This is from Australia, maybe our members down under will chime in?
https://www.youtube.com/embed/BC1l4geSTP8
OT - our role in CO2
Forum rules
Welcome to the Leverguns.Com General Discussions Forum. This is a high-class place so act respectable. We discuss most anything here other than politics... politely.
Please post political post in the new Politics forum.
Welcome to the Leverguns.Com General Discussions Forum. This is a high-class place so act respectable. We discuss most anything here other than politics... politely.
Please post political post in the new Politics forum.
- GunnyMack
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 11716
- Joined: Mon Sep 19, 2016 7:57 am
- Location: Not where I want to be!
OT - our role in CO2
BROWN LABS MATTER !!
Re: OT - our role in CO2
I watched a bit of it. There's a kernel (nyuk-nyuk) of truth in what he says, but I think he misses the bigger picture, which is considered in many places on the web, including this one. There's no question nature puts out a lot of CO2 and reabsorbs it. The question is whether nature can fully absorb the annual emissions from our burning of fossil fuels, and that is apparently a "no." Whether the effects of this are significant is another question.
- Ysabel Kid
- Moderator
- Posts: 28989
- Joined: Mon Sep 17, 2007 7:10 pm
- Location: South Carolina, USA
- Contact:
Re: OT - our role in CO2
Science is, by its very nature, an endless series of questions. When someone says "the science is settled", go ahead and tune out at that point. They have crossed into politics and/or faith - but certainly not science.
One of the questions I seldom hear asked, and less often even attempted to be answered, is the question of cost. Even assuming the premise is correct, that man's activities are leading to a sustained increase in global temperatures (which I'd debate, at least on a relative scale compared to something like... the sun), what are the cost/benefit trade-offs association with the various courses of action advocated by different parties?
For example, IF man's industrial activity will raise the mean global temperature on earth by 1 degree Celsius over the next 100 years, what is the cost of that happening, what is the cost of measures to try to prevent it from happening versus the cost of adapting to that change?
Those advocating restricting industrial activity rarely want to discuss theses costs. Probably because (a) the discussion doesn't favor their "solutions" and (b) it reveals their true agenda.
One of the questions I seldom hear asked, and less often even attempted to be answered, is the question of cost. Even assuming the premise is correct, that man's activities are leading to a sustained increase in global temperatures (which I'd debate, at least on a relative scale compared to something like... the sun), what are the cost/benefit trade-offs association with the various courses of action advocated by different parties?
For example, IF man's industrial activity will raise the mean global temperature on earth by 1 degree Celsius over the next 100 years, what is the cost of that happening, what is the cost of measures to try to prevent it from happening versus the cost of adapting to that change?
Those advocating restricting industrial activity rarely want to discuss theses costs. Probably because (a) the discussion doesn't favor their "solutions" and (b) it reveals their true agenda.
- crs
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 3154
- Joined: Thu Sep 06, 2007 10:32 am
- Location: Republic of Texas
- Contact:
Re: OT - our role in CO2
Gunny,
Seen it before and I agree with him 100%.
That is also one of the most understandable presentation of the "climate realists" argument.
Seen it before and I agree with him 100%.
That is also one of the most understandable presentation of the "climate realists" argument.
CRS, NRA Benefactor Member, TSRA, DRSS, DWWC, Whittington Center
Android Ballistics App at http://www.xplat.net/
Android Ballistics App at http://www.xplat.net/
Re: OT - our role in CO2
Blue green algae in the oceans put out more oxygen and take up more CO2 than trees do. All green plants, grass and tomato plants included, take up CO2 and put out oxygen by photosynthesis. If you look at what happened in 1816 from Mount Tambora, the reality was that CO2 actually did not raise temperatures. Global warming science cannot explain why the gigantic CO2 emissions from volcanic eruptions cause the opposite of what GlowBull warming science says. Remember the cool decade after Mount St. Helens?
D. Brian Casady
Quid Llatine Dictum Sit, Altum Viditur.
Advanced is being able to do the basics while your leg is on fire---Bill Jeans
Don't ever take a fence down until you know why it was put up---Robert Frost
Quid Llatine Dictum Sit, Altum Viditur.
Advanced is being able to do the basics while your leg is on fire---Bill Jeans
Don't ever take a fence down until you know why it was put up---Robert Frost
- GunnyMack
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 11716
- Joined: Mon Sep 19, 2016 7:57 am
- Location: Not where I want to be!
Re: OT - our role in CO2
all I know is when the sun burns out in another 4 billion years is it really going to matter what we do?
BROWN LABS MATTER !!
-
JerryB
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 5492
- Joined: Mon Apr 02, 2007 9:23 pm
- Location: Batesville,Arkansas
Re: OT - our role in CO2
Reckon when God created this world he figured that He could take care of it just fine until He is done with it.
JerryB II Corinthians 3:17, Now the Lord is that Spirit: and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.
JOSHUA 24:15
JOSHUA 24:15
Re: OT - our role in CO2
They're going to find that guy in a dumpster. In all fairness, who really gives a hoot. I hear chopping off heads increases co2 so I guess that means the Middle East will freeze overnight.---6
This is Boring & Mindless……Wasted Energy
Re: OT - our role in CO2
I'd thought that it was fairly well established that the global environmental impact from volcanic eruption is a net cooling effect resulting from the volume of ash that remains airborne in the atmosphere. Greenhouse gases can't cause warming without generous amounts of sunlight.piller wrote: ↑Fri Apr 14, 2017 2:10 pm Blue green algae in the oceans put out more oxygen and take up more CO2 than trees do. All green plants, grass and tomato plants included, take up CO2 and put out oxygen by photosynthesis. If you look at what happened in 1816 from Mount Tambora, the reality was that CO2 actually did not raise temperatures. Global warming science cannot explain why the gigantic CO2 emissions from volcanic eruptions cause the opposite of what GlowBull warming science says. Remember the cool decade after Mount St. Helens?
Government office attracts the power-mad, yet it's people who just want to be left alone to live life on their own terms who are considered dangerous.
History teaches that it's a small window in which people can fight back before it is too dangerous to fight back.
History teaches that it's a small window in which people can fight back before it is too dangerous to fight back.
