I'm going to stick my neck out and suggest we may have crossed a tipping point. — unenlightened
It isn't real 'til it's happening in the US. — unenlightened
It isn't real 'til it's happening in the US.
— unenlightened
It is real when the greatest philosophers of all time provide links
https://www.theweathernetwork.com/en/video/RuqVGk5I
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2314607120 — Merkwurdichliebe
Scientists warn Earth warming faster than expected — due to reduction in ship pollution
A new study published in Oxford Open Climate Change, led by renowned U.S. climate scientist James Hansen, suggests one of the main drivers has been an unintentional global geoengineering experiment: the reduction of ship tracks.
As commercial ships move across the ocean, they emit exhaust that includes sulfur. This can contribute to the formation of marine clouds through aerosols — also known as ship tracks — which radiate heat back out into space.
However, in 2020, as part of an effort to curb the harmful aerosol pollution released by these ships, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) imposed strict regulations on shipping, reducing sulfur content in fuel from 3.5 per cent to 0.5 per cent.
The reduction in marine clouds has allowed more heat to be absorbed into the oceans, accelerating an energy imbalance, where more heat is being trapped than being released.
"The 1.5-degree limit is deader than a doornail," said Hansen, whose 1988 congressional testimony on climate change helped sound the alarm of global warming. "And the two-degree limit can be rescued, only with the help of purposeful actions." — Scientists
Greta Thunberg and her Gen Z friends owe Baby Boomers an apology over climate change
They said ‘older generations’ had let young people down. Yet a new poll on green lifestyle choices tells a very different story
In the poll, those aged 18-24 claimed to be the most worried about climate change. When it came to doing something other than moan, however, it was a different story. Almost 90 per cent of the over-65s said they recycled “as much as possible”, compared with only half of the young. The old were also more likely to save water, turn down the heating, wash their clothes at low temperatures, buy locally produced food, avoid excessive packaging, buy energy-efficient appliances, switch off the lights when leaving a room, and repair things rather than throw them away. On top of that, more of them had cut down on the number of flights they took.
Greta’s generation were more likely to have given up meat. But otherwise, it seemed to be the old doing most of the work.
What are we to make of this mysterious discrepancy? Perhaps Greta’s generation is in such deep despair about the future of the planet that some of them have simply given up trying to save it. There is, however, an alternative possibility – which is that they care more about being seen to have the “right” opinion on climate change than they do about tackling it. A type of behaviour that older people like to call “virtue-signalling”. — MICHAEL DEACON
To set one generation against another in this way does nothing but foster useless argument and resentment. — unenlightened
It is the younger generation who is "setting one generation against another". — Agree-to-Disagree
But you don't want to think, you want to spread poison. — unenlightened
Your statement "just fuck off and die" is typical of the younger generation's attitude towards the older generation. Are you trying to lead by example? — Agree-to-Disagree
You do know that Deacon is a satirical journalist don't you? — unenlightened
I must be young at heart then at 71 and three quarters. — unenlightened
just fuck off and die — unenlightened
If you are 71 and three quarters then you are likely to die before me. — Agree-to-Disagree
But when the shadowy sun sets on the one
That fired the gun
You’ll see by his grave
On the stone that remains
Carved next to his name
His epitaph plain:
"Only a pawn in their game." — Bob Dylan
2023 'virtually certain' to be warmest in 125,000 years - EU scientists — Kate Abnett and Gloria Dickie, Reuters
To put it another way, current temperatures are not higher than they were in the past. — Agree-to-Disagree
It's been a lot hotter, yes. — frank
Are you claiming that "There used to be jungles at the poles and the equator water was close to boiling" at some time in the last 420,000 years? — Agree-to-Disagree
The earth seems to have 2 states, glacial and interglacial, and it regularly moves between the 2 states. We are currently in an interglacial and the current temperature is lower than the previous 3 interglacials. The current very high CO2 level has not increased the temperature above the temperature of a "normal" interglacial. — Agree-to-Disagree
What proof do you have that the current temperature is not just a "normal" temperature for an interglacial? — Agree-to-Disagree
2023 'virtually certain' to be warmest in 125,000 years - EU scientists
— Kate Abnett and Gloria Dickie, Reuters
Think carefully about the implications of this statement. — Agree-to-Disagree
But what you leave out that is highlighted on the graph with a nice red highlighter, is how very out of the 400,000 year cycle the Co2 level is at the moment. We have thrown a C02 quilt on the planet that will warm it to a level unprecedented in at least the 400,000 years of that graph, it being obvious that the actual temperature lags behind the measure of the insulation. — unenlightened
I think he's just here to poke unenlightened in the butt. — frank
Always happy to be someone's significant other. — unenlightened
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