In legal terms, the evidence for global warming is between "a preponderance of evidence" (the low end) and "beyond a reasonable doubt" (the high end). — Bitter Crank
Lots of variables go into climate, some human produced, some not. — Bitter Crank
It may be the case that there is little we can do about it. More likely, we can have at least a moderating effect on climate change, and since this is the only place we have, we would do well to get on with whatever we can do. — Bitter Crank
I think one reason for the shift in terminology from "global warming" to "climate change" is that the latter is less controversial; of course the climate changes over time. The question then becomes the degree to which human activity is the cause of its detrimental aspects. — aletheist
I agree - my view is that the proposition that human activity has had and is having some negative effect on climate is "beyond a reasonable doubt," but so far there is not "a preponderance of evidence" that human activity is the sole or even dominant reason for allof the worrisome climate changes that we are observing. — aletheist
but so far there is not "a preponderance of evidence" that human activity is the sole or even dominant reason for all of the worrisome climate changes that we are observing. — aletheist
Is there any good reason to believe that this would not have an effect on the composition of the atmosphere? — Wayfarer
Even if I grant that there is "a preponderance of evidence" for this, it does not rise to the level of being "beyond a reasonable doubt." — aletheist
'Inconvenient Truth' showed ten years ago that the accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere has been clearly measurable since the 1970's when observations started being made in Hawaii. — Wayfarer
As I said before, I am on board with doing what we can, but it will require reaching widespread consensus on both the problem and the solutions. — aletheist
I think one reason for the shift in terminology from "global warming" to "climate change" is that the latter is less controversial; of course the climate changes over time. The question then becomes the degree to which human activity is the cause of its detrimental aspects. — aletheist
I am on board with doing what we can, but it will require reaching widespread consensus on both the problem and the solutions. — aletheist
Next week, Mr. Trump plans to sign an executive order directing Mr. Pruitt to start the lengthy legal process of unwinding Mr. Obama’s E.P.A. regulations for cutting greenhouse pollution from coal-fired power plants. Those regulations are the linchpin of the last administration’s program to meet the nation’s obligations to reduce climate emissions under the Paris agreement.
Just picking a nit... — Pierre-Normand
I am on board with doing what we can, but it will require reaching widespread consensus on both the problem and the solutions. — aletheist
The main obstacle to reaching consensus on the existence of the problem (and the anthropogenic cause of global warming) is the politically motivated resistance of Republicans in the American Congress. — Pierre-Normand
The iconic blossoming cherry trees that ring the Tidal Basin [in Washington] have symbolized the arrival of spring for nearly a century. This year, they will be one more sign of wacky and warming weather.
The National Park Service, which maintains the trees, said on Wednesday that the pink and white blossoms could reach their peak as soon as March 14, a full three weeks earlier than normal. If the flowers indeed pop on that date, it will be the earliest bloom on record.
Overall, the intensity fluctuations of solar radiation are small. In long-term average they amount to only the fraction of a percent of the total irradiance. The ultraviolet radiation, however, shows greater fluctuations and is also regarded as particularly climate-effective. Since the Earth's atmosphere absorbs this radiation to a large extent, it influences critical chemical reactions in the upper layers of the atmosphere. Indirectly, these processes can also affect the temperature at the Earth's surface.
I think some people are paralyzed by the awfulness of what the absence of cheap abundant oil, coal, electricity, transportation, etc. mean. It means an end to life as we know it. Some of those people are in positions of national power. If they aren't paralyzed, they may be too shocked to deal with it. — Bitter Crank
It's not skepticism. To be skeptical is to withhold belief when there is little or no evidence to support that belief, and is the approach of all good scientists (and, one might argue, all good philosophers).Climate change skepticism is unwarranted. — Benkei
So here I am today, in basically the precise year which twenty years ago was hailed as the beginning of the end, and instead of worry or anxiety, the main emotions I feel toward climate change are curiosity and a kind of urgency or excitement. I look at climate change and instead of focusing only on the ways in which it can be or is bad for life, I am much more interested to know about the ways in which we can take advantage of and exploit it. — VagabondSpectre
The population will shrink. It won't be nice, but as food production falls, billions that the earth can no longer feed will die. That will bring consumption closer to production at a much lower level. — BitterCrank
I don't exactly see it as a sure thing that the population is going to actually shrink anytime soon, even in the face of drastic climate change. — VagabondSpectre
Monsanto — VagabondSpectre
Massive new and high-density agriculture simply must be contrived through technology — VagabondSpectre
I think it would take a global catastrophe, or a long insufferable period of global depression, to actually put population growth into the negative. — VagabondSpectre
The poor bears... We really should get some pelts for posterity while supplies last! — VagabondSpectre
The Green Revolution (Norman Borlaug) depended on, and "massive new high-density agriculture contrived through technology" assumes plentiful, cheap petroleum (for fertilizer, transportation, farm operation, irrigation, etc.). — Bitter Crank
And just what do you think the combination of global warming (aka climate change) and the steady decline of cheap, plentiful oil (and all the industrial, technical prowess that it brings) is if not "a global catastrophe"? — Bitter Crank
Listen, the agriculture/medical/pharmaceutical industries all depend on cheap, plentiful petroleum for power, but also many products and chemical feedstock. — Bitter Crank
I think it would take a global catastrophe, or a long and resisted period of global depression, to actually put population growth into the negative. — VagabondSpectre
Fertilization boosts efficiency but it's not necessary. — VagabondSpectre
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