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one of the graphs from the article said:The vested interests on both sides of the argument between the ``greenhouse'' party and the ``solar warming'' party are obvious. Scientifically, the meteorologists, climatologists, and atmospheric physicists, who were responsible for ``discovering'' the human contribution to the terrestrial greenhouse effect, have been the most consistent champions of its importance, while the solar physics community, and especially those interested in solar-terrestrial relations, have increasingly stressed the possible importance of the long-term variations of the solar constant as the chief cause of climate change. Both communities tend to take the change for granted, and to neglect any purely statistical or chaotic effects which could lead to excursions of the Earth's surface temperature during periods of a couple of decades, without requiring a secular change either in the solar constant or in atmospheric transparency. In addition, the debate is conditioned by more powerful vested-interest groups. The oil industry in all its guises would obviously like to believe, and would like the public to believe, that greenhouse warming has been greatly exaggerated, and exploits any genuine scientific differences to undermine the credibility of the climatologists. Solar physics has been losing ground steadily compared with other branches of astrophysics during the past few decades, and many of its practicioners have seen solar climate change as a chance to move into an area where funding may be more assured. These aspirations are of course legitimate, and there is indeed much work to be done in the field, but one should be aware of the political background to this delicate issue, and not fall into the trap of using possible solar warming as an excuse for delay in reducing man-made emissions of greenhouse gases. Whatever the magnitude of the effects of these in the long term, there is no doubt that their concentration has increased dramatically in the past 30 years, and that for many reasons this is not a desirable path to follow.
People control governments. If people can be convinced that global warming is a real threat to their lives, emissions can be cut down. Companies have already moved to less damaging technology, governments are also starting to care.
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Wut?
Judging from the low-quality and over-average of your graph, there is little chance that the graph is legitimate. And look at the CO2 data source(from the geocraft main site), the report from the source actually show that CO2 and palaeotemperature are correlated. I don't know why geocraft drew a different conclusion comparing with a professional report(If you bother to read it all) from the same set of data. And the report is from American Journal of Science. Lol
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Wut?
Anyway, I've never rejected the solar variation theory. But this article is truly readable. It is, in fact, supporting your arguments.
http://www.eso.org/sci/libraries/lisa3/beckmanj.html
That graph is wrong. The rise in CO2 follows rising temperatures (by several hundred years).
It is, in fact, money controlling lots of people. Who are the rich? And who are willing to manipulate others for their own good? No, you are wrong. They are not governments. Governments aren't profit making companies. They are the oil companies. It is oil companies trying to manipulate you and me.
Oil companies are trying underestimate the effect of greenhouse gases emission. Thus, more people will use fossil fuel, and they can profit from the up-raising oil price.
The oil companies want your oil use restricted so they can a) limit supply and b) jack up the price.
Oil demand only increases.But trimming down greenhouse gases emission suggests that oil demand is restricted, not that the supply is restricted.
Up until recently oil has only been artificially limited.When the oil supply is restricted, the price goes up.
Oil demand will never decrease.However, if the demand is restricted, the price will not be affected or will even go down. It is because there are less buyer. It ought to be hard to get the oil sold. How are the oil companies supposed to increase their profit while there are less oil is bought?
Engine lubricant, gasoline, and diesel are not the only products of oil.When petroleum cars turn into eco-cars, fire power plants turn into nuclear/renewable power plants, it is certain that the demand goes down, not the supply. So the oil companies will gain less profit thanks to trimming down of greenhouse gases emission. Thus, it is almost impossible for oil companies to support any anthropogenic global warming theory.
Yes. Do you know anything about oil?This is a basic concept of supply and demand. Have you ever studied economics?
Econonmics works like this, you pay up for your service, they make 400% 1000% profit... and the company still has a way to create a decent profit margin, it will perpetuate.
It's a socially viable conclusion though, restricting the supply to the populace will eventually happen because a smaller and smaller number of people will be able to afford it. This will just mean they will be making an equal amount of profit from a smaller more elite group of society because of the adjusted increases in price. You can bet they don't care as long as they are getting their money.
Up until recently oil has only been artificially limited.
Oil demand will never decrease.
Plastics are a HUGE industry and oil that will not be refined into combustible liquids will be shoved in our face through other means. They'll probably convince the auto industry to make plastic cars.![]()
The government itself doesn't need profit because it gets free money (debt) out of thin air.
What? You think plastic is a greater business then transportation fuel? Take USA as an example. The daily use of crude oil is about 20.8 million barrels daily. The amount of crude oil used in making plastic is only about 2 million barrels(less than 1/10 of total), but that used as transportation fuel is more than 14 million barrels. The profit of plastic industry and transportation fuel is not comparable. Motor consumption of oil far outweighs plastic manufacture consumption. Profit from plastic or other by-products of petroleum can never keep up to that of transportation oil, because 68% of oil is used in transportation. The percentage is even greater if I account the oil consumption of fire power plants as well. Your argument is therefore WRONG.
Jesus Christ.Please elaborate. I fail to see how debt provides a government with money.
Ok, that was just one example, and you are making up an unrealistic situation where all oil dependent machinery just simply ceases to exist.
That's not going to happen until oil runs out. Oil will run out before the demand ever does, so no, I am not wrong.
The oil companies can just as easily arrange a stranglehold on whatever new car fuel becomes popular next.
Thats interesting. If there has been a stable equilibrium over millions of years, then what causes the periodic formation of ice caps? Why was Greenland habitable only 1000 years ago?
It can't be because of co2 because there was a stable equilibrium. So what causes this?
But is there really a warming trend?
Yeah, the Clathrate Gun hypothesis.Ok that was a stupid question. What I really mean is, how accurately can we source the largest areas of concern?
I've heard that warming the ocean will release trapped methane ice, adding to yet more greenhouse gas "pollution" and there is absolutely no way to stop it.
There seems to be so many factors it's pointless to concentrate on just one like CO2, so I will restate my question thusly: Can the warming trend be stopped by reducing CO2?
The answer I expect to recieve is an emphatic NO.
The what?the normal equilibrium
Judging from the low-quality and over-average of your graph, there is little chance that the graph is legitimate. And look at the CO2 data source(from the geocraft main site), the report from the source actually show that CO2 and palaeotemperature are correlated. I don't know why geocraft drew a different conclusion comparing with a professional report(If you bother to read it all) from the same set of data. And the report is from American Journal of Science. Lol
![]()
Wut?
Anyway, I've never rejected the solar variation theory. But this article is truly readable. It is, in fact, supporting your arguments.
http://www.eso.org/sci/libraries/lisa3/beckmanj.html
You can't begin to compare a graph with an x-axis on 100,000 year intervals with one on 100,000,000 year intervals.
The graph I posted is certainly worth consideration. Nobody doubts that co2 levels have, in the past, been many many times greater than they are today, with no apparent correlation with temperatures. co2 levels have been as much as 19 times what they are today, and guess what.....nothing bad happened.
...This means that there appears to have been very high early Paleozoic levels of CO2, followed by a large drop during the Devonian, and a rise to moderately high values during the Mesozoic, followed by a gradual decline through both the later Mesozoic and Cenozoic. This type of modeling is incapable of delimiting shorter term CO2 fluctuations (Paleocene-Eocene boundary, late Ordovician glaciation) because of the nature of the input data which is added to the model as 10 my or longer averages. This type of modeling is incapable of delimiting shorter term CO2 fluctuations Paleocene-Eocene boundary, late Ordovician glaciation) because of the nature of the input data which is added to the model as 10 my or longer averages. Thus, exact values of CO2, as shown by the standard curve, should not be taken literally and are always susceptible to modification. Nevertheless, the overall trend remains. This means that over the long term there is indeed a correlation between CO2 and paleotemperature, as manifested by the atmospheric greenhouse effect.
I repeat, correlation does not equal causation. Either report just demonstrates how different conclusions may be drawn from the same data.
And to be honest, a slick website does not make a compelling argument.