Global Warming?

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   / Global Warming? #2,411  
For those of you who don't like to follow links, here is the op ed piece by conservative talk show host DR Tucker on his conversion:

"I was defeated by facts.

It wasn’t all that long ago when I joined others on the right in dismissing concerns about climate change. It was my firm belief that the science was unsettled, that any movement associated with Al Gore and Van Jones couldn’t possibly be trusted, that environmentalists were simply left-wing, anti-capitalist kooks.

It wasn’t until after I read Stanford University professor Morris Fiorina’s book Disconnect (2009) that I started to reconsider things. Fiorina noted that while environmentalism is now considered the domain of the Democratic Party, for many years it was the GOP that was identified with conservationist concerns. I was curious as to how the political climate shifted with regard to environmentalism—and whether there was something to all this talk about climate change.

I’m very fortunate to have acquaintances in the environmentalist movement, and I began discussing my concerns with them last fall. One friend recommended that I read the 2007 Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, suggesting that it might resolve some of the questions I had about the science behind climate concerns.

I began reading the report with a skeptical eye, but by the time I concluded I could not find anything to justify my skepticism. The report presented an airtight case that the planet’s temperature has increased dramatically (“Eleven of the last twelve years [1995-2006] rank among the twelve warmest years in the instrumental record of global surface temperature [since 1850]”), that sea levels have undergone a dramatic and disturbing increase since the 1960s (“Global average sea level rose at an average rate of 1.8 [1.3 to 2.3]mm per year over 1961 to 2003 and at an average rate of about 3.1 [2.4 to 3.8]mm per year from 1993 to 2003”) and that climate alteration is having an unusual impact on avian and sea life (“…recent warming is strongly affecting terrestrial biological systems, including such changes as earlier timing of spring events, such as leaf-unfolding, bird migration and egg-laying…observed changes in marine and freshwater biological systems are associated with rising water temperatures, as well as related changes in ice cover, salinity, oxygen levels and circulation”).

The report highlighted the key role carbon emissions played in climate alteration, noting, “The largest growth in GHG emissions between 1970 and 2004 has come from energy supply, transport and industry, while residential and commercial buildings, forestry [including deforestation] and agriculture sectors have been growing at a lower rate” and that “[c]hanges in the atmospheric concentrations of GHGs and aerosols, land cover and solar radiation alter the energy balance of the climate system and are drivers of climate change. They affect the absorption, scattering and emission of radiation within the atmosphere and at the Earth’s surface.” I was stunned by the report’s claim that “[t]he observed widespread warming of the atmosphere and ocean, together with ice mass loss, support the conclusion that it is extremely unlikely that global climate change of the past 50 years can be explained without external forcing and very likely that it is not due to known natural causes alone.”

If carbon-fueled climate alteration continues at its current rate, the report noted, we will bear witness to unprecedented health horrors: “The health status of millions of people is projected to be affected through, for example, increases in malnutrition; increased deaths, diseases and injury due to extreme weather events…increased frequency of cardio-respiratory diseases due to higher concentrations of ground-level ozone in urban areas related to climate change; and the altered spatial distribution of some infectious diseases.” In addition, “For increases in global average temperature exceeding 1.5 to 2.5°C and in concomitant atmospheric CO2 concentrations, there are projected to be major changes in ecosystem structure and function, species’ ecological interactions and shifts in species’ geographical ranges, with predominantly negative consequences for biodiversity and ecosystem goods and services, e.g. water and food supply.”

The report did provide some hope, noting that “ocieties can respond to climate change…by reducing GHG emissions [mitigation], thereby reducing the rate and magnitude of change… Policies that provide a real or implicit price of carbon could create incentives for producers and consumers to significantly invest in low-GHG products, technologies and processes.”

I came away from the report convinced that climate alteration poses a critical threat to our health and way of life, and that “policies that provide a real or implicit price of carbon” are in fact necessary, from an economic and a moral standpoint, to mitigate that threat. Such policies—most notably the much-maligned concept of cap-and-trade—should not be considered job-killers but life-savers.

There’s a part of me that understands why libertarian pundits seem to have so much scorn for those who support state action to combat carbon emissions. Modern libertarianism is suffused with skepticism of government, and supporting state regulation of carbon emissions requires, on some level, a belief in government to get things right. Is it even possible to be a libertarian and an environmentalist—or a conservative and an environmentalist, for that matter?

I’m a bit skeptical myself. I’d argue that conservatives and libertarians should strongly support regulation to reduce carbon pollution, since pollution by one entity invariably infringes upon the rights of others (including property rights), and no entity has a constitutional right to pollute. It does not put America on the road to serfdom to suggest that the federal government has a compelling interest in protecting the country from ecological damage. If anything, it puts America on the road to common sense.

Since reconsidering climate science, I’ve had a number of debates with conservative and libertarian friends, who oppose government regulation of carbon emissions in part because they believe those regulations will cost too much. Of course regulations cost; limiting ecological damage and preserving public health requires money. The issue is whether those costs are moral to impose. If no entity has a constitutional right to pollute, and if the federal government has a compelling interest in reducing carbon pollution, then how can those costs not be moral?

In the months following my acceptance of the conclusions in the IPCC report, I’ve had a change in my emotional climate. I go back and forth between disappointment and hope—sadness over seeing Republicans who once believed in the threat of climate change (such as Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown and former Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty) suddenly turn into skeptics; optimism about efforts by such groups as Republicans for Environmental Protection and Citizens Climate Lobby to sound the alarm about the need to combat climate pollution. I struggle with the urge to give in to cynicism and bitterness, to write off the American right for its refusal to recognize scientific facts. Thankfully, there’s a stronger urge—an urge to keep working until the American right recognizes that a healthy planet is required to have the life and liberty that allows us to pursue happiness."


And here is a good rebuttal post to DR Tucker's worthless opinion;

A convert to the true faith! I went the other way when I investigated the science in detail. The story started in 1922 when Arthur Milne the English astronomer incorrectly calculated atmospheric IR. Out popped ‘back radiation’, the origin of ‘high feedback’.

The modelling started in the early 1970s but by 2004, NASA knew that there was no experimental proof of the cloud part of ‘global dimming’, supposed to hide present CO2-AGW. It’s theoretical from a Dutch researcher, developed by Carl Sagan. But Sagan got wrong; rain clouds get darker underneath when the optical physics in the climate models predicts the opposite.

Apparently to overcome this setback, NASA published a fake explanation of the effect. Check it out; they claim polluted clouds with smaller droplets reflect more solar energy by enhanced ‘surface reflection’. There’s no such physics: the imaginary cooling was kept in AR4, figure 2.4.

No ‘cloud albedo effect’ cooling and there’s no proof of ‘high feedback’. Also in 2004, NASA physicist Ferenc Miskolczi left his job when he was refused permission to publish work showing Milne was mistaken and a water planet has constant GHG warming independent of [CO2].

Correct Sagan’s physics and instead of polluted thicker clouds cooling [thin ones do so], they heat, another AGW and a far better explanation of extra ocean heating at the start of the end of an ice age, 1000 years before the air warms up and more CO2 appears.

So good readers, remember the propaganda offensive trying to pretend CO2-AGW will be a major threat despite massive cooling as the sun goes into hibernation is part of what has since 2004 probably been the biggest scientific fraud in History.
 
   / Global Warming? #2,412  
EE_Bota said:
Yea, but if you guys were as smart as Romney, the debate would've been over long ago. Let me give the Romney side:

I believe the world is getting warmer, and I believe that surely some man somewhere has done something to make that worse. For the good of the economy and for the good of the people, I propose we use America's resources to become energy independent by the end of this decade! Now, who's with me?!!

I'm sure we will do that last part by drilling for solar panels, and digging windmills out of the mountains of WV. :)

As much as I don't like Romney, who was my governor for four years, I doubt he will make the denier crowd happy with his policies. He is hard to read and will tell anyone whatever they want to hear so long as he thinks it will make him president. He started that act as soon as he became governor here. However, he is not an ideologue and likely would support moderate AGW mitigation programs once he was in office. His statements on climate change are quite middle of the road and certainly at odds with the hardcore denier crowd.
 
   / Global Warming? #2,413  
As much as I don't like Romney, who was my governor for four years, I doubt he will make the denier crowd happy with his policies. He is hard to read and will tell anyone whatever they want to hear so long as he thinks it will make him president. He started that act as soon as he became governor here. However, he is not an ideologue and likely would support moderate AGW mitigation programs once he was in office. His statements on climate change are quite middle of the road and certainly at odds with the hardcore denier crowd.

The part where you said he is not an ideologue didn't sound half bad to me.
The number 16 trillion has completely crushed any number I have worked against it, but the total technically recoverable reserves in the US of oil is 1.4 trillion. And there are also coal reserves. If the US made sure we got maximum value out of all government owned reserves of any type, it is the closest thing I have seen to offsetting our staggering debt.
 
   / Global Warming? #2,414  
EE_Bota said:
The part where you said he is not an ideologue didn't sound half bad to me.
The number 16 trillion has completely crushed any number I have worked against it, but the total technically recoverable reserves in the US of oil is 1.4 trillion. And there are also coal reserves. If the US made sure we got maximum value out of all government owned reserves of any type, it is the closest thing I have seen to offsetting our staggering debt.

While I agree that any efforts to mitigate AGW need to consider economic impact and I appreciate the geopolitical benefits of domestic sourcing of fuel needs, I don't see the connection. What does it matter for the deficit if we pay money to multinational energy corporations in either case? Perhaps the Feds get a piece of the domestic action but I would think the impact of using less fuel more efficiently would ***** any impact of where that fuel comes from. Doubling MPG standards for all vehicles would have more beneficial effect on national debt (or at least personal finance) than doubling domestic oil production. Wouldn't it? Spend half as much on fuel equals more money for other investments. Leaving more oil in the ground for another generation protects an asset that can only be more valuable to future Americans. Decreasing barrels of oil combusted would pretty clearly help mitigate AGW based on current best science too while increasing production would do the opposite. There is a balance to be struck between current and future needs but I don't see how simply increasing production helps.
 
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   / Global Warming? #2,415  
Good cartoon.
 

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   / Global Warming? #2,417  
interesting film clip, as always the solution is in the middle. Some want every tree protected every spider or minnow protected, others would cut the very last giant Sequoia or red wood and bulldoze every stream.
 
   / Global Warming? #2,418  
lockhaven said:
interesting film clip, as always the solution is in the middle. Some want every tree protected every spider or minnow protected, others would cut the very last giant Sequoia or red wood and bulldoze every stream.

Yep. The Golden Mean is a valuable concept.
 
   / Global Warming? #2,419  
What no Libbies crying about how much money was wasted on "green scams" WHAT no protesting, WHAT no "occupy " cry babies holding up signs NAHHHHHHH, NOW when Corporations WASTE MONEY ya that different isn't it.

See this is why LIBERALS HAVE NO CREDIBILITY

The Complete List of *****'s Taxpayer-Backed Green Energy Failures

complete list of faltering or bankrupt green-energy companies:
Evergreen Solar ($24 million)*
SpectraWatt ($500,000)*
Solyndra ($535 million)*
Beacon Power ($69 million)*
AES’s subsidiary Eastern Energy ($17.1 million)
Nevada Geothermal ($98.5 million)
SunPower ($1.5 billion)
First Solar ($1.46 billion)
Babcock and Brown ($178 million)
EnerDel’s subsidiary Ener1 ($118.5 million)*
Amonix ($5.9 million)
National Renewable Energy Lab ($200 million)
Fisker Automotive ($528 million)
Abound Solar ($374 million)*
A123 Systems ($279 million)*
Willard and Kelsey Solar Group ($6 million)
Johnson Controls ($299 million)
Schneider Electric ($86 million)
Brightsource ($1.6 billion)
ECOtality ($126.2 million)
Raser Technologies ($33 million)*
Energy Conversion Devices ($13.3 million)*
Mountain Plaza, Inc. ($2 million)*
Olsen’s Crop Service and Olsen’s Mills Acquisition Company ($10 million)*
Range Fuels ($80 million)*
Thompson River Power ($6.4 million)*
Stirling Energy Systems ($7 million)*
LSP Energy ($2.1 billion)*
UniSolar ($100 million)*
Azure Dynamics ($120 million)*
GreenVolts ($500,000)
Vestas ($50 million)
LG Chem’s subsidiary Compact Power ($150 million)
Nordic Windpower ($16 million)*
Navistar ($10 million)
Satcon ($3 million)*
 
   / Global Warming? #2,420  
I get it.......
Now I get it.
It just occurred to me.
This is why you use your ignore list.
 
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