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The Shale Boom Won't Stop Climate Change; It Could Make It Worse

Lasrick writes Energy expert H-Holger Rogner walks through the realities of the shale-gas boom, the 'game-changer' that has brought about a drop in energy prices and greatly reduced carbon emissions. But despite the positive impact on carbon emissions, Rogner points out that the cheap gas brought about by fracking shale may already be affecting investments into renewable energy, nuclear energy, and energy efficiency by offering more attractive investment opportunities: 'At today's prices of $4 to $5 per million British thermal units, gas-fired electricity holds a definite competitive advantage over new nuclear construction and unsubsidized renewables.' But natural gas is still a fossil fuel that emits carbon dioxide. 'A much higher share of natural gas in the energy mix would eventually raise emissions again, especially if gas not only displaces coal but also non-fossil energy sources. Moreover, methane, the chief component of natural gas, is itself a heat-trapping greenhouse gas with 25 times the warming effect of carbon dioxide. If total methane leakage—from drilling through end use—is greater than about 4 percent, that could negate any climate benefits of switching from coal and oil to gas.'

401 comments

  1. More cooling, then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    So, will we have 36 years of no warming instead of only 18?

    1. Re:More cooling, then? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I'm getting plain fed up with all these cockamamie "CO2-based disaster" predictions. It's nothing but speculation run amok, and all the more baneful because it's politically- and money-driven.

      Fact: we have no real, objective evidence that CO2 is going to cause us any real problems.

      The scientific evidence has been stacking up against the idea for at least 10 years. It isn't happening, it isn't going to happen. And even if it did, it would probably benefit us more than hurt us.

    2. Re:More cooling, then? by danbert8 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This would get modded flamebait. Warmer periods in earth's history have been more life prolific. I have yet to see studies seriously listing benefits of a warmer climate and actually comparing that to any negatives. It's all catastrophe and death. Because if heaven forbid we might benefit from it, there's no reason to tax or subsidize things, which appears to be the end goal of climate research, to engage social change.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    3. Re:More cooling, then? by khayman80 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'm getting plain fed up with all these cockamamie "CO2-based disaster" predictions. It's nothing but speculation run amok, and all the more baneful because it's politically- and money-driven. Fact: we have no real, objective evidence that CO2 is going to cause us any real problems. [Jane Q. Public, 2014-12-14]

      Really? Then why did over a dozen national science academies say with one voice that "the need for urgent action to address climate change is now indisputable"?

      The scientific evidence has been stacking up against the idea for at least 10 years. It isn't happening, it isn't going to happen. And even if it did, it would probably benefit us more than hurt us. [Jane Q. Public, 2014-12-14]

      Even if CO2 causes us real problems, it would probably benefit us more than hurt us? Really? In 2014, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and The Royal Society (U.K.) wrote a joint publication (PDF).

      Here's another 2014 publication by the American Association for the Advancement of Science, which publishes the journal Science.

      Those scientific reports don't agree with Jane, nor do statements made by all these large scientific societies.

    4. Re:More cooling, then? by jbp1 · · Score: 0

      hahahaha bunch of alarmist, tree-hugging, social justice warriors. http://clivebest.com/blog/?p=5... so as per mr best, there's another explanation and it actually makes a lot more scientific sense than mr mann. Oh and the anthropomorphic constant (Ac) in that Best equation = 0 or, try this for an even better idea of what is going to happen: http://clivebest.com/blog/?p=2... plus he has several other explanations, Ac = 0 for those also.

    5. Re:More cooling, then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the anthropomorphic constant sad or happy?

    6. Re:More cooling, then? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2

      I have yet to see studies seriously listing benefits of a warmer climate and actually comparing that to any negatives.

      http://web.stanford.edu/~moore...

      I found that in 30 seconds. Why couldn't you?

      I have little doubt that if I spent more time, I could find many more.

      The actual fact is that for all of history, more deaths attributable to climate have been due to cold rather than warm. This is a statistic that is also just about as easy to find.

    7. Re:More cooling, then? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2

      Really? Then why did over a dozen national science academies say with one voice that "the need for urgent action to address climate change is now indisputable [nationalacademies.org]"?

      I wrote "evidence", doofus. You do know what "evidence" means, yes? A public statement by an organization is not evidence. It's an opinion.

      I am well aware that organizations have been making such public statements. But that isn't evidence. If you have actual, direct evidence, why did you not link to THAT, rather than somebody else's claim? But then I know why you didn't: you have shown yourself to be the Prince of straw-man arguments.

      I am not in a position to answer "why" they might have done so. But the fact that they did is not itself evidence of anything. Consensus is not science.

  2. "Could", by mi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The Shale Boom Won't Stop Climate Change; It Could Make It Worse

    On the basis of a could, we are supposed to drop everything and choose the most expensive options. No, thanks.

    Unless one's goal is to diminish the Western society, only a fool would fall for the "global warming" rhetoric these many years after none of the dire predictions materialized.

    Troll my behind — respond giving examples to the contrary: a link to a dire prediction made 10-15-20 years ago, and a link showing it materializing within 10% of the predicted "bad"...

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    1. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Informative

      Troll my behind — respond giving examples to the contrary: a link to a dire prediction made 10-15-20 years ago, and a link showing it materializing within 10% of the predicted "bad"...

      You really ought to include links when you say that kind of thing. Like this one, which quotes James Hansen in 1988, saying the West Side Highway in New York would be underwater. And " there will be tape across the windows across the street because of high winds." And " the droughts can get more severe and you’ll have signs in restaurants saying 'Water by request only.”

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:"Could", by russotto · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Oh, that's beautiful

      âoeThe West Side Highway [which runs along the Hudson River] will be under water. And there will be tape across the windows across the street because of high winds. And the same birds wonâ(TM)t be there. The trees in the median strip will change.â Then he said, âoeThere will be more police cars.â Why? âoeWell, you know what happens to crime when the heat goes up.â

      The West Side Highway of course still carries traffic. Broadway through Midtown, where he said there'd be more traffic, does not. No tape across the windows. Birds not different. Trees still there. Crime is MUCH lower.

    3. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Except it has been underwater recently: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n...

      (during Sandy)

    4. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Informative

      If I'm not mistaken, the water level in New York has risen a bit more than an inch since then (basing my estimate on global averages). Not enough to cover the highway.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1, Informative

      Except it has been underwater recently: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n... [theepochtimes.com] (during Sandy)

      TBH, if that's what you think he meant, you have the reading comprehension of a sixth grader. Or worse.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    6. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Don't worry. You are safe. Unless someone make time machines and travel back in time from 2350 to shoot you in the head for being stupid, you are just fine.

      1. Tragedy of the commons
      2. Short term gain, pain, not in our lifetimes!

      So yes, New York WILL BE under water, in 2500. Not in 2050. Yes, Bangladesh, Neatherlands, Florida, and other places where BILLIONS of people live, WILL BE under water, in 2500, not in 2050.

      In 2050, some islands will be dead. Some coastal marshes will be saturated with salt, and dead, despite what North Carolina laws says.

      Anyway, you are *prime example* of why many people ignore Global Warming. It will not affect them drastically in their lifetimes. It will not even matter much in their children's lifetimes. Their grand kids? Well, who knows. But their grand-grand-grand-grand kids will probably start to curse 1900-2200 era.

      And you are fucking lucky that people took proactive measure to curb ozone depletion. But that only had 40 year lead time, not 400+ year lead time. And no, in 200 years you will not be able to just turn on magic reverse global warming. Even if people in 100 years stop ALL CO2 emissions, the earth will just get warmer and warmer and warmer until new equilibrium is reached.

      +12C global average means ice age

      +14.5C global average means 1950s type environment

      +15C is about current temperature.

      with current emissions, we are aiming at +20C average? +25C? If 2C is different between ice age or not, the current *at least* +5C swing is going to be very significant. But not for a few centuries. So you can rest east and call it "bullshit"

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

    7. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 0

      Even if people in 100 years stop ALL CO2 emissions, the earth will just get warmer and warmer and warmer until new equilibrium is reached.

      That is a hypothesis that has never been really well supported.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    8. Re:"Could", by PopeRatzo · · Score: 0

      Shale is much more expensive than any other form of energy except coal, when you calculate the true costs.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    9. Re:"Could", by mi · · Score: 1

      Shale is much more expensive than any other form of energy except coal, when you calculate the true costs.

      The details and citations you are offering are most distinguished — by their absence.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    10. Re:"Could", by mi · · Score: 0

      And you are fucking lucky that people took proactive measure to curb ozone depletion.

      I am, actually, surprised, your kind has not claimed credit for the global warming slowing/disappearing already...

      It would've been rather nifty of you to explain the failure of all predictions to materialize: "See, we warned you, thanks to our efforts we are still living above water!"

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    11. Re:"Could", by El_Oscuro · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The funny thing about Sandy, is that the Capitol Weather Gang correctly predicted it about a week in advance, based on a very similar storm in 1878. We didn't quite as many SUVs nor coal plants back then.

      --
      "Be grateful for what you have. You may never know when you may lose it."
    12. Re:"Could", by Mashiki · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yep that's why these guys aren't making any money at $50/bbl either right? Because it costs them so much money to pull it out of the ground. Interestingly enough, heavy crude pulling here in Canada from the oil sands is profitable down to $20/bbl, it's hovering at about $40/bbl right now. Light and medium is profitable down to $30/bbl in some cases, and newer techniques are driving the extraction cost even lower. And in the case of coal, it can be expensive...or cheap. Depending on the method that you're using to pull it out of the ground, here in Canada we mostly do strip mining for it. It's the easiest way, and companies by law have to restore the environment and have fund setup for it.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    13. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 0

      Actually, much worse than predicted: http://www.realclimate.org/ima...

    14. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 3, Informative

      There is no quote in that article, just recollections of a conversation that had occurred 30 years earlier, so it's not clear exactly what was said - but here is a picture of the highway in question, underwater in 2012 as predicted: http://news.yahoo.com/photos/p...

    15. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Show me the quote of what he said so that we can judge. No quote? strange...

    16. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you read his quote and interpret it to mean he was talking about a hurricane, you lack reading comprehension.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    17. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's fairly basic physics. Because of the ocean we do not reach equilibrium instantaneously. Is there any evidence to suggest otherwise?

    18. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Informative

      Seriously bro, does it bother you so much that a scientist made a prediction that didn't come true? Because if it does, you're in for a world of disappointment when you learn the truth....

      It really doesn't matter. Scientists make predictions that don't come true, learn from them, and move on. That's how science works.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    19. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      I have an idea. In this day and age when everyone likes to keep records of every person's data, let's keep track of every person's carbon footprint. Make that number inheritable, so that when someone dies, it gets passed on to the children, much like wealth. Then, if the point comes when it is evident that the disaster is here and we need to pay up, the payment can be distributed using the personal carbon footprint. I'm sure the deniers will have no problem with this, since they will not have to pay anything.

      I realize that this is pretty unrealistic. I'm just curious to know if any deniers would be willing to pay up if, in the future, it turns out they were wrong.

    20. Re: "Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sins of the father... Let's start with your ancestors.

    21. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The Salon article is wrong although the fault may be that of the interviewee. Bob Reiss asked Hansen what the view from his office would look like if his worst-case scenario from the paper he'd published not long before the interview were to come to pass.
      That would have been the Scenario A from the 1988 "Global Climate Change as Forecast by GISS 3D Model" - http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/docs...

      That scenario as described in the paper, assumes a CO2 doubling by 2030 but states that Scenario B's assumption of said doubling by 2060 is more likely.

      Reiss details the conversation in a couple of his books but only named 2001's The Coming Storm when he corrected what he'd told to Salon, who never updated the online article.
      Either way, there's still quite some time before Hansen's prediction can be definitively shown to have been wrong

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    22. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      The Salon article was wrong - see my reply to OP.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    23. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      The info from that article is wrong as the interviewed author later admitted.
      Hansen's prediction was based on a worst-case scenario of CO2 doubling by 2030 but his paper from that year or previous one said that a doubling by 2060 (Scenario B) was more likely.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    24. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      By "true costs", he means the cost of the environmental impact and total externalities.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    25. Re: "Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The difference here being that the current generation has the power to decide about the living conditions of the next. It's a pretty new concept. But you don't give a shit, am I right?

    26. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Our path is not sustainable, so the longer we wait to make the switch, the harder it will be. The longer we wait till we switch the stronger the possible negative consequences will be. We live on a planet with a fairly enclosed system, you can not keep increasing pressure on multiple points and not expect a shift in the equilibrium.
      I can understand if the consequences were minor, but why risk severe issues, if you have to make the switch anyways?

    27. Re:"Could", by AmiMoJo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Classic Slashdot logical fallacy. One person makes a mistake, therefore all the other evidence and accurate predictions about climate change must also be wrong.

      By that logic gravity must be wrong, because Whitehead's theory of gravitation turned out to be incorrect. Clearly airlines are just ripping us off because gravity isn't real. Just look up in the sky, there are clouds up there, they don't come crashing down to earth, right?

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    28. Re:"Could", by AmiMoJo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is why America has no friends. It's like you think polluting is your god given birthright and will continue to argue about it long after everyone else has accepted that it's a problem.

      Remember that it's only cheap for you because you are pushing the cost on to other people.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    29. Re:"Could", by jandersen · · Score: 1

      On the basis of a could, we are supposed to drop everything and choose the most expensive options. No, thanks.

      Yes, yes, whatever. I'm not going to go into a futile exercise of trying to convince you or others who argue like this. You see, from the scientific viewpoint, words like 'discussion' and 'arguments' imply that you have reviewed the available data, formed an opinion based on this and whichever logical means you possess, and then you exchange views with an open mind, since you realize that your insight might not be perfect. I see no evidence of an open mind from the side you are on - you have decided, a priori, that you don't like what the science is saying, so now you are just trying to discredit in any way, and to hell with honesty, decency and logic.

      I don't know if you have noticed, but the rest of us have left the subject long ago and moved on. The issue is settled, mankind does in fact cause global warming, and we are now considering how we best handle the situation we have brought upon ourselves. You may opt out of the discussion and you may try to disrupt any constructive dialog, but the fact is that you have been sidelined.

    30. Re:"Could", by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      Its a basic physics that you should be able to demonstrate. Bear in mind that when Al Gore and Bill Nye tried to demonstrate it, they ended up faking the experiment in post-production.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    31. Re:"Could", by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      Over time, nothing is sustainable. The Sun's fusion process is not sustainable.

      You're going to have to qualify your bullshit argument by first defining what "sustainable" means and over what period it operates.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    32. Re:"Could", by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      I think you're just projecting your own denial of how the scientific process works, because you're a believer in apocalypse and to believers every sign of bad weather is a portent and every skeptic, a heretical blinded tool of Satan.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    33. Re:"Could", by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      By "true costs", he means the cost of the environmental impact and total externalities.

      You mean like all of the super toxic, and environmentally damaging "green energy" products that are made? Yeah, but it's green...and...yeah green. Ignore the massive strip mining, and open tailing ponds where the REM's are gained...

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    34. Re:"Could", by AchilleTalon · · Score: 0

      First of all, if the model cannot make correct predictions, you cannot predict the effect of taking action A to prevent global warming. No matter if you believe or not the global warming is real and caused by humans.

      Second, by 2500 we will have exhausted cheap gas, oil and coal for a long time. Not that there will not have still any to burn, it will just no longer be cheap energy compare to renewable.

      Third, that is perfectly true no rational actor would be willing to sacrifice something today for an uncertain outcome tomorrow, in particular if that tomorrow he will already be dead.

      So, get the models right and stop whinning about people that are not ready to sacrifice anything for wrong models, incorrect models or not accurate enough models.

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
    35. Re:"Could", by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      And I predict that warmer climate will generate more evaporation from the ocean and thus more clouds. The ocean levels will go down by that measure. More rains. So, in order to save desert regions, I encourage people to emit as much CO2 as they can.

      You see? I can too make out-of-my-ass predictions on the climate, and end up with a random advice. The problem with your nice theory is that it's been repeatedly challenged by many models and observations. Expect me to divide by x (x>1) my way of life for a hypothetical outcome that may or may not come? Hardly.

    36. Re:"Could", by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      heavy crude pulling here in Canada from the oil sands is profitable down to $20/bbl

      Is that why companies pulling heavy crude in Canada lost up to half of their capitalization in the past few weeks when their stock prices shot into the crapper following oil's nose dive?

      Talk to all the worried people up near Bakken or Marcellus. You don't want to be someone who bought any of those companies in early October.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    37. Re:"Could", by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1
      Interesing. You're carefully designing a bet so that one side CANNOT lose.

      The other side might not lose, but the penalty is assigned in such a way that either (a) the climate gets worse and your political enemies lose, or (b) the climate does not get worse and noone loses.

      How about coming back with a suggestion that includes penalties for your side if you're wrong, rather than just penalties for the other side if they're wrong?

      Face it, people are more likely to take bets if the bet offers a chance to win, rather than a chance to not lose....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    38. Re:"Could", by Oligonicella · · Score: 0

      Whitehead's theory of gravitation is still about gravity. So, everything from "Clearly" on is straw.

    39. Re: "Could", by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      *Every* generation has altered the living conditions passed to the next. Now that your main point is collapsed, mind swallowing your own ad hominem?

    40. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      It is hard to know what was said or what was meant since the article is a recollection of a conversation that had taken place 30 years prior. No quotes are available.

    41. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      He's made bad predictions (and also some frighteningly accurate ones), but it is not clear that this is one of them. What did he actually say and what was the context? We cannot know since this article provides no source. It is a recollection of a conversation that took place 30 years prior. Certainly it does not match his published literature from the time...

    42. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      If you read his quote

      Show me the quote? There is no quote - so how could I misinterpret it?

    43. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's pretty pointless responding to an ill-informed comment on an alarmist troll story, but your point might be better made by blaming the lack of flooding on post-glacial rebound. Global water level averages are particularly meaningless for NYC.

    44. Re:"Could", by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      In 500 years, billions of people could be living on the moon. How big was New York in 1500? Do you really think over 500 years people can't MOVE? It's not going to disappear in a tidal wave. If anything, it might turn into a city like Venice which is still managing to survive despite sinking into the sea. Even in the worst predictions of global warming, I fail to see how there won't be enough landmass to support all the people we currently have. In fact, given improving technology, it wouldn't surprise me if we could double, triple, or quintuple the population in 500 years and still have a higher standard of living. I mean well more of the landmass of the world is currently unlivable because it's too cold, not because it's too hot. Antarctica, Canada, Alaska, Greenland, most of Russia... Too damn cold.

      Sure most of the population currently lives near the ocean, but that won't change in 500 years, just the location of the coast. People will move inland over generations and I'm sure they won't complain that more latitudes will have tropical weather.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    45. Re:"Could", by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      http://longbets.org/

      I'd put money on there not being a collapse of human civilization due to climate change over the next (I'll even let you choose the amount of time). Would you?

      Yeah, didn't think so.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    46. Re:"Could", by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      You have a point. That's why we are releasing the pressure of all those hydrocarbons locked up below ground and putting the CO2 back in the atmosphere where it belongs.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    47. Re:"Could", by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      No, America has no friends because we torture innocent people even though we know it doesn't do us any good. We act like policemen of the world and thrust our political beliefs and morals on the rest of the world while we shit in our own living room back at home.

      Pollution probably doesn't make the top 5 reasons to hate America worldwide.

      Also, it's convenient when you get to define pollution to be whatever you want. Considering that the gasses you exhale as part of staying alive are considered pollution now.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    48. Re:"Could", by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      Science doesn't leave subjects and move on. That's not how it works. That sounds more like a religion or a cult to me.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    49. Re:"Could", by Livius · · Score: 1

      And no, in 200 years you will not be able to just turn on magic reverse global warming.

      This is a weaker argument than many people think. Technological knowledge is increasing at an exponential rate, and a technological solution is plausible. That's not what's wrong with the argument. What's wrong is that it's also plausible the technology won't be developed or won't be developed in time - this is bad when the existence of human civilization is at stake.

    50. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Reiss got it wrong in the interview but what was actually asked of & answered by Hansen is recorded in two of his books, one of which is The Coming Storm, 2001.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    51. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Go ahead and add those up, too. We are speaking of true costs, after all.
      But you'll have to give up your computer & smartphone or accept ones that are much larger, slower, with crappier screens and lower capacity if you choose to live without the lanthanides.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    52. Re:"Could", by smashin234 · · Score: 1

      Only a fool believes that New York City is going to be underwater by the year 2500. The only way that is even remotely possible is if humanity was to leave New York City and leave it to the oceans...and that is not going to happen.

      The people who predict the big cities going underwater are uneducated idiots who have not looked at old historical photos of these same cities from 100 years ago. 100 years ago, the oceans and the rivers were much closer to the city center and somehow the land was expanded (especially in Manhatten). You see, man has this ability to move dirt around and change the elevation of low lying areas. The reason we typically build dams instead of doing that is that building dams is cheaper, but you never see that kind of discussion in "climate science" because that is an actual problem based in reality....

      Or look at Miami...a swampland that was worthless until we dragged it.

      No, its physically impossible for these cities to be left to the oceans even if ocean levels started rising faster than the slow crawl that is happening now. Look at New Orleans, or the Netherlands, you see man will adapt. It might be costly, but it will happen and those horror stories of the oceans smothering people to death are nothing but science fiction gone horribly wrong to scare gullible and stupid people alike into thinking there is a crisis.

      Its all nonsense in the end.

      Humans have adapted to changing sea levels for over 1000 years now. Yea, sea levels are increasing as to be expected during an interglacial. I am more scared personally of the end of the current interglacial when our planet goes back into an ice age and covers all of Canada and Russia and a good portion of other countries in glaciers. Try farming on a glacier. Try feeding a large industrialized civilization when icebergs are creeping closer to your big cities.

      That is why I laugh at the horror stories caused by global warming. Rising seas? Please, at the rate its happening (not what the computer models tell us) is comically small and easily adapted to. Even the rising temperatures that we see from actual measurements are not scary and the last 15 years show us that warming has slowed down. Are we to be scared of "possibilities based on computer models"? Or do we look at the actual data and decide that this catastrophe is not going to happen and go back to adapting to changes in the climate system? I prefer adaptation because that is what humans are good at. Controlling the climate is just a fool's game and is something we are incapable of doing.

    53. Re:"Could", by smashin234 · · Score: 1

      And may I ask how in the world you know how much oil and coal there is in this planet and how you know that the cheapest forms with new technology in 2500 are going to be exhausted?

      Guessing out of your backside you are.

    54. Re:"Could", by idji · · Score: 1

      By "western society", I think you mean the society that created REAL HEALTH PROBLEMS like aerial nuclear tests, mustard gas, smog, lead poisoning, chlorofluorocarbons, acid rain and other things that needed banning. This process is ongoing, and the benefits are for all. Go and look at asthma statistics for Los Angeles since 1970...
      You can sit back smugly and wait for the millions of refugees to descend on Europe from Subsaharan Africa and Central/Southern America as their homelands become more arid, driving them north, or watch as global fishery catches dive because of eutrophication and ocean acidification.
      This is no fiction - already these are burning issues in America and EU this year.

      Forget your apocalyptic scenarios - there have been many environmental problems of the past that we fixed because they made people sick, and now we need to fix the environmental problems that are making people hungry and killing sealife.
      Westen Society has done IMMENSE damage to the planet,eg http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G..., , and we need to keep finding, preventing and fixing these problems.
      When talking about fracking, people almost always IGNORE the fact that they are pumping masses of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L... into the ground, without taking responsibility for the consequences. Be assured that the next few generations will be cursing yours for that and filling the earth's orbital space with 300,000+ pieces of junk http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S....

      There is no "business as usual", we all need to be acting responsibly for our own health and others.

    55. Re:"Could", by Temkin · · Score: 1

      This is why America has no friends. It's like you think polluting is your god given birthright and will continue to argue about it long after everyone else has accepted that it's a problem.

      Remember that it's only cheap for you because you are pushing the cost on to other people.

      The USA has already met our (not ratified) Kyoto goals, and exceeded them. Global CO2 emmissions are now primarily an emerging market issue. China, India, etc...

    56. Re:"Could", by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Rofl, you seem to be out of the news loop.

      The "predicted" consequences are materializing all over the world, as the worst currently in the west/south west of the USA ... but well ... who cares about that.

      a link to a dire prediction made 10-15-20 years ago The prediction at that time are the same as right now: they cover the future, not 2014.

      If you are unable to understand simple physical stuff, I suggest to you to avoid buying land at coast lines and in relatively dry central continental areas. Good luck.

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

      First of all: to have a correct model you need to watch *once* the complete development till the end and craft/correct your model while this development is happening. That makes having a model pretty pointless, doesn't it?

      Second: that is irrelevant. The sooner all is burned the sooner the catastrophe is here.

      Third: that depends on your education and what kind of risk you wanna take. Want to take the risk that the model is right but you don't care? Want to take the risk the model is wrong but spend the money (to save the planet) anyway? After all investing into green energy is: just an investment. Obviously it makes sense right now to invest into green energy ... at least that is my impression.

      So, get the models right and stop whinning about people that are not ready to sacrifice anything for wrong models, incorrect models or not accurate enough models.
      I believe our models are meanwhile quite right.
      However we only know how right our models are in 25 - 50 years. So: what is your point? You have none I guess, you only babble ... trying to look smart. Hint: you don't look smart.

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

      Even in the worst predictions of global warming, I fail to see how there won't be enough landmass to support all the people we currently have.

      War, greed, inhumanity, fear ... or would you welcome brown, black, yellow, poor, uneducated, non christian, starving gipsies and africans into your "culture" or would you rather have a fence around your country, your nation to keep the starving buggers out?

      Antarctica, Canada, Alaska, Greenland, most of Russia... Too damn cold.
      Wrong or makes no sense: Antarctica, makes no sense. Regardless how war it ever will be, it has 6 months polar night and will be cold that time.
      Canada: wrong.
      Greenland: south might be inhabitable in future, the north is beyond the polar circle and is only limited inhabitable.
      Russia: wrong. Siberia is quite fine inhabitable but low populated. Yes, they also have strong winters, but trust me: you don't want to be there in summer.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    59. Re:"Could", by mi · · Score: 1

      By "true costs", he means the cost of the environmental impact and total externalities.

      ... which are impossible to measure accurately, and what estimates there are, depend heavily on one's belief in global warming. That is, if you fear the GW, you'll feel the "true costs" to be higher... But, as I said, only a fool would still sincerely have this fear today. And only someone, whose real goal is the diminishing of (KKKapitalist) Western society, would continue to attempt to spread such a fear — without himself believing in it.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    60. Re:"Could", by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Rofl ... a technical solution is absolutely not plausible.

      Physics laws don't change over night, nor do they in 200 years.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    61. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's better than the kindergarten science and reading education that you have.

    62. Re:"Could", by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      I once read a SF novel, one key feature was that mankind lived *after* the *singularity* .

      That meant people could upload their mind into a "computing device" and made endless copies.

      I believe it is Accelerando from "Charles Stross", don't find it in my book shelf and can not check right now. Nevertheless, that book is pretty good.

      Anyway, what I was referring about is this: as many of those "uploaded" people lived in space, earth laws finally decided that every copy of an uploaded person is liable for any harm/crime any copy of the person did.

      Interesting concept.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    63. Re:"Could", by mi · · Score: 1

      The "predicted" consequences are materializing all over the world, as the worst currently in the west/south west of the USA

      Well, if that were true, you would've had no problem fulfilling my request for citations... And yet, I don't see any... Khmm...

      The prediction at that time are the same as right now: they cover the future, not 2014.

      Ah, I see. Thanks for confirming no such predictions have actually been made. You know, one characteristic of a scientific theory is that it can be demonstrated wrong. For example, gravity can be rejected, if ever we see two masses not attracting each other. But global warming is conveniently infallible — if we only talk about the predictions so far in the future, nobody alive today will see them come to pass — or not.

      If you are unable to understand simple physical stuff, I suggest to you to avoid buying land at coast lines and in relatively dry central continental areas. Good luck.

      He-he... Well, get back to me, when Al Gore — the High Priest of the Global Warming — sells his recently-bought ocean-front villa and moves some place higher. Until then, you can stick your "suggestions", where they'll do the most good...

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    64. Re:"Could", by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Everything in the USA is cheap as they push costs to other people.

      May it be perfume or clothes. Every brand that sells something for 50â in Europe is selling the exact same thing for $10 or less in the US. The only thing that seems on par are Mc$ burgers ... but it is surprising that there are enough people over here eating that shit to make it a business for them.

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

      Erm, you likely forgot the exact extend of the Kyoto goals?

      Global CO2 emmissions are now primarily an emerging market issue. China, India, etc...
      That is nonsense, it is just 2 years ago that China exceeded the USA CO2 emissions. And right now they are also working on limiting them.

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

      They (REMs --- and that abbreviation does not really exist) are usually mined in desserts ... what exactly is your point? And how do you come to the idiotic idea that it causes "super toxic" waste?

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    67. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes!

      Make the kids accountable, since they choose to waste more and pollute more today to live better and get ahead. It is only fair that their kids and grand kids get punished if the deniers are wrong more than others who did the right thing and reduced pollution.

    68. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      "depend heavily on one's belief in global warming" - when re-insurers are worried, the general public should sit up and pay attention.
      If you think, global warming is a belief system, ask yourself when & why Rex Tillerson, CEO of oil giant ExxonMobil got religion.
      He's firmly on the side of those who think that we can adapt or geoengineer out of the worst of it but that's a long way from the "belief" that's it's all some commie hoax.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    69. Re:"Could", by amiga3D · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure it's Bush's fault.

    70. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      I'd love to see the quotes.

    71. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 0

      You're as good at using the internet as I am. Surely you can find it.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    72. Re:"Could", by amiga3D · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't think they're entirely wrong about global warming, but I am certain they aren't entirely right. Their evangelism on the subject rivals that of any Pentecostal Evangelist raving about sin. It's so much fun to pick at someone who is so certain of their rightness that it is irresistible.

    73. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      One person makes a mistake, therefore all the other evidence and accurate predictions about climate change must also be wrong.

      No one in this conversation has said that. Shall we dub your oversight the 'classic slashdot strawman?'

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    74. Re:"Could", by Temkin · · Score: 1

      Erm, you likely forgot the exact extend of the Kyoto goals?

      Global CO2 emmissions are now primarily an emerging market issue. China, India, etc...
      That is nonsense, it is just 2 years ago that China exceeded the USA CO2 emissions. And right now they are also working on limiting them.

      Working on it, as in "keep growing them until 2030, while the US shrinks"... I should just quit work and go on the dole with leadership like this. Why bother?

    75. Re:"Could", by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I see your point. But think now, what temperature is the planet supposed to be? It has certainly ranged a lot over time. Even if we do everything possible to reduce our impact on GW the fact is that the climate will probably continue to warm until something happens to stop it. We live on a living planet that has been through many changes before man arrived on the scene including periods of ice and times when the entire planet was a steamy tropical environment. Change is inevitable and really unless we get rid of 5 billion people or so I don't see any meaningful reduction in man's contribution to carbon in the atmosphere. In a couple of hundred years or so that land in Antarctica might be very valuable.

    76. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That scenario as described in the paper, assumes a CO2 doubling by 2030 but states that Scenario B's assumption of said doubling by 2060 is more likely...... Either way, there's still quite some time before Hansen's prediction can be definitively shown to have been wrong

      No, the paper is really wrong (which is a more serious problem, but not as entertaining. You can forgive a man for predictions he didn't even publish). CO2 releases have tracked between scenario A and B, but temperatures have been below scenario C, which assumes no more CO2 was added to the atmosphere after 2000. The model is junk.

      But he shouldn't feel too bad, he's not alone. Most of the other climate models are wrong, too.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    77. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      See below for one analysis of Hansen's predictions vs real-world observations. The main issue is that the value he used for climate sensitivity was on the high side; adjusting that value downwards and making no other changes gives a pretty good agreement with observations.

      http://www.skepticalscience.co...

      There are other comparisons but this is the most layman-friendly yet thorough I've yet found.
      Keep in mind that the polar regions, especially the Arctic, have been warming the quickest (one of Hansen's longstanding predictions) but are not well-represented in any dataset, especially the HadCRUT ones which is what your linked paper is using for their reconstructions, although HadCRUT4 is significantly better in this regard than HadCRUT3.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    78. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The main issue is that the value he used for climate sensitivity was on the high side; adjusting that value downwards and making no other changes gives a pretty good agreement with observations.

      Well yes, if your estimate is too high, then multiply it by a number between 0 and 1, and you will get closer to the estimate.

      Once again, all the models are overestimating. It sucks, but he's still wrong.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    79. Re:"Could", by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      So now it's a straw man attack. Pick the most extreme example and use it to discredit the vast majority of moderates who think we should address this problem.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    80. Re:"Could", by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I made no attempt to discredit any moderates whatsoever? Where exactly did you read that in the above response? My comment was entirely directed at the extremists and how much fun they are to bait. I can't see why you'd complain unless you are one of the foam at the mouth sort yourself.

    81. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      That number is a lot closer to 1 than to zero.
      Imperfect models aren't useless and I'd rather they hit a bit high than low when there are still forcings & feedbacks of uncertain magnitude.
      By definition, all models are imperfect.

      Given what he had to work with in the '80s , it's a wonder he got anywhere near the results he did.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    82. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Given what he had to work with in the '80s , it's a wonder he got anywhere near the results he did.

      Given what we have to work with now, it's a wonder models haven't gotten much better.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    83. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      We need more permanent temperature monitoring stations, in the oceans & the poles, as much or more than we need better models.

      If we can't accurately measure the real world changes, we won't know for certain how good or bad the models are.

      The much-ballyhooed "pause / hiatus / slowdown" gave deniers something to crow about - so much so that none stopped to think why the melt rate of Arctic sea ice, Greenland, Antarctic ice shelves and the vast majority of the planets glaciers sped up enormously.
      I would have thought that at least a few of them are aware of just how much heat is needed to melt ice - it's a LOT.

      Better coverage of those regions would have exposed the illusion of the "slowdown".

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    84. Re:"Could", by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Physics laws don't change over night, nor do they in 200 years.

      You are correct, this is ROFL.. Physics laws do not change but our abilities to harness and utilize them for our own benefit does. Sometimes this can be overnight, sometimes it takes 200 years.

      So what if in 50 years, we find a way to take the Co2 from the atmosphere, separate the carbon and manufacture fibers from it that replace steel in automobiles and bridges and other uses we now spend a lot of carbon energy on. What if in 100 years, we become more efficient and are able to do this with methane too?

      This is the problem with the global warming crowd. Instead of finding solutions, they want to claim oppression of people via taxes the will severely strain their ability to enjoy lifestyles as they already know it and disrupt business while forcing their own agenda onto everyone is the only way. The fact is, there are several ways global warming can be addressed and these ways will be added to in the future as out knowledge increases. If the governments of the world were actually worried about global warming, they would be creating research teams devoted to finding solutions like efficient, reliable, and cost effective energy sources as well as ways to make use of emissions in a productive way and then make this knowledge available to the world so that it can be implemented. But instead, it's about restricting growth in first world nations while forcing investments into third world nations, it's about power and control of the populous.

    85. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      We need more permanent temperature monitoring stations, in the oceans & the poles, as much or more than we need better models.

      I can agree with that.

      Your use of words like 'denier' reveals you as a partisan, not a scientist.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    86. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about we have someone travel back from the next ice age to slap you upside your head for being such a ninny.

    87. Re:"Could", by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Going back in the thread. If you are not supporting the entire argument you need to specify that in your reply, especially since this is a fairly common tactic.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    88. Re:"Could", by microbox · · Score: 2

      It only takes a microsecond for a claim to be generated, and another microsecond of the ideologue to convince themselves it is true based on its pleasant chime. It takes forever to disprove the claim because, as the Japanese say, he who doesn't listen cannot hear. Thus it is, has been, and always will be. I'm convinced that the name "homo sapian" is a failed attempt at irony.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    89. Re:"Could", by microbox · · Score: 1

      They don't see it as pollution, but an assault on the very moral fabric of their being. If they are wrong about AGW, so then think about the consequences!!! TEH SOCIALISM!!! And so the cogs turn in the mind of the ideologue who, with no trace of irony sees themselves as balanced, nuanced and reasonable. Hence all the projection and gnashing at teeth.

      --

      Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    90. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      It doesn't exist. Curious that you've invested so much in it considering...

    91. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 0

      It doesn't exist. Curious that you've invested so much in it considering...

      Heh. Apparently you aren't good at using Google.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    92. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      surely you would just produce the quote if one existed oh master of the googly ways.

    93. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 0

      To what end?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    94. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Yup. They didn't like it when I showed the example they claimed didn't exist. Here it is again: http://www.realclimate.org/ima...

    95. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      There are more than just scientists, partisans & deniers. I certainly can't claim to be a scientist but neither are nearly all of the most vehement deniers.
      I've spent 20 years listening to the actual scientists on BOTH sides and have decided who to trust.
      At some point, every rational person has to decide which side of the fence to come down on or forever have the post stuck up his ass.

      It doesn't require every last uncertainty to be resolved with perfect accuracy and every measure I've personally taken to lower my carbon footprint has saved me money.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    96. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      every measure I've personally taken to lower my carbon footprint has saved me money.

      That's good for you.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    97. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have seen the "water by request only" more than a few times in more than a few restaurants.

    98. Re:"Could", by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      The fact that CO2 (or CH4 or H2O vapour and may others) is a greenhouse gas is well known since roughly 1850.

      If you still live in the 17xx than that is your problem.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    99. Re:"Could", by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      So Canada and Siberia are wrong because you say so. Explain to me why the majority of the population of Canada is scrunched up along the southern border... Is it because they don't want to live in the cold or because the availability of light for half the year is unbearable.

      As for people being welcome in my culture, I welcome people of all backgrounds, colors, peaceful religions, and means. I am an American and that was supposed to be the whole point.
      "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free"

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

      The taxes are for finding solutions.

      No one is sitting around and finding solutions for nothing. You find a solution because you figure it is cheaper than paying the tax.

      The rest of your post is simply idiotic unscientific phantasy, or science fiction.

      We as well could have cold fusion and hot fusion tomorrow. That is as likely as finding an economic industrial scale process to remove CO2 from the atmosphere.

      But instead, it's about restricting growth in first world nations while forcing investments into third world nations, it's about power and control of the populous
      Growth is not restricted.CO2 production is.
      That s a no brainer ... no idea why you believe it is super easy to remove CO2 (at some point in the future, when it is probably to late) from the atmosphere but it is not possible to have an economy that uses less energy. Hint: Europe already is showcasing it. It is possible, and it is rather simple.

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

      Pffttt .. why don't you simply look at a map of Canadian population distribution?

      And why don't you simply check the border to Mexico? When the huge migrations due to global warming start there will be borders like that all over the world.

      No matter what: "welcome people of all backgrounds, colors, peaceful religions, and means." ... you might think so, I might think so, but neither do the politicians nor the general population.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    102. Re:"Could", by mi · · Score: 1

      when re-insurers are worried

      Citations, please.

      ask yourself when & why Rex Tillerson, CEO of oil giant ExxonMobil got religion

      To help shield his corporation from boycotts and hostile legislation.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    103. Re:"Could", by mi · · Score: 1

      The fact that CO2 (or CH4 or H2O vapour and may others) is a greenhouse gas is well known since roughly 1850.

      Straw-man. I said nothing about CO2 (or CH4 or H2O). My claim stands — none of the dire predictions (made since 1850, supposedly) has materialized. You had several opportunities to offer the requested counter-examples, but failed.

      If you still live in the 17xx than that is your problem.

      Ergo, you have no arguments and prefer to discuss gases and vapors instead... Kinda gives the audience an idea of your own contents...

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    104. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Try not to be so lazy but in the spirit of the holiday season, here's one for free: http://www.insurancebusinesson...

      "Shield his corporation........" - you should do stand up, funny guy.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    105. Re:"Could", by mi · · Score: 1

      Try not to be so lazy but in the spirit of the holiday season

      No, funny guy, that's not, how it works. You put forth an argument, you put forth supporting citations. If you don't, the argument is baseless.

      here's one for free

      Yeah, is this the best you can come up with?

      reinsurers might be underestimating their exposure to catastrophe losses due to climate change

      Translation: "they do go through the motions of pretending to believe, but obviously aren't sincere". The rating agency, likewise, pretends to believe, it is important, but there is not a word in the article about any company's actual rating suffering because of it.

      "Shield his corporation........" - you should do stand up, funny guy.

      That's all? Ad hominem? I think, we are done here...

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    106. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a person living in China: What you heard the Chinese govt. say and what the actually Chinese govt. not only actually said but intend to do are very close to polar opposites.

    107. Re:"Could", by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Those engaged in denying are not doing so because of scientific insight, so calling them out on their emotional response is rather fitting.

    108. Re: "Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By that metric the shit coming out your arse isn't pollution.
      I think we can all agree that returning a substance that exceeds the environments ability to absorb, use. Or otherwise process is pollution.
      Carbon has a cycle, it gets produced and used across the globe. It is however being produced at a rate that far exceeds its consumption. I think that classifies it as pollution, since if it continues like this, things won't be great for us. (For varying time scales).

    109. Re:"Could", by haruchai · · Score: 1

      "No, funny guy, that's not, how it works. You put forth an argument, you put forth supporting citations. If you don't, the argument is baseless"

      I don't think Slashdot qualifies as "peer-reviewed" even if there's always someone willing to disagree. And long experience shows that providing citations off the bat doesn't mean that they'll be read. If the other person is unfamiliar to me and won't even try to look for what I'm referencing, that has been a very reliable indicator of what I can expect in 15+ yrs of browsing /. It's not like you have to run out in a hurricane to the local library.

      So bye, bye and happy holidays.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    110. Re:"Could", by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      http://www41.statcan.gc.ca/200...

      Looks like it's pretty sparse up north...

      As for the Mexicans, they aren't trying to get here because of climate or lack of resources, they are trying to get here because of jobs, benefits, and American society.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    111. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      If you think everyone who calls global warming a non-problem is doing so because of emotional response, then you have just revealed yourself as a partisan (and a simpleton).

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    112. Re:"Could", by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      none of the dire predictions has materialized.
      The predictions are that in FUTURE we have trouble. OFC they have not materialized that. What is your STUPID point?
      You had several opportunities to offer the requested counter-examples, but failed. Neither did I fail nor had I the chance. WE are at 2014 right now, not at 2050. IDIOT!

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

      It does not matter WHY someone wants to use a barely floating boat and travels over the mediterranean sea and "invades" Spain, Italy, Greece or ex. Jugoslavia.

      They simply come and are not welcome, so from migration they sooner or later switch to invasion.

      Regardless of that, doubling the population or tripple and quadruple it in europe would cause trouble. Currently we don't produce enough food for such a "migration".

      My point was: you already have a fence at your south border ... so will other nations build up fences.

      Hence the people who try to migrate will end up in concentration camps.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    114. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wave the guy off all you want. You wanted proof but since it didn't agree with your narrative, it must be WRONG. You're better than that, Phantom.

    115. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you don't particularly care who's right, you just want to be a douchebag to others. Well, looks like it succeeded, you're at +4.

    116. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To prove yourself wrong, of course. But we know you won't do that. You're more comfortable making him prove you wrong, or him proving himself right, than you are just ending the BS and admitting you're wrong. Again, Phantom, you're better than that!

    117. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I neither asked for, nor wanted, proof.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    118. Re:"Could", by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      none of the dire predictions has materialized. The predictions are that in FUTURE we have trouble. OFC they have not materialized that. What is your STUPID point? You had several opportunities to offer the requested counter-examples, but failed. Neither did I fail nor had I the chance. WE are at 2014 right now, not at 2050. IDIOT!

      Are you not familiar with the term "moving the goalposts"? Dire predictions were made decades ago about present time that have not occurred. Why would we have any faith that the current dire predictions would then occur? They've been claiming the sky is failing as long as I can remember. And when it doesn't happen, they simply spurt out "well, wait longer...it's coming...eventually" You don't see the problem with that line of reasoning?

    119. Re:"Could", by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      There where no dire predictions made decades ago about present time.

      You must have read an SF story and mix that up with predictions of scientists.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    120. Re:"Could", by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You drink then drive and you COULD kill someone.

      We don't want to wait until some people die before doing something about it, though, so we have laws making it illegal to drive over the limit.

      Somehow you think this should be thrown out because it's only *could*.

    121. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      He's made bad predictions (and also some frighteningly accurate ones)....Certainly it does not match his published literature from the time

      You are right, the predictions that matter are the ones that are published.

      And in those, he is pathetically wrong. Anyone can draw a trend line that extrapolates from present. Not as many people can program a super-computer to predict the future.

      So far no one has been able to predict the future climate accurately, including Mr Hansen.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    122. Re:"Could", by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      There where no dire predictions made decades ago about present time.

      I beg to differ. This is Hansen alone: http://themigrantmind.blogspot...

      There have been tons of dire predictions, from "+2 degree global temperature" to "sea level rising by a foot" to "the polar ice caps melting by 2013" (to be fair, that one was Gore). Global warming advocates have been overpredicting for years: http://images.dailytech.com/ni...

    123. Re:"Could", by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      I beg to differ, too.

      Perhaps you should read what you link, then first you would know that Hansen is no climatologist, so his "opinion" is not a scientific "prediction" and secondly if you would follow the links in your post you would be able to read a scanned document available on google, just two, sentences behind the 'Hudson' quote you want to make Mr. Watson says: climate change is inevitable, the question is only timeframe and amount.

      Ah, now we are down from 'scientists' to 'advocates' ... you are an advocate, too! You just predict the opposite. So about what are you complaining? That the press is printing the wrong persons opinions?

      Bottom line we don't know where we actually would be right now if not many western nations had redused their CO2 output drasticly. So you blaim now advocates that their dire predictions did not happen because other people,took care to prevent them from happening?

      Sea level rises are a no brainwr ... no idea what you want to defute here.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    124. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Now would be a good time to say "Gee, thanks Layzej for correcting my preconceptions!": http://news.slashdot.org/story...

    125. Re:"Could", by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The taxes are for finding solutions.

      No they are not. It's to subsidize the pet flavor of alternative energy of the month. That and off-shoring manufacturing is how it has been used everywhere it has been implemented.

      No one is sitting around and finding solutions for nothing. You find a solution because you figure it is cheaper than paying the tax.

      Yes, you create artificial hardships until the people bitch loud enough for someone to do something about it. Great concept there, except for the concept in and of itself. Like I said previously, if the governments who are worried about it would actually do the research themselves and then make the tech available as it is discovered and/or implemented by regulation when it is feasible, it can all be fixed without creating hardships on the populace. Except this isn't about a fix, it's a political solution about power and control over people.

      The rest of your post is simply idiotic unscientific phantasy, or science fiction.

      No more so than the entirety of your post. Or are you admitting that science will not find the answer to alternative energy and it is just wishful thinking for those of us who think some honest research would go a long way?

      We as well could have cold fusion and hot fusion tomorrow. That is as likely as finding an economic industrial scale process to remove CO2 from the atmosphere.

      You could get AIDs or Ebola tomorrow and die for all we know. You not getting it is just as much fantasy as you getting it. No one can predict the future. The best we can do is assess the likelihood and take steps to either avoid it or encourage it. You sound like you want nothing to do with a future where we do not need to oppressively tax people, restrict their behaviors while causing hardships in the process. Perhaps you are in it for other reasons?

      Growth is not restricted.CO2 production is.

      Yes, and no reliable and efficient form of energy exists on the scales in use that does not produce Co2 (exempt Nuclear but that too has it's booger man). So yes, while you are technically right just as the idiots who say a square peg fits into a round hole when everyone paying attention knows its not supposed to.

      LThat s a no brainer ... no idea why you believe it is super easy to remove CO2 (at some point in the future, when it is probably to late) from the atmosphere but it is not possible to have an economy that uses less energy. Hint: Europe already is showcasing it. It is possible, and it is rather simple.

      Actually, no Europe is not. They are exporting their Co2 production to China and India where imports from them have increased over 10 fold and Europe is facing de-industrialization issues not only with those two countries but with former soviet countries who have no restrictions. The only thing Europe is showcasing is how to export Co2 production and tank their economies.

    126. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Nah, if he was so confident in that prediction, why did he later change it?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    127. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Right. You ignore any evidence contrary to your presuppositions. I get it.

    128. Re:"Could", by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Dude, even scientists accept that the models have problems now, it's time to move on.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    129. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Who said anything about models?

    130. Re:"Could", by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Phantom: predictions that matter are the ones that are published. And in those, he is pathetically wrong...

      Layzej: Here's one that is bang on.

      Phantom: Never mind about the models.

      Nelson: Ha ha!

    131. Re:"Could", by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Actually, no Europe is not. They are exporting their Co2 production to China and India where imports from them have increased over 10 fold and Europe is facing de-industrialization issues not only with those two countries but with former soviet countries who have no restrictions. The only thing Europe is showcasing is how to export Co2 production and tank their economies.
      Well, the rest of your post is already nonsense. But this tops it.
      Why don't you simply check how much Europe is importing from China?!
      You could even compare that with the CO2 reduction done in Europe the last 20 years and the increase of CO2 production in China over the last 20 years. Hint: regardless of your idiotic (false!) claims the reduction in CO2 production in Europe is still more than the increase in China.
      Perhaps you like to talk about the USA? But I really doubt that the US shifted much of their CO2 production to China and import that many goods now.
      This is simpy a US strawman argument.

      The rest of your post(s) clearly shows you how sciense and research works ...

      How exactly should a government do its own research? Paying funds to a private company? Or having its own research institutions competing with private companies?

      Taxing what you don't want, like pollution, and leaving the rest to 'the market' workes quite fine if you leave the market otherwise alone.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    132. Re:"Could", by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Sigh... I guess you do not know the CO2 reduction done in Europe the last 20 years and the increase of CO2 production in China over the last 20 years or you would have provided it. It is an indisputable fact that Europe, or the EU more specifically has drastically increased their imports since attempting to cope with Co2 reductions.

      The amount of Co2 reduction verses increases is meaningless because it does not and never has to be a one for one trade. China has actually increaes their Co2 production over the same period of time well above any reductions in Europe. But the real magic sticking you in the eye is that I did not limit it to china as you pretend to want to.

      The rest of your post(s) clearly shows you how sciense and research works ...

      Why don't you take a deep breath, wait a few minutes, try to parse that into a constructive thought, maybe ask you mom to help or something and then repost it as a complete thought that everyone else can understand.

      How exactly should a government do its own research? Paying funds to a private company? Or having its own research institutions competing with private companies?

      How about all of the above? I mean if the problem is actually serious and needs attention, why not just address it. Crime is one of those all of the above situations and it is workign pretty damn well. We have government funded police, security guards (private companies), government paying security guards, and government institutions competing with private companies all in order to keep crime low. And yes, it is working fantastically as crime rates (more specifically violent crimes) are dropping huge amounts over the last 50 years. One thing they did not do though, was impose an enormous taxes and burdensome regulations on victims of crime in the hopes they could somehow figure out how to lower the crime rates on their own in some distant future.

      Taxing what you don't want, like pollution, and leaving the rest to 'the market' workes quite fine if you leave the market otherwise alone.

      Only if your goal is control and subjugation of the populace why expanding your own power. Otherwise it is destructive and overly burdensome and intentionally cruel to lower income people. It does little to nothing to advance any legitimate goals other that creating hardships for the population.

      Why don't you open your eyes and look around a bit. Stop mindlessly repeating the shit you have been brainwashed with and actually apply some critical thinking skills if you have them. This nonsense you are spouting is really worthless drivel to anyone not advancing their own goals and will be resisted by the majority of the population all the way. If climate change really is a problem, then using the power that already exists within governments to explore the cures and fixes while implementing them is the proper solution. Not sitting on your thumbs and buying carbon credits from Al Gore or burdening the populous and hoping they come up with the cure. It's almost as if your understanding of economics is limited to a second grade level. This makes about as much sense as divesting from fossil fuels- which only makes the stock cheaper so others will purchase it and life goes on.

    133. Re:"Could", by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      It is an indisputable fact that Europe, or the EU more specifically has drastically increased their imports since attempting to cope with Co2 reductions.
      No it is no fact, it is nonsense. Google is your friend.

      I stopped reading here, perhaps the rest of your post has/had more merti, but sorry ... I can not stand your idiology that lacks any substance or truth.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  3. A Bridge Fuel... by bird · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... to the abyss. I emit personal methane in the general direction of anybody that didn't recognize this many moons ago. The solution to climate change isn't finding ever-more-exotic carbon to extact and burn - it's to stop burning carbon as soon as possible.

    1. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You mean the solution to pollution is no longer dilution?

      It sure seems to be working for the oil industry. They are diluting the per barrel price of oil in order to stem the transitional tide of investment in alternatives. Shale oil and gas at lower prices will perpetuate GHG emissions and restore growth in general consumption warding off deflation and generating another boom cycle as long as food production keeps up with population growth.

      Wall Street's bakers were given a pass on their global fraud, and the threat of reregulation has been nulled out in Washington Debit-Creditland, while Peru is generating nothing but hot air.

      Hang on to your shorts, the weather makers are preparing to burn women, children and men, indiscriminately.

    2. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The solution to climate change isn't finding ever-more-exotic carbon to extact and burn - it's to stop burning carbon as soon as possible.

      Agreed. TFS has got to be one of the most "duh"-provoking things I've seen posted here (and that's saying something). What kind of idiot thought we'd reduce climate change (which most scientists agree has something to do with carbon released from fossil fuel production) by switching to another fossil fuel that still emits carbon when burned? Unless we stop dumping carbon into the atmosphere, we'll still be dumping carbon into the atmosphere. We need an article to tell us this? What we need are other reasonable ways to harness and use energy and/or radically cut energy consumption until we only need renewables; until we have that, gas isn't solving our problem of using coal and oil: it's merely postponing our usage of that coal and oil.

    3. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by phantomfive · · Score: 5, Informative

      What kind of idiot thought we'd reduce climate change (which most scientists agree has something to do with carbon released from fossil fuel production) by switching to another fossil fuel that still emits carbon when burned?

      The reasoning is that natural gas releases less carbon than coal, so if we switch from coal to natural gas, then we'll reduce climate change. I do not have the information necessary to determine if that is a correct line of reasoning or not.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    4. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's a war on, if you didn't know. It's not about alternatives.

      The old-fashioned oil cartel powers lowered traditionally-sourced oil prices for two reasons: first, to fuck over Russia (likely at US bidding, since Saudi Arabia started this increase in production) and second, to suppress investment in shale and fracking. The shale and fracking oil companies are now fighting for survival, because no one's giving them money for capex. The shale/fracking companies can't support themselves when oil is under $75/barrel; it's now at $60. The Saudis (and a half-reluctant OPEC) are betting that they can hold the prices down long enough to fuck over the upstart competition that's not under their control. If prices are down for much longer, there will probably be a bidding war to take over a lot of the shale/fracking companies.

      Alternatives (solar, wind, nuclear, whatever) are collateral damage in this price war; they weren't a big enough part of the picture to be a real threat anyway. Peru is and always was meaningless.

      One day, alternatives will emerge as a threat, but by then there won't be enough oil for the traditional powers to dump on the market. Perhaps the Chinese or the Indians will have figured out a safer nuclear power solution by then, and they might even sell some technology to the US and Europe.

    5. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Wall Street's bakers were given a pass on their global fraud

      Are they putting sawdust in the muffins again?

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    6. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Redundant

      The problem is that no conceivable practical combination of alternatives will allow to sustain the kind of economic model we have now. We won't stop burning carbon as long as we cling to the ancient "career-house-car-consume and throw away" model.

    7. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Fiber. You should give it a try. It's also helpful if you are pursuing a strategy of dinner cost averaging.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    8. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      that's what nuclear is for dumbass but your dumbass lefties and greenies are too afraid safer plants might permit our civilization to continue growing so they won't touch them.

    9. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's to stop burning carbon as soon as possible

      Feel free to stop eating at any time then ...

    10. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by haruchai · · Score: 2

      A flaw in that reasoning is that bad drilling practices cause a significant release of methane into the atmosphere which has a much higher warming effect in the near term than CO2.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    11. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Switching from coal to natural gas doesn't stop the CO2 levels from rising, it just slows it down by around 30%.

    12. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by tlhIngan · · Score: 5, Informative

      The reasoning is that natural gas releases less carbon than coal, so if we switch from coal to natural gas, then we'll reduce climate change. I do not have the information necessary to determine if that is a correct line of reasoning or not.

      Well, natural gas/methane is CH4 - there are 4 hydrogens per carbon. As you start going to longer chained hydrocarbons, the ratio between hydrogen to carbon goes from 4:1 to 2:1 because adding another carbon adds only 2 more hydrogens. Octane, in gasoline, comprises of 8 carbon atoms and 18 hydrogen atoms - 2 per carbon plus 2 more at the ends.

    13. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      " The solution to climate change isn't finding ever-more-exotic carbon to extact and burn - it's to kill off 2/3 or more of the human population, and convince the rest that living in a subsistence-level squalor is worth it, in hopes that we are able to fix global climate into a steady state of conditions that it's never done on an epochal scale anyway.."

      Fixed that for you.

      --
      -Styopa
    14. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by mean+pun · · Score: 2

      ... first, to fuck over Russia (likely at US bidding, since Saudi Arabia started this increase in production) ...

      That's a bit too simple. Saudi Arabia decided years ago to increase its production capacity. It then started an official project to get an increase of 10%. Given the existing production capacity at the time, that was an enormous project that took many years. They made that investment to use it, not just so that they could open the oil tap a little more one day to give Putin a black eye. Was that extra capacity intended to fight wars? Who knows. But if so, it was to fight all competitors from non-OPEC oil producers to green alternatives.

    15. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The reasoning is that natural gas releases less carbon than coal, so if we switch from coal to natural gas, then we'll reduce climate change.

      Yes, I'm perfectly aware of that, and unlike you I know the science behind it. The problem is the next sentence of my post that you conveniently left out of your quote -- which is, if we don't actually reduce energy demand, we'll eventually run out of natural gas and have to burn the coal/oil anyway. So we just end up in the same place, just a few decades later.

      Also note my primary objection is to the beginning of TFS which implies we could STOP climate change by this substitution, which is in fact idiocy if anyone thought it true.

    16. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by itzly · · Score: 1

      And only until the methane runs out, and then we'll switch back to coal.

    17. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by MrL0G1C · · Score: 1

      The extremely expensive plants you mean? The ones that cost double what new renewables cost? Do they deliver dispatchable power or do they deliver continuous power that can't be altered much hour to hour?

      What happens when a country with a 'safer plant' gets hit by bombs because the country it's in has gone to war?

      Can u guarantee the safe waste won't end up in terrorists/mafia hands? Is all nuclear waste in the world right now accounted for?

      --
      Waterfox - a Firefox fork with legacy extension support, security updates and better privacy by default.
    18. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2

      The extremely expensive plants you mean? The ones that cost double what new renewables cost? Do they deliver dispatchable power or do they deliver continuous power that can't be altered much hour to hour?

      Digression:

      Yes, conventional nuclear power plants are baseload, and they're baseload for a reason.

      HOWEVER, that does not mean that a nuclear power plant can't be designed to handle (large) transients in demand. The nuclear power plants on submarines do so on a routine basis.

      Note also that baseload power is needed just as much as transient power. "Renewables" are wonderful sources of transient power, not so much for baseload. Replacing everything with solar (unless the solar power stations are in high orbit) will NOT replace current electricity needs. Ditto wind power.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    19. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by DRJlaw · · Score: 2

      The reasoning is that natural gas releases less carbon than coal, so if we switch from coal to natural gas, then we'll reduce climate change.

      Yes, I'm perfectly aware of that, and unlike you I know the science behind it. The problem is the next sentence of my post that you conveniently left out of your quote -- which is, if we don't actually reduce energy demand, we'll eventually run out of natural gas and have to burn the coal/oil anyway. So we just end up in the same place, just a few decades later.

      Unlike you, GP is viewing the entire situation. You simply refuse to work your assumptions into both scenarios.

      Also note my primary objection is to the beginning of TFS which implies we could STOP climate change by this substitution, which is in fact idiocy if anyone thought it true.

      Let's imagine two scenarios:

      1. Burn coal until coal becomes impractical, then switch to natural gas.

      2. Burn natural gas (with declining use of coal due to current policy and economic factors) until that becomes impractical, then increase or switch back to coal.

      If we don't actually "reduce energy demand," as you put it, we burn the same amount of carbon under either scenario. Yet the second scenario reduces carbon introduced into the system in the earlier years. If we do reduce "energy demand," by whatever means and at whatever time, there is a net carbon reduction.

      Only your strawman is claiming that substition = solution. The rest of us are claiming that substition = mitigation. In any of the two scenarios where we dont burn until we "run out" of both resources, there is less carbon emitted by switching to natural gas. In the scenario where we do burn until we "run out" of both resources, there is a nominally greater amount of time for society and nature to adapt by using natural gas first. In the meantime we continue to develop and drive down the cost of other sources, to deploy those technologies, and to develop storage technologies to support personal and bulk transportation.

      You claim that switching to natural gas is idiocy yet using natural gas is somewhere between neutral-to-improvement, is currently somewhat cheaper, and under a carbon tax would inherently be cheaper due to factors that you claim to be perfectly aware of. Yet science and economics be damned; you just want the biggest stick possible to force us to do it your way -- right now, all the way, regardless of cost, and "what storage problems?".

      The idiocy is not only seeking to internalize the costs of fossil fuels, but seeking to reject any improvement in their use that is not a complete solution. The idiocy is thinking that people won't recognize that fact and call you on it. The idiocy is thinking that once the sciene is proven (which it is), everyone must automatically adopt your particular priorities and timetable because there are no value judgments involved (or only yours).

      People rately cooperate with those who call them idiots. Until you have a comfortable majority -- which you do not -- you cannot afford to alienate those who are supporting relative improvements. So become perfectly aware of the sitatuion and stop engaging in equal idiocy yourself.

    20. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not that they are afraid, is that they are dumb and the people at the top clearly have a hidden agenda, and nuclear poses too much a competition. Have you noticed that all oil-producing countries are governed by lefties? Lefties are against tobacco, christianism, and letting citizens own guns, but they are openly pro-drugs, terrorism, islamism, and piracy; that's because they are too sectarian and dumb to hide their shady industries. Lefties are the mafiosos in the "mafia" game, the ones behind most violence and misery in the world, and the ones governing USA right now. Lefties openly want state-forced monopoly over every industry, so the more you vote lefties, the stronger Disney, the RIAA, and the MPAA get, because their government model is to give the state (and euphemism to say "them") absolute power and control over all aspects of your life. That's why almost all billionaries in USA are lefties, because that's the best way to strengthen their monopolies and stifle competition.

      By the way, officials at EU have recently revealed that Russia (actually, the International Socialist) was behind the anti-nuclear propaganda since the 80s, not only to keep their grip on energy, but because it's easier to invade countries if they don't have nuclear weapons, as recently happened with Ucrania.

    21. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

      What kind of idiot thought we'd reduce climate change (which most scientists agree has something to do with carbon released from fossil fuel production) by switching to another fossil fuel that still emits carbon when burned?

      The reasoning is that natural gas releases less carbon than coal, so if we switch from coal to natural gas, then we'll reduce climate change. I do not have the information necessary to determine if that is a correct line of reasoning or not.

      Of course it's incorrect. You're not going to reduce emissions by opening some giant new resource which does the exact same thing, and promptly drops prices all over the world for it.

      No one investing in that industry is thinking "obviously we're only going to get 10 years of development out of this". They're planning to burn every last bit of it.

    22. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Problems with you statement. The alternatives you have mean, you have to keep a backup supplier on hand for input when the sun don't shine,and the wind don't blow. Or every thing browns out. And you have to depend on oils, or gases to repower everything. As the seasons shift, as the input systems to create wind and cloud vary per season, the wind varies per season, the clouds vary per season, why do you insist that we put all of the eggs in one basket? As climate\weather changes, windmill, mirrors change the topography and the local currents, meaning downwind, from a wind power plant, will not get the cooling winds, or the laminare flow of winds anymore, therefore I will not receive the benefit of free cooling, but I will receive the sub audible noises of the generators, degrading the environment I sought to inhabit.

    23. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Depends when we/they stop using gas. After all the total amount matters.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    24. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      if we don't actually reduce energy demand, we'll eventually run out of natural gas and have to burn the coal/oil anyway.

      My goal is roughly the opposite......to provide the world with enough cheap energy that demand multiplies many times over. The cheaper we can get energy, the better the world will be.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    25. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      If you cull 2/3rds of the plants population and don't change anything rgarding CO2 emission you only extend the time till the catastrophe is happening by a factor of 3.

      So assuming in 50 years "it is over" if we change nothing, killing 2/3rds of the plants population tomorrow at once only extends that to 150 years.

      I suggest we start right away and with you. As you likely produce more CO2 than a random other person on the planet.

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

      HOWEVER, that does not mean that a nuclear power plant can't be designed to handle (large) transients in demand. Physics contradict you. You need completely different working plants, e.g. thorium based ones.
      The nuclear power plants on submarines do so on a routine basis. Yes, guess what: they are very small, and the construction principles prevent them to accumulate Boron gas. And on top of that: most submarines based on nuclear power have more than one reactor. So if one is affected by Boron poisoning the others can cope for it. And bottom line: most nuclear reactors on ships run full throttle all the time anyway, you control the amount of power you generate by the amount of steam you make with them. You rarely change the power output of the nuclear reactor itself.

      "Renewables" are wonderful sources of transient power, not so much for baseload.
      That is complete nonsense.
      As soon as you have a lower percent marge of how much renewable power you minimum generate each day, you can use that as base load.
      E.g. Germany on average produces 30% of its energy via renewables. Over daytime (and depending on day of the year) that varies from 10% to 60%.
      So we can put 10% of our renewables into the base load calculation and reduce base load plants.
      Ditto wind power.
      Wrong again. The above 10% renewable base load in Germany comes from wind alone.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    27. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, I think you astroturfed the wrong comment. Nuclear plants don't depend on oil, gas, winds, clouds, or sunshine.

    28. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yeah. And I really wonder if we couldn't find a better use for natural gas than burning it........

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    29. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Well, I believe it already is the main feedstock of for the production of hydrogen and for anhydrous ammonia for fertilizer.

    30. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A flaw in that reasoning is that not all wells drilled follow bad drilling practices. And of those that do, the amount of methane (atmospherically short-lived, of course) still adds up to less long term damage then CO2 from burning coal would cause.

    31. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HOWEVER, that does not mean that a nuclear power plant can't be designed to handle (large) transients in demand. Physics contradict you. You need completely different working plants, e.g. thorium based ones.
      The nuclear power plants on submarines do so on a routine basis. Yes, guess what: they are very small, and the construction principles prevent them to accumulate Boron gas. And on top of that: most submarines based on nuclear power have more than one reactor. So if one is affected by Boron poisoning the others can cope for it. And bottom line: most nuclear reactors on ships run full throttle all the time anyway, you control the amount of power you generate by the amount of steam you make with them. You rarely change the power output of the nuclear reactor itself.

      "Renewables" are wonderful sources of transient power, not so much for baseload.
      That is complete nonsense.
      As soon as you have a lower percent marge of how much renewable power you minimum generate each day, you can use that as base load.
      E.g. Germany on average produces 30% of its energy via renewables. Over daytime (and depending on day of the year) that varies from 10% to 60%.
      So we can put 10% of our renewables into the base load calculation and reduce base load plants.
      Ditto wind power.
      Wrong again. The above 10% renewable base load in Germany comes from wind alone.

      Wong again. In a normal wind year, the above 10% renewable base load in Germany can come from wind alone. It is reasonable to expect that not all years will be 'normal'. When it is an above normal wind year, it could be 14% or even higher. When it is a below normal year... one begins to wonder if the meaning of 'base load' is actually understood.

    32. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Have a look at the link below. Here's a teaser - Methane levels downwind peaked at the stunningly high level of 2080 parts per billion!

      http://www.dailykos.com/story/...

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    33. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      You really don't want to release it into the atmosphere without burning it.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    34. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      You're saying "extend the time" like that's not a good thing. The more time we can buy here, the better off we are.

      Renewable energy sources are getting better all the time. We keep learning more about how climate change works, and we might figure out other things to do. We might have practical fusion power in another twenty or thirty years (of course, that's been the case all my life). The longer we can delay things, the more options we have.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    35. Re:A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SICK. BURN. BRAH. He isn't going to respond to you. PWND!

    36. Re: A Bridge Fuel... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't? How do you propose building a nuclear power plant without oil?
      Nuclear power plants are built with concrete.
      Concrete takes huge amounts of oil to make.

      In addition, nuclear power plants (most anyway) rely on a connection to the electrical grid. They can only handle short outages. Our electric power grids are currently powered mostly by coal and oil. If a nuclear power plant is cut off from the grid for any length of time, it will melt down.

      So... yes, nuclear power plants, as currently designed rely heavily on oil and coal.

  4. No Shit Sherlock by BringYourOwnBacon · · Score: 1

    Huh, you don't say.

  5. What time it is it? by MouseTheLuckyDog · · Score: 2, Funny
    It's time to do the Chicken Little Dance

    Bwak bwak

    The sky is falling.

    Bwak bwak

    The ground is burning.

    Bwak bwak

    The North Pole is melting.

    Bwak bwak

    Al Gore is coming.

    Bwak bwak

    ( OK the last one is really scary. )

    1. Re:What time it is it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PEAK OIL. remember, they declared it in 2010?

      http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/27/opinion/27krugman.html

      "At any rate, U.S. oil supplies will last only 20 years. Foreign supplies will last 40 or 50 years, but are increasingly dependent upon world politics."
      — May 1972 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

  6. Well, duh by arielCo · · Score: 1

    "Breaking news: An oil glut won't make fossil fuel consumption go down - it might even increase."

    --
    This post contains no rudeness or derision of any kind. All arguments are friendly. Terms and exclusions may apply.
  7. We are doomed... by TropicalCoder · · Score: 1, Insightful

    No matter what they do, they won't do anything that will save us anyhow. Our generation will be Ok, but the upcoming generations will have a challenge. Coastal areas as they are now will be uninhabitable, and a lot of people will suffer from a wide variety of things like droughts and inundations and cold or hot. A lot of people will suffer, because we won't do anything to change the situation, but they will get over it eventually. One door closes and another door opens. Places that are considered too cold today will have a moderate climate tomorrow. However, the world's standard of living may drop in the process. This in itself will reduce carbon emissions.

    Meanwhile, San Francisco will get the Big One one day not too long from now, and Mount Pinatubo will become a super volcano and cover a third of the USA with magma. Nothing much we can do about that, but USA was headed down hill anyhow.

    1. Re:We are doomed... by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Well if SanFran get's the big one, most of the world would rejoice. It would remove most of the hipster blight in one swift stroke.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    2. Re:We are doomed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Getting "the big one" in SanFran may mean something completely different from what you think...

    3. Re:We are doomed... by bigfinger76 · · Score: 1

      Sooner than never is still never. I think.

    4. Re:We are doomed... by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I hear what you're saying but here in Norway we have stone age settlements that are 100-200 meters above the current sea level - glaciers depressed the whole country. Current coastal settlements may suffer, but even if you assume 100% of the ice melting it's not 2012 and we don't need a new Noah's ark. People live in temperatures from Sahara to Siberia and in weather patterns from rain forest to to desert. "Save us" makes it sound like we're heading towards some kind of extinction level event and clearly we're not.

      The real threat to our environment is not our lifestyle, it's that we've been multiplying like rabbits. In 1900 the world population was 1650 million, they could all be polluting like Americans of 2014 and they'd still emit less CO2 in total than the world does today. If we double the population we need to cut the pollution in half to stay constant, it's not higher math. That's a very touch subject of personal freedom, but condoms, birth control and China's one child policy is probably the best long term action for the environment.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    5. Re:We are doomed... by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 3, Informative

      and China's one child policy is probably the best long term action for the environment.

      And yet, in most developed first world countries, birth rates have pretty much plateaued, or are on the way there. The US, China, Japan, Singapore, Russia, most of Europe - all currently below population sustaining birth rates at the moment. Check out this chart, sorted by fertility rates from lowest to highest. You can likely notice a clear trend between the upper portions of the chart and the lower regions.

      Economics and education (especially of women) is the key, not police state policies that encroach on more of our personal liberties. We need to get everyone to first-world economic status as fast as we can, because then:

      1) People will stop pumping out kids en mass, since at that point they're an economic liability, not an advantage, and
      2) People will start caring more about the environment when they're not trying to figure out where they'll get they're next meal, or if they will have a roof over their heads tomorrow.

      Seriously, exploding population was the boogieman twenty or thirty years ago. If we forecast using today's trends, it seems pretty likely that the world's population will most likely peak and then decline. Take a look at the actual data trends (the recent ones - and don't extrapolate linearly), then draw your own conclusions.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    6. Re:We are doomed... by unimacs · · Score: 2

      If we double the population we need to cut the pollution in half to stay constant, it's not higher math. That's a very touch subject of personal freedom, but condoms, birth control and China's one child policy is probably the best long term action for the environment.

      It's not higher math, but it's also not correct. ;-)

      There is not a fixed amount of CO2 produced per person so doubling the population doesn't necessarily double the pollution. Further there are often serious issues that result from population decline. Just look at Japan. Besides, most of the Western world has near zero population growth and that trend is moving into Asia. My guess Africa won't be THAT far behind. Yes, birth control should be provided and encouraged in developing countries but I don't think we really need to be draconian about it.

      Population does matter but it's not everything. Take a look at the Mayans. Many folks feel that the Mayan empire collapsed because they weren't living sustainably. Certainly population growth played a role but so did slashing and burning the rain forest.

    7. Re:We are doomed... by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Well, knowing SanFran I say we leave the sexual fetishes in the ditch.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    8. Re:We are doomed... by Sesostris+III · · Score: 2

      I agree. There is no-one thinking 50 to 100, or even 200 years ahead. Short term is the order of the day. It will be the future generations that suffer.

      I don't have children, but if I did I would be intensely concerned with the environment I would be leaving them - and their children in turn. Yet as far as I can tell, those I know who do have children seem unconcerned. It is the immediate future that interests them ("new shiny") rather than the long term.

      It didn't used to be like this. The old European cathedrals were planned and built over decades, if not centuries (Cathedral Building in the Middle Ages).

      In 50 to 100 years time when fossil fuel resources start to run out, our children's children will have to do what we should be doing now, and develop renewable resources. They will have to do so with a (most likely) more hostile environment (due to climate change) and without the reserves of fossil fuel to help kick-start the change.

      Maybe using all these fossil fuels won't cause catastrophic climate change, and the naysayers are wrong. However, it seems to me to be a gamble, the stakes of which are the future lives of our children and their children. Unfortunately it seems to be a gamble many are willing to make.

      I would rather we didn't make this gamble. I would rather we "bite the bullet" now. Take the hit, make sacrifices to our lifestyle and go hell-bent for long-term sustainable renewables. For the sake of our children (and their children).

      We won't, which I find heartbreakingly sad. The only consolation I have - and it is an empty consolation at that - is that my descendants won't be affected, as I don't have any children.

      --
      You never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough. - Blake
    9. Re:We are doomed... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      People live in temperatures from Sahara to Siberia and in weather patterns from rain forest to to desert.

      Sure, but how much do you think it will cost you to adapt? Do you think that if much of our ability to grow certain crops goes away we will still have cheap food and easily feed everyone?

      I'm sure we can survive no matter what happens, it's a question of a little pain now or massive pain in the future.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    10. Re:We are doomed... by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Even China is starting to lessen their population control program now. It was only intended to prevent a period of explosive growth that could otherwise outpace the country's ability to industrialise and construct infrastructure - and then to be abandoned once the population stabilised naturally.

    11. Re:We are doomed... by fatwilbur · · Score: 1

      I would rather we didn't make this gamble. I would rather we "bite the bullet" now. Take the hit, make sacrifices to our lifestyle and go hell-bent for long-term sustainable renewables.

      And I would rather take that gamble. Judging by our consumer demands, I'm in the clear majority. So what do you do?

    12. Re:We are doomed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with your argument is that per capita carbon emissions are not equal for different societies. Take a look at this graph of per-capita carbon emissions by country:

      http://www.oecd.org/media/oecdorg/directorates/directorateforsciencetechnologyandindustry/61612_chart_3_130.png

      It's very obvious from that chart that the higher the overall standard of living in a given country, the higher the per-capita emission of carbon, up to 8-fold between the US and India -- and the majority of the world's poor nations are far worse off than that. Since using known techniques today, increase in standard of living mostly requires a massive surge in carbon consumption, the order of operations you're suggesting is infeasible. Double the standard of living of all the world's poor, you'd massively increase carbon emissions -- to the point where a disaster would become a calamity. And it would be decades before we even saw the promised population reductions.

      That's not to say you're wrong about the need to reduce population and increase standard of living. It's just to point out that standard of living and population are long-term problems while carbon elimination is a very near-term one. We need a way for people to maintain a high standard of living without burning all the carbon they can get their hands on. Then we need to scale this to the rest of the world before they become addicted to the 'burning crap and raising livestock' model themselves.

    13. Re:We are doomed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will not be in "the future" and neither will you. Those fuckers can fend for themselves just like we had to when we were growing up.

  8. We are doomed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, we could get lucky and our sun could go supernova waaaay sooner than anyone expects.

  9. Methane part of the summary...comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DNRTFA:

    http://news.discovery.com/earth/global-warming/gassy-cows-emit-more-methane-than-oil-industry-140710.htm

    1. Re:Methane part of the summary...comment by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      The difference being that the carbon in the methane that cows emit comes from CO2 the grass that the cows ate absorbed from the atmosphere in the first place so there is no net increase in carbon in the carbon cycle. Fossil fuel derived methane on the other hand does increase the total carbon in the carbon cycle.

    2. Re:Methane part of the summary...comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where do you think the carbon in fossil fuels came from? You're just a typical statist idiot who wants to restrict people's freedom as an end in its own right.
      --
      roman_mir

    3. Re:Methane part of the summary...comment by itzly · · Score: 1

      Since the fossil carbon has been sequestered, the sun has gotten quite a bit brighter. Releasing all that CO2 now would dramatically increase temperatures.

    4. Re:Methane part of the summary...comment by carbonates · · Score: 1

      I have bad news for you. ALL carbon is part of the carbon cycle. Even the carbon in limestone, which accounts for 99.9% of the carbon on the planet, is part of the carbon cycle, and it almost all got there through biogenic pathways. Even the carbon in "fossil fuel" came from living organisms. You really don't have a clear understanding of the carbon cycle.

    5. Re:Methane part of the summary...comment by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but there is an active carbon cycle which is the carbon that cycles through the atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere on relatively short time scales and carbon stores that are not actively in the cycle and has been fundamentally sequestered from the active cycle for millions of years. The Earth's biological systems are well adjusted to the current level of carbon in the active cycle and will be disrupted by changes in it.

  10. And Cocaine is more profitable than... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    working a shithole job for minimum wage. That's why people sell the stuff.

  11. "we need a stance of problem fixing,.. by zr · · Score: 1

    ...not just problem avoidance" — David Deutsch

    Legendary scientist David Deutsch puts theoretical physics on the back burner to discuss a more urgent matter: the survival of our species. The first step toward solving global warming, he says, is to admit that we have a problem.

    http://www.ted.com/talks/david...

    1. Re:"we need a stance of problem fixing,.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh wow, a Ted talk on global warming and how humans are to blame. Sounds fascinating.

    2. Re:"we need a stance of problem fixing,.. by zr · · Score: 1

      thats not what this ted talk is about at all, actually. watch it, you might be surprised

  12. Glass half empty by iamacat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Switching from oil and coal to natural gas is a positive step in reducing both carbon emissions and other pollutants. We should celebrate progress rather than grumbling that it doesn't solve humanity's problems forever and ever, because nothing ever will. If carbon tax is implemented, natural gas will be more economical than oil and eventually other technologies will be more economical than natural gas.

    1. Re:Glass half empty by pherthyl · · Score: 1

      >> Switching from oil and coal to natural gas is a positive step in reducing both carbon emissions and other pollutants.

      That's the thing though, we don't actually know if this is true. Methane leakage can easily invalidate that argument and studies have shown we are leaking more than anyone wants to admit

    2. Re:Glass half empty by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Not quite, but pretty close to accurate.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    3. Re:Glass half empty by iamacat · · Score: 1

      Methane only stays in the atmosphere for 14 years, carbon dioxide lasts for thousands of years and we don't have practical ways to remove it quickly. How about concentrating on the big problem?

    4. Re:Glass half empty by pherthyl · · Score: 1

      And? You think the gas extraction will stop or scale down? So what if it lasts 14 years if we are dependent on continuing to scale up gas extraction

    5. Re:Glass half empty by itzly · · Score: 1

      As long as the leakage persist, methane concentrations will stay high. And when shale gas runs out, it will again be replaced by burning coal.

    6. Re:Glass half empty by iamacat · · Score: 1

      You are a fountain of optimism! 1. Leakage can never be minimized, 2. We will not come up with anything new by the time considerable shale reserves run out 3. Let's beat ourselves up because of a problem that can be completely solved in a decade or so if need be.

    7. Re:Glass half empty by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Methane doesn't just vanish, it turns into carbon dioxide (and water vapor, but that's self-regulating). When we dig coal up, if we just put it in a pile we don't produce carbon dioxide, even if there's some loss. When we dig methane up, if we have any loss that's more methane now and carbon dioxide later.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  13. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by ChunderDownunder · · Score: 1

    commie fascists

    Oxymoron?

  14. heresy! With that attitude, it'd be solved by raymorris · · Score: 4, Funny

    Heretic! Only solar-electric is good. Only solar-electric can be praised. To get hot water, we must build huge solar-electric panels and use them to charge big banks of batteries made from toxic chemicals, then electrically heat the water! Simply the water through a black pipe outdoors and allowing the sun to heat it naturally will not do.

    Nuclear may be a thousand times safer than any currently available alternative, but it's not solar-electric, so we'll just have to stick with coal until we can figure out which combination of noxious chemicals will make a magic battery for solar-electric. We've only been seriously investing in solar-electric for 60 years - any day now that magic battery will appear, and with it magic components like 100% efficient inverters. Until then, we must burn coal.

    1. Re:heresy! With that attitude, it'd be solved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Solar water heating and using excess solar heated water to provide radiator-type heating within the house seem like a positive step.

    2. Re: heresy! With that attitude, it'd be solved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is winter here and partly cloudy so I don't get much sun now. 11:00am. I am producing around 1500w from my solar panels.
      My heat pump warms water right now to 35c and warms up the concrete under my parquet floor. It uses around 270-400 watt. In the evening it shuts off and only turns on if the temperature gets too low during the night, but it rarely does. I have 3 layers of glass in the windows and they are constructed to absorb all the heat from the sun, and keep it inside. Tinted windows made to get as much heat inside and keep it there.
      The biggest problem is the latency. I'd say it is about 3-4 hours from starting to heat the floor until it works. I only have a temperature sensor outside to adjust how much it should offset the heating of the floor in relation to the inside temperature. I think it should also measure wind speed and radiation from the sun to calculate the temperature of the water.
      My heating bill are around 1/4 of my neighbors with the same house, insulation etc. and they already are half of the average for the area.

    3. Re:heresy! With that attitude, it'd be solved by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Actually solar heating is really efficient and cheap. It's kinda dumb to generate electricity, from whatever source, and use it to heat water when you can just let the sun do it for you. In addition, storing heat is easy and cheap.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    4. Re:heresy! With that attitude, it'd be solved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoosh!

    5. Re:heresy! With that attitude, it'd be solved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said. Of course, you could be praised in Portland OR for this statement.

    6. Re:heresy! With that attitude, it'd be solved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *whoosh*

  15. AGW blather aside... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AGW blather aside, shale is only profitable when oil is expensive. Expensive oil encourages conservation, so if shale is being pumped it's a sign that oil is expensive and the move to alternatives is on. Yes, shale increased the supply and suppressed prices--for a bit. It's self-defeating though. If you follow the financial pages, you hear stories that many shale operations are already not profitable at these prices. Markets go up and down. Smart alternative energy companies will ride out the storm, or at least somebody will preserve their tech through Chapter 11 reorg. That sucks for the truly innovative people in this space; but that's capitalism. The (cheap) oil will run out, and then alternatives will be viable. We had a chance to do it in an orderly fashion; but that's not human nature.

    I just learned this first hand. I'm typing this on a new computer. I had plenty of warning the old one was going to give out. Overheating, weird glitches in the video... but finally Fan Error on boot, and no amount of dust-cleaning would fix it even though the fan turns. Yeah, it's fixable; but it's a 10 year old laptop and working on them is a PiTA and I needed a new one TODAY. Today. I could have done it voluntarily before I got stranded; but no. It's human nature to put things off. I was standing in line at wallyworld with all the other holiday nincompoops.

    1. Re:AGW blather aside... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AGW blather aside, shale is only profitable when oil is expensive. Expensive oil encourages conservation, so if shale is being pumped it's a sign that oil is expensive and the move to alternatives is on.

      And as a resident of North America, frankly, the best place for that oil, right now, is in the ground. Let the Saudis pump their reserves dry. Let the Venezuelans and the Iraqis and the Russians pump theirs dry try as they try to stay afloat. Only when they're running low will prices start to rise, and only when they're all out of oil, will the price resume its ascent. At which point the Canadian oil sands and the US shale reserves will be worth one of two numbers: (a) in the event of global peace (low-intensity conflicts like the $10T War on Terra don't count), the oil will be worth whatever the market will bear, be it $100 or $200, or (b) in the event of serious economic or meatspace warfare, the oil will be worth life itself: it's a sufficiently-large energy reserve to guarantee food on the table for North America - which is already a net food exporter - while the rest of the planet starves.

      With apologies to Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia, I don't pretend that this is a morally-justifiable position. But there are no morals in geopolitics.

  16. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Nope. Two sides of the same coin.

    Under communism, government and business are one and the same. Under fascism, business and government are one and the same.

  17. Nukes Now by jdgoulden · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What really killed nuclear power wasn't "The China Syndrome" or Greenpeace - it was that the price of fossil fuels didn't continue to increase as expected. That's unfortunate, as while I like inexpensive energy I also believe that we should make ALL of our electricity with nukes (or hydro) and save fossil fuels for applications where nothing else will do (e.g. aircraft). And here's a litmus test: if you're serious about global warming, you've pretty much got to be pro-nuke. No other technology - not solar, not wind, not whatever green scheme you dream up - can produce electricity on a large scale. Wanna save the planet? Push for nukes and plug-in electric cars.

    1. Re:Nukes Now by amorsen · · Score: 1

      No other technology - not solar, not wind, not whatever green scheme you dream up - can produce electricity on a large scale.

      This is not true. Both solar and wind can scale as far as you want. There are few places where at least one is not an option, and both can generate way more energy than the world uses (particularly solar).

      Given the current construction times for nuclear reactors in the West which approaches a couple of decades from proposal to first production, nuclear is likely to be too little, too late. But by all means, build some nuclear power plants. Particularly if you are in a country which is fucked when it comes to solar and wind, like England.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    2. Re:Nukes Now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was actually that the price of electricity would have plummeted, if an effective nuclear strategy had been implemented.

      They'd have had to GIVE away electricity, more or less.

    3. Re:Nukes Now by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Nuclear also has a PR problem. It scares people - and if it scares people, politicians end up following the will of the people for once.

      Look at Fukushima, for example. It was a media-fest for weeks. Minimal release of radiation, no nuclear-related fatalities, no land left unusable for a thousand years - but even so there was more coverage of that plant than all the rest of the tsunami damage put together. It was a bit hairy for a time when they needed to bring in emergency pumps for the cooldown, but even that was only due to a problem with the outdated plant putting all their cooling pumps in one place - not an issue with newer designs. You can blame the media for a lot of the panic, but they just can't resist a story about nuclear catastrophy. Even when there isn't actually a catastrophy, they still try to hype it up.

    4. Re:Nukes Now by Sesostris+III · · Score: 1

      Not sure why this is being modded 'Funny'. Quite a few 'environmentalists' are starting to revisit Nuclear Power, e.g. George Monbiot (A regular columnist in the Guardian newspaper).

      Personally, I can't help thinking that technology may have advanced since we last built nuclear reactors. Certainly I think any IT would be more advanced - just don't connect to the internet!

      --
      You never know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough. - Blake
  18. $58 a barrel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Enjoy, Venezuela. You deserve it.

    1. Re:$58 a barrel by Tetetrasaurus · · Score: 0

      Actually this is good for Venezuela because the kind of oil they export didn't fall that much comparatively, whereas what they import did. I'm glad because although they say stupid things about America, what they are trying to do for their citizens is right on the money. We could use a little of that populism here too, although I am sure you will keep voting against your interests with the Republicunts because you think you are a part of their club.

  19. The Fossile Fuel Advocates can fuck off! by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 0

    I'm getting tired of the anti-intellectualism here on Slashdot. But look, I want inventions to come along to where we aren't burning coal to make electricity and paying hundreds of US or Canadian or Euro Dollars in money to put Gasoline in our Cars. It SUCKS! and we need to do what ever it takes to find a way to make electricity generation so inexpensive and cost so little that all we have to pay for is the upkeep of the facilities and infrastructure. But I don't want to see smoke stacks belching smoke, and I don't want to see cars that spew Carbon Monoxide. There must be a way. Figure out what that way is.

    Stop listening to the Pro-Fossil Fuel Drivel!

    1. Re:The Fossile Fuel Advocates can fuck off! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Follow the money. It is that simple. Our oil/fuel markets are manipulated. It was clear when gas went to 4 dollars a gallon and it is clear now that it is heading back to 'normal' levels.

      The street rumor is the saudis already make a shit ton of money. At 30 a barrel. The derivative markets are what are being manipulated to push it. The saudis are also *very* angry at iran. One of their fellow conspirators of this manipulation. That the Russians are taking it in the arse is just icing on the cake for them.

      I dont want less oil because I am some sort of 'carbon nut'. I want it to stick it to these jackasses who have been ripping us off for 50+ years.

    2. Re:The Fossile Fuel Advocates can fuck off! by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      I'm getting tired of the anti-intellectualism here on Slashdot.

      Want to know Slashdot's dirty little secret?

      It's always been an intellectual vacuum for anything other than IT - and even in that case it's always been poisoned by ideological zealotry.

      Not that the rest of the internet is much better; the only thing that changes from site to site is the focus of interest...

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  20. This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... some idiot try to grab water like he's picking up a ball or something. Every time they squeeze, it just shoots through their fingers and they get nothing.

    Capitalist economies are dynamic. They respond. Squeeze in one place and you create pressure that causes the system to adapt to restore equilibrium.

    Listen to Bruce Lee... Understand what it is to be water. To flow.

    The issue with trying to control fossil fuel consumption is that it fills a need. That need exists. It is a sucking vacuum that will draw solutions to it and will do so in the most cost efficient manner it can find.

    For example... that might mean off shoring all production to Asia if you make it too expensive to make things in the West. Very simple to do that. Totally bypasses all the environmental laws instantly. Anything that makes production in the US more expensive then somewhere else will just result in off shoring.

    That principle carries over to everything else. A major mistake environmental activists keep making is fucking with prices and expecting the system to not change the way it does things to reduce costs. They think the system will just choose the path they decide rather then keep looking.

    Listen to Jeff Goldblum from Jurassic Park:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    Life will find a way. It will not be contained.

    Your solutions must be cost neutral or very nearly cost neutral or must be cheaper then existing models.

    Or you will have set yourself up as an obstacle. And life will find a way.

    You might not like that anymore then the people liked getting eaten by dinosaurs in that movie. But the dinosaurs don't care what you want. They want what they want and you can't really stop them without destroying everything.

    If you want to keep the system active and you really have no choice here... then you're going to have to play the game. Learn the rules or lose.

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    1. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Your solutions must be cost neutral or very nearly cost neutral or must be cheaper then existing models.

      If you want to keep the system active and you really have no choice here... then you're going to have to play the game. Learn the rules or lose.

      What if the set of cost neutral solutions is empty?

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    2. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Look into the raptor's eye through the tall grass by the pale moonlight and ask that question again.

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    3. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Ichijo · · Score: 1

      Anything that makes production in the US more expensive then somewhere else will just result in off shoring.

      And, conveniently, it also makes implementing the same production standards in those countries more cost-effective. You have to start somewhere.

      Tax carbon (make it revenue-neutral to be more palatable), and tariff exports from countries that don't, until they do. It's simple, effective, and transparent.

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    4. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      Look into the raptor's eye through the tall grass by the pale moonlight and ask that question again.

      That is a very entertaining answer, but I literally have no idea what you're talking about or how it relates to global warming.

      --
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    5. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'll be very clear then.

      You're dealing with what are ultimately derivations of human nature on geopolitical scales.

      These forces are nearly natural forces in their intensity, intractability, indifference to criticism, etc. They have their own rules they operate on. Like gravity, supply and demand doesn't care if you find something immoral or undesirable. If the demand is there then that sucking void is going to feed its need. Look at the war on drugs. How is that working out? Same thing. Supply and demand. People have drugs. Other people want drugs. The two call to each other until the one services the other. Same thing with energy. You cut off my supply of energy... I want energy... someone else has energy and they're willing to sell it to me. I will get what I want.

      You cannot stop me. You can only make yourself an additional problem I have to deal with to get what I need.

      You only solve this issue by making sure first and foremost that I get what I need. Try to starve me and you will either get bypassed or eaten in turn.

      You say you don't have a cost neutral alternative?

      I asked you to look into the raptor's eye. Don't think you're reasoning with another reasonable human being here. You are looking into the eye of something that is hungry, powerful, and clever. And if you do not understand how this creature works then you are not going to be able to control it. It will take what it wants without hesitation, pity, or remorse.

      Fossil fuels service a need for energy. They are currently cheap, reliable, and abundant. When the raptor is hungry, it is going to seek out easy to kill prey that it finds tasty.

      What you are suggesting is putting the raptor on a diet... feeding it less... and you probably want to feed it something else... maybe kale or something. The raptor is going to be hungry until it isn't. And the raptor is hungry for what it considers food... not what you consider food.

      That is what you are reasoning with and are attempting to regulate. When you put up electrified fences, all you're doing is creating obstacles. The raptor doesn't respect these barriers. It simply sees them as puzzles it has to solve.

      In regards to global warming, out sourcing instantly bypasses most environmental regulations. It renders irrelevant most of the rules. The raptor escapes and does what it wants.

      Another good trick is bribing the gate keepers. You give the politicians a little bit of meat and they leave a little hole in the fence that lets the raptor out to do what it wants. In that case, all the regulation accomplishes is to give corrupt politicians ways to extort bribes. Nothing more in many cases.

      If you want to fix the issue, then you need to appreciate that answers that do not answer the question are not answers at all.

      Lazy and naive policy wonks keep thinking they can solve complicated problems with lazy hamfisted policies that mostly rely on government violence to compel compliance. Rather then solve the puzzle you are slaming jigsaw pieces into places they do not go. With enough force the cardboard can be ripped and any piece can fit anywhere. This is in many cases the logic of many government policies. "We have guns and prisons. They comply with what we say or we'll throw them in jail or shoot them." All you're doing is creating barriers. The dumb ones won't figure out how to get out. But the clever ones test the walls... tap tap tap scrape along the edges. They watch. They wait. And when their moment comes... they will be ready. They always have been.

      I can think of many ways to improve the environment without causing ripples in the equilibrium. My solutions will not be attractive to the crypto marxists... but then they only see the environmental issues as a means to an end rather then an end unto themselves.

      For those that genuinely care... the solution is finding a solution for everyone. That includes the industries that feed and fuel us all. You have no solution if your first step is to fuck over the beating heart of our civilization.

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    6. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Not possible given the current trade treaties.

      At best, you'll tax carbon in the US, trigger massive off shoring, and accomplish a net negative impact as the production is moved farther from the product markets requiring at the very least additional transport. In reality, foreign production tends to also have far worse environmental impacts for many reasons. Which just adds to the carbon debt.

      You need to see the issues holistically rather then simply leaning on the crutch of coercive police power in a given country.

      If the depth of your thinking on the issue goes no deeper then "I can order the police to shoot or arrest people that don't do what I say" then are you truly surprised if people like me judge such thinking to be naive, callow, and self defeating?

      Think deeper. This is a game of chess... not tic tac toe. Chickens have been taught to play the latter... please think a few moves ahead here.

      The tariff idea would require a complete negation of all our existing trade treaties. The WTO amongst others wouldn't tolerate it. You'd have to engage in a trade war with the entire planet.

      Avoiding that would require convincing other member nations to write in an exemption for that action. And good luck getting that from any of the big players.

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    7. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Ichijo · · Score: 1

      So, we increase a tariff on the promise that if the country taxes carbon on the export, we'll lower the tariff by an equivalent amount. Why wouldn't the country simply tax carbon at the border so the USA doesn't get any of that money? Because they would be no worse off than today, a trade war is unwarranted. Meanwhile, the USA achieves its carbon reduction goals without triggering massive offshoring.

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    8. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Because they would enjoy no market advantage if they had to follow the same rules.

      What is more, they don't have to comply with your rules under current trade law.

      What is more, they have more tools to resist your actions then you have to impose them unless you engage in and win a trade war.

      Look, bro... Asia has built its current economy on doing what we used to do in the west... cheaper. You take away their market advantage and their whole economy collapses. The jobs of literally billions of people are in the balance.

      Do you honestly think they're going to cooperate with your idea? You're basically saying "If I ask really nice, they'll put a loaded gun in their mouths and pull the trigger... right guys?"

      They won't. What they'll do first is patronize you. This is highly effective. Look at what china recently did to Obama. They agreed to all the carbon emissions reductions he asked for... with the condition that they monitor their own emissions with no official international oversight and they furthermore will be the final arbitor as to whether they are or are not in compliance.

      Which means they could literally increase their emissions 1000 fold and still technically remain in compliance simply by saying they are in compliance.

      This is precisely how Asia has been dealing with nitwit enviros in the west for a generation.

      All you will ever accomplish is wasting peoples time, making some trust fund asshats feel like they're not asshats, and enrich people you have no control over at the expense of people that you do have control over. These actions are quite literally counter productive.

      If you want to actually effect actual change in the real world that will not just be a shell game to delude idiots... then you're going to have to come up with methods to solve these problems that do not simply sweep it all under the rug.

      This is not a job for politicians or community organizers. These people in this situation are less then useless. They bring no value to the table. If you want to solve it, you are going to need engineers and patience.

      Beyond that, you're just sticking your thumb up your ass and singing show tunes.

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    9. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      You, dear sir, deserve a medal... and maybe a talk show on TV... if anyone would bother watching it...

      You're correct, but sadly I suspect your message will be lost on those who are unable to consider more than one side to any situation, their point of view is the only possible correct one...

    10. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      This is the truth...

      The comment about the recent "deal" with China is so true... we agree to cut our emmissions sooner and they agree to slow down the increase of theirs, at a later date, when different people will be in power, and they self-certify to boot.

      This is just Obama pandering to the US public, no more or less, I would hope that even he knows it is complete BS.

    11. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Most of them don't even have a solution. They're saying "we have guns and prisons... so if anyone doesn't step into line they get some ratio of imprisoned and shot."

      That isn't a solution. That is a threat.

      Solving the problem requires developing technologies, industrial models, and energy supply chains that are competitive with existing systems while not causing the same issues.

      One technology that could really help is biomass gasification. You can run cars on carbon neutral biomass. Grass, twigs, wood chips, wood pellets, trash, etc. Basically the Mr Fusion from Back to the Future. It exists and it works. You can see YouTube videos of people building these things in their backyards. There are a few people that have built them into their cars and drive around with a car powered by biomass. Think of all those people trying to come up with an efficient way to turn algae into oil. Waste of time because you can just grow ANYTHING, pelletize it in a standard pellet maker, and then burn it. Carbon neutral biomass engines. And we have the technology right now. They were first used extensively during WW2... mostly in europe because fuel was scarce. They have issues such as building up tar in parts of the engine. But that is more of a question of carefully controlling the fuel temperature etc.

      And you don't need to actually burn the biomass in the car itself. You can simply produce biogas, store it in tanks, and then refuel cars/trucks/etc as needed at conventional gas stations.

      That is one solution. In rural and agricultural environments this technology should be vastly superior to what they're currently doing. Which means making much of current mechanized agriculture carbon neutral. All the tractors and other farm equipment... carbon neutral. The farm itself... carbon neutral and in some cases entirely energy self sufficient.

      Beyond that, shift 100 percent of green energy power plant funding to subsidies for private self generation. Solar and wind power are not like coal or nuclear power. They don't make sense in concentrations. They are defuse distributed energy sources. The most efficient means of collection is to distribute collection throughout suburbia and try to make rural and suburban communities as energy self sufficient as possible.

      That leaves urban centers and really nuclear power is the most reasonable source of power for urban populations. Yes, old power plants from the 60s are occasionally a problem. But that is hardly a reason to discontinue the use of nuclear power. It is rather an argument to not build power plants like that in the future. Keep them small so that they can be shut down or decommissioned without requiring all the king's horses and all the king's men. And keep them modern. Understand that they're going to have a shelf life and when their number is up, decommissioned them so they can be replaced with something better. Eventually we should get the thorium reactors we're being promised. And then most of this won't matter anymore.

      Probably the single biggest contributor to global pollution is the concept of planned obsolesce. The disposable society. We are constantly selling or throwing away things that are 90 percent identical to what we replace them with... why? Lack of modular construction and repairable design. Imagine if cars were never junked unless they suffered a major accident? What if instead they were simply progressively upgraded and modified. Tweaks to the engine. Tweaks to the suspension. Tweaks to the breaks. Tweaks to the electronics. Tweaks to the body. Do the same thing with everything from washing machines to cellphones. Everything modular. Associate modularity with environmental friendliness. Suddenly, instead of factories that have to replace everything everyone owns every 10 years, those same factories instead only have to produce the upgrades and repair parts to maintain what everyone owns. The amount of things we have build to keep everyone happy is reduced by a magnitude.

      Think of all the environmentalists saying we hav

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    12. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Of course he does. The point is to placate the dupes and keep the gravy flowing.

      Think of all the money that has gone into AGW propoganda that could have instead been spent on funding research into superior solar power, biogas generators, superior supply chain systems, etc. You know... the stuff that will ACTUALLY make a difference.

      They spend the money talking about doing something instead of funding the people that will actually do it. Politicians are not those that "do" they are those that "TALK" about doing or order the doing. But they do not "do" anything. And yet, despite so much needing to be done, how much has been squandered making such men rich? Look at the wealth that has flowed to Washington. It is currently the healthiest economy in the country. Rising property values. Booming businesses. And all of it sustained by legions of federal bureaucrats and politicians living it up on the national dime.

      The solution to every problem so they say is to give those people more money. Why? What would they do with it? Buy more hookers and cocaine? Yachts? Because arguing they'll suddenly save the environment if they get enough money isn't credible. They don't spend the money they get on that.

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    13. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The issue with trying to control fossil fuel consumption is that it fills a need. That need exists. It is a sucking vacuum that will draw solutions to it and will do so in the most cost efficient manner it can find.

      For example... that might mean off shoring all production to Asia if you make it too expensive to make things in the West. Very simple to do that. Totally bypasses all the environmental laws instantly. Anything that makes production in the US more expensive then somewhere else will just result in off shoring.

      Europe solved this ages ago. Firstly to make things more efficient, so that the demand goes down. If your house is well insulated you need less cooling and heating, simple as that. Doesn't matter how cheap it is, you don't need it. New buildings can be pretty much passive at fairly minimal cost these days.

      Secondly, you require imported goods to meet certain standards. The EU has things like RoHS that require goods not to use hazardous materials, but also requires companies offshoring manufacturing or importing to be environmentally responsible in the countries where their factories are. Companies will do it because they want to sell to the EU, which is a huge and very profitable market. In the EU corporations are our bitch and do what we tell them to, unlike in the US where you are the corporation's bitch and do what they tell you to.

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    14. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet, despite a complete inability to commit politically, both China and the US will, in all likelihood, meet their targets by dumb luck without any real effort, simply because the tech is improving. China is curretly the #1 buyer of solar panels, and the US is #2. That's a lot of solar panels.

    15. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 0

      Laughable.

      1. Europe just like the US has outsourced much of its production.

      2. Much of european heavy industry is grandfathered and doesn't especially have to change anything. They after all got lots of carbon credits while new companies don't get them. Effectively all you did here was make it harder for new companies to compete with old industry. Palms were definitely well greased for that little trick.

      As to making things more efficient, that is actually a good way of ACTUALLY solving the problem. So I grant you that is there but that is hardly a unique accomplishment. Every nation can make that claim including smokey china.

      As to your controls on imports meeting certain standards. You import all sorts of things that were produced under the same conditions as every other market. Your imports come from the same smokey sweat shops everyone else gets their stuff. Do you have standards requiring the final product not be toxic? Sure... we have those as well. Doesn't mean the factory itself isn't toxic or that the process didn't pump lots of lovely CO2 into the air.

      You've off shored just like the rest of the west. Don't kid yourself.

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    16. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The whole "if we offer better conditions than sweatshops, we will be run out of business by sweatshops" argument is bullshit. It's used by the economic elite to argue why you should slave all day for table scraps while they make millions and by "learning the rules" you mean "bend over and take it like a good boy". We can demand basic environmental conditions just like we demand worker health and safety, no child labor, minimum wage and a bunch of other conditions and a few might bugger off but you won't miss working there. If you squeeze too hard it will all go away though, it's not like grabbing water maybe more like pudding.

      Besides, what you're talking about is not really capitalism it's human nature, of course we adapt how we play to the rules of the games. That's what they're trying to do, give people the right incentives. And yes, that is hard in a dynamic system and if you don't have a good enough model what you do might end up being counterproductive. Some of it is just ridiculous, like here in Norway we export gas and import coal-based power, because then the emissions didn't happen here. That makes no sense at all. But just because some things environmentalists do is facepalm-worthy, doesn't mean that it all is.

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    17. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      As to the argument being bullshit, I agree. I didn't make it though. That is your strawman.

      try again. I will not respect a strawman argument. Start by making your own argument rather then telling me what mine is... it will help you to avoid that little fallacy.

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    18. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a beautifully written piece. You are wasted here can we make him president.

    19. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Sigh... Tragedy of the social media age. Just enough contact to get validation but not enough to pay for my hookers and booze. :'(

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    20. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no solution. It's far too late for solutions. Even if we stopped all industrial civilization TODAY it's too late. We are on track for a 4-6C rise in temps by 2100. This will effectively end most if not all humanity on the planet. Time to wake up to reality folks.

    21. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      There is no evidence for any of your claims. That is chicken little hysteria.

      Were this a 1950's science fiction movie... you'd be getting slapped by the protagonist and told to control yourself.

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    22. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      The big problem I have with what you say is that it's purely negative, saying why things won't work, and suggesting that only with some improbable developments can we affect global warming. If, after all, people are going to use lots of cheap energy no matter what we do, then there is no solution. If we can influence behavior to reduce carbon dioxide production, even a little, we're at least buying time and options.

      I'm also puzzled by "crypto marxist", as if totalitarianism was only post-Marxist and had never appeared in anti-Communist governments. You describe them in some detail without, as far as I can tell, showing that there are a significant number of crypto-Marxist environmental idealist fanatics. We know there are some (see the recent Greenpeace article), but I've seen no evidence that they're at all important (as opposed to loud).

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    23. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Okay, how much money has gone into propaganda (on the side acknowledging AGW), and how much into research? I keep having the feeling that you're strenuously arguing against something that doesn't really exist.

      --
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    24. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      In regards to having solutions. I said I had them at the bottom and I did explain them roughly to some other people:

      http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

      I try to have original thinking on things. There is no thought but original thought. Which is not to say that other people might not have had the same idea, but rather that I personally came up with these solutions independently.

      As to crypto marxism, it is not authoritarianism that gives them away as being marxists. It is rather their thought process on market economics. Their thinking is very distinctive of Marxist thinking. Marxism for example, believes in STATIC economies. That is, if you pull a tile out of the jenga tower which is any economy, they tend to believe that the tower will stay just as it was absent that tile. Allowing them to put the tile they just took out of the tower and place it where ever they want or simply remove it from the game.

      That sort of thinking is specific to marxism which literally teaches economic processes in this fashion. It is why Marxists are so often blindsided by market reactions to their policies because they don't believe markets react. They will of course rhetorically say that of course they do... but when you look at their polices, they all inherently assume static market conditions. That they can change a given variable in the economy and that everything else won't adjust to compensate for those changes.

      Markets are dynamic. They are like water. They flow. They seek equilibrium. They have ripples and waves... there are splashes and little droplets of money may take some time to run down the walls on occasion. But they always seek equilibrium. Change anything and you change everything.

      As to crypto marxists not being a relevant portion of the environmental movement, then most policies wouldn't focus on centralizing industrial power in government hands, redistributing wealth, and generally undoing the industrial revolution. They also would have some inkling that the economy is a dynamic entity and not a block of wood.

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    25. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      We don't need money spent on propaganda on either side or on AGW research.

      Both are wastes of money. Let me walk that back a bit... I am not saying we should have ZERO research into AGW, but that the money being spent on it annually is already counter productive. Scale it down to what we spend studying the moon or something. Enough that serious scientists can keep the lights on and do their work. But not so much that you can build universities on the backs of the research or that the money literally perverts the entire academic institution. You must appreciate that if you throw enough money at something the money distorts everyone's perceptions on that issue. We have too much money spent on AGW research as it is... it is distorting things.

      What should we spent the money on instead? Technology and engineering.

      Stop giving money to activists, politicians, and even scientists. Give the money instead to engineers and companies capable of actually DOING something.

      That is, stop giving the money to people that TALK and start giving money to people that DO.

      Energy storage is a big issue. I'd throw a lot of money at that. Investments... not loans. When you throw money at the scientists, politicians, or activists... are they ever required to pay it back? Nope. Only industry has to deal with that. Every other recipiant just gets a check they cash with no strings attached. What green energy and industry needed was not loans. The loans destroyed a few good companies. Solyndra for example could have been awesome. But the federal government killed them. We had all these wonderful US green energy companies and the US federal government went through them and strangled them all in their cribs. Why? Because they were given very large loans that they couldn't possibly repay given current economic conditions. And so the federal government foreclosed on them. What fledgling businesses need is not loans but investment. Buy their stock. Or just as important, maybe give them tax breaks or exemptions from all sorts of things that make it hard to do business in the US.

      Do something so they can build for you.

      FDR ran into this issue at the start of the US war effort in WW2. He had applied all sorts of controls on US industry that was making it impossible for them to do their jobs. They told him "if you want smooth and reliable war production then you need to take your boot off our necks."... and because he had no choice... FDR complied. US war production skyrocketed and US industry stayed high after the war into the 50's largely because the government is slow and didn't start fucking with industry again until the 60s... and as we all know... by the 70's US industry started to have problems. A lot of this has to do with foreign competition etc undercutting US market dominance. But a significant amount of it was also changes to the regulatory environment which undermined US industry.

      The point is, if you want people to build a new and better future for you... you are going to need to respect that producing things is hard and fucking with the people that do it is not in your interest.

      If you want solar panels on every roof. If you want coal to become obsolete. If you want everyone to go around in electric cars... we can do these things. Stop fucking with the people that build things or they won't build things.

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    26. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you really have to type "straw man" in every thing you post? I've seen it in 4 stories tonight so far, in multiple threads within those. It's looking like you don't actually know what the hell a straw man even is. You'll throw it in the face of every person who "disagrees" with you though. Good thing it's made of straw-- it might hurt otherwise!

      PS, we all still fucking hate you. STFU & DIAF.

    27. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You act like shooting the hungry raptor isn't a solution. If I shoot it, it can't eat me but I can eat it and so can my family. By you ignoring the realities, though preaching at us like you know what they are (stupid fucking raptors), you yet again prove why your solutions are no solutions at all. For the fiftieth time tonight, STFU and DIAF. No one wants to hear your crazy plans. We've heard them countless times already and we shout you down every time. Here's some advice I'm sure you'll tell me to go fuck myself with: If everyone in the world hates you, then YOU are the problem. The Jews & Muslims don't get that and neither will you. You're just a victim.....

    28. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      I only post strawman when someone uses that specific logical fallacy against me.

      It is hardly the only one I see. Right now you're attempting to troll me by looking through my post history and commenting on other things I've commented upon.

      You're currently trying an ad hominem in that you're suggesting that because I said something you dislike or am a bad person in your view that my arguments are wrong.

      This is ultimately my problem with ignorant people like you. You do not know how to form a coherent argument. All you know how to do is use these cookie cutter fallacies to con people into thinking you actually had a point.

      Your problem in regards to me is that I'm slightly better educated then most of your victims. I know what you're doing and pin your bullshit to a specimen board like preserved beetles. I put the latin name for your idiocy down below the poor attempt at reasoning... and snap the case shut.

      That is all your sad attempts at having a point are to me... a catalog of stupidity.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    29. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Sure... and I repeat, how has the war on drugs gone?

      When will you people learn that you are not in control. You never have been and you never will be. Not even in soviet russia did this work.

      Supply and demand do not care what you think.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    30. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Where did you get that about Marxism believing in static economies? I don't remember that (not that I ever got that far into Das Kapital).

      In contrast, some people have pushed for tradable carbon credits, which are a way of harnessing the free market to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. This is not government control or a redistribution of wealth (which is needed in the US for other reasons). You're paying attention to some small number of idiots and projecting them on a much larger group of people.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    31. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      As to static economies, because they constantly say they'll change one variable in the system without accounting for all the other variables that change in relation to them.

      For example, they tend to think they can raise taxes without depressing the economy despite that happening every single time. Just one example. They always think they can change one thing without effecting everything. It betrays an assumption that economies are static. They have no appreciation or education in the dynamism of an actual economy. Simply pointing out that one thing they're doing is going to effect something else they don't want to effect tends to make them upset. It is sort of funny.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    32. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Lots of people believe that changing one thing won't change much else. Tax increases do not necessarily depress the economy, depending on what else is going on; here you're indulging in a similar fallacy by assuming that one specific change has one specific effect. Economies are complicated, and will react to assorted stimuli in not-easily-predictable ways.

      Observe the people on /. who think that a deflationary currency would be great. Are they Marxists? Observe the people who always argue for tax cuts. Are they Marxists? There's a lot of bad thinking all over the place.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    33. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Think of an ecology... take energy or nutrition out of that ecology... now lets say you're eating 30 to 50 percent of all energy and nutrition in that ecology.

      Are you going to imply that that has no impact on the populations and growth trends in that ecology? Come now.

      You take money out of the system and you took money out of the system.

      It is the folly of the Marxists to think they can rob peter to pay paul without pissing off peter.

      You should really know better by now.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    34. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Except that taxes do not necessarily take money out of the system. The Federal Government does not bury the money deep beneath the Pentagon, but turns around and spends it or gives it to people who are going to spend it fast. This stuff is complicated, guy, and you're claiming that A always causes B without listing an assortment of As and seeing if the Bs are all present.. Your ecology analogy fails because you're being much too vague. How is energy or nutrition leaving the ecology? Answer that and I'll come up with a better guess.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    35. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      That's fine. Keep a static view of the system. I can't pump the koolaid out of your stomach.

      If a given part of the forest is getting nutrients taken from at a rate of 70 percent it doesn't really matter to that part of the forest if all its neutralists are going to a totally different part of the forest. It is still suffering a net loss of resources.

      Change the tax system so that you have to pay every entity you take the taxes the money you just took from them and your point would make some sense.

      But that isn't how it works.

      The government is obviously a net drain on resources as it doesn't make anything. That drain has to be factored into your calculations.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    36. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      The government does make things. It provides services and some goods, although it concentrates on services (two obvious ones are defense and the court system, which make commerce possible).. If you don't realize that, it's no wonder you go for simplistic answers. The irony is that you think other people go for simplistic answers.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    37. Re:This whole issue is like watching... by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      I appreciate the value of defense and law and order. The problem is that most of the budget and focus of the government goes to anything but these things.

      There is a modern attempt to justify government using welfare for example rather then defense and law and order.

      I don't feel comfortable with that. I'd like them to do their jobs rather then come up with new ones.

      The actual expense of the government if we just focus on law and order and defense is relatively tiny. Especially law and order. That constitutes almost nothing.

      And in places like Los Angeles where I live, you're running into a situation where the government is cutting court services and shutting down court houses despite higher demand for courts. Why? Lack of money. But they have lots of money. They're just spending it on other things.

      Look, the issue with government is that you do need some of it to maintain a civil society. However, the amount you need is radically less then what we have today. Raising taxes to pay for yet more stuff that we do not need is to the common ill.

      Empires have collapsed for not heeding this warning.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  21. The real question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What does Bennett have to say?

  22. Sad that the far left screws this up. by WindBourne · · Score: 2

    The far right runs around screaming that there is no climate change, while ignoring the science (real bad).
    The far left runs around screaming that climate change is an issue due to science (good), but then ignores all of the solutions (just as bad).

    So, how can the far left take advantage of the shale boom? Well, right now, the far right wants keystone pipeline.
    If keystone goes in, will it lower or increase emission from tar sands? The answer is NO.
    If keystone is blocked, will it lower or increase emissions from tar sands? Again the answer is NO.
    Basically, keystone pipeline does not help nor hurt emissions.
    So, what CAN happen is that the far left can use it to trade to lower REAL emissions. Transportation accounts for a large chunk of the global emissions, esp. in North America. That is very true for commercial vehicles such as semi-trucks, that burn diesel fuel.
    BUT, by trading keystone for subsidies for commercial vehicles and large passenger vehicles (suburbans come to mind), that use nat gas at first, and then within 3 years, make it ONLY for Serial Hybrids that use Nat gas. With this trade, it will move large vehicles off diesel and over to nat gas. BUT, within 3 years, the move to serial hybrids allows makers to be using real electric vehicles and being able to switch to say hydrogen fuel cells, or perhaps wireless charging to run these vehicles. With this approach, then the far right gets their keystone, while the far left gets actual emission DOWNWARDS.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by amorsen · · Score: 1

      The difficulty of transporting oil away from the tar sands works as a tax on that oil. A tax which is applied right at the production of the worst kind of fossil fuel we currently have. Keystone XL will remove most of that tax. As it is, tar sand oil is right on the cusp of being economical, and therefore lowering the costs is going to increase production a lot.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    2. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the master plan is to force producers to burn more fuel in the course of providing fuel so that consumers will burn less fuel?

    3. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by amorsen · · Score: 1

      So the master plan is to force producers to burn more fuel in the course of providing fuel so that consumers will burn less fuel?

      More or less, yes. An actual extraction tax which would provide revenue (and replace harmful wage taxes) would be infinitely preferable, of course. However that is not on the table,

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    4. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Actually the really far right wants to keep on buying oil from those Saudis since that boosts their personal profits. That makes local shale oil/gas just as bad in their eyes as windmills. Let's hope they keep on losing influence or at least invest in their own country.

    5. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Wether it is developed or not, does not change the emissions. The same amount of oil will be burned if it comes from tar sands or from a well. RIght now, you are making the issue one of tar sand vs. pumped oil. That is a no win situation. At best, it is a tactical issue.
      HOWEVER, if you let keystone go through, while getting all NEW COMMERCIAL VEHICLES (that burn that tar sand) to be using nat gas, and then doing EV with 'range extender' (basically serial hybrid), you start dropping the demand for diesel or tar sands. In addition, it will move the commercial vehicles into EVs

      the far left need to quit thinking tactical and start thinking strategically. Otherwise, CO2 emissions will NOT drop.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    6. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      yeah, the far right is not much better. However, the far left screams about Nat gas and says that it hurts things, when in reality, it is the smartest way to go.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    7. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by amorsen · · Score: 1

      The same amount of oil will be burned if it comes from tar sands or from a well.

      Oil from a well causes considerably less CO2 emission compared to oil from tar sands. The tar sand does not boil itself.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    8. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I'd agree, but since some of my paycheck comes from coal seam gas it's probably best to take it with a bucket of salt. However my power generation background screams at me that a monoculture of anything in electricity generation is bad, and solar plus even wind have real niches in a few places. Personally I think anything at all which reduces reliance on getting energy supplies from other countries is a good thing because that reduces their political influence - the strong Saudi influence on US foreign affairs since at least 1981 (reversal of the move towards energy independance) has done a lot of damage to the USA in my opinion.

      When nat gas hurts things it's being done wrong. There's a bit of that about since there's very much a gold rush mentality in the sector.

    9. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      not enough to matter. Far more important is to focus on changing the vehicles, not the source.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    10. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Oh, I am a believer in converting our coal into methane (great point energy). As you said, we can not have a monoculture. As it is, it was the fact that we allowed coal to grow to 60% of our electricity that is leaving America in its current situation.
      BUT, if we allow coal to go to methane, and add nukes, and other AE, etc, well, that makes good sense.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    11. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Would be nice but nukes are dead unless we get something based on military tech (eg. from sub reactor research, small reactors have a lot of advantages) or based on German, Indian or even Russian technology (liquid metal cooled reactor under development). The Westinghouse thing based partly on Japanese technology (because US R&D has almost halted in that area for decades so Westinghouse bought a bunch of Japanese who had done R&D, took the results, then sacked everyone) is pretty well a 1970s reactor painted green and isn't going to win people over. That's my opinion anyway. I'd like to be proved wrong about the US civilian nuclear industry being something other than a pack of useless parasites since the 1980s. It could happen.

    12. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well using Natural gas to provide process heat is a bit silly. OK I can work with that.
      Give "them" the same breaks the solar has been given and I am sure
      Suncore will be willing to buy a MSR to provide the heat to upgrade Tar
      sand sludge into normal crude oil (aka synthetic oil). Oh and while you
      are at it use small MSRs to provide the process heat for SAGD recovery.
      No more big ugly pits that are hard to fill. We could use the jobs!
      Google it! there you go; now the difference between West Texas light and
      Tar sand sludge is the cost of the MSRs. No added CO2. It is not like
      California heavy oil is any better than Tar Sand sludge. The same thing
      goes for refineries - Process heat by nuke. Less CO2; even greens should like
      that - ROTFLMAO - Greens and nukes in the same paragraph - soooo much fun.

    13. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am sure those "really far right" people you conjure in your dreams are just dying to give more money to the Saudis.

      From down here on Earth, where there is no global warming, reality is quite different from your fictionalized environs.

    14. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by amorsen · · Score: 1

      A nuclear reactor has a life span in decades, and needs more than a decade to pay itself back. There is no way anyone is going to make that investment when the business case involves something as speculative as tar sand. Tar sand is barely profitable now, who knows what it will be like in 2 or 5 years, never mind the 20+ you need to justify building a reactor.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    15. Re:Sad that the far left screws this up. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      First off, B&W already has a reactor that could be up within 5 years. They are nervous about demand. What is needed is a guaranteed number of reactor buys (say 10 ) to get them moving again.

      BUT, what is really needed is to focus on gen IV reactors esp. using thorium. They can burn up the old waste.

      Now, with the last congress, I would have agreed with you. And IMHO, this coming CONgress is going to be a major fuck-up. HOWEVER, the GOP supports nukes. In addition, so does O. As such, I think that we will see an energy bill that will push new reactors.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  23. 29 cents (for gas in 1967) is (ta-da) $2.05 today by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    29-cent gas in 1967 may sound like a dream but those 29 cents (according to inverse finance law) is $2.05 today.

    http://www.dollartimes.com/inf...

    I REST THIS CASE!

  24. here's a question by slashmydots · · Score: 1

    If a drill site was leaking that much methane, wouldn't it sort of maybe blow up?

  25. Who thought it would? by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Who thought it would?
    Come on guys, if you thought it would stop carbon dioxide emissions your life up until now has failed to give you a bullshit detector good enough to avoid getting scammed by the next used car salesman or similar you meet.

  26. Nuclear lobby ate itself - need to import by dbIII · · Score: 1

    The US nuclear lobby ate it's own children. Pushing to scrap the Clinton era thorium project because success would conflict with existing investment in Uranium is one of many examples. Lobbying to halt research into waste management because that reflected poorly on the fantasy that it's "clean" is another. Putting trust fund children and horse judges into management positions and just using nuclear energy as a vector to milk the taxpayer and electricity consumers, without having to deal with any competition, is another reason why you can't have your shiny and wonderful nuke that does what is promised.
    Give it a few years and you may be able to buy one from overseas, but the US nuclear industry is a couple of decades into the long coast down with no chance of revival, only a chance of replacement with completely new players.

    1. Re:Nuclear lobby ate itself - need to import by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could you eat that extra apostrophe? it's means it is.

    2. Re:Nuclear lobby ate itself - need to import by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It appears I've attracted the ire of an aspiring English teacher, well take this then:
      Lat every felawe telle his tale aboute, And lat se now who shal the soper wynne;- And ther I lefte, I wol ayeyn bigynne.
      Still perfectly understandable by aspiring English teachers, or just about anyone with the language, even after all this time. What's an apostrophe out of place to that? Surely you can still read it.

      So I suggest comment on content instead of despair that this is a casual site where many posters do minimal or no proofreading after typing out whatever they think of on the spur of the moment.

    3. Re:Nuclear lobby ate itself - need to import by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For fuck's sake:

      "So" is supposed to have a comma after it.

      Everything between "comment" and the end of the sentence makes very little sense as posted and should be rewritten to clarify the statement. Also, it is a run-on sentence.

      "spur of the moment" should be hyphenated.

      Finally, your Olde English statement is not intelligible in the least. The best non-Google translation I can come up with is:

      "Let every fellow tell his tale about, And let see now who shall the super wine;- And there I left, I will (some fucking word that doesn't exist) begin."
      Yeah, that makes a whole lot of sense right there-- about as much sense as adding an apostrophe where it doesn't belong! Next time, ignore the grammar Nazis. That way you only sound stupid once instead of in an entire paragraph feigning eloquence!

  27. That's 2%, not 4% by rbrander · · Score: 1

    Burning methane has about half the CO2 emissions per unit energy as coal, basically all carbon. Add in the effect of 2% losses from drill to furnace, and you have the same greenhouse effect as using coal for the same job.
    For residential use, there's no question that many handling processes, storages, and miles of ever-smaller pipes has losses well above that.
    Even for heavy industrial consumers connected straight to major supply pipelines, it's surely over 2% loss; from leaks around the wellhead to every stage of the plant processing to pipeline joints, leaks happen.
    Gas is a cleaner-greener fuel in that all the other bad stuff in coal emissions are not there; coal kills perhaps 24,000 Americans per year - but the greenhouse impact of gas is certainly worse than coal, or oil.

  28. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Ichijo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Totalitarian government, whether it gets sold to the people as "Communist" or "Fascist" or whatever the next excuse will be to give central government ever more power always comes from the left.

    Except when it benefits Big Oil, then that fascism (actually, dirigism, which is close enough) comes from the right. Unless you can name one right wing politician who opposes minimum parking requirements?

    I use this example because such requirements take away our freedom and property rights while benefiting Big Oil by inducing people to drive everywhere.

    It's interesting how the left errs on the side of the poor while the right errs on the side of the wealthy.

    --
    Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
  29. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you actually serious here or is this a troll? I'm honestly wondering here.

  30. WTF is the far left? Reason isn't the left. by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    There is no real left or right paradigm; it is an illusion, like in the book Flat Land or the film The Matrix. It's at least 2 dimensional: up/down and left/right. The "far left" today doesn't even get press coverage - the Democratic party doesn't represent them; just tries to sucker them for votes. see http://politicalcompass.org/

    Characterizing the correct answer as left/right is ignoring the whole problem and debating empty propaganda.

    Keystone helps sell shale oil cheaper. You just buy into the defeatist propaganda of the corporations to stand to gain (along with your so called "right" who were purchased and some "left" also who were purchased. The real reason lawyers make good politicians is they argue whatever position their boss wants like they believe it themselves.)

    Higher costs for shale will delay it; hopefully, long enough to address demand with cheaper alternatives or enough sanity to ban it... Asbestos is cheap and we stopped using that! Assuming that oil is going to burn is as foolish as keeping the asbestos mines open in the middle of that debate (which was settled in science years before politics caught up; thank the vested interest lobby...) The cynical and wise strategic move is to STALL it out as long as possible so they don't invest in more expensive alternative routes - making it even less cost effective when keystone is stopped. That strategy does the most to stop them. (note: I'm not saying Obama's clever. It is a really clever plan and he just happens to be doing the same thing, so far.)

    Extremists are never happy; don't know why you think giving each something they want is going to change anything!

    1. Re:WTF is the far left? Reason isn't the left. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      I did not characterize the best solution as right vs left. I said that both of you fools are just that: fools.
      You can NOT stall out anything. Economics forces the issues. Tar Sands are economical at 40 / bl. As such, they are viable RIGHT NOW.
      The right strategy is to move the west from oil to EVs, but use nat gas as the extender. Like H2, and electricity, Nat gas or Methane can be CARRIERS of energy.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  31. Oh noes..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And today yet another alarmist warning that the sky is falling.

  32. You can't appease extremists. by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    The "right" will fight all alternative power like they have ALWAYS DONE no matter what deals you give them today. Extremists don't give up.

    With a growing industry with more lobbyists the alternatives sway the "right" (and "left") a little bit. The entrenched powers DO NOT want there enemies empowered; the unequal footing they have must be maintained. The "right" in this case is not actually extreme they are just the most corrupt on this issue. I guarantee they will shift when the $ moves in the other direction.

    What needs to be done for progress is to drag the opposition kicking and screaming forward so over time they'll adapt and shift to new kinds of fear mongering after all their nay saying proves false. It has been done before (slavery, civil rights, introducing min wage, banning child labor, weekends off, etc.) Now with civil gay marriage all the straight civil marriages are not ending plus we are not surrounded in bestiality and pedophiles either. After the fear proves empty (and some more old people die) then we'll have gay Republicans will be demanding we ban Atheists from adopting children. It'll happen. History rhymes.

  33. The shale boom is over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    OPEC will keep oil prices low, until there is no fracking industry left. Looking at the financials of many of the companies involved, it doesn't look like it will take very long.

  34. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The NAZI party was the NATIONAL Socialist GERMAN Workers PARTY. So per your argument, that's as right wing as it gets. All the NATIONAL parties of the history have been right wing. Left wing parties are typically INTERNATIONAL (their war-song is even called the "Internationale"), as their ideology is about class, not about nation.

    So the name of the Nazis both appeal to extreme left wing, as well as extreme right wing. This is not a coincidence.

    The rest of the AC's argument is as stupid and ill-informed.

  35. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 2

    Your argument doesn't hold water. You state roughly that the Nazis are leftist because all totalitarians are leftist. And as Nazis are totalitarians they must be leftist.

    You mix terms: you draw an opposite between 'totalitarian' and 'liberal', and you equate them to 'left' and 'right'. That doesn't work: the traditional 'left' versus 'right' divide is about those who believe in 'class equality' and those that believe in 'private property'. Both have totalitarian as well as liberal factions. Where the left have communists that are as totalitarian as it gets, the right have fascists and authoritarian factions that drive towards a totalitarian state. The US "democrat and republican party" being one example of such an authoritarian right wing faction.

  36. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by bames53 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Unless you can name one right wing politician who opposes minimum parking requirements?

    Pretty much any libertarian leaning Republican. Not that I particularly support him, but I imagine Sen. Paul would express opposition to minimum parking requirements if asked, and his father certainly would and would have voted against any such legislation.

    It's interesting how the left errs on the side of the poor while the right errs on the side of the wealthy.

    Actually both sides err on the side of the wealthy, the left only pretends or is fooled into thinking the things it does 'for the poor' actually benefit the poor. For example almost all of the programs that are supposedly to benefit the less well off in fact transfer more from the poorer to the better off than vice versa.

  37. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by bames53 · · Score: 2

    Your argument doesn't hold water. You state roughly that the Nazis are leftist because all totalitarians are leftist. And as Nazis are totalitarians they must be leftist.

    Actually if you read his post you'll see that he placed the Nazi's on the left not by simply equating totalitarianism with leftism, but by listing four Nazi policies: universal health care, minimum wage, social security, and a 102% tax on certain corporations. His argument is more like "These policies are leftist and therefore mark the party implementing them as being on the left."

    Note that I'm not taking any position is this argument; I can certainly see problems with his argument. This is simply a 'meta' comment on your discussion to point out that your characterization of his argument is incorrect.

  38. Re: Your argument is devoid of facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You haven't a fucking clue about politics and history.

    Think you are watching too much Fox TV.

  39. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by JimSadler · · Score: 1

    That is total nonsense! The Nazis were not leftests at all. They were right wing extreemists. Germany had a deep fear of the left in the form of communism and that was the reason behind the formation of a rabid dog type of right wind nation. Bothe the communists and the Nazis threw individual human rights under the bus. American liberals operate in the exact opposite way with a very high emphasis on justice and human rights. If you knew a bit about what happens in South America you would get a clue as to the nature of the problem. Many ministers, priests and nuns have been tortured and murdered simply because the teaching of Christianity insists upon basic human rights and condems greed. The wealthy have for many decades hired killers to eliminate anyone who suggests fairness and decency for anyone other than the rich. These aristocrats are highly associated with Nazi beliefs and practices.

  40. 'Catastrophic man-made global warming' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL. If you mean that, why don't you say that? Why do you keep saying 'climate change', which is a meaningless term, and is SUPPOSED to be taken as meaning 'catastrophic man-made global warming', even though it clearly doesn't.

    www.climatedepot.com

  41. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Vitriol+Angst · · Score: 1

    You can paint a sign on an elephant and call it a Petunia for all I care. Hitler has more in common with our Republican/Conservative Party in the USA than almost anything you could mention right now.

    Both sides are allowing the wealthiest to buy the rules -- so in a few more years, it won't really matter who runs the stage show. I want a living wage, and I don't want to panic about health care and retirement. Even risk-taking super trapeze artists can use a safety net. Hitler was Progressive only in the sense that he made progress. He was socially regressive however. Remember, they persecuted people.

    Whomever is not for war, not for companies over people, doesn't manipulate currencies, and above all else, values human life the most -- well, that's the person who is not like Hitler. Which group is suggesting we send a bunch of latin American refugees back across the border when the drug cartels are slaughtering school buses full of people? A lack of compassion and blind obedience to ideals is the direction of fascist pricks -- call it anything you want.

    --
    >>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
  42. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by paazin · · Score: 1

    What people seem to ignore here is that classical liberalism and fascism are significantly dissimilar; conservatism in the US is more along the classical liberal vein while fascism is more along the monarchist/statist vein.

  43. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by SuricouRaven · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Nazis were also strongly opposed to abortion* and homosexuality, and frequently spoke of the richness of German Christian heritage and declared themselves a Christian party. Sound a lot like the American right-wing?

    Or - and here is a notion that many may find strange - could it be that the left-vs-right divide is rather artificial, and not all political parties can be neatly fitted into one of two buckets?

    *Though they did make exceptions for their eugenics programs, abortion was otherwise strictly prohibited.

  44. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by jandersen · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The left is about central control

    So, you're implying that large corporations, like Oracle, IBM, Microsoft (or Redhat for that matter), are basically a bunch of commies? And the different churches, they are of course too? I think, maybe you have a different way of navigating through space from the rest of us.

    Out here, in the real world, words like '(political) left', 'communism' and 'socialism', are about the idea that we might all be better off if we shared more of the burdens of life; that in order to protect essential freedoms, such as freedom of speech and self-determination, we need to agree on the rules, and because there are selfish bullies in the world, we also need to be able to enforce the rules. And the words '(political) right', 'capitalism' and 'free market' are about the idea that it is best to allow the individual to seek their own fortune in the way they believe is right.

    We have had ample demonstration over the last century or so, that taken to the extreme, both of these ideas produce monsters, which ironically end up looking very alike, as fascism. An insightful person will realize that society, in order to be stable and functional, needs both of those ingredients to some extent.It is also not hard to see that the balance is not right in the US at the moment, which is why you are becoming more and more unstable.

  45. The pipeline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One concern that I don't think is being addressed is this...

    Eminent domain on people who don't want to sell their land for the pipeline.

  46. The problem with human beings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The problem is not carbon, nor climate, nor coal, nor natural gas, nor fracking

    The problem is human

    I have read the (almost the) same discussions since the late 1980's, first on fidonet, then The Well, then AOL, then the newsgroups, then net forums all over --- same old arguments repeated ad nauseum, while everybody and their old grandma keep depending on fossil fuel to survive

    From driving cars (even if you do not have a car, you still take buses/trains, don't you?) to electricity to cooking to heating up the house during winter, we are burning fossil fuel

    Heck, even the act of posting this message on /. fossil fuels have been burned to generate electricity to power my computer and all the servers that keep the Net alive

    On one side there are people who pooh pooh the idea that the world is going down the drain because of our unsatiated appetite for more fossil fuel

    On the other side people running scared like headless chicken bawking, but still, these people oppose Nuclear. Germany is a case in point

    The country of Germany gobbled up so much electricity and yet they have closed down all their nuclear power plant. They do so because of political correctness doctrine that nuclear is bad, but by closing down their nuke plants, they burn fossil fuel, more of it

    I do not see any light at the end of the tunnel, I simply don't

    We humans are turning this planet into a hellhole, and the only thing we can do is talk, and then, talk some more

    1. Re:The problem with human beings by Pieroxy · · Score: 0

      There is no evidence (still standing at least) that link CO2 emissions (produced by burning fossil fuel) to the global warming. There is no evidence that CO2 emissions will have or did have any meaningful impact on the planet climate. If anything, the planet is getting greener because all those trees love all that CO2.

      Furthermore, there is no evidence that the global warming is going to be harmful in any way for humans. But most of all, there is no shred of evidence that humanity can do anything to stop or act on the global warming.

      So before shouting out loud that we are "turning this planet into a hellhole", let's stop for a minute and think about it. Because in every scenarii studied so far, most lead to an economic disaster, but none to a better climate.

    2. Re:The problem with human beings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So kill yourself. That solves reduces the problem somewhat for everyone else and completely for yourself.

    3. Re:The problem with human beings by tendrousbeastie · · Score: 1

      "Because in every" implies that a singular noun will follow.

    4. Re:The problem with human beings by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Pieroxy(2014) or Fourier(1824)? - Tough choice.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    5. Re:The problem with human beings by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      Thanks. Not a native English writer.

    6. Re:The problem with human beings by dave420 · · Score: 1

      There is evidence. You not knowing about it does not make it magically not exist. You can not excuse your ignorance simply because it makes you feel better.

    7. Re:The problem with human beings by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      There is evidence.

      Then give me a link to one !

  47. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    The NAZI party was the National SOCIALIST German WORKERS PARTY.

    It says "Oxo" on buses, but they don't go there.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  48. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    Or - and here is a notion that many may find strange - could it be that the left-vs-right divide is rather artificial, and not all political parties can be neatly fitted into one of two buckets?

    Perhaps this is why the two-axis system was invented.

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

    Not perfect, but a better approximation.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  49. Nothing changes until it is all gone by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    Burn it all as quickly as possible.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  50. Re: Your argument is devoid of facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When all your opponents are left with is an "is not!' reply, you know you have beaten them.

    Oh, and when they play the "Hahahahah Faux News" card... that too.

  51. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The truth hurts, huh.

    Of COURSE you're wondering. The dude laid it out fairly well. And you're not used to it. You're having issues of congitave dissonance. It leaves mayn people "wondering".

    Don't worry, though. Just give it some time. Your fantasies of how swell the goverment is will kick right in again in a short while.

  52. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did you miss the "SOCIALIST" party? And the "WORKERS"?
    Socialism is not at odds with Nationalism - these concepts have to do with different philosophies. Socialism is a far left-wing view of economic governance. Nationalism is a wing-independent concept of social values centering on the national identity as a thing of value. You can easily be both.
    The main reason that name was chosen was to differentiate it from the USSR's Communism, which demanded subservience to the USSR.

    Curiously, when the Nazis were in power, they raised the minimum wage, either nationalized or put government officials in charge of industry, had universal health care, prevented workers from being fired or transferred without approval, reduced the power of stockholders, and all sorts of other far left-wing activities. Yet, you call them right wing.

  53. The Real Reason for The Shale Gas Boom by Irate+Engineer · · Score: 1

    Shale gas isn't being exploited because it is cleaner than oil (though it is). It is being exploited because we are trying to get oil, and all the easy-to-get oil is about gone. Oil and gas often co-exist in the same formations, so if you are digging hard for oil you tend to get a lot of gas.

    We've had some technology breakthroughs that let us extract this gas and oil from shales which will keep things going for a while. Enjoy it while it lasts, because after it is gone, it's gone.

    The tragic thing is that the temporarily low oil and gas prices do make it difficult to transition to renewable technologies as it removes the cost impetus. The problem is that many renewable infrastructures will require decades to construct, while oil and gas prices will fluctuate wildly in the space of months or a year. When it runs out, fuel prices will go through the roof, and we'll be sitting a decade or more away from a replacement energy system.

    --

    Left MS Windows for Linux Mint and never looked back!

    Vote for Bernie in 2016!

  54. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell me when in the history of this planet there has ever been global climate stasis? Seriously?

  55. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by pipingguy · · Score: 1

    Good post, mod up.

  56. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You forget something, that the NAZI party was socialist, and it did exactly the same things that all other socialist and communist dictatorships have brought to the world. The difference between National/International is tangential, just like the difference between greenies and feminists. Same dogs, same agenda, same ideology, same politics, different dressing.
    If communists and nazis hate each other, is because they both want to be the ones at the top off a feudalist/police state. However, nazis at least were far more intelligent by praising themselves through nationalism, and fomenting their industries through monopolies, rather than by killing anyone that was bright or productive, as the communists did. So, the communists are basically dumb nazis and fascists.

    Germany actually have had both NAZI and Communist governments, and the Communist side (East-germany) is to this day poor, dumb, and unindustrialized.

  57. Re: THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Invalid argument. The proper argument should be: in politics, it's who/what is the most important factor, if the truth were to be told, in getting to the winning position? There are no left right arguments if only the truth is expressed for action. Therefore they are unable to pander for votes, to get the vote, one must pander or pervacate, or discourage votes. And the local press must report the errors in truth, or they should loose their identity as "press" and be known as arms of propaganda. And the courts should uphold press over yellow press rags. That's unlikely to happen where the money is involved.
    As to your assertations, left/right? Here is another controlling factor. Money. Who finances the division? Who creates the division? And why? Even the oldest of the history books, are lacking on this. But history is written by the winner of the conflicts, not the loser. The loser is always vilified, and misreported and edited to appear worse then first thought.
    Communism is a great idea in thought, christian enclaves are a great idea, Mulla's express great ideas also. So wher e does it go wrong? What is the backing influence to division?

  58. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by Livius · · Score: 2

    The Nazi Party was organized crime masquerading as a cult, not a political party in the modern sense, and it was neither (consistently) left-wing or right-wing in its politics. Much like the Communist Party.

  59. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong, the parent post has it right. National socialists, socialism, this is leftist, left wing stuff. Community organizer type stuff. Definitely not right wing stuff.

  60. Could? by YoungManKlaus · · Score: 1

    I mean, seriously, you are still blowing CO2 previously bound in the earth into the atmosphere. Just because you take your carbon from a short-chained molecule instead of a long-chained one does not fundamentally alter whats happening.

  61. Germane? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All of these "Climate Change", "Climate Terror" "Climate Trumps Everything" stories, which are just "spank my bitch up" have no place here.

  62. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by Cyberax · · Score: 1

    Actually, no. Nazi party was _named_ "National Socialist", while its policies were pretty consistent with far-right wing. Basically, its name was only used for PR to drum up support.

  63. Re: THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quick go to a library an get a book.
    Really. Learn what political terms mean from a non partisan source.
    The fascism movement was a rightism movement.
    The nazis killed the unionists and communist they where not buddies.
    Just because fox think left means evil and right means good does not make it a political fact.
    To far left or right is a dictator ship.
    So thoses that say you can be tofar to the right ,you need to wonder about them.

  64. Re: THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashdot needs a like button

  65. ha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bad news for those believing in global warming. But for the rest of us we just laugh, because money is not going to the groups they support, the "clean" energy companies. Their global warming scare tactic has been used for too many years now and is losing its grip.

  66. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, right after we determine which descendants of African-Americans slave owners should be paying reparations to the descendants of the African-American slaves.

    Get back to me when that is complete.

  67. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by lgw · · Score: 1

    You've mentally defined both "Nazis" and "right wing" as "people I don't like", so of course they're the same to you, history be damned.

    American liberals operate in the exact opposite way with a very high emphasis on justice and human rights

    Exactly - the "American right" is currently the home of the classic liberal, if you haven't been paying attention. Often derided as "libertarian" and "wanting Somalia", the liberal wants government out of his daily life, values the right of people to make their own decisions very highly, with a focus on personal responsibility. The only place where the "American left" has any lingering remnants of liberalism is sex, and even that is fading as the anti-sex prudes have mostly moved to the left now (and the anti-sex right is quite elderly now, and dying off).

    Many ministers, priests and nuns have been tortured and murdered simply because the teaching of Christianity insists upon basic human rights and condems greed. The wealthy have for many decades hired killers to eliminate anyone who suggests fairness and decency for anyone other than the rich.

    The overlap between "Christian values" and "the American right" is nearly 100% - it's only the sex part where there's dissonance.

    These aristocrats are highly associated with Nazi beliefs and practices.

    Socialism, Communism, Fascism, they all loudly proclaim the evils of corporations and the rich, and then the rulers make themselves and their friends massively, massively rich (and quietly vanish anyone who insists on pointing that out).

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  68. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Destroy your car, don't get on a bus, and never, every fly on a airplane.

    Then disconnect your household from the electric grid.

    Then tell me about how evil you think "Big Oil" is.

    I suspect "hypocrite" is oddly missing from your dictionary.

  69. Climate has not changed in 10,000 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Climate has not changed in 10,000 years

  70. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by cold+fjord · · Score: 0

    The rest of the AC's argument is as stupid and ill-informed.

    As is yours for trying to claim that the German National Socialist party wasn't socialist. The National Socialists took the other path Marx outlined. The Communists created socialism and exterminated various economic classes, the National Socialists created socialism and exterminated various social/ethnic groups or nationalities. Marx and Engles call for both.

    So yes, the National Socialists were in fact socialists.

    On 16 June 1941, as Hitler readied his forces for Operation Barbarossa, Josef Goebbels looked forward to the new order that the Nazis would impose on a conquered Russia. There would be no come-back, he wrote, for capitalists nor priests nor Tsars. Rather, in the place of debased, Jewish Bolshevism, the Wehrmacht would deliver “der echte Sozialismus”: real socialism.

    Goebbels never doubted that he was a socialist. He understood Nazism to be a better and more plausible form of socialism than that propagated by Lenin. Instead of spreading itself across different nations, it would operate within the unit of the Volk.

    So total is the cultural victory of the modern Left that the merely to recount this fact is jarring. But few at the time would have found it especially contentious. As George Watson put it in The Lost Literature of Socialism:

    It is now clear beyond all reasonable doubt that Hitler and his associates believed they were socialists, and that others, including democratic socialists, thought so too.

    The clue is in the name. Subsequent generations of Leftists have tried to explain away the awkward nomenclature of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party as either a cynical PR stunt or an embarrassing coincidence. In fact, the name meant what it said.

    Hitler told Hermann Rauschning, a Prussian who briefly worked for the Nazis before rejecting them and fleeing the country, that he had admired much of the thinking of the revolutionaries he had known as a young man; but he felt that they had been talkers, not doers. “I have put into practice what these peddlers and pen pushers have timidly begun,” he boasted, adding that “the whole of National Socialism” was “based on Marx”.

    Marx’s error, Hitler believed, had been to foster class war instead of national unity – to set workers against industrialists instead of conscripting both groups into a corporatist order. His aim, he told his economic adviser, Otto Wagener, was to “convert the German Volk to socialism without simply killing off the old individualists” – by which he meant the bankers and factory owners who could, he thought, serve socialism better by generating revenue for the state. “What Marxism, Leninism and Stalinism failed to accomplish,” he told Wagener, “we shall be in a position to achieve.” -- Leftists become incandescent when reminded of the socialist roots of Nazism

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  71. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    I expect there are plenty of places you don't go that maybe you should.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  72. China will buy all the shale by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The shale producers are highly leveraged. China will buy all of them, pennies on the dollar. Congress will have a fit. Oil exports won't happen. Oil prices will rise. All it takes is that threat of US domestic production being foreign owned.

  73. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    Your argument doesn't hold water. You state roughly that the Nazis are leftist because all totalitarians are leftist. And as Nazis are totalitarians they must be leftist.

    No, that ithe AC stated. The AC stated that the National Socialists (Nazis) were leftists because they are socialists.

    Quoting the AC:

    Of course the Nazis were leftists. There were a progressive socialist party, that actually implemented a bunch of progressive ideals, often the first in Europe to do so: universal health care, minimum wage, social security ...

    The Left has more than one branch of socialism having both the communists (international socialists) that exterminate classes and the Nationional Socialists that exterminate races. Marx and Engles called for both.

    The US "democrat and republican party" being one example of such an authoritarian right wing faction.

    That is just silly. The Democrats aren't right wing, and the Republicans aren't authoritarian.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  74. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Or - and here is a notion that many may find strange - could it be that the left-vs-right divide is rather artificial, and not all political parties can be neatly fitted into one of two buckets?

    YES

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  75. Re: THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  76. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    HE didn't miss it. Didn't you know that when you are hiding from reality, things like Nationalist and International can make almost otherwise identical organizations politically opposite as in left verses right. So by focusing on the geographical structure of national verses international, the person can completely ignore the political ideology of nationalism and socialism and conflate the similarities of other words in order to provoke any misunderstand that fits their desired worldview that they can imagine.

    And yes, Nazi Germany was very progressive. They had free university education, instituted minimum wages and lead the science front. In fact they advance Eugenics to the point of the Aryan race being the true race and made a foundation for the final solution to the inferior races. But we won't let facts bother some people. They are happy with their misaligned worldviews and history will repeat itself. It's like the constant calls for more funding for failed institution. If only more money was thrown that way and they could try the same things again, it might work this time. Get used to it.

  77. Tar sands is being stalled already. by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    It is being stalled and will continue to be for a little while longer. No, it's not completely stalled but it could be moving much faster than it is. I have a hard time believing Tar sands is economical at $40 / bl. I've never heard that low an estimate before. I remember when fracking was getting wonderful estimates and they ended up losing $ when higher more realistic numbers came out. (fracking is still cheap... although they leak so much doing it cheaply it does more harm than coal does. responsible fracking is much more costly; deciding on a compromise and transition scheme is tricky and the ideal compromise can't be done because of politics and selfish voters.)

    I didn't discuss natural gas or H2.

  78. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    Seriously?

    If we are being 'serious', nobody has claimed there is such a thing, however the climate our civilization has experienced in the last 10k yrs has been in a very stable "dynamic equilibrium". That is set to change because humans are kicking the crap out of the climate system, it will fuck up our agriculture, flood our coastal cities, and cause mass migration. How much worse it gets is depends on how we behave, if continue on our current course then the laws of physics say the ocean will become acidic in the 2100's - the last time such an event happened naturally, it coincided with the worst ever extinction event known to man.

    We have already got a taste of how climatic changes can cause social disruption in Syria. The "arab spring" was preceded by the worst drought in the 10ky history of the fertile crescent (the birthplace of agriculture). The 'unprecedented' drought caused people to abandon their farms and set off food riots in major cities such as Cairo and Aleppo. In Syria agriculture totally collapsed, a full 10% of the population (2M people) simply walked off their "dust bowl" farms just prior to the civil war, coincidence?

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  79. Renewables are cheaper than you think by microbox · · Score: 1

    You probably believe that renewables can never compete with carbon energy on price alone -- unsubsidized. The simple truth is that after subsidies are removed, only gas can compete with renewables. Gas wins handily, for now. The main obstacle for renewables in that the USA needs more high voltage capacity -- blocked by the nimby crowd -- to move electricty across the country. With more high voltage power lines, it would quickly start to cost more to mine and ship coal to existing coal power plants than build wind power. Solar is close behind, and the prices are coming down fast.

    Now it is not true that the above pricing estimates are purely subsidy free. Coal, oil and natural gas are still given huge subsidies in the calculations: private profits, socialized losses. You see, coal/oil/gas does not pay for the significant health burdens, or the trillions in wars. And that is leaving aside using the atmosphere as a free waste tip.

    If your main concern about climate change action is "ruining the economy", then pull your head out of partisan news sources, and go look at the actual figures that businesses and governments use to make decisions. Most economists believe that climate action costs are negligible, but that not doing anything will cost a lot -- starting with all the beachfront property on the East coast, which will have moved in land within 100 years.

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    1. Re:Renewables are cheaper than you think by mi · · Score: 1

      You see, coal/oil/gas does not pay for the significant health burdens

      Yes, they do — they pay taxes and salaries.

      or the trillions in wars

      Please, spare me the "war for oil" meme. It is utter nonsense.

      figures that businesses and governments use to make decisions

      What is it with you, guys? So many posts trying to rebut mine, and none offering much in the way of citations. What figures? Which governments?

      Most economists believe that climate action costs are negligible

      That governments — and government-employed economists believe in something, that justifies expanding governmental control over citizens is not at all surprising. Conflict-of-interest much? And even they can't offer much more than belief...

      starting with all the beachfront property

      You mean, property like this? Or that's on the West coast — must be entirely different, yeah...

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  80. phantomfive makin stuff up again by Layzej · · Score: 1

    kind of a silly question given that it doesn't exist.

  81. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by lgw · · Score: 1

    Hitler thought he was a socialist. His contemporaries thought he was a socialist. The National Socialist Workers Party saw themselves as socialist. He started in power with a straight-up socialist agenda (including the eugenics, lest we forget where he got that from). Denying history won't change it, it just means you can't learn from it. What else do you think Orwell was writing about, passionate socialist that he was? He had seen first hand where socialism can lead if the people aren't careful with it.

    I want a living wage, and I don't want to panic about health care and retirement. Even risk-taking super trapeze artists can use a safety net.

    You want more government power to give you a living wage. You want more government power to give you health care. You want more government power to give you a safe retirement. You want more government power to protect you from this that and the other thing. Do you ever stop to think what the government will do with all that power once it has it? We only have to look back 75 years to learn the answer - the government is your friend while it accumulates power, but eventually it accumulates enough power that it no longer needs to be your friend.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  82. Jane/Lonny Eachus goes Sky Dragon Slayer by khayman80 · · Score: 2

    If you have actual, direct evidence, why did you not link to THAT, rather than somebody else's claim? [Jane Q. Public, 2014-12-14]

    I linked to reviews of actual, direct evidence by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and The Royal Society (U.K.) in their joint publication (PDF), and another review of evidence by the American Association for the Advancement of Science, which publishes the journal Science.

    While Jane is reading those reviews, he should also consider addressing this issue with his basic thermodynamics:

    Your own insistence that power in = power out (assuming perfect conversion and no entropic losses) belies this argument. You are arguing against yourself and you refuse to see that. If power in = power out (your own stipulation) ... [Jane Q. Public, 2014-12-14]

    I'm not the only one insisting that power in = power out through any boundary where nothing inside is changing. Once again, that's a fundamental principle called "conservation of energy". Here are some introductions: example (backup), example (backup), example (backup).

    As you can tell, conservation of energy is a fundamental physics principle. Assumptions of "perfect conversion and no entropic losses" aren't applicable, and anyone who mistakenly thinks they are should read through those examples to learn about conservation of energy.

    If power in = power out (your own stipulation), and the only NET power INTO a defined spherical region is electrical, and the only NET power OUT of that region is radiative, then net radiative power out at steady-state must therefore be equal to the net electrical power consumed. [Jane Q. Public, 2014-12-14]

    Jane seems to be saying that at steady-state:

    net electrical power consumed = net radiative power out

    But net radiative power out of a boundary around the source = "radiative power out" minus "radiative power in", so the equation Jane just described also says:

    net electrical power consumed = "radiative power out" minus "radiative power in"

    However, this new equation doesn't match Jane's earlier equation:

    My energy conservation equation is this: electrical power in = (epsilon * sigma) * T^4 * area = radiant power out [Jane Q. Public, 2014-10-08]

    Notice that Jane's earlier equation doesn't describe net radiative power out, which is why it violates conservation of energy. Is Jane retracting his earlier incorrect equation, or does Jane dispute the definition of the word "net"?

  83. you mean the change that stopped 14-18 years ago? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So the "ice age is coming" of the 1970s becomes "global warming" in
    the 1980s/90s and has now morphed into "climate change" because the warming stopped 14-18 years ago. "Climate Change" is so nice because they won't have to change their scam's name every time the climate does something they don't expect .... like CHANGE! For goodness sake climate is always changing and humans for all their arrogance have very little to do with it. Urban heat island is proven and CO2 might have a 1 degree C change for each doubling.

    A question for everyone who thinks that CO2 controls the climate. How long with rising CO2 and flat or falling temperatures before you admit your theory is wrong? 20 years? 30? Never?

    All 5 of the major datasets (RSS, UAH, HadCRUT4, GISS, NCDC) show no warming for between 14 and almost 18 years. In that time CO2 has risen 8-10%.

    Here are 2 predictions. First I predict that CO2 will continue to increase because China and other countries don't care about CO2. They don't even care about real pollutants much less CO2. Second I predict it will get colder over the next 20-30 years. Why?

    Dr Libby in the 1970s said that "looking forward it will stay cold until the mid 80s (it did), then it will warm by about 1/4 degree F until the end of the century it did), then it gets cold". When asked how cold she was predicting a 1-2 degree F drop with an outside chance of a 3-4 degree drop.

    Dr Easterbrook in 2001 said the PDO was done it's positive warm cycle and that we were in for 25-30 years of cold weather. How cold? We have his good, bad and ugly predictions based on previous negative cold phases of the PDO.

    Why do I join with them and side with their predictions? While past performance is not a guarantee of future correctness it is a lot better record than the IPCC and their dozens of models of which none have been accurate. They are all based on CO2 controlling the climate and the other 2 are all cyclical natural cycles. I'll go with those who have a good track record at predicting future climate. Dr Libby is the most impressive as her prediction is 30+ years going and still accurate.

    If you want to read a great explanation of why the IPCC models are broken beyond belief there was a great article describing that and all the other problems with climate science by Dr Brown of Duke university

    http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/10/06/real-science-debates-are-not-rare/

  84. No shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    JevonÃ(TM)s Paradox: as technology progresses, the increase in efficiency with which a resource is used tends to increase (rather than decrease) the rate of consumption of that resource.

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

  85. Nukes Now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um no. If you're serious about climate you're anti nuke because nukes will not save us. Recall how much energy it takes to build a nuclear power plant. And think about the fact that without electricity and water, nuclear power plants tend to melt down. And do you have a solution for handling all that waste?

    The only solution to climate change is one: end industrial civilization; two: drastically reduce the world's population.

    Neither of those solutions is palatable to anyone, which is why we don't do it.

    So... humanity will be mostly over by 2100. Time to face reality.

  86. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    Up to the mid-30s, the National Socialist party had a good many Socialists, but they were purged then, and the National Socialist party remained Socialist in name only, pandering to large corporations. Any belief to the contrary relies on what they said, not what they did, and they lied a lot.

    I'm not going to dig through your claims, except to point out that Social Security was devised by Otto von Bismarck for the German Empire, not the Nazis, and everybody who bothers to dig through such things is well aware of that.

    Your political rants are equally wrong. Are you going to try to tell us that the TSA was created by leftists?

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  87. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    One problem is that he's wrong, just going with the "big lie" technique. His reasoning is either circular or relies on falsehoods.

    Wikipedia lists the Soviets as the first to try to provide universal health care, and doesn't mention Nazi Germany. The Brits had a minimum wage law in 1604, and the Nazis practiced slave labor. Social Security was introduced by the definitely-not-left-wing Bismarck in the German Empire. The 102% tax is definitely something I'm unaware of, despite reading about the period, and I'm confident that if it existed it was in the context of moving companies from the control of people the Nazis didn't like to Nazi cronies. I'll be happy to look into an substantiation of that.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  88. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    I await your documentation that Marx and Engels called for racial extermination. It would also be interesting to see any coherent argument, based on facts, that the National Socialist party was, after the mid-30s, Socialist or leftist (as I am well aware of right-wingers through history that didn't like democracy).

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  89. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by lgw · · Score: 1

    Socialism is always about lying a lot. It's a hook to gain centralized power that people just keep biting at.

    Are you going to try to tell us that the TSA was created by leftists?

    It's a sign of the cross-over in American politics of the control freaks from the right to the left. (Did you know John Kerry wrote much of the Patriot Act?) When I was young, the moral busybodies and authoritarians were indeed on the right, balanced by the desire on the right for a poorly-funded government that would limit the effect of that. But that seems to have been a brief anomaly, and the moral busybodies and preachy humorless prudes are firmly on the left these days, save for a few elderly Bible-bashers who haven't died off yet.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  90. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    How about we learn a bit of history before saying stupid things about it? Hitler was not a socialist. His contemporaries did not consider him a socialist. The NSDAP purged its socialists in the mid-30s. Hitler stayed in power largely by being buddy-buddy with big industrialists, unlike any Marxist I'm aware of. As far as Orwell, 1984 and Animal Farm are pretty obviously based on the Soviet Union (with clear allusions to Trotsky vs. the old guard) - you know, an actual left-wing Socialist-wannabe totalitarian state?

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  91. FUD by carbonates · · Score: 1
    This article is well written, but is mostly FUD and not fact. I make a living evaluating gas and oil reserves, so I know what I am talking about.

    "Although the extent of the US experience is unlikely to be replicated elsewhere, and US estimates of economically recoverable quantities remain a matter of debate, shale gas has the potential to become a widely accessible global fuel."

    Only the last part of that sentence is true. US estimates of economically recoverable quantities are conservative if anything. In reality, with the proper gas and oil prices, the US has far more than official estimates from EIA, IEA, or USGS, all of whom are dependent on access to data, most of which is proprietary that they will never see. Economics changes reserves estimates each quarter, so whenever someone says economically recoverable, they are confusing the issue and not really telling you a number that is related to total resource. Over time most resource that is uneconomic is likely to become economic, so those number are always "debatable" by definition. He is being disingenuous with this statement.

    US shale gas can be replicated elsewhere and will be. Russia currently has little openly expressed interest in shale gas, but probably has more reserves than North America. Saudi Arabia is pursuing shale gas. Argentina's shale gas and oil has been very successful, but the government has made outside investors nervous and slowed the process. China has the resource, but because of lack of infrastructure, will be slow to move forward. India likewise has shale gas but currently has a regulatory regime that makes it uneconomic. Regulations and politics are the primary obstacle of shale gas in many countries. Those may be hard to change but do not represent impossible obstacles. Shale gas will become a worldwide phenomenon, it is just a matter of time, probably decades. Shale gas has the potential to free much of the developing world from dependence on imported oil and gas and allow them to develop industrial bases of their own. All that is needed is the political will to allow it to happen.

    "Some of the other categories of unconventional gas—tight gas, coal bed methane, aquifer gas, and gas hydrates—dwarf shale gas in magnitude." Not true except for gas hydrates, which so far have not proven to be recoverable in commercial quantities. The difficulty is their lack of concentration, as well as their location primarily below permafrost and the continental shelf. He forgets to mention, while pointing out the methane emissions of the oil and gas industry, that coal mines are actually some of the largest emitters of methane. The recently published methane hot spot map of the US showed the largest methane emissions in the US are from the largest strip mine in North America, in the Four Corners Region. Coal emits methane as soon as it is uncovered, and continues to emit methane during transport in open rail cars, and in the large storage piles where it is kept near power plants.

    "Moreover, methane, the chief component of natural gas, is itself a heat-trapping greenhouse gas with 25 times the warming effect of carbon dioxide. If total methane leakage—from drilling through end use—is greater than about 4 percent, that could negate any climate benefits of switching from coal and oil to gas." This is a very misleading statement. Methane has a half life of less than 12 years, and only has the multiple he refers to if considered over a 100 year period. Basically this is statistical manipulation. In any case, coal emits more methane than natural gas drilling (yet he mentions the "huge" potential of coal bed methane) so switching from coal to natural gas will always result in a climate change benefit.

    "Accounting for the climate impacts of methane leakages eliminated all climate mitigation benefits." The only studies that have concluded this have all been discredited by later studies, often based simply on the methodology of obtaining the methane leakage numbers. One study actually included emis

  92. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by lgw · · Score: 1

    I see now why "1 + 1 = 2" was a protest sign under Communism - you can't tell a left anything that conflicts with his community-based-reality.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  93. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by painandgreed · · Score: 1

    No, that ithe AC stated. The AC stated that the National Socialists (Nazis) were leftists because they are socialists.

    Quoting the AC:

    They were, but that part of the NAZI party died with Rohm on the Night of Long Knives in 1934. His faction was the one that put Socialist and Worker in the name of the party and sought nationalization of industry with greater worker control and wealth redistribution. After that night when Hitler and his faction took firm absolute of the NAZI party, Socialist was just an awkward term that everybody ignored.

    The Baath party in Iraq and Syria had the same trouble since were/are the last vestiges of the NAZI political machine, being heavily influenced if not started by actual NAZIs sent to the Middle East to spread their political viewpoints in WW2.

  94. Re:Your argument is devoid of facts by painandgreed · · Score: 1

    Actually, no. Nazi party was _named_ "National Socialist", while its policies were pretty consistent with far-right wing. Basically, its name was only used for PR to drum up support.

    Rohm was actually part of the faction that wanted the socialist in there and was for wealth redistribution from the aristocracy to the workers as well as nationalization of industry. Because of his help founding the party and friendship with Hitler, he was able to champion the cause and even maintain that he was Hitler's equal. That part of the Nazi party died in 1934 on the Night of Long Knives.

  95. Why are we bothering anymore by Methadras · · Score: 1

    Really, who gives a fuck anymore about global warming or climate change other than control gaia freaks. We argue incessantly about this subject and get nowhere. The reality is, is that the world will not give up on petrofuels anytime soon and we have a cleaner environment than ever before. At least in the US and some EU countries. So what is the incentive other than leftist redistributive taxation schemes that the world can deal with? Frankly none. As long as those countries who through their own ingenuity have to succumb to having their citizens foot the bill for the less well off countries to try and come into some sort of compliance, then nothing will happen. And really the dirty little secret is, is that no one really gives a shit about countries like India or China's climate or environment. They created it themselves and asking others to pitch in their money to help them is a non-starter.

  96. IF!? by Gallomimia · · Score: 1

    If total methane leakage—from drilling through end use—is greater than about 4 percent

    IF?? It's a lot more than 4% now. Companies are not properly regulated, and do not properly report when they blast a few thousand cubic meters of unprocessed gas straight into the atmosphere. All of your speculation and statistics is for naught. Get away from us. We only want news, not spin doctors. I thought this site was about InfoTech not people stupid enough to chain themselves to a tree and believe its going to stop big business. We all know what dollars can do to an industry because we all see what Microsoft and now Apple are doing to ours. Go back to your tree.

    --
    Sadly, a Libertarian cannot force his views on another, and freedom cannot spread as does the cancer known as religion.
  97. You are why we cry! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What us lefties were too afraid of has already come to fruition: We introduced laws making your redneck ass go to school and git sum lernin' but you still refused. What we have now is that bullshit you just posted that purports to be grammar. I can't even believe someone bothered to mod that dreck up! If only we could limit how much the population grew! You'd be the first nominated to take one for the team, I assure you!

  98. What do we do, maaan? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sit around a goddamned campfire singing Kumbaya, eating our free range locally sourced antibiotic gluten free chickpeas, while ignoring how shitty the world is because we're too fucking stoned to do anything but sit around a goddamned campfire singing Kumbaya, eating our free range locally sourced antibiotic gluten free chickpeas, while ignoring how shitty the world is because we're too fucking stoned! Doesn't that sound, like, great, doooooode?

  99. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    To be precise, once you start out either lying or repeating other people's lies, you're not going to be able to tell me anything that conflicts with the numerous history books I've read. Which is doubtless the reason for the insult as refutation.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  100. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    The Nazis were also into lies. It seems to go with totalitarianism of any political stripe.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  101. Re:THERE HAS NEVER BEEN CLIMATE STASIS! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    I await your documentation that Marx and Engels called for racial extermination.

    As requested. I suggest watching the whole thing, it is very informative.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  102. Don't let reality change your mind about anything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/12/18/new-study-two-thousand-years-of-northern-european-summer-temperatures-show-a-downward-trend/