Hey Agree: I hope that you will now review Mitloehner's article from U Cal that you referenced and reconsider your opposition to reducing biogenic methane emissions. — EricH
Bottom line: Fossil methane increases the total amount of carbon in the atmosphere, which drives warming. — Dr. Frank Mitloehner
As part of the biogenic carbon cycle, the carbon originally utilized by the plant is returned to the atmosphere contributing no net gain of CO2. — Dr. Frank Mitloehner
Cellulose content is particularly high in grasses and shrubs found on marginal lands, which are places where grains and other human edible crops cannot grow. Two-thirds of all agricultural land is marginal, full of cellulose dense grasses that are indigestible to humans. But guess who can digest cellulose? — Samantha Werth, CLEAR Center at UC Davis
They [cows] turn low-quality proteins [crops] from a human nutritional perspective into high-quality protein [beef and dairy] with a more balanced amino acid profile. — Pamela Tyers at CSIRO
Your random, fatuous questions are irrelevant. — Mikie
Adults are talking. — Mikie
In any case, we’re talking about making production better by not having it controlled by a handful of elites. — Mikie
↪schopenhauer1 Small is Beautiful. — unenlightened
Not all of the something-industrial complex are purely evil. ;) — jorndoe
How odd that it’s this one issue — cows — that you want to dwell on, and yet repeatedly get wrong. — Mikie
Now you are saying this is incorrect, but you have not offered an explanation. If this is wrong, then you need to provide the correct answer. If biogenic methane in the atmosphere stays the same (at 600 ppb) how much warmer will global temps be due to this? — EricH
If we could get fusion working that would help. — frank
Marriage Counselor: "So Micky, I hear you saying you think Minnie is mentally... unstable?"
Micky. "I didn't say she was mentally unstable. I said she was fucking Goofy." — frank
How odd that it’s this one issue — cows — that you want to dwell on, and yet repeatedly get wrong. — Mikie
If two idiots agree, that doesn't mean they're right.
— Benkei
Thank you for saying what we’re all thinking. — Mikie
What I want to say to agree to disagree is that we are on the hook, and we won't be getting off the hook through reinterpretation. Only by altogether stopping greenhouse gas production can we avoid getting cooked. — BC
Of course the actual picture is more complicated, but does that help in understanding why the two statements under discussion aren't contradictory? — wonderer1
Try reading what was said. — Mikie
Our results suggest that as CO2 accumulates in the atmosphere, the full warming effect of an emission may not be felt for several decades, if not centuries. Most of the warming, however, will emerge relatively quickly, implying that CO2 emission cuts will not only benefit subsequent generations but also the generation implementing those cuts.
started rethinking this issue.
— Agree to Disagree
No they haven’t. — Mikie
That's new. They used to say the lag was a century or more. :up: — frank
Greenhouse gases act like insulation. So global temperatures start to increase when the insulation effect increases, and will eventually reach a stable temperature for any stable increase. The time it will take to stabilise, and the temperature it will eventually stabilise at, are extremely difficult to model but the time-frame will be decades, if not centuries. So the assumption that warming will continue due to a steady state of greenhouse gases is very much closer to the truth, than that the planet will stop warming immediately when greenhouse gases stop increasing. — unenlightened
However, if we stopped emitting greenhouse gases today, the rise in global temperatures would begin to flatten within a few years. Temperatures would then plateau but remain well-elevated for many, many centuries. There is a time lag between what we do and when we feel it, but that lag is less than a decade.
There is such a thing as overthinking an issue. — LuckyR
Perhaps the confusion here is with the word "additional". Would you agree with this sentence: — EricH
This additional methane from human activity contributes 14% of global warming.
The rate of warming since 1981 is 0.32° F (0.18° C) per decade.
0.14 * 0.32° F = 0.0448° F ( 0.025° C)
So methane is currently causing roughly 0.0448 °F ( 0.025° C) increase in global temp per decade. — EricH
The energy sector (i.e. fossil methane) is responsible for around 40% of total methane emissions attributable to human activity, second only to agriculture. — EricH
If biogenic methane stays constant over the next decade, then that by itself is going to increase global temp by 0.0224° F ( 0.012° C) per decade - because that's what it is doing today and it's going to continue to do that (the laws of physics are not changing). — EricH
Have I finally made myself clear? — EricH
If you are emitting a constant amount of methane then that will replace the methane that is breaking down into CO2.
So a constant emission of biogenic methane between 2023 and 2035 will continue to contribute an ADDITIONAL 0.0224° F ( 0.012° C) — EricH
Nobody has time for education. :razz: — frank
Mikey, that was all stuff you should have learned in a high school biology class. I wonder about you sometimes. :confused: — frank
“No reliable source has ever stated or even hinted at the possibility that in the future methane may no longer be a greenhouse gas.” — EricH
But I am cynical and don't believe that people will do what is required. The reasons include […] ignorance,
— Agree to Disagree
Without any awareness of irony. — Mikie
How are you a pessimistic optimist? — frank
Try reading something other than one guy from the meat industry. — Mikie
For a constant rate of methane emissions, one molecule in effect replaces a previously emitted molecule that has since broken down. This means that for a steady rate of methane release—as emitted by a constant number of dairy cows, for example—the amount of methane in the atmosphere (concentration) stays at the same level and does not increase. As a result, when a steady amount of methane is emitted for more than 12 years, no additional global warming occurs (Frame et al., 2018).
It won't be solved by humans as they are now. I agree with that. We can change though. We can morph into a species that reacts intelligently. I'm not guaranteeing that will happen, I'm just saying that we have a history of being incredibly adaptable. It's possible. — frank
See what I'm saying? — frank
Right - it will continue to contribute 14% of the global warning - which accumulates. — EricH
Fossil methane impacts the climate differently than biogenic methane.
Bottom line: Fossil methane increases the total amount of carbon in the atmosphere, which drives warming.
As part of the biogenic carbon cycle, the carbon originally utilized by the plant is returned to the atmosphere, contributing no net gain of CO2.
Because CO2 emissions last in the atmosphere for so long, they can continue to impact warming for centuries to come. New emissions are added on top of those that were previously emitted [added by me - new emissions of CO2 accumulate], leading to increases in the total atmospheric stock or concentration of CO2. As a result, when additional CO2 is emitted, additional global warming occurs (Frame et al., 2018).
In contrast, methane emissions degrade in the atmosphere relatively quickly, after about 12 years, and do not act cumulatively over long periods of time [added by me - methane emissions do NOT accumulate]. For a constant rate of methane emissions, one molecule in effect replaces a previously emitted molecule that has since broken down. This means that for a steady rate of methane release—as emitted by a constant number of dairy cows, for example—the amount of methane in the atmosphere (concentration) stays at the same level and does not increase. As a result, when a steady amount of methane is emitted for more than 12 years, no additional global warming occurs (Frame et al., 2018).
This improved understanding of how short-lived versus long-lived emissions affect climate differently is critical to addressing further global warming. Limiting climate change requires that we bring emissions of CO2 and other long-lived GHGs down to net-zero (Frame et al., 2018). For methane, however, it is possible to have steady ongoing emissions that do not result in additional warming (Frame et al., 2018).
How are you going to farm the cattle without clearing land or using land that is already cleared that could otherwise be planted with trees, ideally fruit or nut-bearing trees, or grow more efficient animals, such as chickens, or crops, and how will you transport the cattle to market without using fossil fuels? — Janus
Does, "Hesperus is Phosphorus", help? — wonderer1
If you have nothing left to add, let the adults talk.
— Mikie
I suspect that when I went back to university to do a 2nd degree you were probably still in nappies (or if you are American, still in diapers). — Agree to Disagree
Seems kind of silly to think that matters much in this discussion, when you are constantly demonstrating that you are a pretender to scientific understanding. — wonderer1
But let's say for the moment that Clear Center is correct and every other source is wrong - and that methane from livestock (provided it is constant) is not contributing to global warming at all. — EricH
So they say that carbon dioxide is bad but methane which degrades, quickly or slowly, to carbon dioxide is not as bad? — magritte
Yeah arbitrary limits to your terms to allow your mantra to be true. One tries to engage, but eventually one reaches the outer limits of denialism. 12 years too short, 12 million years too long, but if you look at it just so - no worries. — unenlightened
Have a great death! — unenlightened
It is a zero sum game with respect to the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. But the methane from 1.5 billion cattle that hangs around for 12 years in the atmosphere is contributing 14% of the of the global warming. — EricH
Because CO2 emissions last in the atmosphere for so long, they can continue to impact warming for centuries to come. New emissions are added on top of those that were previously emitted, leading to increases in the total atmospheric stock or concentration of CO2. As a result, when additional CO2 is emitted, additional global warming occurs (Frame et al., 2018).
In contrast, methane emissions degrade in the atmosphere relatively quickly, after about 12 years, and do not act cumulatively over long periods of time. For a constant rate of methane emissions, one molecule in effect replaces a previously emitted molecule that has since broken down. This means that for a steady rate of methane release—as emitted by a constant number of dairy cows, for example—the amount of methane in the atmosphere (concentration) stays at the same level and does not increase. As a result, when a steady amount of methane is emitted for more than 12 years, no additional global warming occurs (Frame et al., 2018).