the back burner until we absolutely have to address it. And for a lot of people, they aren't going to notice it until it's in the form of refugees. It's a gradual problem. CFCs made headlines but now CO2 consumption can't? I don't get it ...

    1. Re:Please Be Quiet by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There will be a demonstration of the effects of global warming on food supplies next year. Be sure to watch.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:Please Be Quiet by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      What's funny is if the entire north pole melted, it wouldn't affect sea levels in the least. Not one millimeter. Greenland, on the other hand, would bring the sea level up about 20 feet or so.

      There's the concern for the ocean temperature increasing, causing expansion and making water more voluminous and thus causing the same amount of water (mass) to rise; but I don't believe it. The south pole is never going to melt--it simply cannot. It never comes above -37C down there; if it gets hot enough to melt, the rest of the earth is molten slag and we don't really care much about rising sea levels. However, there will always be a free flow water border against antarctic ice. This causes antarctic ice to melt. Since the whole ice cap can't and won't melt, this melting simply draws heat away--80 times as much heat as a 1 degree difference in the same mass of water, in fact, plus the temperature of ice (so -37C would draw 37 degrees PLUS 80 degrees = 117 degrees gram for gram from water). The ice at the border of these temperature zones should be warmed to about 0C, so talk about 80 times the mass equivalence of 0C water.

      In short, antarctica will keep the oceans cool as long as ocean water circulates past antarctica.

      So the solution is to desalinate water in antarctica and dump it on the ice cap. We need to move basically the mass of the ice on Greenland as it melts--not insubstantial. Note that the new ice must be stored above sea level, because bobbing in the sea it will be expanded and will displace a large mass of water. Such ice, once melted, takes up less space and so the part above the water doesn't become a rise in sea level. Of course, while this means ice bergs and ice caps don't raise sea levels when they melt, dropping additional such ice into the water DOES raise sea levels, hence why it must be sequestered above sea level.

      Ham?

    3. Re:Please Be Quiet by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      You know we do raise cattle in the East as well right?

      While I would love to fix global warming, a more pragmatic approach maybe the only option. Stop raising cattle in the southwest, and as the temperatures allow move that activity north. Even invading Canada is probably easier than getting our government to regulate CO2.

    4. Re:Please Be Quiet by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Why even desalinate it?

      At -37C salt water freezes just as well as fresh.

    5. Re:Please Be Quiet by WillAdams · · Score: 2

      Already started if one tracks prices and supply closely.

      I really like quinoa, but have stopped purchasing it since it has to be imported from so far away and the exportation from the countries which raise it has led to dramatic price increases there.

      --
      Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
    6. Re:Please Be Quiet by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      The water frozen in Greenland is fresh water. I'm just being consistent.

    7. Re:Please Be Quiet by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      Could we not just ignore that though and save a ton of money?

    8. Re:Please Be Quiet by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Can it not be grown in the US?
      I like it as well and it does seem to come primarily from South America.

    9. Re:Please Be Quiet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sounds clever, but remember that Antarctic ice doesn't have to *melt* to be a problem. It just has to fall into the water. Glacial movement is enough for that. Adding extra weight to the glaciers won't make them move *slower*.

    10. Re:Please Be Quiet by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Well, it's going to raise the sea level by 20 feet. 2/3 of the earth's surface is covered with water, by 20 feet. Honestly, it's diameter of the earth at sea level, area of a sphere of diameter plus 40 feet minus the current diameter, that's the volume of water added. That's a lot of water. There's also quite a lot in the ocean though ... I don't know the impact on salinity. It may be negligible. On the other hand, stuff on the surface of an ice cap may prefer non-salty ice.

    11. Re:Please Be Quiet by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Because all the stupid government programs to turn all our dent corn into inefficient alcohol, and the fed printing US money like crazy, those things have nothing to do with food price inflation?

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    12. Re:Please Be Quiet by GigsVT · · Score: 3, Informative

      The US mainly grows corn and soy because the government protects those industries from ever having to retool for more viable crops.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    13. Re:Please Be Quiet by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Which one changed in time to effect next year's food supplies: Biofuel production and the US financial situation, or the amount of rainfall over the US' farmland this year?

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    14. Re:Please Be Quiet by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      I was thinking brined penguin could become a new delicacy. Since we will be making them extinct it also has limited availability going for it.

    15. Re:Please Be Quiet by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Our corrupt monetary system has a much bigger effect on food supplies and prices than any climatological 'occurrence', other than the planet splitting apart, ever could. We throw away more than we consume. All of our present difficulties are man made, politically and economically motivated for personal advantage. All technical issues were resolved during WW2. We can drop a pallet of any thing, any time, anywhere, with hardly more than 24 hours notice.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    16. Re:Please Be Quiet by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      You think that pallet-dropping is cheap, or is expensive due to a corrupt monetary system? You think food gets thrown away near where it's needed?

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    17. Re:Please Be Quiet by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      You think food gets thrown away near where it's needed?

      Yes, most definitely

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    18. Re:Please Be Quiet by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Because at o degree it will stay melted almost the entire year?
      I'm not sure how cold you think it gets in the antarctic. HInt: Wind Chill won't matter.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    19. Re:Please Be Quiet by rossdee · · Score: 1

      "Do you know what a straw man is?"

      Yeah, Its something farmers put out in the fields to scare birds at harvest time. They seem to be common household ornaments in october for some reason.

    20. Re:Please Be Quiet by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      All of the above?

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  7. Antarctic Ice Record by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but what about this?:

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamestaylor/2012/09/19/antarctic-sea-ice-sets-another-record/

    Gaining on one end and losing on the other . . . . .

    1. Re:Antarctic Ice Record by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That doesn't count, you racist!

      *waves hankie*

    2. Re:Antarctic Ice Record by Cimexus · · Score: 1

      It's sea ice. Where do you think that sea ice came from?

      That'd mostly be from the ice cap over Antarctica itself (i.e. stuff that's been locked up over ~land~ for the last however many million years). Warmer air temps lead to more of it breaking off into the sea. Where it will melt in the upcoming southern summer.

      Increased sea ice around Antarctica is a sign of increased loss of the Antarctic ice cap itself. It's a sign of 'loss', not a gain at all.

  8. This is good by synapse7 · · Score: 1

    This should raise the low water levels around lake Michigan and I'm sure there won't be any consequences.

  9. Fabulous by ledow · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm assuming he's a guy with good credentials, held in high-regard, data and conclusions backed up by peer-review, etc.

    Great.

    So what do we do? Because we haven't been able to answer that question for decades and now we NEED to know the answer before we continue, if that's the case.

    As fabulous as all this detective work is, what are we supposed to do about it and what effect does that work have? If it means we have to forgo electricity (say), then maybe we're better off just letting the climate rise and the icecaps melt (for instance). Maybe not. Who knows?

    Because for DECADES people have been shouting doom with no reasonable, practical explanation for it, solution of it, or analysis of the impact of said solutions.

    Let's work from the assumption that I believe you and you're 100% correct. What do we do now?

    1. Re:Fabulous by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Switch to nuclear power + renewables and electric cars.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:Fabulous by ledow · · Score: 1

      Great. Where are you going to get enough oil and metal to do that on any significantly achievable timescale?

    3. Re:Fabulous by i+kan+reed · · Score: 4, Informative

      Build your own solution there are more than enough options with known and reasonable impacts on global GDP and quality of life. The real problem has been purely political for at least a decade.

      A site with a list of wedges

    4. Re:Fabulous by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      The limit on building nuke plants is not oil nor metal, it is the limited amount of foundries that can cast such large components.

      If we had the will, we would find the way.

    5. Re:Fabulous by ledow · · Score: 1

      Nice post.

      Pick any three. Calculate the impact. Is that better or worse than (potentially, possibly, a while from now) seas rising slightly?

      Because things like vehicle replacement and stopping cutting down trees have huge, global impacts on lots of things (not least, trying to convince people to throw away their old car and buy a new, less-efficient one).

      And you can't just do this a little at a time, we're talking international co-operation. And thus international-impact. And then you better hope that you were right in what was causing the problem and that is wasn't just a natural cycle that a) gets worse, b) goes back to normal without us doing anything anyway.

      This is the point - we can all posit crazy ideas, but without some sort of plan of where we can go and what the impact of going there is, it's all pie-in-the-sky stuff (like replacing coal with photo-voltaics, for example, which is laughable).

    6. Re:Fabulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do what you want. I'm taking my foil hat and moving to Mars.

      See ya!

    7. Re:Fabulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      He does make a strong point of who the enemy is....the hydocarbon industry. He also thinks that the people behind this industry are too rich and powerful to fight. So what can be done short of fitting people like the Koch's with bullets in the head? That's the way the masses rose up against tyranny in societies ruled by kings and czars. Today we have ballot boxes, if they are only not rigged.

    8. Re:Fabulous by i+kan+reed · · Score: 2

      How about pick 3, is that worse than 5 more years of droughts like this one? Allowing global warming to continue unabated has economic costs. You know, those things everyone starts raging about when we mention cap and trade, or anything of the like.

    9. Re:Fabulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If each family had to generate all their own power, solar and wind wouldn't be so laughable. A gas generator would cost too much in fuel, plus needs daily refilling, natural gas generators would be a popular option. They cost a lot though and require monthly fees for the amount of gas. And you wouldn't want to be neighbors with someone with a coal boiler.

      And yes, I went from 90% coal to 90% solar at my house for $10,000 (before tax rebate). If you don't use too much power for heat/AC it can be done. $20k would be more typical for a family though.

    10. Re:Fabulous by drooling-dog · · Score: 1

      Actually, as someone who believes we may indeed have a serious problem here, I find your attitude refreshing. Up to now the conservative approach - driven by overt PR efforts by the fossil carbon industry - has been to derail the discussion through deliberate misinformation and ad hominem attacks on climate scientists. The question of whether we can do anything about it - and if so, what - is a real step forward because now we can talk about concrete policy options. Industry money will speak loudly in that debate as well, but at least we'll be having it.

    11. Re:Fabulous by pla · · Score: 2

      Because for DECADES people have been shouting doom with no reasonable, practical explanation for it, solution of it, or analysis of the impact of said solutions.

      And for DECADES, we've heard the answer, over and over, from a variety of groups generally interested in the environment - "Reduce, Reuse, Recycle".

      Now just extend that to the concept of carbon emissions, and you have your answer. Zero landfill, zero emissions.

      The bigger problem, which that doesn't address - We also need zero population growth. No amount of per-person conservation can make up for the number of people increasing without limit. Fortunately, rising sea levels and global warming will help with that, by killing off a good many of us (no, not drowning - Mosquitoes or viral pandemics, most likely).

    12. Re:Fabulous by Layzej · · Score: 1

      I favour a revenue neutral carbon tax. It is bizarre that we tax income (something we should want to encourage) but don't tax things like carbon that we want to discourage. A revenue neutral carbon tax would address this by reducing income tax. We could then let the market solve problems like which alternative energy source should be used.

    13. Re:Fabulous by Hatta · · Score: 3, Informative

      500ppm is 150ppm too high. And we don't even have the political will to do 500.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    14. Re:Fabulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell are you talking about?!? The limit on building nuke plants isn't oil, or metal, or foundries, since the latter could be built in itself in under a year with enough backing.

      The limit on building nuke plants is the nuclear boogeyman, and good luck changing THAT point of view to the vast, vast majority of people that think nuclear plants are the reincarnation of Satan. Hell, they even associate the idea of those molten salt plants with the nuclear boogeyman, despite the absolute absence of radioactivity.

      Maybe we need to remove the word "plant" as well. Just call it "salty energy maker" and see if you get anywhere. No wait, probably avoid the word 'energy' too, since any new type of energy is apparently bad. Run with "Salt juice", and tell people it will make their lives better. The idiot health nuts will probably jump on board with that name at least.

    15. Re:Fabulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The scale of nuclear reactors is pretty much dictated by NRC regs. Above a critic mass, all additional volume and mass are required to meet the economies of scale necessary to turn a profit wih mandates such a the ability to a plane crash. Provided with enough natural uranium and magnox alloy, I could build a reactor using the pressure of the ocean to maintain the carbon dioxide in a supercritical state. This could be practically done using a water well in the sierra nevadas and a dumptruck of baking soda. The entire project could be done by one or two people financed on minimum wage, so I don't have much sympathy for the "too hard and expensive" argument

    16. Re:Fabulous by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      What do we do now?

      1. Third world population control. No one emits less carbon dioxide than people that don't exist. Most third world women have more children than they want, but don't have access to contraceptives. Give them the contraceptives. Illiterate women in Sierra Leone have an average of five children. Literate women in Sierra Leone have an average of three. Basic education for third world girls has a big impact on population growth.

      2. Scientific research. We need cost effective alternative energy. Most of the world is not in a position to subsidize AE, so it must make economic as well as environmental sense.

      3. Implement other "no regrets" policies. If global warming turns out to be wrong, will we be sorry that we reduced third world populations, or developed cost effective solar panels? Of course not, because those things make sense for other reasons as well. Similarly, if we reduce the amount of oil we buy from Russia, Venezuela and Iran, we are not going to regret it, because it is something we should be doing anyway for national security reasons. Stricter building codes that require better insulation and more efficient lighting also make sense because their ROI is far higher than average.

    17. Re:Fabulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dafuq? I went browsing for this stabilization wedge thingy and they are espousing increasing ethanol production.

      I was under the impression this was generally not such a great idea. Does anyone have any sources with info including economic analysis on run-on effects (as much as they can be predicted/analysed from past instances) like amount of fuel spent on moving more crops due to prices going up (and total energy use incl fertilizers/farm machinery/processing etc) that shows crop ethanol being a net win?

      If not, should I put my conspiracist hat on (it is sponsored by BP who would have a financial incentive for encouraging liquid hydrocarbon fuels).

    18. Re:Fabulous by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      The US will never build another nuclear plant, at least not until the government changes quite a bit and stifles the public outcry that would come. People are still saying "Three Mile Island" as a warning against nuclear energy. Ask one of these people how many died because of Three Mile Island and the answer will be thousands. In fact, nobody died.

      The fact that people are allowed to bring incorrect statements like this to public comment sessions about building new nuclear plants insures that none will be built in the US ever again.

    19. Re:Fabulous by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      We are actually already building more units right now.

    20. Re:Fabulous by fnj · · Score: 1

      But the limit on RUNNING nuke plants is the amount of uranium we can mine, refine and process, and the amount of plutonium we can make from uranium. Unless and until you perfect designs that leverage use of thorium to reduce (not eliminate) the amount of uranium required.

    21. Re:Fabulous by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Because for DECADES people have been shouting doom with no reasonable, practical explanation for it, solution of it, or analysis of the impact of said solutions.

      They've been propounding both explanations and solutions for decades now. The explanations have not changed.

      The solutions, however, have gotten harder, since the problem was allowed to get worse. Various solutions are still on the table: subsidizing non-greenhouse fuel sources, using a Pigovian tax to realize the externalities of carbon, setting higher fuel standards (and other efficiency standards, such as on home appliances), improving public transportation, encouraging telecommuting, encouraging a shift away from meat production, etc etc etc etc.

      These are less effective than they might have been a couple of decades ago, and we'll also have to budget for coping measures: sea walls, moving farms, disaster relief (including relocating some residents), etc.

      This has all been known for quite some time, and was widely said and widely ignored. That is the reason why you heard it as shouting, but it shouldn't have come to shouting. We should have acknowledged the science, and objectively investigated the economics, 22 years ago at the first IPCC report. What's done is done, and won't be changed, but I'd encourage you to realize that the shouting was shouting not because they weren't rational, but because people weren't listening to the rational arguments.

    22. Re:Fabulous by rastoboy29 · · Score: 1

      Well, in the past there wasn't something happening like an ice cap melting.

      Also, maybe the thing to do is figure out wtf to do.  First you have to admit you have a problem....

    23. Re:Fabulous by dodobh · · Score: 1

      People in third world countries emit far less CO2 per capita than people in the developed world. While limiting population growth is important, you won't achieve useful reductions by limiting growth in that part of the world. You will achieve different useful targets.

      --
      I can throw myself at the ground, and miss.
    24. Re:Fabulous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fortunately, rising sea levels and global warming will help with that, by killing off a good many of us (no, not drowning - Mosquitoes or viral pandemics, most likely).

      False. Increased death rates (up to any levels modern humans are likely to encounter) increase population growth

  10. huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamestaylor/2012/09/19/antarctic-sea-ice-sets-another-record/

  11. Can we mod a story "flamebait"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Because that's all these stories ever do is start flame wars. Can we please stick to technical stories, news for nerds, etc.?

    This shit is like a religion to you people, you fucking nutjobs on both sides need to go find somewhere else to discuss your fundamentalism, because I'm damn sick of hearin you all bellyache about it.

  12. The real emergency is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does anybody watch Real Time with Bill Maher? Just about every republican on the panel has said, with a straight face, that there is no sufficient evidence for global warming being real and/or being man made. That's the real emergency, the fact that we have a bunch of people who outright ignore science. And, it's not like I'm talking about some random Joe off of the street. These are the people that have influence in this country.

    1. Re:The real emergency is... by Rosy+At+Random · · Score: 5, Funny

      Clearly the ice has a liberal agenda.

      --
      Would you like a slice of toast?
    2. Re:The real emergency is... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 5, Funny

      If this is legitimate global warming, the planet has ways of shutting the whole thing down, no need to worry.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    3. Re:The real emergency is... by NatasRevol · · Score: 0

      What's the saying?

      Life has a liberal bias?

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    4. Re:The real emergency is... by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      So we just hope that 'shutting the whole thing down' happens before our agricultural regions dry up?

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    5. Re:The real emergency is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is the way it shuts the whole thing down! We are modifying our environment in a way that it will not be able to provide food for the number of people we have. So the number of people will correct downward.

    6. Re:The real emergency is... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 3, Funny

      Look, global warming happens. You just have to prepare for it like you would for getting a flat tire.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    7. Re:The real emergency is... by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      Ha, that's funny.

      I've got my FixItFlat ready to go! Where to I put it into the environment? Oh....

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    8. Re:The real emergency is... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2
      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    9. Re:The real emergency is... by Rosy+At+Random · · Score: 1

      It's just not playing fair when you have reality on your side. Ringers like that just aren't sportsmanlike.

      --
      Would you like a slice of toast?
    10. Re:The real emergency is... by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      Apparently. Once I heard how nutter Akin (and others!) must be to openly say something like that, I tune them out. I can only imagine what they say behind closed doors.

      I'm thinking the Australians have more insight than most Americans.

      http://bigstory.ap.org/article/australian-minister-warns-republican-crazies

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    11. Re:The real emergency is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that there has been a lot of bullshit propaganda. Yes the climate is changing but the science is not clear about how much of this is manmade. CO2 isn't a problem yet is has been propagated as the big evil poison that it isn't. History shows that when temperatures rise, CO2 levels follow, NOT the other way around. Also plants love CO2, they will grow faster and bigger with more CO2, all research shows that and every potgrower in the world can tell you this. You want to solve vanishing rainforests? Bring on the CO2!

      The problem with the climate is for the majority that it has been repackaged and sold by an elite group of bankers who saw an opportunity to introduce a global tax that won't do anything for the climate at all.

    12. Re:The real emergency is... by gman003 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Citation:
      "Now, I know there are some polls out there saying this man has a 32 percent approval rating. But guys like us, we don't pay attention to the polls. We know that polls are just a collection of statistics that reflect what people are thinking in reality. And reality has a well-known liberal bias."

      Colbert, Stephen. 2006 White House Correspondents' Association Dinner (speech, 2006).

    13. Re:The real emergency is... by drooling-dog · · Score: 1

      They don't see "sufficient evidence" because they don't care about evidence and wouldn't recognize it if they fell face-first into it. It's not because they're stupid or even ignorant (at least at the top; they do count on and exploit the ignorance of the public). The job that they're paid to do is to protect the short-term interests of the fossil fuel industry, which has a vital interest in fending off any and all limitations to the amount of CO2 we pump into the atmosphere. The objective is to delay any meaningful response to the problem by 15 or 20 years, and they have done that quite successfully.

    14. Re:The real emergency is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to worry about AGW, but then Obama told me I didn't build that. So, you know, not my problem.

    15. Re:The real emergency is... by micahraleigh · · Score: 0

      The folks aren't going to believe anything the scientists say after the East Anglia debacle.

      I know I don't.

    16. Re:The real emergency is... by fnj · · Score: 1

      Does anybody watch Real Time with Bill Maher?

      Not I. I have better things to do with my time than watch the histrionics of an evil, hate-filled, unobjective, supercilious, stupid son of a bitch.

    17. Re:The real emergency is... by Rhacman · · Score: 1

      Aww man, we're screwed! We all know that Mother Earth was just asking for it! There was a time when she'd kill a man for so much as trying to make a move on her, but these days it seems like she'll let damn near anyone crest her ample peaks or explore her deepest crevasse!

      --
      Account -> Discussions -> Disable Sigs
    18. Re:The real emergency is... by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Not funny in this case, since the planet does have ways of eliminating the source of global warming — us.

    19. Re:The real emergency is... by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      That's a pretty well crafted straw-man argument. You didn't quote anybody nor did you name any names but you managed to throw a whole political party under the bus without actually quoting and then refuting a single thing they said. You Sir or Madam win an Internet!

    20. Re:The real emergency is... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Yes the climate is changing but the science is not clear about how much of this is manmade.

      Yes, it is a bit fuzzy. Current estimates are that 80-120% of the warming is due to human contributions.

  13. Planetary Emergency?! by Bugler412 · · Score: 1

    Holy hyperbole batman!

    1. Re:Planetary Emergency?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Octonauts, sound the OctoAlert!

    2. Re:Planetary Emergency?! by fustakrakich · · Score: 0

      We need these crises in order to pass more patriot acts and open more Guantanamo like prisons. Keep the people too scared to revolt.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  14. Looking out the window? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 0

    I here that New York City is getting tornadoes with increasing frequency. I doubt that when New Yorkers look out the window, they fail to notice such a change in the weather patterns...

    --
    Palm trees and 8
    1. Re:Looking out the window? by Xentor · · Score: 0

      When we look out the window, we see one of three things, depending on living situation:

      1) An air shaft
      2) Other buildings, which block our view of such interesting phenomena
      3) A beautiful skyline... Except the people that see this are too rich to care.

      So yes, we fail to notice...

      Then it shows up on TV, and since we're busy doing ten things at once, we think it's just a commercial or a movie trailer, and ignore it. Either that, or we're so bored that we think, "Hey, that'll liven things up a bit!"

      (I am a New Yorker, but I'm mostly joking about most of the above)

      --
      "The amount of intelligence on this planet is a constant. The population is growing." -Cole's Axiom
    2. Re:Looking out the window? by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      Have you lived in New York? Mostly when you look out of a window you see a dirty brick wall. If you're lucky is has no grafitti.

      --
      No sig today...
  15. The importan question is not being asked.... by madhatter256 · · Score: 1, Informative

    Is this man made or part of a natural cycle?

    Is 30 years enough to make a conclusion? Or should we wait another 50 to 100 years to see if humankind has contributed to this?

    Also, what about Russia's thousands of leaky natural gas pipelines (and possibly more that have been undocumented) that reportedly dump 8 times more natural gas into the atmosphere per year than the amount of oil Deep water horizon' well had dumped in 2010???

    Last I checked methane is more potent greenhouse gas than CO2 (which we humans do put out more) and don't forget the numerous natural emissions of CH4 into the atmosphere.

    We as humans know way too little. It's not one thing thats causing this, which is what is being fed to us by the Media. It is many other things. From a mathematical perspective... we only have one equation, but too many variables.

    --
    Previewing comments are for sissies!
    1. Re:The importan question is not being asked.... by Stirling+Newberry · · Score: 2

      What I want to know is how many time shares you have planned in the future Yukon Riveria.

    2. Re:The importan question is not being asked.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well I for one am looking forward to my house being only 20 minutes from the coastline rather than the 2 hours it is now!

    3. Re:The importan question is not being asked.... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Russia wants global warming. You think I'm joking, but you've never been to St Petersburg in December. Really. You can tell them it's risky but they get a wild happy look on their face and you know they think it's worth the risk. Remember these are the guys who play Russian Roulette.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    4. Re:The importan question is not being asked.... by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      Right, so the logical answer to an unknown which could potentially destroy us as a civilization is to sit back and watch until we know for certain?

      It's not like the actions we can undertake to reduce the danger are going to sabotage the worldwide economy or anything. In fact, it'd probably help with a heap of other issues like general pollution, acid rains, deforestation, dependency on a rapidly diminishing non-renewable resource, etc.

      But yeah, let's just wait another century, shovel the problems to our children and die happy that we didn't have to throw away our second Hummer we're only using to go to the mall.

    5. Re:The importan question is not being asked.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or should we wait another 50 to 100 years to see if humankind has contributed to this?

      By then the conveyor belt, (e.g. Gulf Stream, etc.), will have altered. Then you'll see some dramatic and sudden climatic changes.

    6. Re:The importan question is not being asked.... by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Where do you get that the "man made" question is not being asked? It's at the center of every discussion I've heard on the subject. The issues you raise make no sense outside of the Denier echo chamber.

    7. Re:The importan question is not being asked.... by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      http://www.skepticalscience.com/global-warming-natural-cycle.htm

  16. What an overreaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has everybody forgotten the millions of fish frozen in South American rivers a year or two ago, and the snow load that broke a bunch of buildings in Australia? It's the weather, the weather varies, and this is what that looks like. The Arctic ice will be back and forth, as always.

  17. The Planet is fine by Stirling+Newberry · · Score: 5, Funny

    many of us dependent on a rather thin surface of the hydrosphere, however, are not going to like what happens next.

    1. Re:The Planet is fine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not see what the big deal is, this melting is not as bad as it was 10,000 years ago. Ice was 5000 feet thick over most of the northern continents.

  18. ZOMG, but The Rolling Stone says its true by alen · · Score: 0

    i mean we never had any fires before this year. or heavy rain, or powerful hurricanes. until this year it was sunny and 73 degrees everywhere all the time

    in the 80's the Mississippi flooded almost every year.
    we had wildfires all the time because they are caused by poor forest management, not global warming. the Native Americans learned long ago you have to set small fires so that large ones can be avoided. enviro-crazies hate this and its illegal to do controlled burns in forests in most places. if you don't do controlled fires then the supply of fuel for large fires builds up and lighting or anything else will cause a huge fire

    1. Re:ZOMG, but The Rolling Stone says its true by i+kan+reed · · Score: 0

      Yep, nothing about the words "record" breaking made it over and over in that headline. Nope, other people are the ones using anecdotal evidence rather than hard data. Address the points actually made, for once.

    2. Re:ZOMG, but The Rolling Stone says its true by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2

      When was the last time tornadoes were a seasonal occurrence in New York City?

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    3. Re:ZOMG, but The Rolling Stone says its true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you think tornadoes in NYC is come recent occurrence?

      http://www.tornadohistoryproject.com/tornado/New_York/map

    4. Re:ZOMG, but The Rolling Stone says its true by Ben4jammin · · Score: 2

      Funny you should mention the 80s. My grandfather told me that there is a 30 year drought cycle. It is here now. It was here in the 80s when my uncle went broke trying to be a farmer, and according to my granfather they slept outside during the 50s because it was too damn hot to sleep in the house. That said, I don't think this possible drought cycle explains it all. I have no idea how much is natural and how much is man made.

      As far as the article goes, the mention of Ky (where I live) and the current corn crops is accurate. Farms that usually get around 130 bushels/acre this year are producing about 30. Many corn crops aren't even being harvested because it is not worth it. The stalks can't even be used for feedstock for cows and chickens. Soybeans have been hurt, too, just not as bad as corn.

    5. Re:ZOMG, but The Rolling Stone says its true by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      i mean we never had any fires before this year

      We never had half as many acres burn as happened this year. No heavy rain where I'm at, in fact it's the worst drought in half a century. This was Illinois' hotest July on record. This has been a mild hurricane season -- but man, there sure were a lot of tornados down south this year.

      the Native Americans learned long ago you have to set small fires so that large ones can be avoided.

      No. They set fires to catch game; they set teh fires for a cheap meal.

      illegal to do controlled burns in forests in most places

      That's because it's easier to set the whole damned state on fire with a "controlled" burn than it is to control a burn.

      BTW and OT, I see you refuse to use standard conventions, like starting sentences with a capital. You must be a Microsoft fan, following your own "standards" like they do. Here's a hint, son: it doesn't make you look cool, it makes you look incredibly stupid. Of course, it doesn't nake you look as stupid as the comment itself did.

    6. Re:ZOMG, but The Rolling Stone says its true by catprog · · Score: 1

      25 to -5

        0 is drought.

      now take 2 off every 30 years

      Their will be a drought every 30 years. It will just last longer each time,

      --
      My Transformation Website
      Kindle Books http://www.catprog.org/rev
      Interactive CYOA http://www.catprog.org/st
  19. OMG All time low!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Drawing on new data released Wednesday by the National Snow and Ice Data Center that the Arctic ice pack has melted to an all time low within the satellite record"

    Reliable satellite data didn't start until late 1978 so proclaiming doom and gloom for the planet, based on 34 years of records, is asinine. When you're dealing with the global climate that is less than the blink of an eye.

  20. Too much politics. by readin · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "So, not sure why your mainstream press isn't covering this story?"

    I think two of the primary reasons are Al Gore and Michael Moore. A losing presidential candidate and a filmaker famous for leftist hatchet jobs took the lead role in publicizing global warming. That made at least half the population of America immediately suspicious or simply unwilling to listen. Then the methods that were used - e.g. Al Gore famously declaring the debate over before most people had even started paying attention - just made things worse. The trend continues to this day when it seems that attempts at meaningful debate are shouted down usually by people claiming AGW is real.

    In my personal experience I tried reading some AGW pages on Wikipedia because I wanted to learn more and get a better idea of whether AGW is real (it certainly seems plausible). I found a few minor mistakes that I attempted to correct. Instead of reasoned debate or explanations I mainly encountered vitriol and ridicule. Based on what I read, I would think AGW is definitely real, but based on the attitudes of the people editing the Wikipedia page I have to question whether the article I read is sufficiently unbiased to be useful.

    There are a lot of people for whom, unfortunately, the decision has largely been made largely by prejudices based in politics - I'm pretty sure this applies to both sides. Al Gore and Michael Moore created that situation. However I'm sure there are a lot of people who are still open-minded but who feel they can't get good trustworthy information because the debate (or lack thereof) became so politicized.

    --
    I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    1. Re:Too much politics. by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Al Gore deserves a lot of the blame but why Michael Moore? I'm not aware of him publicizing global warming at all.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:Too much politics. by readin · · Score: 1

      You're right, my bad. I thought Michael Moore produced "An Inconvenient Truth".

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    3. Re:Too much politics. by readin · · Score: 2, Informative

      CORRECTION: GameboyRMH made me realize it wasn't Michael Moore who produced "An Inconvenient Truth". I'm sorry for including him in my post above.

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    4. Re:Too much politics. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Based on what I read, I would think AGW is definitely real,

      AGW is real. There is no question that adding CO2 to the environment will cause some warming. This is based on evidence that we've known about going back 100 years.

      The real question of AGW is how much? If we double CO2, how much warming will we get? The answer is, from CO2 alone, we'll get between .7C and 1.3C degrees of warming. Some scientists have suggested that there are some positive feedbacks that will cause the temperature to increase even more, even up to 7 or 8 degrees. The science that supports these high numbers is not anything close to solid.

      On top of that we have Hansen, who predicts that if the CO2 levels get above 400, we will have runaway warming that we can do nothing about, and will mortally threaten civilization. To be safe, we should reduce CO2 levels to 350, but that's not going to happen.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:Too much politics. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In defense of Al Gore, when he said the debate was over, among the scientists the debate was over. The consensus among those who study the field had been reached. Just because ignorant politicians decided it was a great issue to manipulate people with doesn't change that.

  21. Some things I know - or have come to understand by gr8_phk · · Score: 0, Troll

    1) We don't really have data over a very long time.
    2) Just last week I read that climate models had been using positive feedback to predict moisture (rain and drought) where in fact negative would be more accurate.
    3) We know air traffic has an immediate affect on weather but nobody talks about that. (including temperature variations)
    4) We are in an inter-glacial period and no one knows exactly how far the ice is supposed to recede.
    5) Had CO levels not been elevated by our actions, plant life would soon die - it's been decreasing for millions of years.
    6) CO2 helps plants grow. Which will also take it out of the atmosphere.
    7) Coal is essentially compressed biomass. Burning it will put it back in the biosphere where it was historically. (not true of oil).
    8) The prehistoric record shows significant vegetation (rainforest?) at higher latitudes - like Montana.
    9) There is evidence that the northwest passage has been clear at some points in the last 1000 years. So this may not be new.
    10) Alarmist articles bring eyeballs and ad-click revenue.

    Besides, last winter was mild in Michigan, and I liked it that way. OTOH, I predict a much colder one this year.

    1. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by ledow · · Score: 0

      We can't explain how an atom works, only what we can observe.

      We can't predict weather without more than handful of days and still not with any accuracy (tell me what temperature it will be to the nearest degree a fortnight Tuesday).

      To then suggest we actually have a clue what's going on even on the surface of a 6x10^24 kg mass of crap and that we're responsible for some quite minor change (if it was major, we'd be dead already, even a handful of degrees could be major) is pretty far-fetched for even the best scientists and climate models.

      Sure, science can tell you that a black hole will suck up a neighbour with X km of itself because it's close enough and has enough gravity, but it can't describe how it's going to happen in any detail. What we deal with in our climate is trying to extrapolate accurate records of fine detail from a huge system that we have no idea of, no "plan" of the end-result, no rough approximation of prior years and so little previous accurate data that it's laughable.

      Unfortunately, some people then want to use this to forward their private agendas NO MATTER the impact on us by either a) the climate or b) our solution to fix the climate (which would be equally as drastic, if not worse).

    2. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by Captain+Hook · · Score: 1

      Wow, just wow.

      --
      These comments are my personal opinions and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the other voices in my head.
    3. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Changing the surface temperature of a 6x10&^24kg mass of crap even a few degrees is quite a major undertaking. And if we're continuing to do the behavior that has led to a few degrees temperature change that will have dramatic affects to the biosystem. And we have no idea how long it will take to 'auto-correct' even if we stopped entirely. You're right that there's no sense in running around panicking like a crazy person but the evidence seems to point to humans causing these things and it's something we should work on. Even without 'climate change' a world where we aren't dealing with the other numerous downsides of coal and oil sounds quite good. I mean what if we stopped being reliant on Saudi oil and it turned out 'climate change' was total bupkis? It would still be AWESOME. So stop bickering about the minute details of one of the NUMEROUS reasons why we should get off coal and oil and get on board with some of the solutions.

    4. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by UdoKeir · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yet not a one climate model (to my knowledge) takes into account the biggest heat source and the biggest driver of that heat source.

      https://www.google.com/search?q=climate+change+sun+spots

      First hit is:

      http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=sun-spots-and-climate-change

      most up-to-date climate models—including those used by the United Nations’ prestigious Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)—incorporate the effects of the sun’s variable degree of brightness in their overall calculations.

      This wasn't difficult. Are you being willfully ignorant?

    5. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by barakn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The "we can't predict weather with any accuracy and predicting climate is going to be even harder" argument is the crappiest of crappy arguments. Consider a toss of a fair coin. Toss it once and I have a 50% chance of calling it incorrectly. Toss it 1000 times and my guess that it came up heads 50% of the time will come quite close to the actual percentage of heads.

      --
      "I'm so moist I'm sticking to the leather." -Kermit the Frog on The Late Late Show
    6. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by Layzej · · Score: 1

      2) Just last week I read that climate models had been using positive feedback to predict moisture (rain and drought) where in fact negative would be more accurate.

      Moisture is a much more powerful greenhouse gas than carbon. A hotter climate is able to hold more moisture. In fact, atmospheric moisture has increased by about 4% over the last 40 years. This is why it is a positive feedback - and a powerful one at that.

      4) We are in an inter-glacial period and no one knows exactly how far the ice is supposed to recede.

      We have been at the hight of an interglacial for the last 10,000 years. Temperatures have been relatively stable over than time, and should be slowly dropping as we head back into a glacial period. Over the last 50 years they have taken a sharp detour.

      5) Had CO levels not been elevated by our actions, plant life would soon die - it's been decreasing for millions of years.

      And would take millions more before this became a concern.

      6) CO2 helps plants grow. Which will also take it out of the atmosphere.

      Unfortunatly not at the rate that we are putting it in.

      8) The prehistoric record shows significant vegetation (rainforest?) at higher latitudes - like Montana.

      There are rain forests in Canada... what of it?

      10) Alarmist articles bring eyeballs and ad-click revenue.

      No argument there. I wish we could have a more reasoned debate but the media favours the extremes. That said, what is happening in the arctic is truly amazing. We have just about hit rock bottom. There ain't much left to lose! https://sites.google.com/site/arcticseaicegraphs/

    7. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by barakn · · Score: 5, Informative

      1) No, that's not true. We have data extending back millions of years, although its quality does decrease with age.
      2) Oh good, their models will become more accurate. Where's your model?
      3) No, it is certainly a part of the discussion. The 3-day halt in air-traffic post 9/11 showed a spike in temperatures, revealing the fact that jet contrails are probably hiding some of the warming.
      4) We are already in the part of the Milankovitch cycle where the glaciers should be returning.
      5) This is a wonderfully ignorant statement that ignores feedback cycles in the biosphere and geological sources of CO2.
      6) Yes, but at what timescale? Will the plants we happen to eat have the same nutritive value? What ecological shifts will occur?
      7) Historically? So there were historians writing down what happened during the Pennsylvanian period 300 million years ago? Also, the "not true of oil" statement reveals you to be one of those morons that believes in an unlimited supply of abiogenic oil. Good luck with that.
      8) So what? That occurred with a different configuration of continents and a different orbit around the sun.
      9) So what? This argument confuses weather with climate. It looks like the Northwest Passage will be permanently open during the summer.
      10) The Kardashians get far more clicks. It's actually very hard to get fat, lazy Americans interested in the planet they're destroying.
      11) Move to Texas, then see how much you like the summers.

      --
      "I'm so moist I'm sticking to the leather." -Kermit the Frog on The Late Late Show
    8. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The earth was much warmer during the Eocene period..Yet life went on. Otherwise we wouldn't be here to talk about. Life will go on despite this worming. Probably without the human species, which will probably experience its well deserved extinction after all the damage it has done to so many other forms of life.

    9. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

      1) We don't have temperature or arctic ice data going back even thousands of years. Never mind millions (that's CO2 data from ice cores).
      2) My point was the models were predicting more floods and droughts due to warming, but just got revised LAST WEEK. i.e. we still don't know
      3) Post 9-11 the spread of temperatures increased (high-low) which reveals jet contrails may be a primary cause of... something, possibly warming
      4) Do you really want the glaciers to return?
      5) What? Current thinking (as I understand it) is that coal is in fact dead biomass.
      6) Plants grow faster with increased CO2 and IIRC die a little below 180ppm (which is where we would be without intervention).
      7) Based on where we think coal came from. Oil is thought to form deep in the earth and seep upwards - hence they look for (and find) it under large geologic formations that trap it. Not sure why agreeing with the oil companies on its origin makes me a moron ;-)
      8) Point is, the earth was just find when it was substantially warmer.
      9) Point was that less ice in the arctic has probably happened before and is therefore not a "planetary emergency" as TFA says.
      10) Agreed.
      11) Texas should be under water... no, just kidding. Your anecdote is no more valuable than mine ;-) Perhaps you guys should plant trees instead of cattle.

    10. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    11. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      We don't really have data over a very long time.

      Wrong. We have tree ring data going back thousands of years, and ice core data going back millions.

      We know air traffic has an immediate affect on weather

      Yeah? And how do we know that?

      Had CO levels not been elevated by our actions, plant life would soon die - it's been decreasing for millions of years

      All plant life would die? I'm afraid you've left out a few variables in your calculations.

      Coal is essentially compressed biomass. Burning it will put it back in the biosphere where it was historically. (not true of oil).

      Yes, it's biomass, but it's biomass millions of years old. We are releasing carbon that nature itself sequestered. And for the record, you're wrong about oil, as well -- it, too, is biomass.

      The prehistoric record shows significant vegetation (rainforest?) at higher latitudes - like Montana.

      Montana isn't where it was then, and mountains grow and flatten over those time scales.

      There is evidence that the northwest passage has been clear at some points in the last 1000 years.

      Citation?

      Alarmist articles bring eyeballs and ad-click revenue.

      Well, you got one thing right.

    12. Re:Some things I know - or have come to understand by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

      barakn did a great job of tearing your arguments apart, but I would like to add...

      6) This is only true if CO2 is the limiting factor. If water or nitrogen or something else are the bottleneck for plant growth, excess CO2 will have little to no impact.

      7) Coal and oil are what is known as *sequestered* carbon. The carbon in those fossil fuels is not part of the atmosphere, it is locked away where it has no impact. Burning those fossil fuels puts that carbon back into the atmosphere where it can enhance the greenhouse gas effect.

      --
      :(){ :|:& };:
  22. meanwhile.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Antarctic Sea Ice Sets Another Record

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamestaylor/2012/09/19/antarctic-sea-ice-sets-another-record/

    "Antarctic sea ice set another record this past week, with the most amount of ice ever recorded on day 256 of the calendar year (September 12 of this leap year)."

    1. Re:meanwhile.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      please refer to this:

      http://www.skepticalscience.com/arctic-antarctic-sea-ice.htm

      Arctic sea ice loss is three times greater than Antarctic sea ice gain.

    2. Re:meanwhile.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We deniers frequently claim that the world's ice is increasing and hence there is no global warming. The world's ice is located around the poles, in the Arctic and Antarctic. While the ice in the Arctic is entirely sea ice, we distinguish land and sea ice in the Antarctic. Let's discuss the Antarctic first.

      http://friendsofginandtonic.org/page4/page18/page18.html

    3. Re:meanwhile.... by goldstein · · Score: 1

      This is known as cherry picking. Sure, you can find the odd result for a specific set of circumstances (note that the link refers to a single day of the year) that seems to support your viewpoint. In reality, what is happening in the Antarctic is not far out of the ordinary. It's a different story for what is happening in the Arctic. The previous record, set in 2007, smashed the previous one and now, the 2012 record has done the same to the 2007 one.

    4. Re:meanwhile.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the Antarctic continental glaciers are melting off and flowing into the ocean. How the fuck is this a good thing?

    5. Re:meanwhile.... by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Oh, that's real convincing. In the middle of the usual rant about the "mainstream media" covering up, we have a "fact" that he got from a Denier blog. Where did the blog get this "fact"? From a scientific site that says the blog's interpretation is purest bullshit.

      Against this, we have satellite photos of the entire polar ice cap shrinking. Get your stupid head out of the sand.

    6. Re:meanwhile.... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      There's a pretty good chunk of land ice on Greenland, enough to raise sea levels by 20 feet if were to all melt.

    7. Re:meanwhile.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Skepticalscience, a fringe website run by a complete nutcase, is often wrong. As it is in this case.

      http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20120013495_2012013235.pdf

  23. Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by Bananatree3 · · Score: 1

    It seems the only practical way to get everyone on board is when there's a dollar amount. When the issue is as global and integrated into our daily lives as that of global warming, the only way to make everyone move in another direction is when economics come in to play. The only *real* way to get India, China, the US and all the other large CO2 emitting countries is to push the price of alternative fuels below that of their CO2-emitting counterparts.

    From what I can tell, the only way to make a huge, quick reduction in CO2 is to beat it with something cheaper.

    There is no one "something" unfortunately. It's a huge mixture of different technologies, but I don't see anything else more motivating that cash, and motivation is something the world lacks when it comes to CO2 reduction...

    1. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's where the idea of carbon taxes or cap-and-trade come from: The goal is to take a cost that is currently not being factored into the price and make it part of the price. Then you let the markets do their thing and motivate people to switch to alternatives.

      Trouble is, that for most libertarians, this kind of regulation is unwarranted government intrusion on the free and unfettered markets. And for most politicians, this kind of regulation is unwarranted intrusion on the profit margins of major campaign contributors.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    2. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by Bananatree3 · · Score: 1

      Cap/Trade and other carbon credit schemes only work if the full force of the national government is behind it, which makes it an extremely weak international solution. The only *real* solution that will produce a rapid, unequivocal and large-scale shift away from fossil fuels is if there is a direct competitor that is definitively cheaper on it's own in the free market. A true economical alternative that is not dependent on fossil fuels. Anything less than that will require government intervention, and that requires political will. If there's anything I know about international political will, it's that it is nearly impossible to do anything that global quickly. Free markets on the other hand, move rapidly.

    3. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      When those proposing carbon taxes or cap-and-trade provide for an implementation that actually deals with global warming... I might get behind it.

      By in large, every carbon tax or cap-and-trade system proposed so far is essentially a massive regional wealth transfer.

      I'm Canadian... living in Ontario. Alberta produces a lot of oil. Most schemes will end up taking money from Alberta and then redistributing it to Ontario. Not because Ontario is doing anymore. Merely because it is Alberta producing oil. So it becomes a wealth transfer from areas that produce... to areas that don't.

      On a global level, you could see China paying countries just because it is producing, while others are not.

      In the United States, when Howard Dean was proposing a Carbon Tax... he promised to use the money to.... get this... fund Healthcare. Now let's see. We're supposedly facing a global catastrophic situation poised to destroy civilization via floods and extreme weather. Can you imagine the devastation!!! And Howard Dean whats to take all the money and spend it to bribe voters on healthcare. If he had proposed the money from a carbon tax would go to things like:

      flood protection, irrigation systems, moving people from flood prone areas, green R&D... that I could take him seriously.

      Other areas of the world have proposed Carbon Taxes to fund tax cuts... again... we're facing a potential global catastrophe... so shouldn't the carbon tax be used to combat it instead of letting people buy another IPOD?

      So I'll wait until the green movement actually takes global warming seriously before I do. Because all I see right now is a bunch of greedy people wanting another tax to fund their pet projects.

      The left treats global warming much like the neo-cons treat war. They tell us it is the most extreme threat to mankind... but what sacrifices are they willing to make?

      Was George Bush willing to raise taxes to fund the Iraq war? Was he willing to send his own kids to war?

      Is the left willing to cut public sector union salaries and pensions to find money to fund anti climate change initiatives. Did Obama not just spend most of his campaign on a healthcare plan. Oh wait.. so you're telling me a global catastrophe the likes of which mankind has never seen is coming towards us... but what we need the president of the United States to work on is a half-baked healthcare system?

      Yeah... seems to me like climate change really isn't that much of an issue. When it is a real issue, people will be willing to make real sacrifices. These scientists and leftists politicians will take paycuts. People will offer to ration. Such sacrifices were made in WW2.

    4. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      The result from cap-and-trade in the US would be 25-50% increase in just about every price that exists. If the object itself didn't cost more, transportation of it would drive the cost up. For example, there are only a few factories in the US that make glass bottles. Every glass bottle is trucked across the country from where it is made to where it is used.

      Would changing away from the way things are done now be better? Sure, but it would take a long while to achieve that goal and the only driving force would be cap-and-trade. A shorter term result would be stores and factories would simply close and go out of business. If nobody is buying today it doesn't matter that there could be a better alternative in a year or two. This would mean a drastic change in lifestyle for most people.

      Nobody in any sort of political office is going to want to be behind that so you can assume the government simply isn't going to do it.

    5. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by dkleinsc · · Score: 2

      It actually doesn't really matter what a carbon tax is spent on to force the economy to adjust, although spending on combating global warming is probably a good idea.

      Imagine, if you will, that you're in the market for a car. One car gets 24 km/l and costs $30,000, the other gets 12 km/l and costs $15,000. If gasoline is at about 50.0, and you drive 15000 km per year, then you save $312.50 per year and it will take you 48 years to justify the more expensive car. If gasoline is at about 100.0 (a bit cheaper than now), then you now save $625.00 per year, and it's now 24 years of use to justify the expensive car. But if gasoline is at 300.0 due to a carbon tax, it's now only 8 years of use before the more expensive car was a better deal, so you'll be more likely to make the adjustment, thus reducing your carbon emissions.

      Another example: You own a home heated with an oil furnace. You could improve the insulation for $15,000 and cut your heating oil usage in half. If heating oil is $1000, then it's going to take 30 years for that investment to pay off. If heating oil is $3000, that same investment pays off in 10 years, so you're more likely to make it, thus reducing your carbon emissions again.

      In neither case did the question of what the money is going to really enter into the calculations: Something that was a stupid economic decision without the tax became a smart decision with the tax, and in both cases you reduced your personal carbon output.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    6. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      Of course it matters.

      Because if global warming is not something worth spending money on or fighting... then it's not a severe enough problem to warrant a tax.

      Which is back to my point... it's just a tax to fund other programs and global warming is really taken as a serious threat.

    7. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      "Which is back to my point... it's just a tax to fund other programs and global warming ISN'T really taken as a serious threat."

      -correction.

      And that is pretty much how is I see global warming. It's happening, but really isn't going to be that harmful.

    8. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The result from cap-and-trade in the US would be 25-50% increase in just about every price that exists.

      Bullshit. It entirely depends on the caps. Set them too low and we'd have runaway inflation. 20-50% would look good. Set them too high and no one would reduce CO2 production at all. Let's stop making up numbers.

    9. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Every glass bottle is trucked across the country from where it is made to where it is used.

      That, in my view, is part of the problem: They could be using freight rail to cover most of the distance and save a great deal of carbon emissions.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    10. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by radtea · · Score: 1

      That's where the idea of carbon taxes or cap-and-trade come from

      Since cap-and-trade is the classical liberal move of creating and enforcing property rights as a legal mechanism for overcoming the crisis of an over-exploited commons, that should be "carbon taxes AND cap-and-trade", not "OR".

      This is undoubtedly nit-picking, because no one would really ever be so disingenous or ignorant of economics and history to confuse property rights with a taxes! But while I'm pretty sure in your case this is an innocent slip, my nit-picking mind requires me to speak up, in case there really are some people out there so unbelievably out of touch with reality that they can't tell the difference between a property right and a tax.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    11. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Modern "libertarians" think that everything the government does is unwarranted intrusion. Speeding ticket? Can't smoke in a restaurant? Zoning laws that say you can't run a factory in your back yard? All too intrusive!

      Nowadays "libertarianism" is a manifestation of the same self-centered attitude that causes a teenager to call the parental units fascists when they tell him to turn off the TV and go do his homework. It used to mean serious stuff, like the government not telling us who we can have sex with. Ironically, the leading "libertarian" these days is Ron Paul, who thinks the government should be able to tell you who you can have sex with,.

    12. Re:Make Alternatives Cheaper - Economics by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Since cap-and-trade is the classical liberal move

      In the case of SO2, this classical liberal move was cooked up by the administration of that well-known liberal Ronald Reagan and signed into law by that other well-known liberal George H.W. Bush.

      The difference between the two proposals, which is why I said "or": A carbon tax would be passing something like "1 ton of carbon=$X payment to the government". A cap-and-trade system would say "We're collectively allowing industry X megatons of carbon emissions. Bidding opens at $10,000 per megaton for permits, which can be traded on the open market at any time." They're different policies with somewhat different effects.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  24. keeping the cause alive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nothing like an emergency and a cause which addresses that emergency to give your bland life new meaning.

  25. Then again... by wcrowe · · Score: 2, Informative

    Then again, there is this article from the Register today.

    Nobody knows for sure what is really going on. The satellite record is too short for us to know if this is an extraordinary event, or part of a normal cycle.

    --
    Proverbs 21:19
    1. Re:Then again... by Burz · · Score: 2

      Slashdot has made the mistake of publishing denier articles from the elReg a couple of times, and they've been called on it. Please stop pedaling doubt for its own sake.

      The Antarctic expansion is a small negative feedback that nowhere near compensates for the loss of ice reflectivity in the Arctic.

    2. Re:Then again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So... anybody who disagrees with you should just keep quiet, and not disturb the group-think?

      The Register actually DOES have "news for nerds", unlike a certain other web site...

  26. Is GW good or bad? by mnooning · · Score: 2

    Has anyone studied what would happen if GW was much worse? Vast areas of Russia and Canada would be opened up, yes, but those in low lying coastal areas would be forced to higher ground, losing their homes. How disruptive would it be? How much would that cost us all? What would the predicted increased rain do to the vast Chinese and African deserts? Would there be a vast increase in food production. Would there be increased populations, with the danger of horrendous starvation if the world started to cool again? Would the northern parts of the US be like, say, South Carolina (nice), or like the Caribbean(too hot)?. Would Florida be inundated with constant rain? Disruption is not necessarily bad. Does anyone know of any studies in this area?

    1. Re:Is GW good or bad? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Here's a pros-and-cons list (more overwhelmingly negative than I expected):

      http://www.skepticalscience.com/global-warming-positives-negatives-intermediate.htm

      Even assuming there were net gains to be had in the planet's carrying capacity or areas with "nice" climates, the big nasty problem that ruins it is ocean acidification.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:Is GW good or bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please.
      The oceans are infinitely buffered. That is why rainwater (5.2 pH) can continuously fall on the surface of the ocean all day long with no change in the ocean's pH — not even on the surface of the ocean — because, it mixes so quickly and thoroughly (in fact, the pH of the ocean actually decreases the deeper you go). Any a move toward a lower pH would simply cause CaCO3 to dissolve and bring the pH right back up.

      "Ocean pH is not governed by physico-chemical rules. Marine organisms control their calcium carbonate properties organically behind membranes. Increased CO2, in any case, evolves from sea water because of inverse solubility. CO2 dissolves in cold water and bubbles out of warm water. That's why CO2 trails natural warming," ~Dr. Francis T. Manns

    3. Re:Is GW good or bad? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      You think "Dr." Francis T. Manns, anonymous Internet commenter and well-known climate "skeptic," is a credible or authoritative source?

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  27. Such dubious words... by scorp1us · · Score: 1, Informative

    Hansen is not a scientist he's a activist with scientific credentials. It's his horse in the race and he should be stripped of his title at NASA. We need scientists to report not react.

    Anyway, the "epic" melt now being leverages is not a temperature melt. There was a huge artic storm that broke up the ice, which increased the surface area, which the water then melted. If we take a look at a temperature graph for the arctic: http://ocean.dmi.dk/arctic/meant80n.uk.php We see that it was an "Average" year with no additional time above the melting point than normal. What created the melt was not warmer weather, it was increased surface area.

    --
    Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
    1. Re:Such dubious words... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That is a fascinating chart. Every year, in the winter months the temperature is wildly volatile, yet every summer it settles down very close to the mean.

      In recent years, the Arctic winters have been consistently warmer than the mean. Why would that be? Surely it's not because of CO2, since they aren't getting much sunlight up there at that time.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:Such dubious words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An intelligently phrased post, correcting the latest scare tactic, and actually modded up instead of shouted down. While this may be an anomaly, it also might be a sign of a more intelligent Slashdot than has been the trend recently.

    3. Re:Such dubious words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are wrong, no surprise there.

      The graph shows clearly wintertime temperatures were much warmer than average, thus lower volume of ice was "produced" and melted faster. that the temperature during the summer didnt seem to be above average might be because it is measured above 80degr north wich is ice covered. Think about a glass of water with ice cubes in it the temp right above it wont rise much above 0deg until all the ice is gone.

      Additional the melting did last longer even according to the graph, even tough the temperature dropped below 0 it is salty water which still melts ice.

      there should be be a +5, misinformation score.

    4. Re:Such dubious words... by goldstein · · Score: 1

      There is a considerable amount of heat required to account for the melting of ice that has occurred. Moreover, the water has a large thermal capacity and will not heat as quickly as land. So, it isn't surprising that there hasn't been a large temperature change in the Arctic. However, we have witnessed a striking temperature event in Greenland. You are really fooling yourself if you thing that the events that are happening are nothing out of the ordinary.

    5. Re:Such dubious words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hansen is not a scientist he's a activist with scientific credentials. It's his horse in the race and he should be stripped of his title at NASA. We need scientists to report not react.

      Anyway, the "epic" melt now being leverages is not a temperature melt. There was a huge artic storm that broke up the ice, which increased the surface area, which the water then melted. If we take a look at a temperature graph for the arctic: http://ocean.dmi.dk/arctic/meant80n.uk.php We see that it was an "Average" year with no additional time above the melting point than normal. What created the melt was not warmer weather, it was increased surface area.

      The storm would have had to have been the size and intensity of Typhoon Tip to be able to even approach that level of impact on the entire ice pack.

      Why not just say "God did it!".

  28. That kind of stuff happens after an ice age by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

    One would expect arctic ice to melt more and more during the exit stages of an ice age.

    1. Re:That kind of stuff happens after an ice age by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      The problem with the hypothesis is that given the natural drivers of climate we had the Holocene Climatic Optimum about 8,000 years ago and the factors since then have pointed toward a slight cooling trend which we have seen until the recent dramatic increase in atmospheric CO2.

  29. Tired of it by emho24 · · Score: 0

    A lot of people are just tired of hearing about it and they are tuning out. It doesn't even matter if its true or not, all people know is that they haven't drowned yet or cooked alive, so it must not be important. Paying the mortgage, that is what is on their minds.

    It also doesn't help that people usually hear the global warming cry shortly followed up by a demand for higher taxes to pay for their sins against mother nature.

    --
    You must gather your party before venturing forth.
  30. Change by Das+Auge · · Score: 0

    Oh, come on! Everyone knows that change is always 100% bad for everyone. All the time.

    The people that need to be worried are small countries whose grain belts may move beyond its borders.

  31. 50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by BoRegardless · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It was such a horrible event...All civilizations which used all that land are now gone...under water.

    Well, it took tens of thousands of years and we lost coastline, but gained almost all of Canada and the Northern US, Europe and Asia back from a deep ice sheet to usable land, so I guess we lost some land and gained some land.

    I get a feeling I am being force fed a media manipulation based on our individual lifetime experiences rather than the long long term cycles that man can not affect in more than tiny ways. Man certainly has not affected the prior 2 dozen major worldwide ice age cycles.

    1. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by ledow · · Score: 2

      Especially when nature has things like volcanos (whose dust cover can easily drop sunlight strength in whole regions by orders of magnitude), vegetation (anyone with an interest can find out that were they lived used to be either a) uninhabitable, b) huge forests that were burning dying off and regrowing for millennia before we ever lit a match) and all sorts of other nasties (not to mention things like solar storms and external factors - hell the dust from a meteorite is believed to be what blocked out so much of the sun that the dinosaurs died off from lack of vegetation and changes in atmosphere).

      We just don't know. That was the answer in the 50's when climate science was a bunch of crackpots with flowers in their hair eating from hempen bowls, and it's the answer now. The fact that not much has changed despite HUGE advances in understanding and detection means that we still have much, much further to go before we can even stab a guess at whether we're doing anything bad and/or what effect that has and/or what effect not doing those bad things would have on us.

    2. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by DavidHumus · · Score: 1

      > Man certainly has not affected the prior 2 dozen major worldwide ice age cycles.

      Yes, all 7+ billion of us on the planet now have not done that historically.

    3. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it's going to be a barrel of fucking laughs when China "loses coastline" and their grain belt shifts north over the Russian border. Hopefully none of the fallout makes it across the Pacific to us. (Sorry, western Europe, you're on your own there.)

    4. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      I didn't know man used to have cars, coal plants and all that alongside a population in the billions during the last ice age. It's almost like you can't say "because it happened before and we're still around collectively, it's all going to be fine now!"

    5. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It wouldn't be a problem if you can just pack up and move. But, I have a feeling most people living on the coasts don't have the ability to do that.

      It's a human problem, not a nature problem. Nature might be causing it, and we have a pretty good idea on why based on the facts that we can gather from physics.

      I kind of like the beaches, and it won't take but a few feet increase in high tide to wash them away.

    6. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by rastoboy29 · · Score: 1

      Dude, you need to get it through your head that yes...

      the earth will be fine, but this is happening so FAST, that *we* may not.

      You said yourself that previously it took tens of thousands of years (which is still pretty fast), but here we're talking a few decades.

      The earth could bitchslap us bigtime.

    7. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, are you saying the current ice age, the one which might be ending relatively soon, is the last one?

      Strangely, that makes me sad.

    8. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Just to point out the rather glaring hole in your logic, we're currently seeing warming happening over the course of a human lifetime that took thousands of years (or longer) historically. Even if humans aren't causing it, only a complete idiot would look at that and say "Nah there's nothing to worry about.".

      You're argument is also a non-sequitir, and has no scientific basis. You can start with skepticalscience.com, and then follow the references to the SCIENCE.

      --
      ~X~
    9. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thankfully, we have experts like you who carefully review the uncertainty in present climate understanding and periodically relay your results to us lay people. Meanwhile, anyone who is half ass informed looks at the idiot on the street trying to compare the state of the art in climate science to the 1950s. You look funny Mr!

    10. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by ToddInSF · · Score: 1

      An insult, followed by a criticism of the poster referencing something he didn't reference...

      Trolls shouldn't get modded up.

    11. Re:50 Meter Rise in Sea Level...Oh God by ToddInSF · · Score: 1

      Good point. The real issue is all the rutting humans that somehow magically expect such massive populations to somehow be even remotely sustainable.

  32. "The Will" by Bananatree3 · · Score: 1

    "The will" is economic at this point. Everyone speaks $$$... if someone offers a cheap alternative to CO2, it will change policies faster than anything else. If people burning coal are loosing money because they decided to invest in fossil fuels, they'll be scrambling as fast as possible to shut down their fossil fuel plants and fire up whatever the cheaper alternative is.

    Unless the entire world, or at least the major CO2-emitting countries quickly agree on a universal policy (read Montreal-type Protocol for CFC reduction) the world won't agree on anything. Fossil fuels are the very lifeblood of the modern era, they are the bedrock of our very infrastructure. The likelihood is that something cheaper will come a long well before policy makers decide to legislate their way out of this mess.

    1. Re:"The Will" by jiriw · · Score: 1

      Interesting to note here is that the German government is considering German fossil fuel power plant holders to forbid to shut down their plants. Those plant holders of course are now asking that same government for MORE subsidies (they are already subsidized) to comply or threaten to close anyway.
      They can't compete any more with the low energy prices in summer because that's when renewables generate 'too much' power. However, the plants are still needed for a stable power supply and also for enough power in winter.

      German news article: http://www.zeit.de/politik/deutschland/2012-09/kraftwerk-abschalten-regierung
      Dutch news article: http://www.nu.nl/economie/2910227/duitsland-overweegt-uitschakelverbod-kolencentrales.html
      Unfortunately I couldn't find an English language article about this.

      Amongst other things, questions are now raised seriously if liberalizing the energy market in Germany wasn't actually a bad thing in hindsight. If plants were still under government control, it would be a government issue. Now government has to ask business 'pretty, pretty please?'.
      Everyone speaks $$$ now because we made ourselves dependent on $$$. I'm leaving it up to discussion what's better done by $$$ and what's better off in 'public' hands but things can change ... quickly, if they have to.
      An accelerated sea-level rise would be such a thing because it would threaten half my nation with flooding (I am a Dutch citizen if you're wondering, living near the German border).

    2. Re:"The Will" by GigsVT · · Score: 2

      It's inevitable. Fossil sources will keep increasing in price slowly as extraction becomes more complex and expensive. We have enough coal and oil for at least another hundred years, but it's getting harder to extract. At some point it won't have a positive EROEI anymore and we'll have to stop using it as an energy source because it won't make economic sense to do so anymore.

      The only thing that could possibly make this situation into a disaster is governments passing price controls that artificially lower the prices of fossil energies. That's the worst case scenario and something that must be prevented at all costs.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    3. Re:"The Will" by fche · · Score: 1

      "what's better done by $$$ and what's better off in 'public' hands"

      False dichotomy. Public hands are very much about $$$ too.

    4. Re:"The Will" by jiriw · · Score: 1

      That depends on your political and economic points of view. I'm actually more in favour of a 'Rhineland model' economy myself and have a slightly socialist political bias. In the U.S. that would translate as 'communist', probably. Here it would be 'liberal socialist'.

    5. Re:"The Will" by fche · · Score: 1

      "That depends ..."

      What does? That public hands are also about $$$? Ask any government that has been having problem extracting & spending enough money lately.

    6. Re:"The Will" by jiriw · · Score: 1

      With 'public' I meant a government working for its citizens.. at least, in a country where government functions, has also the interest of the public in mind and gets evaluated by its citizens, for example through a system of elections. It's true that 'public' works with $$$ as well but it doesn't work with $$$ for $$$ sake as most $$$ based groups do (call them corporations, if you want). There lies the difference. A country with not too much of a debt can be independently wealthy. It's got resources, an infrastructure and a tax paying population. That governments now have a problem extracting & spending enough $$$ isn't because there isn't enough $$$. I would even say there is too much of it. It's partly because of bad government, partly because certain $$$ groups preyed on the 'public', partly external circumstances. Amongst others, the rising prices of finite resources because we're going through them at an alarming rate.

      There is still something called 'law', where you come from, I hope? You know, that which, amongst other things, can put limits on the things you and everybody else can do with $$$. That stuff that's made and updated by politicians, applied by the DOJ and other governmental bodies and examined and judged for fairness by judges and lawyers. $$$ shouldn't be a primary motivation with this 'law' thing. It should also look at things like morals, fairness, basic human freedoms. If $$$ was a primary motivation with this 'law' thing, I would call that corruption.

      In extent, if 'public' would equate primarily to $$$ I would call that corruption too.

    7. Re:"The Will" by iceaxe · · Score: 1

      "Our car is heading toward a cliff, but if we turn the steering wheel, it'll take longer to get where we're going!"

      Humans are stupid.

      --
      WALSTIB!
    8. Re:"The Will" by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The only thing that could possibly make this situation into a disaster is governments passing price controls that artificially lower the prices of fossil energies.

      Or, you know, if we actually are past some "tipping point" leading to runaway climate change. That would be a disaster. Or hell, just if the weather changed enough such that people will starve this year. Which it already has.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    9. Re:"The Will" by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      With 'public' I meant a government working for its citizens.. at least, in a country where government functions, has also the interest of the public in mind and gets evaluated by its citizens, for example through a system of elections

      Ah, so in fiction then? That's like saying corporations would be fantastic if they put the interest of the consumer first. But then that wouldn't be reality, eh?

    10. Re:"The Will" by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      It is kinda of interesting how some of you have run to an unfalsifiable "metastable climate" theory when the other projections didn't quite pan out.

      It's not science. It's pretty much exactly the same tactic religion uses with the "second coming" rhetoric.

      Repent your environmental sins now, because at any point there could be a massive change. It's the perfect solution for ongoing fear mongering, without having to bother with things like science or testability of the theory.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    11. Re:"The Will" by catprog · · Score: 1

      EROEI for food is less then 1. more like .01.

      Most of that though is free sunlight. And food is much more convenient then sun.

      If their is something about the invested energy that makes it less convenient then EROEL can be lower.

      --
      My Transformation Website
      Kindle Books http://www.catprog.org/rev
      Interactive CYOA http://www.catprog.org/st
  33. Meanwhile, antarctic sea ice is at a record high. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/SC1209/S00050/antarctic-ice-area-sets-record-high.htm

    A long long time ago, James Hansen ceased to be a credible scientist and became an activist. Right now, there is less sea ice at the north pole than any time since 1979. There were, however, several other times in the 20th century when people were worried that the ice would disappear. Hansen knows that but it doesn't suit his purposes to let us know. He just keeps pounding his simple, alarmist message. They should throw the bum in jail ... oh wait, they did. http://www.climatedepot.com/a/12518/Hansen-Back-in-Jail-NASAs-James-Hansen-Arrested-Again-Outside-White-House-at-Pipeline-Protest--Implores-Obama-to-act-for-sake-of-your-children-and-grandchildren

  34. Obligatory Carlin Quote by TheWoozle · · Score: 3, Funny

    "The planet will be fine. WE'RE fucked."

    --
    Insisting on "correct" English is like saying that there is only one, definitive recipe for chili.
    1. Re:Obligatory Carlin Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the main issue. The planet will get along fine with or without us. I rather like civilisation and I want my grandkids (I currently have two) to thrive not barely survive.

      Mike Moore had it right when he said we had to watch out for rich white men as these are the bustards that are really out to get you. Selfish billionaires like the Koch Broz (there are unselfish billionaires like Bill Gates and Warren Buffett) who are deliberately trying to obfuscate and confuse the public debate to slow down the rate of political change and stifle public debate to keep their coffers full of cash. Such antisocial behaviour should be punished. I'd have their heads up on spikes but that's just a grumpy old man talking.

      Unfortunately the climate scientists (who are actually very conservative statistically if not politically) have been too conservative in their models and predictions of the rate of climate change. The reality is twice as bad as their WORST CASE SCENARIO with global warming trending to 4 or 6C (that's 7 to 11F) by the end of 21st C. THIS IS CATASTROPHIC AND IS LOCKED IN UNLESS WE GEOENGINEER. Climate is like a supertanker it takes a lot to get it goin and it takes a lot to turn it around. Some effects are locked in for FIVE CENTURIES according to some climate scientists (those dealing with carbonate levels in ocean waters). It isn't a matter of if we at but when and how.

      People need to separate the facts from the response. This will revive the political debate to be about polity and policy instead of woo.
      FACT: Man made climate change is happening and threatening our civilisation.
      RESPONSE: Do we:
      A) Go back to a zero Carbon pre-industrial economy with a world population around 1 billion (which raises the question of what do we do with all those "extra passengers"?) all while singing kumbaya and hugging the remaining trees. (BTW I trained as a Botanist and love trees so I am not dissing trees or those that love them.)
      B) Modify our current agricultural and industrial economy to quickly eliminate Carbon use and develop high efficiency homes, buildings, transports, agriculture and industrial systems.
      C) Geoengineer the atmosphere and oceans (oh so carefully as this is a big experiment and we can't afford to eff it up as its the only planet we've got) to reduce CO2, CH4, increase the albedo (that's right paint your roof white mofo) and decrease the H2CO3 in the oceans (probably using iron sulphates) all while trying to cope with the disastrous floods, droughts, storms and general mayhem that comes with a vastly modified climate system.
      D) Do nothing and let the future worry about it. (If they have one.)

      B and C are viable options. A and D are disastrous and to be avoided.
      PeterSW

  35. Blame China, actually. Greenies need to outreach by exabrial · · Score: 1

    Ok, the greenie morons in the USA needs to quit thinking this is their fault. China and India are the main problem... Take a look at this pic from Hangzhou, CN from about 2 years back: ImageShack.us The spire on the hill is 3/4mile away from where I was sitting. No it's not foggy, that's just how polluted it is ALL THE TIME over there. If you truly are an environmentalist, voting for Obama isn't going to save the planet. America has already won this battle.... but since climate science is now in mainstream pop culture, no one actually wants to travel overseas to do the hard work to save the environment.

  36. Lost credibility in the first paragraph by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "... 3.7 x 10-99, a number considerably larger than the number of stars in the universe."

    Anyone else see anything wrong with this statement?

  37. Seriously, what can we do? by yog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apart from having a national Open-Your-Freezer day to cool things down [joke], what realistically can be done? We can't impound all fossil-fuel burning vehicles. We can't shut down the coal electric plants. We can't stop China and other developing regions from buying hundreds of millions of cars and refrigerators and electronics.

    The random environmentally conscious person may trade in her Explorer or Accord for a Toyota Prius and feel nice and self-righteous about it, but has she truly helped the environment? The amount of energy expended to manufacture that Prius, and to dispose of that older vehicle (or merely to pass it on to another driver who'll use it for ten more years) far exceeds the trivial few barrels of oil per year that it conserves. Long term, sure, if we were all driving electric hybrids or pure electrics, we'd be generally reducing atmospheric carbon content, assuming the electric plants weren't making up for it by burning more coal and oil. (If we all switched to bicycles, an argument could be made, but of course our economy would all but shut down.)

    So what can we do other than wring our hands and worry fruitlessly? Well for one thing, we can at least maximize our efficiency which in the U.S. is pretty easy because we're so wasteful. An engineer famously observed that California's rolling blackouts a few summers ago could have been prevented had they merely painted white the roofs of all public buildings in that state.

    Technology is gradually solving these problems, without particular government intervention and sometimes despite such intervention. For example, solar panels are coming down in price, led by the increasingly dominant Chinese manufacturers. You know it's happening because American panel manufacturers are demanding an anti-dumping injunction. At the same time, a variety of new solar-to-electric technologies are in the pipeline, ranging from spray-on applications to bendable and foldable sheets, to bandwidth-specific crystals, to 3-D blocks that are more efficient per area, and on and on. DARPA is experimenting with 50% efficiency solar cells.

    Ultimately, most homes and commercial buildings can and should have some form of solar on the roof; as costs of building these features into new construction or retrofitting them to existing structures fall, it will make enough economic sense that it will happen all by itself, and peak demand for electricity will fall even as demand for storage batteries and fuel cells and solar panel equipment skyrockets (now you know where to invest your money).

    The other big trend is the availability of cheap natural gas from fracking, which is driving the construction of new gas electric plants and gas-heating in homes. Fuel oil is expensive; gas is dirt cheap. The simple economics will force a mass conversion to this relatively clean and cheap power source.

    Ultimately, we will diversify away from reliance mostly on fossil fuels to a mixture of about half fossil and half clean. The impact this will have on the atmosphere is not fully understood, however, and probably would take decades to be observed. Nonetheless, in the latter half of the 21st Century we can expect to have cleaner skies, at least. If we can actively foster reforestation across the Americas and Asia, and if we can somehow reduce the pollution of the oceans which is killing the plankton that furnish most of our oxygen, we may long term reverse the CO2 increase and perhaps eventually this will drive down temperatures.

    Or, maybe these climatic changes have little to do with human activity and nature will simply take its course, regardless of what we do. But at least we should, in my opinion, un-do some of the obvious damage we're causing and optimize conditions for a healthier planet.

    My other pet solution is to push a trillion ton block of ice out of Saturn's orbit and dump it onto the North Pole, which might buy us a couple extra decades at least.

    --
    it's = "it is"; its = possessive. E.g., it's flapping its wings.
    1. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Getting the government to agree that shutting down all the coal burning power plants is impossible, but that doesn't mean that cannot be shut down by force.

      Similarly, getting the government to decide "no more cars" would be impossible, but destruction of some bridges would make car commuting next to impossible and therefore decrease the use of cars overnight.

      As far as the government is concerned, the most environmentally friendly thing that could be done would be a war with China. Stop all shipments of stuff from China immediately. The end result would be a lot less CO2 emissions. I do not think this is likely.

      None of this is going to happen. Nobody is committed enough to blow up a coal power plant or a bridge. What we are going to see is an endless bleating about how we all need to get together and lower our energy use. Return to a lifestyle more compatible with the land. Eat only food that we or our neighbors grow. Reduce, reduce, reduce. None of this is likely to have any effect, but it will achieve certain political goals for a few people.

    2. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by aicrules · · Score: 1

      It's entirely possible that nothing can be done. What if near-cataclysmic climate change happens just because the natural flow of things means that it happens?

    3. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by strikethree · · Score: 2

      My other pet solution is to push a trillion ton block of ice out of Saturn's orbit and dump it onto the North Pole, which might buy us a couple extra decades at least.

      Dude! I love this idea. Hm. How do we maneuver those trillion tons through the atmosphere and into the hydrosphere without any... erm, unhappy side effects. :)

      Another issue is, how much heat energy is a trillion tons of ice going to absorb? I am guessing quite a lot but very little on a global scale; however, what will the evacuation of all that heat energy look like? A trillion ton block of ice at, say -275F is going to cause an extremely fast transfer of heat at one individual point. Should be fun. Anyone have some popcorn?

      Hm. How much would the level of the sea rise with a trillion or more tons of ice placed into it? As a wild guess, I would say less than a meter. Fun to be had by all coastal communities since the sea level rise will happen immediately. :)

      Futurama is not a place to get global warming solutions... even if they are cute. Heh.

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    4. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by na1led · · Score: 1

      Mirrors in space will reflect sunlight to keep the planet in balance. Man controlled climate.

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    5. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My other pet solution is to push a trillion ton block of ice out of Saturn's orbit and dump it onto the North Pole, which might buy us a couple extra decades at least.

      Yes, but you end up hitting the Yucatan instead, and it all ends in tears....

    6. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

      An engineer famously observed that California's rolling blackouts a few summers ago could have been prevented had they merely painted white the roofs of all public buildings in that state.

      You mean the rolling blackouts caused by Enron's illegal market manipulation as a result of partial deregulation passed by former CA governor Pete Wilson? I'm pretty sure that white roofs or not, Enron would have still caused that debacle.

      --
      :(){ :|:& };:
    7. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Well the ice in the Antarctic ice sheet is about 304,152 trillion tons so I'm not sure how much difference a trillion ton block of ice would make.

      Volume of Antarctic ice sheet = ~ 30 million cubic kilometers = 3x10^23 cc
      Ice = ~ 0.92 grams/cc
      So that's 276,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 grams of ice * 0.000001102 tons/gram
      = 304,152,000,000,000,000 tons of ice.

    8. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      No, what we should do is further scare the weak-minded into believing that reducing their "carbon footprint" will make a difference. This will free up additional resources for productive, inventive members of society (like we engineers) to advance human civilization.

      It's maddening, like being the caveman who first rubbed two sticks together to make fire, and yet has to put up with the whining of hipster cavemen because "ugh, that fire, it's too warm! And that wheel you invented...ehhh...it might roll over the delicate toesies of my chiiiiildren! Won't you think of the children?!?!"

      So, fine, yes, if you're petrified the world is going to end, then just shut off all your lights, hide in a cave, maybe kill yourself, and by all means don't breed. Those of us who actually solve problems will do so. But the shrill cries of the whining class are becoming less tenable.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    9. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technology is gradually solving these problems, without particular government intervention and sometimes despite such intervention. For example, solar panels are coming down in price, led by the increasingly dominant Chinese manufacturers. You know it's happening because American panel manufacturers are demanding an anti-dumping injunction.... DARPA is experimenting with 50% efficiency solar cells.

      Seems like these are examples of government funded 'progress'. I was under the impression that Chinese solar manufacturers are greatly subsidized by their government, leading to the price drop and the request for an anti-dumping injunction. I also thought DARPA was funded by U.S. taxpayers. Am I wrong or do I misunderstand the phrase "without government intervention and sometimes despite such intervention" ?

    10. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by Crosshair84 · · Score: 1

      Following the Krugman logic to its conclusion, ask them if they think 9/11 was good for the economy.

    11. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great- might as well find a nice cave and do nothing about how we do things - ?
      amazing - simply amazing

    12. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by TheRealLifeboy · · Score: 1

      The US has already made the most significant contribution to lowering CO2 emissions (which of course could mean totally nothing, since the CO2 hypotheses is fragile to say the least), Thanks to fracking US carbon emissions are at the lowest levels in 20 years. It's not a little drop, it's huge!

      So the best course of action could just be to make sure fracking companies are held accountable to the law, like the rest of the people. Don't exempt them from the clean water act and many other laws. Fix the sleeve leaks, take them to court for hiding the evidence with NDA's where leaks have occurred and in general ensure they clean up their act. At least then the global warming alarmists will be happier with the lowered CO2 output (plants in general will be worse off I suppose) and we'll have a cleaner world.

    13. Re:Seriously, what can we do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We can begin to build out wind power which has many times the needed capacity to power ALL every *single* bit of ALL the world's energy needs , taking into account *ever* single thing you can imagine including such canards as "the wind doesn't always blow everywhere" and ""dead birds" and "there isn't the infrastructure" and "it would take up a huge amount of land mass" and "there isn't enough of needed material X to build all those turbines".

      http://www.npr.org/2012/09/14/161156783/wind-power-plentiful-study-says

      Amongst the conservation / alternative fuel plans which is workable today with existing technology, the Princeton stabilization Wedges concept is a low economic impact workable plan which gets to to where we need to go with very minimal societal disruption.

      http://cmi.princeton.edu/wedges/

      People who are telling you there's nothing we can do can't have looked very hard at what's been proposed by serious researchers who would like to see their grandchildren inherit something other than hell on earth.

      People who are telling you 2 degrees is either 1) a negligible amount with manageable impacts which amount to nothing more than engineering problems or 2) that 2 degrees is all we're going to experience this century are either liars or homicidal maniacs. From:

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2007/apr/23/scienceandnature.climatechange

      Two degrees may not sound like much, but it is enough to make every European summer as hot as 2003, when 30,000 people died from heatstroke. That means extreme summers will be much hotter still. As Middle East-style temperatures sweep across Europe, the death toll may reach into the hundreds of thousands. The Mediterranean area can expect six more weeks of heatwave conditions, with wildfire risk also growing. Water worries will be aggravated as the southern Med loses a fifth of its rainfall, and the tourism industry could collapse as people move north outside the zones of extreme heat.

      Two degrees is also enough to cause the eventual complete melting of the Greenland ice sheet, which would raise global sea levels by seven metres. Much of the ice-cap disappeared 125,000 years ago, when global temperatures were 1-2C higher than now. Because of the sheer size of the ice sheet, no one expects this full seven metres to come before the end of the century, but a top Nasa climate scientist, James Hansen, is warning that the mainstream projections of sea level rise (of 50cm or so by 2100) could be dangerously conservative. As if to underline Hansen's warning, the rate of ice loss from Greenland has tripled since 2004.

      This melting will also continue to affect the world's mountain ranges, and in Peru all the glaciers will disappear from the Andean peaks that currently supply Lima with water. In California, the loss of snowpack from the Sierra Nevada - three-quarters of which could disappear in the two-degree world - will leave cities such as Los Angeles increasingly thirsty during the summer. Global food supplies, especially in the tropics, will also be affected but while two degrees of warming will be survivable for most humans, a third of all species alive today may be driven to extinction as climate change wipes out their habitat.

      Three degrees within this century may be is the tipping point in which the end of the world is all but certain. Right now, if the oil companies sold and we burned the fossil fuels in their reserves, never mind new oil exploration, we'd exceed the by 5 times the amount of carbon we need to force the earth to 2 degrees.

      http://www.ecoequity.org/2012/07/global-warmings-terrifying-new-math-bill-mckibbens-call-for-a-carbon-divestment-movement/

      Just the fact that we've been brought to this brink means that, in fact, democracy has already failed to protect itself and its citizens from ultimate calamity and has, simply put provably failed.

      The time for democracy to work was when Hansen et. al. first began to sound the alarm in the 80s. The fact is, the rig

  38. In Case Anyone Here Gives a Sh*t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The poles have a flip flop effect. As one gets colder, the other melts. All the news about the north melting sure makes for great headlines, but at the same time there is recording breaking new ice in the south pole region.

    You may now go back to your regularly scheduled worship.

  39. Bury Brigade? by Lije+Baley · · Score: 1

    Wow, with all the "Antarctic ice" link posts at the bottom, this place is starting to remind me of Digg. At least when I last saw it years ago...

    --
    Strange things are afoot at the Circle-K.
  40. Fart sequestering politicians by InPursuitOfTruth · · Score: 1

    Or, we could use politicians who degrade American liberties as objects of a new fart sequestering program.

  41. The Truth... by PortHaven · · Score: 2

    Glacier ice is aging, and in typically fashion old northern ice is moving south to a nicer climate. It's like how nearly all retired New Englanders seem to move to Florida (why anyone elderly person would move to a hot muggy swamp is beyond me - perhaps it's a government plot to trick elderly folk into dying more quickly to keep the Social Security budget balanced).

    But likewise, Arctic ice is now inclined to moved south to the Anarctic...

  42. Launch solar shade by SMACX+guy · · Score: 1

    I always have coastal cities and their production lines are far too important, to disrupt with a build order for domes. When sea levels rise (and to be fair, I'm usually the most to blame for it), there's always a planetary council call to launch a solar shade. I don't always get my way, but those who oppose me on the issue will the dominated ASAP if I can, so that we can re-vote on the issue at the next opportunity.

    I'm not saying Earth's current factions are wrong simply because they don't play like me, but... it sure looks dumb. And as is typical, those who you'd think have the most to lose (or at least should think they have the most to lose) are the ones most responsible for the problem and best equipped to do something about it.

    I know what you're thinking: it's zero sum. Sure, the developed countries will lose many cities, but so will their opponents. (Earth example: US might lose New York but Nigeria will lose Lagos, and Nigeria is poor so their loss of Lagos will hurt more, ergo, US wins by this disaster.) I would point out, though, that the more advanced factions will have a greater investment in their cities. Also, if you know what you're doing, your HQ will be coastal (always put your HQ on a coast) so that you can send sea crawlers to ocean hotspots. Winning a large map game is always about energy, in the end, because more energy means more tech, and more tech means both 1) better weapons and 2) first shot at the best Secret Projects. And hey, your coastal HQ probably has some mighty fine Secret Projects in it. Those are irreplaceable. This isn't the kind of situation where zero sum thinking is wise.

  43. We are doing something by Necron69 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hey, maybe we could stop burning so much coal and switch to lower-CO2 emitting natural gas? Oh wait, we already did.

    http://content.usatoday.com/communities/ondeadline/post/2012/08/in-a-surprise-co2-emissions-hit-20-year-low/1#.UFx1MI2PVkY

    Or maybe we could raise the gas mileage requirements on cars?

    http://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/rick-newman/2012/08/27/tough-government-gas-mileage-rules-good-for-drivers-auto-industry

    Anyone who thinks we aren't doing _anything_ isn't paying attention. Personally, however, I won't think we are serious until we start building newer, safer, CO2-free nuclear power plants. If you don't support more nuclear power, you aren't serious about stopping Global Warming, and you haven't studied the problem enough. Yes, I'm looking at you, Greenpeace.

    Necron69

    1. Re:We are doing something by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      Just to clear things up, I think we should definitely invest more into nuclear power, not less. The current trend to move away from it is dumb and may very well cause more issues in the future.

      However, I do not believe that nuclear fission is the universal panacea. Use the energy that is available to you. Got a desert? Some efficient solar power plants could help. Got lots of running water? Get a dam up there. Near the sea? Use tidal effects to your advantage. Lots of buildings with flat roofs in a urban area? Put solar panels on every roof (or alternatively green roofs, which help cool down the building and thus reduce air conditioning costs) and on all the windows.

      Then in the long run I'd hope to see a shift towards nuclear fusion, as eventually we'll find a way to harness that.

      I think it's important to diversify energy sources. No one source is perfect, but many are much better than coal, oil and gas, and nuclear is definitely one of them (modern nuclear incredibly more so). We should take advantage of them fast.

    2. Re:We are doing something by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

      This... What's more, when someone claims to be oh so very concerned about CO2, but not only doesn't support nuclear power, but agitates against nuclear power -- they aren't really concerned about CO2. Not really. They either just flat out do not care enough about the issue to take any effort at all educate themselves, or they have another agenda entirely.

    3. Re:We are doing something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or maybe we could raise the gas mileage requirements on cars?

      I think Europe has demonstrated fairly well the most effective means to accomplish this is to tax fuel. If you try to reward good mileage, often you get things like Washington DC where they allowed access to HOV lanes for hybrid vehicles; suddenly you get hybrid SUVs, which get access to HOV lanes despite having lower mileage than even medium sized cars. The problem is introducing or increasing taxes is politically incorrect.

    4. Re:We are doing something by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Skip the gas milage requirement. It really does not work. Instead put a slowly increasing tax on gas and diesel. At the same time, use part of that to improve our roads/bridges, and another part to get new Natural gas commercial vehicles, and large passenger vehicles, as well as smaller electric passenger vehicles.

      You do that, and our transportation will adjust.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    5. Re:We are doing something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > If you don't support more nuclear power, you aren't
      > serious about stopping Global Warming, and you haven't
      > studied the problem enough. Yes, I'm looking at you,
      > Greenpeace.

      especially their Scotsman's Brigade.

  44. globe was cool in the 70s by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    So we start our satellite observations in a trough of global cooling, and then compare arctic ice levels now with then, and get hysterical. Junk science again by NASA, who also recently made absurd claim of "unprecedented melting" in Greenland, when in fact it is a 150 year cyclical thing right on schedule.

    We'll never be able to have an proper discussion of the bad effects of our pollution on the planet with this anti-scientific fear mongering, by our "scientists." (actually agenda driven funding controlled propagandists)

  45. The three stages of dealing with shite by paiute · · Score: 0

    1. You liberal commie scientists are making this shite up to get your billions in grant money.
    2. Okay, it's happening, but it's die to natural cycles and shite. Nothing we did.
    3. Okay, we caused all this shite, but it'll cost us too much to deal with now.
    4. The ocean is two feet deep on South Beach, but the government moved my mansion and all my shite to higher ground onto property confiscated from someone not smart enough to run a huge PAC.

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
  46. Sorry the sky is not falling... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didnt reports just come out recently that Antarctic Ice is setting new growing records right now ??

    Cant have 'global warming' with that hppening at the same time.

    All the chicken littles and their sycophants need to study history that will show them long time cycles (include time periods long before the industrial age when ther earth was ALOT warmer than now (withing the last several thousand years).

    Ocean current shifts cause weather shifts - get over it.

    Sun activiy changes cause weather shifts --- get over your delusions.

    The hoax is over -- get over it.

  47. Excuxe me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But lack of preparation on the planet's part hardly constitutes an emergency on mine.

    John Galt will save us.

    And I will laugh from my mansion on the moon down at all you thieves.

  48. On PBS? You mean like this debacle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.skepticalscience.com/watts-pbs-newshour.html

  49. Carbon Trade? by Daryen · · Score: 1

    A carbon trade system could be workable (I do not claim to be the originator of this idea).

    The article states that we have an 80% chance of not permanently screwing up the world if we only dump 565 gigatons more of carbon into the atmosphere.

    Divide that up to all nations based on their current carbon emissions. The US and China combined for instance would be allowed to 'print' 226 gigatons of carbon credits.

    Anyone who adds carbon to the atmosphere will be required by their government to purchase the requisite amount of carbon credits. Initially the only supplier will be the Treasury, but more suppliers would emerge. New carbon credits could be "printed" and sold by anyone who permanently sequesters carbon.

    The price of burning carbon would eventually come to include the price of sequestering it. I realize that this fantasy would never happen, but it is at least workable as a theory, and builds on the existing "carbon credits" idea already in place.

    1. Re:Carbon Trade? by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Since carbon sequestering is a theory and one that is going to encounter a huge amount of resistance, I suspect it will never happen. Let's say someone figures out a way to just pump CO2 into some kind of a big storage tank... what happens when the tank leaks? You know that question is coming from people that assume anything man-made will fail. So no carbon sequestering, ever.

      Let's assume that the amount of carbon spewed into the atmosphere by driving a truck from LA to Chicago costs $5000. OK, assume there are 1000 tomatos on the truck - you can assume the price of tomatoes in Chicago goes up by $6 each. How about if there are 10 big-screen TVs - they would go up by at least $500 each, probably a bit more. After all, this will be a new tax and someone is going to have to file it and process it. They are going to get paid for doing this work, right?

      You can say, well, new rail lines will be built which are electric and have less CO2 than the trucks. Except that will take a decade or more to do and this is something that is going to happen the week this goes into effect. So instead of $0.50 for a tomato it is $6.50. Instead of $500 for a TV it is $1050. Sure, things will eventually sort themselves out, but most people that understand what this means is that nobody will be buying tomatoes in Chicago anymore so there is no point in thinking up new inventive ways to ship them from California. Five years after this goes into effect people would look at a tomato and say "What's that?"

      So what happens to the tomato growers, truck drivers and freight terminal guys that move the tomatoes around? Well, they are with the rest of the people still looking for a job after 2007. No, 2020 will not be the year of the electric truck, it will much more likely be the end of interstate transportation of goods. Yes, this would be better for the environment but we need to have a very large war to use up all the unneeded laborers before this is a really good idea. Otherwise they will be sitting around and wondering what to do ... at least until someone comes along and suggest tearing down the government that put them in that situation. Sort of like Russia in 1918. Oh wait, almost exactly like Russia in 1918.

  50. Idiotic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Where does the science say that melting sea ice causes sea level rise?

    NOWHERE.

    Now what other ice is there.

    Land ice. Glaciers.

    Do any exist up there in the Arctic?

    Yes.

    Will the ice there be melting for the same reasons that the arctic ice is?

    Yes.

  51. Small World by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the rolling stone article:

    3.7 x 10-99, a number considerably larger than the number of stars in the universe.

    Was "-99" supposed to be in superscript or not? I can't tell whether the article is claiming the universe contains fewer than -62 stars or fewer than 0.00000000000 000000000000 00000000000000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000000000 000000000000000037 stars.

    (Edit: stick a few spaces in to avoid the lameness filter)

  52. The New End by Sir_Eptishous · · Score: 1

    It's interesting to me, as someone who grew up during the Cold War, with the constant threat of Nuclear Annihilation from the Soviet Union to now be faced with the replacement for that world ending paradigm. Call it what you want, "Climate Change", "Global Warming", etc; it appears that the build up of greenhouse gases in the Earths atmosphere is causing shifts in the Earths weather and climate, for better or more likely for us, worse.

    Back in the late 80's when I first heard about what would be termed "Global Warming", I read with fascination, the way you would read about a multi-car auto wreck on the freeway or descriptions of the siege of Leningrad, how the trapped heat could wreak havoc on the planet. Back then I thought that surely it could be averted, like the CFC problem had been addressed.

    With the fall of "Communism" and the dismantling of the Soviet Empire; the U.S. being left as "The Winner" in the Cold War, there was a sigh of relief, a hope that the Nuclear standoff was coming to and end. The early to mid 80's, when the Soviets changed leaders often and Nuclear War had been more likely than any time since the Kennedy years, were a period of Nuclear Dread. A time when many of that generation thought they wouldn't be around for long.

    So in hindsight it's almost funny to see how this new "Existential Threat"(yes, one of the most overused terms in the MSM) has evolved, after the years of "fast living on the edge" because many assumed our time was near.

    How will the generations that are now facing this threat going to respond?

    --
    We play the game with the bravery of being out of range
  53. The reason everyone isn't alarmed by phrackwulf · · Score: 2

    Is that if you look at this thread you see that a supposedly somewhat technical audience cannot even agree on the relative characteristics and density of sea water vs. fresh water let alone the ultimate fate of the planet. You need to get more granular on this issue. If I need to build dikes to keep New York from becoming the littoral version of "Rapture" from Bioshock that is something you need to let us, the Engineer's know. Other than that. Suck it up princess.

    Just try getting this crowd to agree on a Friday night pizza topping.

    --
    What would Richard Feynman do, if he were here right now? He'd do some math and he'd follow through!
  54. What about the South Pole? by biggaijin · · Score: 1

    As many posters already have said, the arctic melt was thoroughly covered in the "mainstream media". What I found interesting is that the reports of a newly tropical arctic area did not also include the information that the Antarctic ice pack is larger than we ever have seen it and still growing, This sort of omission is typical in the highly political discussion that surrounds climate discussions now.

    The climate has changed drastically over the centuries, sometimes warming, sometimes cooling. I am willing to bow to the evidence that the globe is warming by fractional degrees each year -- though the Northern hemisphere just experienced one of the coldest winters we have had for a very long time -- but I fail to see how changing the amount of carbon dioxide my car emits will reverse any change that is happening. I certainly doubt that passing new taxes on energy use in Europe and the US will cause the weather to change. If we really want the globe to cool down for a couple of years, what we need is a big volcanic explosion that blankets the earth with smoke for a good long time. This would cool things off, but the other effects might not be so desirable.

    1. Re:What about the South Pole? by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

      What I found interesting is that the reports of a newly tropical arctic area did not also include the information that the Antarctic ice pack is larger than we ever have seen it and still growing, This sort of omission is typical in the highly political discussion that surrounds climate discussions now.

      As I have found out from other posters in this thread, the Antarctic ice that is growing is sea ice. If that sea ice is being formed by the land ice sliding into the sea and breaking off, then it doesn't help your position it hurts it.

      The climate has changed drastically over the centuries, sometimes warming, sometimes cooling. I am willing to bow to the evidence that the globe is warming by fractional degrees each year -- though the Northern hemisphere just experienced one of the coldest winters we have had for a very long time

      Now I feel you are just straight up lying! Here in the Chicago area we had snow for only a day or two at a time. Probably less than two weeks total for the whole winter. And we didn't have the usual few weeks of -20 degrees, so I think it was one of the warmest winters I have ever seen.

      --

      -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
  55. Addiction to short-term gains by erroneus · · Score: 1

    I think nothing demonstrates our corporate addiction to short-term gains quite like the end of the world as we know it.

    We know what generally needs to be changed. But the changes required are controlled by large money interests. They don't what that change.

    This is simple but still quite accurate.

    We see this problem all over the financial globe. We see it in the fact that bad practices caused the global financial problems we are seeing today and the same parties who participated and are still going unpunished are pushing for even less regulation... regulation that was put into place to keep the global economy stable and worked well for over 7 decades.

    Of course any and all of this can be fixed in a variety of ways by correcting a variety of behaviors. Among these include the ways money can influence government and the way business can influence government.

    The people benefitting from the current conditions, of course, will not hear of any change and certainly will do everything they can to prevent it. They have what they want and don't want to lose it. And the suffering of the rest of the world isn't on the radars of their conscience.

    Of course we will all die and suffer the same in the end, but their denial is at the source of global doom. This denial was somewhat understandable when the actual effects weren't quite so visible or measurable. But now things are profoundly demonstrable. But then again, we're still a planet populated by extremely superstitious people... we believe in gods and stuff like that. So I have little doubt that we cannot stop the end which is coming.

    Money will be worthless when the end is here... but bullets will be pretty valuable. Invest in precious metals... like lead.

    1. Re:Addiction to short-term gains by gatfirls · · Score: 1

      You seem to envision an "end" like most do in which there is short downward spiral and somehow we'll all be on a relatively even playing field because monetary wealth means nothing. What is more likely (and actually happening right now) is that the corporations and rich will continue to suck on the corpse of their country, society, and neighbors for a very long time and until it is bone dry. Once the "line" (share price/profit margin) stops moving because of the exploitation of cheap Asian labor and lack of regulation happens, what next? We're circling the toilet bowl on many fronts and while the environment is scary because it is essentially irreversible the economic and political cliffs we are standing on or much more pressing and solvable issues that *have* to be addressed before we can even start a rational discussion on international climate changing measures.

  56. Scary new math summary by RichMan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    0) all 40 major climate models are in agreement and new tweaks over last couple of years do not adjust any of them significantly
    1) previously assumed 2'C crisis point is looking bad. Current conditions indicate 1'C is likely edge of strange world. We are at 0.8'C now.
    2) 265 GT of carbon release will get us to 2'C point
    3) 2,795 GT of carbon in known preserves slated for exploitation

    why does it matter -->>
    In the course of this month, a quadrillion kernels of corn need to pollinate across the grain belt, something they can't do if temperatures remain off the charts. Just like us, our crops are adapted to the Holocene, the 11,000-year period of climatic stability we're now leaving... in the dust.

    1. Re:Scary new math summary by Sir_Eptishous · · Score: 1

      For a Rich Man your analysis is spot on.

      --
      We play the game with the bravery of being out of range
    2. Re:Scary new math summary by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      There is now some discussion on whether the Holocene is coming to an end (or is already there) as a result of these changes. We've already seen a dramatic plunge in biodiversity, and the climate is changing. These are usually key markers for an age to begin and/or end.

      --
      ~X~
    3. Re:Scary new math summary by Troed · · Score: 1

      The Holocene has been getting colder and colder from its start, where it was about 2 degrees warmer than now. It's difficult to see how that fits with any hypothesis that 1 degree warming from the Holocene's coldest point (the Little Ice Age) would be strange in any way.

      Along the Arctic Coastal Plain in Alaska, there are indications of summer temperatures 2–3 C warmer than present. Research indicates that the Arctic had substantially less sea ice during this period compared to present

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

    4. Re:Scary new math summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All 40 are wrong. None predicted the 17 year stasis in temperatures we are currently in. We are below the lowest " guarenteed temperature line" they said if no additional co2 was produced. None predicted the 11 year flat temperatures of the oceans. None predicted dropping humidity, dropping cloud height, none predicted pdo/amo and 60 year cycles of el Ninos. None predicted the mwp and the thousand year cycles of warming. All the " scientists" we're wrong about the sea level rise which is 1/10th hat they said it would be. All their predictions are massively off course. We are nowhere near getting 1C by 2100 let alone 2.5C. We haven't gotten any increase in temps in the 21 century. This is all in spite of the fact that co2 production climbs faster and faster. It's not weather. 17 years of zero trend is not "weather". It's a mistake off the models.

  57. Apocalypse Now? by SuperCharlie · · Score: 1

    Ya know.. I used to be kinda worried about the whole environment, global warming thing... but as time goes on and I keep seeing sheeple brainwashed into stabbing themselves in the eye with the same political an religious asshattery.. Ive come to root for these "planetary emergencies". So.. is it time yet? (looks out window) damn. sigh.. no..not yet.

  58. Innovate Goddamnit! by Bananatree3 · · Score: 1

    All the fervor and energy spent on the Global Warming should be spent in R&D on alternatives to fossil fuels. We have the means and the motive to innovate our way out of the climate crisis, but we need every cent on R&D!! Fossil fuels are intrenched in our society. We can try the political approach, but the sure-fire and ultimate solution is a technological approach.

    Start here and make something cheaper goddamit! Innovate, demonstrate and the first innovator to scale effectively will make tens of billions in the process, while the world will get off CO2 faster than any other means.

    Innovate Goddammit!

  59. earth has natural warming and cooling cycles by CoderFool · · Score: 1

    I am not convinced that the current 'gloabal warming' trend is solely due to human activity. James Hansen may be NASA, but some of his conclusions seem dubious. And then the climategate scandal. There is so much pro and con and hysteria about global warming, it's hard to know who is a reliable source of information. To me, there seems to be natural warming and cooling cycles, wetter and dryer cycles. The drought this summer made me think we are in for another 'dustbowl' period like in the thirties. Sure we have better agricultural practices now, so we won't have huge dust storms, but we could be in for the same type of severe drought. I remember reading a story that in the 1920s, ships were able to sail over the ice-free north pole in the summer. My though here is this points to a cycle covering decades. There is another cycle covering centuries. There was a medieval warm period from around 800 or 900 CE to about 1300 CE where the climate warmed enough they were growing grapes in Britain. In this time the Vikings colonized Greenland and Iceland and reportedly landed in Nova Scotia. Some archeological evidence for Vikings has been found in NS. But the one thing that has puzzled archeologists is the mention of the Vikings finding wild grapes in NS-which doesn't make sense unless the climate was warmer at that time than now. In the early 1300s the climate changed to what is termed 'the little ice age'. It got cold enough that the Thames would freeze hard enough and the British has Frost Fairs on it. It was cold enough that the picture of George Washington's crossing with all the ice chunks in it was correct. Around the 1850s, the earth started warming up again. And there is a cycle of tens or hundreds of thousands of years where the earth is warm or the earth has a big ice age--yet the planet is still habitable. There are also news stories where some scientists have found evidence that the earth was warmer in the human past than now, or that not all the ice is going away. Here is a sample of some: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/06/02/1930s_greenland_glacier_retreat/ http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamestaylor/2012/09/19/antarctic-sea-ice-sets-another-record/ http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamestaylor/2011/07/27/new-nasa-data-blow-gaping-hold-in-global-warming-alarmism/ http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/07/10/global_warming_undermined_by_study_of_climate_change/

  60. Rolling Stone? by Gothmolly · · Score: 0

    Rolling Stone is right up there with the NYT. The liberal version of Fox News.

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
  61. And we would what? by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    It's not like resurrecting a Shuttle, throwing a bunch of climatologists and oil drillers on board, and blowing up an asteroid will solve this, nor are we apaprently able to seed clouds and shield earth from the sun and get a few extra years' time to go back to hose and buggy transportation.

    In fact, it's not like we are going to make decisions about climate changes that would entirely disrupt the world's economies for the sake of a change in a single season's ice melt. And certainly not when we are within days or weeks of the cooling season in the Arctic, and all this will become moot for another 6 months.

    Once again, the climate change alarmists go off the deep end and squander their credibility. Please, please start acting like scientists, ok? I'm ready to, and have, accepted the evidence. In Phoenix, the record high temperature (122F) was recorded in 1990. This year seems to be about average. But we don't need uniform record highs. We need sound analysis, not alarmist 'the Arctic is melllltttiiiinnggggg....' proclamations of imminent doom.

    The Arctic is going to freeze over this winter. So of you're not going to put up a continental shade sail, please come back with science, not fear.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    1. Re:And we would what? by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      It's not "scientists." That's what people keep missing in all this endless wrangling. It's just Hansen. That guy does more damage to his own cause than any number of Republican funded think tanks. He's an embarassment and an idiot. And really fuckin' loud. I'm sick of hearing him. I'm sick of the 600+ comment Slashdot threads he fuels. I'm sick of it all, the same way I'm sick of hearing about the motherfucking Middle East.

      Climate Give A Fuck Quotient: 0.
      Middle East Give A Fuck Quotient: 0.

      Let it burn. Let it all burn.

  62. Rapid Arctic Melt Called 'Planetary Emergency? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, what are they calling the record growth of ice in the Antarctic?

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamestaylor/2012/09/19/antarctic-sea-ice-sets-another-record/

  63. the problem is "turf wars" by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

    If we suddenly found a StarGate and dialed an 8 chevron address and found a warehouse with a few dozen ZPMs (and other "toys") we would have a full bore World War 3 THE NEXT DAY.

    Way too many folks have a vested interest in keeping things STATUS QUO for anything to be allowed to disrupt things.

    besides how are you going to get folks to allow a NUKE PLANT in their city?? even if it was a sealed unit that could be trucked in (and then Bolted In Place) you would have folks lining up to scream how unsafe it is.

    SlashMind Challenge find credible and recent links of a design for a semi portable reactor (not counting ship mounted types).

    --
    Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
  64. Oh No You Di'nt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Antarctic Sea Ice Sets Another Record

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamestaylor/2012/09/19/antarctic-sea-ice-sets-another-record/

    "Antarctic sea ice set another record this past week, with the most amount of ice ever recorded on day 256 of the calendar year (September 12 of this leap year)."

    'Don't you realize that this has no relation to the arctic events?'

    or...

    'Don't you understand that the increased freezing is a direct result of the global warming?'

    Try to keep up.

    1. Re:Oh No You Di'nt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Antarctic Sea Ice Sets Another Record

      http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamestaylor/2012/09/19/antarctic-sea-ice-sets-another-record/

      "Antarctic sea ice set another record this past week, with the most amount of ice ever recorded on day 256 of the calendar year (September 12 of this leap year)."

      'Don't you realize that this has no relation to the arctic events?'

      or...

      'Don't you understand that the increased freezing is a direct result of the global warming?'

      Try to keep up.

      How about, "Sea ice. As in, the ice that comes off land based glaciers. At greater rates than seen before. Land based ice, as in not already in the ocean and is the real threat in raising sea levels."

    2. Re:Oh No You Di'nt by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Sea ice is not ice that comes off of land based glaciers but is ice that freezes directly out of the sea. The ice that comes off of land based glaciers is commonly called an ice shelf.

  65. Why aren't you scared? YOU SHOULD BE SCARED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SCARED YET? NO? (I MUST NOT BE YELLING LOUD ENOUGH!)

    The glaciers are receding everyone!!! DON'T YOU UNDERSTAND? RUN FOR YOUR LIVES!!!

  66. Arctic Shrinks, Antarctic Grows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just sayin...

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/09/21/arctic_antarctic_sea_ice_record/

    "Even as the Arctic sea ice starts to grow again from its summery shrunken condition, the austral ice at the planet's other pole may have yet to reach its wintery peak extent. As the graph shows, at the moment it is much larger than normal for the time of year, and depending on what happens in the next week or so it might hit a record high. There has already been a point at which a record for that date occurred, and only a handful of higher daily satellite readings have ever been taken.

    The sea ice around the coasts of Antarctica on average covers roughly the same amount of sea as the north-polar sea ice does: it's just as important, though you wouldn't know it by looking at the world's press right now. Another thing not everyone knows is that even as Arctic ice has been on a long decline since satellite measurements began, the Antarctic ice has been growing steadily (this despite well-publicised ice shelf losses around the Western Antarctic peninsula, bucking the overall continental trend)."

  67. FedBudget Mess + Election + Sequestration in Jan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just checked the sea ice area extent rimming Antarctica: larger than ever and continuing to do so on a yearly basis.

    I'd say the real danger is the Federal Budget Mess, the upcoming Presidential Election and the mandatory Budget
    Sequestration in January. Add to that the loss, i.e. lowering, of credit rating of the US Treasury to Junk Bond status.

    Now that is the clear and present danger!

  68. Global Cooling Was Sure To Kill Us All In The 70's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    During the 70's the big climate issue was global cooling. We were plunging towards a certain ice age. all the world was sure to freeze over. Scientists everywhere were very alarmed and many were very alarming. NOAA/NASA were directed to start monitoring things very closely in the hopes that we could stave off the ice in some unknown way.

    The 70's were scary time climate-wise!

    But, those guys were idiots! This new emergency, global warming, is real! It's been established by real scientists, this time. Only deniers are stupid enough to disagree! There is concensus!(There was in the 70's too.) Rolling Stone confirms that global warming is upon us, not stupid magazines like Time, Newsweek, Washington Post ... that stupidly lauded the imminent ice age.

  69. Fuck the planet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The sun will burn this to ashes anyway!

  70. A record was set - so what? by aggles · · Score: 1

    There has been plenty of news about it, but what's the call to action? Maybe we should get ready for major winter snows in the US Northeast, like happened the winter after the last record was set? There is increasing acceptance that the rise is human accelerated, but there is no common wisdom on what can stop it or even the degree to which the rate of change can be slowed down. What we see here is just another snapshot of the ride towards a warmer planet and we'll have to deal with the impact as it happens, what ever happens.

  71. The sky is falling! by Grand+Facade · · Score: 1

    Firstly what can be done about it?
    Second what should be done about it?

    We have had satellites in the air for less than a drop in the bucket of time in earth's history. How can we use data that only covers less than a drop in the bucket to predict an outcome? Is Earth's climate changing? Hell yes! There is evidence of oceans where there are none. There is evidence of oceans where there was once civilizations. There is evidence of an "Ice age". There is evidence of many species and fauna that USED to exist. Maybe we are the next?

    The only thing certain is death and increased taxes....

    "Change happens"
    There is no call for doing a Chicken Little imitation.

    If we (collectively) are responsible for the change, it's a little late to do anything about it. There are too many humans on the earth now to go back. And the mechanism's (that is earth's climate) pendulum is in mid swing and there is no stopping it. It is most likely to late to even affect how far it swings, even if we were able. And think about it even if we were able to affect it we would have to stop it from swinging back the other way. And then the cold people would want warm and the hot people would want cold and there would be whining and gnashing of teeth about where the pendulum should be stopped. "Some things never change"

    --
    Rick B.
  72. NUCLEAR POWER by roman_mir · · Score: 0

    Well, what can be done is the government could relax various regulations surrounding the nuclear power. It could give a go ahead to building nuclear power plants, if anything can be done by humans, it's this.

    1. Re:NUCLEAR POWER by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Amen, brother. We may not agree on much, but this, absolutely.

  73. One is sea ice extent. The other land ice mass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What happens when a block of packed snow starts to melt?

    It sags and spreads out like melting butter.

    Increasing its extent even as the main mass loses its ice content.

  74. The 1.4%... by mevets · · Score: 1

    With apologies to small island nations, the sea level isnâ(TM)t among the important risks of melting this ice sheet. The ice sheet serves as more than just a moderator.

    [napkin math]:

    Ice reflects over 50% of light energy; whereas open ocean absorbs about 90% (approx: albedo ice=0.5, snow+ice=0.9, ocean=0.06).
    The artic ice normally varies between 3.3% and 2.5% of the surface area.
    The 3.3% figure is less interesting because it occurs when there is little sunlight to absorb or reflect anyways. That is due both to the short days, and the angle of incidence of the suns rays.

    At the new lower bound of 1%, this means that fully 1.5% (2.5 - 1) more area is available to absorb sunlight, at a 90% efficiency means that this fact alone will increase the earths heat absorption by about 1.4%.

    There are likely other moderators (I hope so) which will diffuse this, however there is a disturbing pattern in play to overtax these moderators.

    The point is, what is the significance of this 1.4% gain?

  75. real change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a phone (old flip phone) on a charger, the TV sits in standby waiting for the remote to turn it on, the CD player ditto, the dish box ditto. Modem, router and three computers are on all day (gawd I hate "24/7"). Refrigerator, freezer, clocks, radios and lights on all day long.

    And how many people want to tear down the hydro plants to save the fish. Then they yell about coal fired electric plants.

    Humans, geesh.

  76. Weasel Words by JohnPerkins · · Score: 1

    I have a hard time taking either side (true believers of global warming vs. deniers of global warming), in part due to the use of weasel words. For example:

    "All time low" vs. "all time low within the satellite record."

    This level could be common over the last few hundred/thousand/tens of thousands of years. How far back does the satellite record go? I know it goes back further than this, but you could say something like 'the arctic ice is at an all-time low for measurements made in the last 5 minutes." The time range might make it a meaningless statement, but it would still be designed to project the idea of "all time low."

    "NASA climate scientist James Hansen has declared the current reality a 'planetary emergency' " vs. "NASA has declared the current reality a 'planetary emergency' " vs. "NASA has declared a planetary emergency."

    This third option is what it sounds like the article is trying to project. But it's not NASA, it's one guy who works / has worked for NASA. I have, for instance, a great deal of respect for astronauts, but I don't automatically take their word for everything because I might be talking to that a diaper-wearing, boyfriend-stalking nut case. "...the current reality..." smells weasel-y. Either there is something that warrants a declared emergency or there isn't. Use of "the current reality" feels like it's saying "there is disagreement over the meaning of these data, but what I think is the correct interpretation, so everyone should accept my perception of these data as reality."

    "The thaw this year broke all the records we had previous to this and it didn't just break them, it smashed them."

    See above RE all records, last 5 minutes, etc.. "It smashed them" tries to project an idea but doesn't actually mean anything. Let's say my highest annual income was $50,000 prior to last year, but last year I made $50,001. I can say, truthfully, that I 'smashed my previous earnings record' because 'smashed' isn't tied to do any quantifiable meaning.

    "Not sure why your mainstream press isn't covering this story."

    There's a post above where another Slashdotter note several mainstream sources covering the story. Similar to my issue with "smashed," "mainstream press" doesn't really mean anything either. Side A: "The story isn't being covered in the mainstream press." Side B: "The story is being covered by PBS and CNN- those are mainstream." Side A: "But it's not on the front page of the New York Times or the cover of People." Because the term "mainstream press" isn't quantifiable it doesn't mean anything. If, instead of "mainstream press isn't covering this story," it said "neither news source A, B, C...Z are covering this story," then it might mean something. Also there's the "your" in "your mainstream press." This implies a difference between "your mainstream press," "my mainstream press," and "the mainstream press." The idea the statement "not sure why your mainstream press isn't covering this story" is trying to project is that the story isn't being covered. Stripping away any weasel words leaves only "there is some undefined list of news sources that aren't covering this story."

    "Global warming's terrifying new math."

    "Terrifying" doesn't actually mean anything here because it's a subjective statement. I might watch a comedy movie and my wife might walk into the room, remark that "this movie is stupid," and walk away. It is incorrect to say, in absolute terms, that "this movie is stupid" because that implies the person making the statement to be the ultimate arbiter of what is or isn't stupid. A correct statement would be "I like this movie but my wife does not." Someone may find the data in the article to be terrifying, but that doesn't mean the data are terrifying or that anyone (ex: the reader) should find the data terrifying. There may be someone who is terrified that somewhere there is a duck staring at them, but that doesn't mean I should be terrified if I see a duck staring at me.

    Overall

    What the a

  77. Saw this on TV: by ApplePy · · Score: 1

    News presenter: "Sea ice in the Arctic at lowest levels EVAR! (Since 1979.)"

    Ah, but there has been less ice before 1979, hasn't there? In fact, the rising, choking sea ice is why scientists thought, for a time, that global cooling was what was happening, careening the planet headlong into a new Ice Age. Surely a few Slashdotters are old enough to remember this.

    Do we have a problem? Yep. Should we be doing things to clean up our environment? Absolutely. But beware any "solution" that comes from the realm of politics. Think about it. Only a handful of Congressmen have science education. Most are lawyers.

    Considering the general fear and loathing of politicians around here -- I mean, really, Slashdot! We all know politicians are morons. Now you want to trust them to change the climate of the entire planet? Or, in trying to do so, pass the most tyrannical laws America has ever seen? You're off your rocker.

    --
    That I'm right, and you don't like it, doesn't mean I'm a troll.
  78. Emergency? by jdavidb · · Score: 1

    Emergency? Planetary emergency, you say?

    Dellow felegates! In response to this direct threat to the Republic, mesa propose that the Senate give immediately emergency powers to the Supreme Chancellor!

  79. On another note by Quila · · Score: 1

    Shorter arctic shipping routes are opening up due to the rapid disappearance of route-blocking ice.

  80. The Artic meltdown shows that things are worse... by jurgen · · Score: 2

    Why is this Artic meltdown so important?

    Three words: "postitive feedback loops."

    All the "scary math" up until now has ignored this one very fundamental thing that could make things much, much worse than even the worst case estimates in the IPCC reports until now. The possibility of positive feedback loops accellerating climate change was explicitly excluded from the IPCC reports because they are poorly understood and introduce potentially wildly chaotic responses. They actually say litterally: we're ignoring this because we don't understand it.

    The rapid Arctic meltdown has proven that at least some positive feedback loops are already operating, that for this part of the global system the curve is exponential, not linear.

    Now the very real and very great danger is the Arctic meltdown will or already has triggered other, even more significant positive feedback loops. Such as releasing the vast stores of Methane in sub-sea hydrates and the permafrost. If that turns out to be the case, then fasten your seatbelts... we're on the fasttrack to global meltdown already.

    Take a look at this site: http://www.ameg.me/

  81. Re:Sig by Hatta · · Score: 1

    There is just one recipe for chili. Cubed beef, pork fat or suet, onion, cumin, chiles, and a little water. Simmer for at least 4 hours. That's chili.

    Chili flavored bean stew, with or without tomatoes, is a fine meal. I will gladly eat it and ask for seconds. But it's not chili.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  82. Good for Canada, Russia and Alaska by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

    It is good for Canada, Russia and Alaska.

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    1. Re:Good for Canada, Russia and Alaska by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is good for Canada, Russia and Alaska.

      Speaking as a Canadian, the March to the Hudson Bay our southern neighbours would go on in search of resources/succour as the southern parts of the US became arid wastelands in the worse case scenarios, does not fill me with hope.

  83. Everyone Dies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So will we. Burn baby burn. Some will survive, the rich and the smartest. So whatever.

  84. Integrity is a precious commodity by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1

    Mann, Hanson, Gore, et al. have squandered a resource more precious than the environment they claim to be saving.
    As with most conservatives, I stand ready to conserve nature. Trees, parks, and wildlife are great.
    But these chaps who aren't publishing code, data, or models, especially where taxpayer dollars have been funding their research, leave something to be desired.

    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    1. Re:Integrity is a precious commodity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mann, Hanson, Gore, et al. have squandered a resource more precious than the environment they claim to be saving.

      Once the environment is actively hostile to humans, pretty much everything else aside from survival ceases to be precious. Integrity can't be eaten or drunk, nor will it stop rising floodwaters, raging fires, or storms and other extremes of weather.

      As with most conservatives, I stand ready to conserve nature. Trees, parks, and wildlife are great.

      This isn't about nature conservation. This isn't going to be a matter of preserving polar bears in a zoo and saying There I Fixed It. Changes in climate aren't going to stop at the city limits.

      But these chaps who aren't publishing code, data, or models, especially where taxpayer dollars have been funding their research, leave something to be desired.

      The bolded is an egregious, willful lie. Literally 5 seconds with Google will get you all you need. You have no business saying it's not published.

    2. Re:Integrity is a precious commodity by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1

      And your willingness to attach your name to your reply stands as a bold refutation.
      Someone with credibility, ESR has shown what a pack of clowns "you guys" are: http://esr.ibiblio.org/?p=1447
      Also instructive, NewsBusters: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/noel-sheppard/2012/09/19/pbs-under-attack-allowing-global-warming-skeptic-speak
      Calling me a liar, Your Anonymity, doesn't remove the challenge to start at square one and restore credibility before proceeding.

      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
  85. Too many people on the earth by Stan92057 · · Score: 0

    Too many people on the earth and their water its not given back to the earth. That may sound funny/crazy but think about it. Billions of gallons of water inside pipes under our streets, when we get buried were buried in an air tight tomb so no way to give back that water that way. I think we should all be buried at sea. Nothing goes to waste in the sea except the plastic trash we put in it. Or be burned. Nature leaves nothing but bones and they turn to stone eventually so nothing is wasted. IMO.

    --
    Jack of all trades,master of none
    1. Re:Too many people on the earth by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2

      All the people who have ever lived on the earth would fit in a 1 mile by 1 mile by 1 mile cube. That cube would fit in the grand canyon. Now think about how big the ocean is. The amount of water locked up in people is a literal drop in the bucket.

    2. Re:Too many people on the earth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the people who have ever lived on the earth would fit in a 1 mile by 1 mile by 1 mile cube. That cube would fit in the grand canyon. Now think about how big the ocean is. The amount of water locked up in people is a literal drop in the bucket.

      Well, to be fair to his point, our water consumption per person (nevermind other resources we consume daily) has to be locked up in our infrastructure too, and has to be replenished, so that multiplies this 1 mile cube many times, especially when you consider those billions consume day after day year after year. Further, oceans aren't as ready a source of water; we really should limit ourselves to fresh water sources.

      I could get behind our new burial-at-sea overlords. :)

  86. Planetary Emergency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Planetary Emergency! Everyone to their ships!

  87. Planetary emergency burnout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like people who talk about the threat of terrorism, environmentalism has used such extreme language for so long, people have given up listening. If your alarm meter only ranks things as 0, 9 and 10, people tune you out.

  88. Further evidence by scorp1us · · Score: 1

    http://psc.apl.washington.edu/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/schweiger/ice_volume/Bpiomas_plot_daily_heff.2sst.png

    As we can see, arctic ice thickness has been picking up. This is consistent with the weaker ice being broken off and stronger thicker ice remaining.

    --
    Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
  89. Read your own reference. by liquiddark · · Score: 1

    I don't know what you're seeing in that graph, but I'm seeing significantly higher temperatures than normal after the melting point, which is exactly what TFA mentioned. The average temperature may be below melting, but that doesn't mean the temperature everywhere is below melting. A higher average temperature means more melt. If you look at years before and after about 1980 on that page, you see that the curve has in general been showing higher temperatures most years after the general melting point.

  90. Most post are missing the point by Grayhand · · Score: 2

    Nine out of ten posts will always fall into a couple of categories from it's no big deal or it's a natural cycle. The change is so small it'll have little affect or who cares because any change is hundreds of years off. What people need to look hard at is the last 12 years of stories and the progression. 12 years ago the general belief was if the ice cap is melting we might see no ice cap in summer by 2100. Most thought we'd see a stable summer northwest passage by then maybe as soon as 2050. We already have that and now some are saying the ice cap may collapse as soon as 2015 to 2017. That means no year round ice cap just floating bergs in the summer and those growing gradually smaller. We weren't supposed to see a major impact on climate yet but we are seeing severe droughts and bad weather like tornadoes. We've got hotter summers and worse snow in winters. Most say it's a trend that will soon reverse but the trend started in the early 80s and is accelerating and showing no sign of reversing. People argue about sea level rise but some islands in the Pacific are already under threat. They are seeing the island's water supply poisoned with seawater and waters flooding areas it hadn't historically before. No one on small Pacific Islands are debating global warming they are preparing to eventually abandon their countries. We're facing the classic frog in a pan of hot water scenario. If they saw ice melt and weather like we see now suddenly in 2001 there would have been panic. Stretch it over 12 years and the changes are less noticeable. Just imagine in 12 more years the potential changes? Already if we see another drought next year there will be severe corn shortages. In the past we had a year's worth in storage. Now it's down to a few months. Just look at this one thing, remember history class. Remember all the talk of finding a northwest passage? When they were originally looking some years one would briefly open in the summer. Most years there was no passage. The passage only opened within the last ten years and already we may be a few years away from no summer ice pack. In geologic time that's overnight. They are planning to drill for oil at the north pole! Forget the arctic because no one seems to care about sea ice. Forget sea level rise because until it starts flooding New York no one cares. How's this for hitting home, food prices are likely to double or triple over just the next five to ten years and that may be the conservative estimate. Alarmist? Far from. The aquafers are already badly depleted and we could easily be facing a ten year or more drought. They happen even without global warming. What if the corn crop gets cut in half. That could easily happen. Cattle, Chickens and pigs are all fed corn. Even many fish like catfish are fed mainly corn. Most of your processed food is corn based. Check the labels and you'd be shocked. Almost everything has some corn in it whether from corn syrup or oil or the starch. Corn is now better than $8 a bushel. What happens when it hits $25? There's no substitute. Corporate America has made sure of that. It would take years if not decades to switch over to other sources. Just import what we need? Well that means some one else goes hungry and in order to make sure we get our corn that's where $15 to $25 a bushel comes from. Most won't starve in this country because we'll stop buying toys to buy food but your lifestyle will change dramatically and the third world will start starving in the tens of millions to keep us stocked with what we need because we'll pay anything for it.

  91. Too bad - old, old, old news by pubwvj · · Score: 1

    Too bad they fail to mention that this has happened before, repeatedly, over, and over, and over again. We're headed for a warmer, more diverse world where more of the land area is habitable by a wide diversity of species. We're in a cool period right now and things are correcting. Don't get confused or distracted by "Global Warming" or "Climate Change". The real issue is toxic pollution. PCBs, etc. Pay attention.

  92. Hansen the publicity hound, yet again... by bradley13 · · Score: 1

    Planetary emergency? Total planetary ice is up (the arctic compensated in Antarctica). Ill effects from melting arctic ice: none. The only emergency was Hansen not having enough publicity...

    --
    Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
  93. Bravo -- Consider Hansen 'denounced' by Burz · · Score: 1

    We need scientists to report not react.

    You're wrong. Conscience has to come into it at some point.

    Insinuating that Hansen is some kind of vested interest is pretty ironic, considering that the small number of climatologists who denied AGW have received funding from the fossil fuel industry.

    The reason a storm could even break up the ice is because of the trend in thinning of the ice. If you look at animation on the Arctic front page of the site you linked to, it debunks your (incorrect) interpretation of their chart. The ice progressively gets thinner from 2000 to 2009. So 2012 is not a fluke.

    As for the chart, it does show significant additional atmospheric warmth in the cooler seasons which indicates additional heat was stored in the ocean and some of that released to the air. If both air and sea temps were shown it would paint a very different picture from what you claim.

  94. Sample Size by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    All time low since satellite record... That is how long? 20,30,40,50 years maybe. Not to mention the accuracy of those "records" would be much different today than what could be remotly sensed say 30 years ago...

    Please. Now lets extrapolate in geologic time from a statistical sample that is the equilivent of randomly watching 3.6 seconds of a hockey game, and making some sort of observation of who is going to win (and that is being very kind).

    Stop the chicken little already. Remember what happened there? Well that is quickly becoming the case here where people become fatigued with all the sensationalistic BS. Particulary when all the vanted models they use, I have yet to actually hear about one that offers reproducable and predictable results.

    This is like the, OMG its the coldest/hotest X in Y years! Which just means for values greater than Y it was colder/hotter, and what the heck does that really mean?

    I am not saying that this is nothing, or that we shouldn't be concerned, however at this point I am so skeptical of just about anything one way or another I have trouble taking much of these statements seriously.

  95. Fact Checking! by EnergyScholar · · Score: 1

    The other big trend is the availability of cheap natural gas from fracking, which is driving the construction of new gas electric plants and gas-heating in homes. Fuel oil is expensive; gas is dirt cheap. The simple economics will force a mass conversion to this relatively clean and cheap power source.

    You have some factual errors regarding hydraulic fracturing. You have accepted known-false statements as true, due to hearing them repeated many times by a very well funded public relations campaign. Please allow me to correct your (understandable) misconceptions.

    1. The availability of cheap gas from fracking is very temporary. We currently have a glut, but don't expect it to last more than a couple years. These reservoirs have a very high decline rate. It is unlikely that we'll see the unusual confluence of circumstances that caused this resource to be overproduced this past few years. By 2017 or so North American natural gas won't be cheap anymore.

    2. Natural gas derived from hydraulic fracturing is NOT 'relatively clean'. The actual gas is the same as 'normal' natural gas, but the fracturing process is quite dirty. This (false) claim that fracked gas is 'clean' has been an important aspect of the paid marketing campaign.

    3. While I am dispelling marketing-campaign-induced mythology, readers should also be aware that the 'USA will become energy independant' myth is just that, a myth. The numbers don't even come close to adding up. When you hear that myth repeated, you are hearing propaganda.

    Rather than link to a whole host of scholarly articles highlighting my myth busting, I'll point to this well-researched story which nicely explains the reasons for the deception.

    1. Re:Fact Checking! by yog · · Score: 1

      People with expertise in the field seem to disagree. Every recent source I've read confirms that North America has huge gas reserves.

      http://professional.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303343404577514622469426012.html?mg=reno64-wsj

      An article entitled "The Oil Industry's Deceitful Promise..." written by a journalist in an anti-industry blog hardly constitutes an authoritative source.

      --
      it's = "it is"; its = possessive. E.g., it's flapping its wings.
  96. What happened to the CO2 sequestering plant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashdot reported about the plant they built in Antarctica that produces CO2 snow and traps it in the ground. Where is this?

  97. crying wolf by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Problem goes back to crying wolf too many times, the tendency to mis-state statistics, and the politics over science approach of James Hansen makes this but a footnote in the climate change debate (or in twenty years aka mythology)

  98. Mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently the parent does not understand the difference between sea ice and land ice. http://www.skepticalscience.com/antarctica-gaining-ice.htm

  99. BS! by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    And I read an article last week that said the SOUTH POLE ice was at an all time high! Now, this WINTER, the south pole will melt, stirring the "earth first" crowd to go nuts, all the while, the NORTH pole ice will be increasing. The the TOP of the world is tilted TOWARD the sun, the ice MELTS. When the TOP of the world is tilted AWAY from the sun, it grows. Plus, 30-50 years worth of data MEANS ABSOLUTELY NOTHING compared to the age of the planet!

  100. mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is redundant, there's already a post above this one and one below this one which say the same thing. And all of them are misleading because they fail to grasp the difference between land ice and sea ice.

  101. Does it even matter? by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

    Does it matter whether this is man-made or a natural cycle? Is "natural" climate change going to somehow be more forgiving to our society and economy than man-made climate change of the same magnitude?

    I never understood this line of reasoning, excessive climate change is bad regardless of who is responsible.

    Also, regarding methane, there is 200 times more CO2 (380 ppm) in the atmosphere than methane (1.75 ppm). Additionally, methane stays in the atmosphere on the order of decades, while CO2 stays in the atmosphere for hundreds to thousands of years.

    --
    :(){ :|:& };:
  102. Slashdot ate my links... by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

    Somehow my links didn't make it into the post.

    CO2 and CH4 concentrations in the atmosphere: http://www.skepticalscience.com/methane-and-global-warming.htm

    CO2 and CH4 lifetime in the atmosphere: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jan/16/greenhouse-gases-remain-air

    --
    :(){ :|:& };:
  103. 7 Billion people don't turn on a dime. by AmazingRuss · · Score: 2

    I suspect it was too late to stop it even if we had gone all-in at the first warning. We're up against a wall of wombs ten miles high.

  104. "Planetary Emergency" is the problem by dtjohnson · · Score: 0

    The AGW alarmists point to every climate and weather event as evidence of impending disaster. Tornadoes, hurricanes, forest fires, heat waves, and, now, rain in Mecca, are all blamed on global warming. Here we have the arctic ice extent darn near disappearing this summer which was supposed to be some sort of evidence of disaster and yet...it's barely even noticed. Why? Because nothing significant with respect to climate, weather, or planetary environment has happened as a consequence. If the arctic ice extent is unusually large this winter, will the alarmists exhale with sighs of relief? No, of course not. They will point to that as further evidence of impending disaster. The fundamental problem with the alarmists point of view is their assumption that somehow we can 'control' planetary co2 levels and thereby 'control' the climate. The Earth's climate has fluctuated wildly in the last 50,000 years ...and it will certainly fluctuate wildly in the future despite anything we do. The Earth was obviously much warmer than it is now just a few hundred years ago when vikings were settling in Greenland and the summertime arctic ice extent then was likely 'zero.' If there is a 'planetary emergency' it is in the increasing degree of small-minded thinking by people who want to keep things the way they are rather than adapt to change.

    1. Re:"Planetary Emergency" is the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The AGW alarmists point to every climate and weather event as evidence of impending disaster. Tornadoes, hurricanes, forest fires, heat waves, and, now, rain in Mecca, are all blamed on global warming. Here we have the arctic ice extent darn near disappearing this summer which was supposed to be some sort of evidence of disaster and yet...it's barely even noticed. Why? Because nothing significant with respect to climate, weather, or planetary environment has happened as a consequence.

      Yet.

      The Earth was obviously much warmer than it is now just a few hundred years ago when vikings were settling in Greenland and the summertime arctic ice extent then was likely 'zero.'

      The last time arctic ice extent was zero was over 100,000 years ago. There is no evidence that there was no ice in the arctic in 1000 AD when Greenland and Vinland were settled.

      If there is a 'planetary emergency' it is in the increasing degree of small-minded thinking by people who want to keep things the way they are rather than adapt to change.

      If you find raising concerns to policymakers about mounting evidence of a problem to be 'small minded thinking', then all I can say is you don't understand the thinking, the problem, or the risk.

  105. we know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, it's more like 1. It's far less than clear if mankind is responsible for the melting/warming, and 2. People who live in reality also know there's not a damn thing we can do about it.

  106. Alternating Ice Sheets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Arctic pack ice has been receding over the last decade or so, but that is only natural. You see, there is a well known, if poorly understood, linkage between the ice at the north pole and the ice in and around Antarctica—and the ice around Antarctica is doing quite well. Satellite radar altimetry measurements indicate that the East Antarctic ice sheet interior increased in mass by 45±7 billion metric tons per year from 1992 to 2003. This trend continues today, reinforcing recent scientific investigations into this millennial scale oscillation between the poles. According to studies, this is how things have been for hundreds of thousands of years.

    see http://resilientearth.com/?q=content/case-alternating-ice-sheets

  107. Don't think so... by Burz · · Score: 1

    (...I said the alarmists are people who claim that the specific action of purchasing a fuel-efficient vehicle will save the world.)

    Its you who bandied about the favorite denier straw-man, "alarmists". Toyota may claim hybrids will save the world (though I doubt it), otherwise I don't know who you're talking about. Maybe you take all of your messages about the environment from corporate advertising. Who knows.

    Using a hybrid can help. It is a starting point, like light bulbs, to eventually grapple with the enormity of the pollution that we are generating. It is an attempt to do something while the big environmental problems are being evaded by the political sphere.

  108. Antarctic ice is greater than ever! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As the Arctic melts, the Antarctic has the most ice ever recorded (Google it. It's everywhere.). So it's hard to imagine rising ocean levels when the larger pole is getting larger, even as the smaller pole is getting smaller. It's just a shift. It doesn't denote warming or a problem; it denotes a shift. And it's happened before. Big deal.

    1. Re:Antarctic ice is greater than ever! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      by Anonymous Coward? My name is Steve. This is my first time here. I didn't know I had to have a membership to comment without being labeled.

  109. Re: Thermal expansion by BooMonster · · Score: 1

    How much does a volume of water expand given a rise of temperature of 1-2 degrees Celsius? Assuming that all the water in the ocean was warmed by 2 degrees, how much bigger would the volume be?

  110. Nothing is going to change by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    The reason is that it would require China to make REAL HONEST CHANGES, and that is not going to happen. Right now, they are by far the largest polluter in the world. By 2015-6, they are expected to account for 1/2 of all CO2 emissions. Before 2020, they are expected to account for more than 1/2 of all emissions that man has EVER done.
    So, what would it take to stop this? Well, China is building 1-3 new 1GW coal plant EACH WEEK. Worse, they do not run pollution controls on these. At the same time, USA is shutting down ours, and switching to NG (due to economics).
    Here is a list of closing coal plants and here is a list of proposed or intended to be constructed coal plants.

    If you sort the closing plants based on the year, you will see several hundred plants are scheduled to be closed (with more expected).
    OTOH, if you sort the NEW coal plants on status, and then go to the end of the table, you will find that there are 4 new plants in upcoming, 4 in progressing/projected/startup. More importantly, there are a LARGE number of ABANDONED and CANCELED plants. Why? Because NG is too cheap to go after Coal.

    As such, America's Co2 emissions will continue to plummet. The problem is, that even if we shut down 100% of our emissions today, within 2 years, China will emit our same amount.

    The ONLY way to stop this, is for America, and ideally the west, to put a tax on ALL GOODS based on where they come from. In addition, the CO2 should not be based on estimates, or local monitoring (china cheats horrible at this), but should be based on sat monitoring of CO2(out) - CO2(in). The hard part is getting nations to put the tax based on where the CO2 comes from. It is NOT ppl, but manufacturing that decide this. Basically, the emissions should be tied to emissions PER $ GDP. In addition, it needs to start low and build up over time. If you do that, you give nations and economies time to adjust.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  111. Woops by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    I guess we do have some indication of temperature going back a long way. But the question remains: Where do we want to go from here:
    Ice and Temperature data

  112. It is not the same land by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The land far north are of poor quality compared toa rable land in middle europe or NA. Sure in a few millenia the quality of land will rise and be equal to what we had, but in the mean time you can get mass starvation.

  113. Bookie coverage by huckamania · · Score: 1

    No coverage of the storm that broke up the ice, which is already refreezing. It will be interesting to see if anyone actually makes it to the North Pole in a boat in the next few years, as some are suggesting is a certainty. I wonder if the bookies are making odds yet?

  114. Risk management by microbox · · Score: 1

    With 50-100 years to adapt, I'm sure it'll be fine. We survive much more immediate disruptions from natural disasters every year.

    I'd say that that is the most likely possibility. The costs will be *huge*, but the project of civilization will continue.

    There is a non-zero possibility of catastrophy, and a non-zero possibility of nothing bad happening.

    So... what is the prudent risk-management thing to do? Nothing?? 'cause it'll all be fine???

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    1. Re:Risk management by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      The prudent thing to do is to prevent the governments from subsidizing bad environmental policies, like wasting all the dent corn on ethanol, growing so much dent corn in the first place, holding fossil energy prices artificially low through price controls, etc.

      If the government doesn't fuck it up, the world will adapt. If vested interests manage to preserve a status quo that makes less and less sense as the environment changes through government collusion and interference with the market, then we will be fucked in a much larger way.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    2. Re:Risk management by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If vested interests manage to preserve a status quo

      Here here. I concur 100%. Now, how to get those vested oil interests to include the cost of carbon pollution into the price of their products. After-all, it is a huge externality for them, and it skews the market place. Economists have the answer already, it is called a price on carbon, and it has been shown to reduce emissions /and/ electricity bills at the same time, with negligible net effect on the economy. 1/5 of the US economy exists under such a scheme for 10 years now, and has been growing relative to the rest of the USA. So much for cries of economic Armageddon.

  115. History repeats itself. by microbox · · Score: 1
    Land ice is decreasing, but sea ice is increasing. This is not a good sign. Instead of geting third-hand accounts from right-wing faithfuls, why not read the original source:

    This little canard about Antartic ice being okay will continue well beyond being a pants-on-fire bald-face lie. We will have to wait until it is *so* obvious that Antartica is losing ice, that even Glenn Beck has to admit it. But then, the forbes (and the conservative think tanks) will just slip right on to another canard.

    History repeats itself. We've seen this before.

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  116. Economic alarmists by microbox · · Score: 1

    Because we haven't been able to answer that question for decades and now we NEED to know the answer before we continue, if that's the case.

    A revenue neutral carbon tax would put the free-market to work at finding solutions. Far from picking winners and loser, a carbon tax would actually reflect the hidden cost of polluting the atmosphere. Such approaches have been implemented in many places in the developed world, and have been shown to have negligible impact on the economy. (An empirical argument can be made that they help the economy by ploughing carbon profits directly into new goods and services.)

    Those who cry about economic armageddon are the real alarmists in the climate-change story, and that particular crowd made the same cries of economic armageddon over acid rain and the ozone hole. (Fixing these problems has negligible net effect on the economy.)

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  117. Just Hyperbolic BullShit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These are the 'people' who predicted the Arctic Ocean would be sea ice free in Sept. 2012.

    WaaaaaaHaaaaaaPeeeeennnnnnneeeeeeedddddd..

    Reality.

    The High Priest Mark Serreze wants the laws of chemistry and physics to be different for the Arctic than the Antarctic.

    What BullShit! And This is guy who lead the pack in 2007 to predict a sea ice free Arctic Ocean.

    Ah! The Antarctic sea ice area extent! A very inconvenient truth to the Believers.

    Hardy har har and Piss on them in their graves.

    Sadly, that is what is the only solution to get out of this 'Believer Public Relations Quagmire --- Vietnam Style' for
    people like Serreze and Hansen.

    Hay Serreze, how many Gooks did to kill in Nam baby before the Evac from the US DoS/CIA building rooftop in Saigon?

    What a waste of sperm.

  118. I have pHD in Slashdot by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    PHDs are overated.

    Just do 1 post per day for one year, and thats equal to the text needed to write a PHD.

    I therefore declared, most slashusers to have PHDs in Slashdot.

    Id like to see slashdot give a PHD status to all users based on words posted.

    We will have 3* PHD and 5* PHDs users.

    Maybed based on the section, some users can have a PHD in Apple Postings, or PHD in Google Posts.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  119. No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No problem. People can cheerfully ignore all of this. It just shows up in other places. For instance, the American midwest might have a drought thing. We don't have to care about this ice stuff, its just that the "once in 50 years drought" will be "every year". Is that a problem?

  120. Sky is Falling, news at 11 by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    This would be "Sky is Falling XVII", unless I miss my count?

    Let me see if I can get them all:
    "Peak oil" has been predicted at least 5 or 6 times already (I'm talking about peaks that should have happened, not all the future ones).
    Overpopulation, concomitant with worldwide famine
    Nuclear power will most certainly kill us all, and if not that, Ron Reagan will most certainly start a nuclear war.
    DDT certainly will kill us.
    Chlorofluorocarbons.
    Acid Rain.
    Ice Age *was* predicted by the mass media, but we didn't have the internet yet to debunk it immediately.
    Oh GM crops/"Frankenfoods" for sure.
    And then of course obesity, AIDS, SARS, bird flu but those are mainly just human killers.

    This naturally sets aside 'wrath of god' stuff that Islam suggests we'll all face for letting women wear pants, or the Rapture that evangelicals suggest will resolve "Sky Is Falling VII and VIII".

    Oh no, panic panic panic. Sorry, I simply don't care. If it happens, it happens; humans are the most adaptable eukaryote this planet has ever seen. If we can't adapt....oh well. And yes, during the adaptation, millions may die. (shrug). Perhaps it's 24/7 news coverage, perhaps it's just me - I can't summon up the energy to give a shit if 400 million nearly-starving South Asians are flooded out. I really don't care. If it helps, I don't expect THEM to care when a tornado goes through my town.

    In a philosophical sense, I'm not certain that this universalization of tragedy - in which we shed a tear over every shitty thing that happens worldwide - makes sense, except to exploitative media organizations, who instinctively understand that we are morbidly interested in disaster.

    --
    -Styopa
  121. Global Warming is Still Junk Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Global Warming has been, still is, and will remain : Junk Science.

  122. Wrong! a ship is NOT 50 million cars! by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

    How can we call bullshit on someone (justified or not) and make an incredible claim, supported by you failing at correctly reading an article? If you read till the end you'll know a huge ship rejects about 50 million more sulfure dioxide than a car, NOT 50 million times the greenhouse potential or even using 50 million times the energy. This figure is due to 1. the scale of energy use, 2. ships using the worst fuel, which would be terrible or unpractical to burn on land 3. cars use gasoline, or diesel fuel which had most of its sulphur artificially removed because of standards we imposed to ouserlves.

  123. Al tried to warn us! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Al tried to warn us! Oh god it's happening!!!!!!

  124. Rolling Stone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So glad we are relying on Rolling Stone magazine for science.

  125. Ice Moved to Antarctic? by david.c99 · · Score: 1

    In other News, the Ice at the Antarctic is experiencing record highs. What's ironic is the Global Warming Fanatic Alarmists only point out what furthers their agenda: On NOES the ice is melting!1!!!1 ... wait ... don't look behind the curtain ... don't pay attention to the ice that is growing at the other pole ... don't look there ... don't pull back THAT curtain ... we only want to ALARM people to further our Agenda. Seriously ... the earth warms ... the earth cools ... this is somehow news? Worse yet is we have very little to no control over it, and what control we think we have might end up doing more harm then good. Can you imagine allowing these nut cases to fly off the handle and try to seriously influence the temperature of the earth with some hair brained scheme? When you look at the state of the billions of people in the "3rd World" countries and forecast what impact they "might" have on the global climate and the realization to "Save the Planet" (as the nut cases so speak) means literally imposing martial law on those billions you quickly come to the realization that all this is little more then "tilting at windmills". Absolutely astounding at how many smart people out there that are so dumb with regards to the reality of the situation.

  126. littoral by Descalzo · · Score: 1

    Littoral. Awesome.

    --
    I cried real tears when Li Mu Bai died.
  127. Natural Process by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...is natural. Adapt or die.

  128. So it's a "planetary emergency"... by ToddInSF · · Score: 1

    And all this ice has melted, or vaporized, into water...

    It went somewhere, it didn't go out into space, right ?

    So why haven't the oceans already risen, why haven't the coastal cities already flooded, why hasn't the water line gone up ?

    OK, it takes a while... I can half accept that - how long ? A year ? What can we do to stop or reverse it in what, a year ?

    Something about all this "science" is rotten, the politicization of it, the partisanship, the accusations of partisanship for simply questioning science by headlines, the name-calling by people that come off as hysterical, and unqualified to even talk about the science behind the science by headlines tactics.

    Nobody needs to go to a GW skeptic site to have questions, the questions are obvious, lets hear some answers. OK, slashdot has a great number of responses and some very credible explanations - but they are by no means even remotely in agreement as to the mechanisms, or even the time frames involved. If anything, the more detailed explanations here just elicit even more questions.

    So, please, everybody, spare me your Armageddon-like almost religiously fervent certainty. If you were so certain you'd be able to talk the specific science. Admit it, you don't know, your'e going on faith. I don't need science for THAT, that's what people (who go to them) have churches for.

  129. huh by Captain.Abrecan · · Score: 1

    So, what does this do to the environments around the melt? Is this an area that has wildlife in the summertime?

  130. Redefined Press coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's amazing to me, is that we're shifting toward a mentality that any news is false, when in fact it's pretty good.
    Normal folks are oftne told by their church & the pulpit + the people they hang, what's good and bad.... and the problem is,
    they don't know the difference (how could they?). Made worse by the fact that most communities don't have local papers that reach the masses anymore, so most folks are probably pulling their news from places like FB (kidding me right).

    This is BIG news, and not something we can once again ignore as if nothing has happened.... and each day that we deny that changes are underway on the planet, puts us one day closer to some major disasters. It's as if the USA has become two-sided with science and education - if you're one of those that happened to be smart, educated, well-informed, then well, you're an outsider and not trust-worthy
    BUT
    if you sing the Star Spangled Banner, are WASP, and call yourself "conservative" then, well - you're as good as in - nothing else matters, because it's WWJD! (kidding me right)

    If only those folks knew what journalism was compared to propaganda, rhetoric and bullying language - then they could tell the difference.
    Guess that's what happens when you suck up NASCAR fumes 16 weekends out of the year!

  131. Day After Tomorrrow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Decent movie, came out a number of years ago -
    went over a similar premise, prior to the extended melting and warming we've actually seen.
    Tornadoes in LA - well, not quite - but we have seen the worst drought in 100+ years, the warmest 5 winters in over 100 years in the past decade, and rains and flooding in areas that don't ever see them. Lets not forget this past summer, where the largest # of acres burned to the ground, and the week of 80+ temps in the midwest in early February that destroyed the world's largest crop of cherries (Michigan) and all of the fruit-bearing trees in 8 states....

    I'd hazard a guess that most folks have their collective heads buried in the sand, as is typical of most Americans -
    until it's too late, and tomorrow they walk outside and no longer hear birds or any other wildlife, as they've moved on
    because it's no longer capable of supporting life as it was known.

  132. Not this nonsense again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I was in grade school and we practiced for Russian nuclear bomb attacks (which were imminent) we were taught that we would all starve to death by the year 2000, because we'd never produce enough food (Malthusian Dilemma). Now I hear that in a few years 60% of Americans will be obese -- the new crisis, apparently, is that we have too much food.

    When I was programming PDP-11's the big headline was that an ice age was imminent. We were all doomed, because the ice age was coming back, and we'd all have to live in domed cities to stay warm or move to the rain forest. Nobody talks about that scientific ooopsie anymore.

    Now we're all going to fry, the oceans are going to rise, etc. etc. etc.

    Sure folks.

    These scenarios had several things in common: Unless you sent money TODAY... Unless we made "radical transformations" in our lifestyles... Unless we stopped living life the way we wanted to... Unless we ceded control to a larger, smarter, more intellectual authority who would act in the "common good"... If you didn't accept these theories you were ignorant, stupid, and selfish....

    When I look at Al Gore's house, and his houseboat with it's huge twin diesel engines, I have to stop, and wonder if we aren't all being played for suckers again.

    Not really. We are being played for suckers. It really is that simple.

    Nobody ever got rich by shouting from the rooftops that everything will turn out just fine, and somehow we will survive.

  133. Maybe all is NOT lost.... by singingjim1 · · Score: 1

    This covers two of the stories I read today, but doesn't melting ice and a warmer climate lead to increased growing seasons and increased growing acreage? So the population is growing and food becomes a problem, but then you can grow crops in Canada and Russia now where you couldn't before. Distribution becomes easier as sea lanes open up that weren't there before due to so much frozen water. Seems like it's all much ado about nothing. We're all going to be fine until the big meteor hits.