Prospects Rise For a 2015 UN Climate Deal, But Likely To Be Weak 145
An anonymous reader writes with news that a global climate deal seems to be on the horizon. "A global deal to combat climate change in 2015 looks more likely after promises for action by China, the United States and the European Union, but any agreement will probably be too weak to halt rising temperatures. Delegates from almost 200 nations will meet in Lima, Peru, from Dec. 1-12 to work on the accord due in Paris in a year's time, also spurred by new scientific warnings about risks of floods, heatwaves, ocean acidification and rising seas. After failure to agree a sweeping U.N. treaty at a summit in Copenhagen in 2009, the easier but less ambitious aim now is a deal made up of 'nationally determined' plans to help reverse a 45 percent rise in greenhouse gas emissions since 1990."
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That hottest year in 1998 did give opportunity for a lot of profitable agenda driven nonsense; remember to live as Al Gore says, not as he does with his 20+ family equivalent carbon footprint (give the hypocrite some credit, it used to be 30+ until he put some "green" tech in his mansion)
Of course, the fact of global cooling showing that most the issue was cyclical rather than man-driven might get notice even from the unwashed masses soon
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That hottest year in 1998
According to NASA, the years 2005, 2007, and 2010 were hotter. On the 5-year average, all the years 1999-2011 were hotter than 1998. Source: http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gist... [nasa.gov]
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Those years were "hottest" only on a multi-year averaging system. I'm not denying we've had a hot spell.
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I938 may have been hotter in the contiguous US but globally it wasn't anywhere near the hottest year.
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It has never been as hot in the world as 1936.
Yes, it has. [woodfortrees.org] Globally every year since 1990 has been warmer than 1936.
Its been a long time since Canadian border states had temps at 121 degrees Fahrenheit.
Actually, that would be Steele city in North Dakota on July 6th, 1936. No other Canadian border state has ever recorded a temperature of 121 F. Also note that North Dakota and south Dakota both recorded record lows of -60 F and -58 F in 1936. However, as previously pointed out, North America is about 4.8% of the world's surface and around 16.5% of the land area [wikipedia.org] A record-shattering warm year in the U.S. might be barely noticable in t
Single-year does not make a decadal trend. (Score:2)
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Yes I agree that one year doesn't make a trend. However there definitely was a cool period in the 20th century, so your claim of no abatement from warming is rejected because of reality.
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Re: Single-year does not make a decadal trend. (Score:2)
Not only are multi-year trends important, also energy imbalance is more important then temperature. The entire greenhouse effect is about the global energy imbalance and temperature is just a proxy measure of that.
We've been measuring that energy imbalance by satellite for a few decades now and seen a net of more in than out, as expected.
Here is a big trick though, that imbalance should also be growing as we dump more and more CO2 into the atmosphere. Or more importantly, the degree to which our activity af
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I'm sorry, you're full of shit and don't have a clue what you're talking about. When you disagree with NASA and CERN and the fossil record you better be able to also drop an SUV on mars from a rocket powered skycrane and hold all the worlds antimatter.
The IPCC has not been right about anything, ever, and if you don't think 75% error is meaningful then 2+2=7 is for you.
You wouldn't happen to be the recipient of a climate grant would you?
"The problem is we don't know what the climate is doing. We thought we k
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Its like getting someone to admit Bigfoot is a fake. There are simply too many people making money off of the hoax to ever get someone to st
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Climate on the other hand measures changes over vast periods of time, 50 years, 100 years, 10,000 years, etc. Those are easier to guess because they're at a global "macro" level.
And they're harder to guess because one has to wait 50, 100, or 10,000 years to see if the predictions come true. Climate predictions don't suffer from the chaotic behavior of weather, but they do suffer from systemic bias of the climate modelers.
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If only the sun's output showed a trend. Gee, a bunch of ideologues with ties to industry providing you with the "truth" of climate change, eh? Sad.
Actually, the amount of relevant radiation that reaches the earth shows a pretty compelling correlation with global temperatures [wordpress.com]. It's certainly a better correlation that the CO2 concentrations.
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Are you sure? Here's the usual solar activity / climate graph [realclimate.org] and there's no clear correlation between the Sun's activity and temperature, but a very obvious link to CO2.
The article you link shows how cosmic rays can seed cloud formation, which may well be correct, but I don't think there's any evidence of the next step, increased temperature.
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It is warmer now than it's ever been in modern times, according to the people who try to measure global temperature. Here's the NOAA global temperature since 1880:
http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/sotc/service/global/glob/201410.gif [noaa.gov]
I realise that it's horribly cold in a lot of the US at the moment, but globally the world is very warm.
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HadCRUT goes back a little further, 1850:
http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/cru/data/temperature/HadCRUT4.pdf [uea.ac.uk]
There aren't sufficient historical records to go back much further with direct measurement. You have to start relying on proxies, like tree measurements and ice cores.
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First, you're looking at a propaganda site. I don't know where that graph is from, but the "forcings" don't work, and most of the assumptions made in the forcing models have been invalidated by observations. For instance, many used a parameter for forcings based feedbacks from increasing humidity that assumed net increase in temperatures, but it turns out, from long-term observations, that net temperatures decrease with increased humidity (due to cloud cover, which can insulate at night, but the total cov
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I think all the solar activity graphs look like that, they are based on the same satellite data. For example:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0d/Solar-cycle-data.png [wikimedia.org]
How can increased solar activity be causing global warming if solar activity is not increasing? Isn't it more likely that the huge increase in CO2, a strongly-warming gas, is the cause?
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You want ties to industry? How about cap and trade being written by the same geniuses that gave us credit default swaps [nakedcapitalism.com]? At the end of the day you can wave whatever flag you want because the only "solutions" being pushed are nothing but a reverse robin hood scam [youtube.com] where the actual polluters get carbon "indulgences" while those that can't afford to offshore their wealth get royally fucked in the ass to benefit the 1%...surprise surprise, the rich getting richer by stealing what few cents out of each dollar they don't already hoard.
You're American. Everything your country does is part of "a reverse robin hood scam".
What did China promise? (Score:3)
The agreement allows China to continue building coal-powered plants, expand its economy and cement its place as the world's leading polluter -- perhaps even doubling its output until 2030 or some year around that time, when China's carbon emissions are expected to peak.
At that point, the Chinese promise that they will implement some vague action plan at some vague point in the future. All we need to do is trust them. The agreement contains no binding language requiring any goals to be met.
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Exactly. China promised to do nothing, other than make Obama look like a dumb-ass.
As for a 'UN Climate Deal', they'll announce a glorious new agreement in 2015 that doesn't require anyone to do anything unless anyone else does. And the only people who'll actually do anything will be Obama and the suicidal EU nations.
Deal is the opposite to what you think. (Score:2)
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China promised to do nothing, other than make Obama look like a dumb-ass.
Obama didn't promise to do anything either. Under American law, no international agreement is binding unless it is ratified by the Senate. Chance of that happening in this case: 0%.
What Obama "promised" is what America is on track to accomplish anyway. Vehicle fuel efficiency is rising. Shale gas is replacing coal. Electricity consumption is falling, as people go from incandescent to CFL to LED, and CRT to flat screen.
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Exactly. China promised to do nothing...
And yet their green energy generation capacity is skyrocketting faster than many other countries in the world. In other news the Denmark didn't make any major green energy promises either but now derives 40% of its energy from Wind. As always actions speak louder than words.
So let's look at action then:
US renewables growth last year was 16% China's was 28%
Ok ok so there's a size difference between the two:
US increased by 8 millions of barrels of oil equivalent, China increased by 9.6m.
So they are putting in
no hope for political solution (Score:2)
The reason politicians won't come to a meaningful agreement is because the population doesn't want it. Most people aren't willing to give up their car (or even double the price of gas) for the sake of global warming.
It would be easier to get everyone to agree to switch to nuclear energy than to agree to meaningful limits on CO2 emiss
Not easy to go nuclear, though it's the answer (Score:2)
It would be easier to get everyone to agree to switch to nuclear energy than to agree to meaningful limits on CO2 emissions
Even though going nuclear is the only practical solution, I don't think it's any easier - you have decades of people devoted to scaring people about anything nuclear, and those groups are still around piping that tune - even to the clear detriment of the earth and environment. They just are too afraid to do anything else.
even in countries that actually want to do something about CO2 (l
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plenty of smarter countries have a full-on nuclear program, too bad the USA isn't one of those.
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no, India, China, Russia, and South Korea are not
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US investors are free to pump money into new nuclear capacity if they want to, but they don't. Too expensive, and if government funding gets cut they might never see a profit. There are also a multitude of things that can go wrong (not just meltdowns, things like premature ageing or the discovery flaws that are costly to fix) so it's a fairly risky investment. The countries that are building new capacity all offset the risk with government subsidy.
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Only if you want to rape the earth with a chainsaw is nuclear the worst option.
People who are against nuclear may as well set fire to an acre of tires in their back yard, it would represent a tiny fraction of the pollution you have caused from the continued and future use of coal plants, you dirty bastard.
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Exactly my point, if even GERMANS can't be rational about this there is no hope for anyone.
The German people have been systematically zombified on this and other issues. They are getting fed a lot of propaganda, they've been led around by people like Hermet Kohl and Angela Merkel for so long they just don't know any better.
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they've been led around by people like Hermet Kohl and Angela Merkel for so long they just don't know any better.
Angela Merkel has never led anyone anywhere. She just waits to see which policy is going to be most popular, and then she jumps in front of it.
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Nuclear power's biggest problem is how expensive it is. In the US right now new nuclear power plants can't be built without federal loan guarantees and the liability coverage of the Price-Anderson Act. As wind and solar continue to drop in price it's going to be difficult for nuclear to compete in the long run.
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I've never met anyone who can argue successfully against action on climate in an open debate. The whole denialist movement is merely a desperate papering over of the fact that a small number of people don't want to do anything about climate change.
Why?
Well, generally they can't even articulate that.
Very few people actually fall into this category, fewer still sincerely believe that rhetoric, the problem with dissonance is that it is hard to keep straight
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I've never met anyone who can argue successfully against action on climate in an open debate.
Well, since you are being the judge of 'successful,' I'm not surprised you've never seen that. You are no different than most people in that you don't like to lose your own argument.
In the case of climate change, people and politicians are happy to help the environment. You will rarely see a politician who says he wants to hurt the environment.
It's only when you get down to specific propositions that people object. How much are you willing to help the environment? Are you willing to double the price of
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I'm in favor of 'doing something,' as long as it doesn't negatively effect me.
Burning coal is "doing something" and it is negatively impacting everyone..
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Well, since you are being the judge of 'successful,' I'm not surprised you've never seen that.
I'm using fairly standard criteria - said criteria being based your ability to provide verifiable proof of your assertions. What did you think? That mere rhetoric would convince us?
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I'm using fairly standard criteria - said criteria being based your ability to provide verifiable proof of your assertions. What did you think? That mere rhetoric would convince us?
I don't think there's anything that will convince you. If someone provided proof, you would find a way to explain it away.
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Every time someone proposes a solution to climate change, people don't want it. It's not just politicians. That was the fact that started the thread, and it still stands.
Sure, if 'do something' means turning off your lights when you leave the room, people favor it. When it comes to doubling the price of gas, people don't.
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I've never met anyone who can argue successfully against action on climate in an open debate. The whole denialist movement is merely a desperate papering over of the fact that a small number of people don't want to do
Why should we care about what you think "successful" means? Use of the term, "denialist" indicates you aren't serious about debate. But I'll put forth a serious argument in case you decide to change your mind.
I grant that there is global warming and it probably is due in large part to human activities, particularly, greenhouse gas emissions and albedo changes. But there are plenty of problems going from that to asserting that we should act on it, particularly, the recent calls for reducing human carbon d
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You simply saying that all the research into AGW is poor and that it's all spun etc. doesn't make it so. You really are a denialist, and it's tragic that you are so caught up in this game you can't even use your own brain. You are a real human being who has handed over their thought processes to others. Again - it's tragic.
I could point you to many sources which show you're wrong, but I've seen others do just that and you still come back as if those interactions never happened.
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When you can deny actual observed reality because an "authority" told you to disbelieve reality you will believe anything you are told by that authority no matter how false it is. You lose the argument by hollering "denialist" at anyone that doesn't go along with
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You simply saying that all the research into AGW is poor and that it's all spun etc. doesn't make it so.
Indeed. I've described the sort of problems (not at all a complete list I might add) that do make all that research in AGW poor. It's those problems, not my words that are at issue here.
I could point you to many sources which show you're wrong, but I've seen others do just that and you still come back as if those interactions never happened.
I require evidence not sources. So many people just don't get that dropping links is not the same thing as providing evidence. The key property of evidence is that it allows me to distinguish between hypotheses, such as between "climate change requires us to cut carbon dioxide emissions by 80% by 2050" and "we know which sid
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You simply saying that all the research into AGW is poor
The predictions are poor. Or do you just ignore the studies that have shown that the computer models don't match reality?
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Why should we care about what you think "successful" means?
You've engaged in fallacy. Nobody cares about your feelings. If you can post proof of your numerous assertions, then post it, otherwise your assertions remain in the realm of paranoid delusion. e.g:
First, the evidence for catastrophic anthropogenic global warming is poor. The data sets gets really tenuous once you get further in the past than an actual temperature record (about 150 or so years ago). And actual measurement of global mean temperature is much more recent with satellite measurements. The most important parameter in climatology today, the temperature forcing of a doubling of atmospheric CO2 levels is unknown to at least a factor of 3 (1.5 C per to 4.5 C per is current IPCC estimate).
So essentially you are saying that in fact, the situation could be MUCH WORSE than what is predicted by current models. And this would motivate us to not take action on climate change why?
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We know the heat hasn't been radiated to space, we have satellites that measure this.
I used to think the same until I realized the first place that people had looked for the "missing heat" was the polar regions. Why? Because it was the only surface region which wasn't covered by an extensive network of weather stations and weakly covered by satellites.
Well, these regions also happen, particularly in the Antarctic, to be places where high altitude ozone and water vapor, both significant greenhouse gases, happen to be particularly low. That means a pathway for heat to radiate to space whic
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The problem is the people in general. They do not want to be inconvenienced, burdened, overly taxed, or told they have to go without something they are already taking for granted while wealthy and rich people gets to still enjoy it. It is a step backwards in society from any rational sense of reality.
This is why the governments who are concerned should not be trying to force more expensive tech onto people, they should not be trying to tax them in hopes that someone will get fed up and create a better alter
Senate approves international treaties (Score:2)
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No, they're just getting more and more desperate as reality continues to argue against them.
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It requires a 2/3rds majority of the Senate to approve a treaty. The Republicans have had enough seats to block any treaty for a long time, and have done so in the last few years. Putting the Republicans in the majority doesn't change their ability to block treaties.
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It was climate change before it was global warming. Gilbert Plass published a paper in 1958 titled "The Carbon Dioxide Theory of Climate Change". The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was created in 1989. "Catastrophic" was just something the climate science deniers added so they could try and mock climate change.
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It isn't just the right-wing media pundits who are climate deniers. Look no further than the new House Majority Leader from the great coal state of Kentucky, re-elected with money from the Koch Brothers, (who are kinda big on coal). Or the Frackin' State of Oklahoma Senator James Inhofe, chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, who disagrees with 800 actual scientists on the matter, since forever. In fact James Inhofe wrote a anti-science book, titled "The Greatest Hoa
Wow! (Score:2)
The freaks are really posting today.
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You see a lot of that on some websites when hot-button issues like climate change are discussed. For example, on Ars Technica there are almost always brand-new accounts posting the same old denier crap on every AGW thread; most likely a popular nut site like Drudge or WND will post a link, or someone in their forums.
The hypocrites convene! (Score:1)
So let me get this straight:
Delegates (ie, representatives and their entourages, servants, security, family, etc) from 200 nations will all be taking their private jets to a city located in a subtropical desert during the summer, where they'll sit around for a week in luxurious air conditioning discussing an agreement that they may decide to agree to a year later when they all travel by private jet to Paris to do it all over again.
And we're expected to take these people seriously when it comes to what they
Holy Profit (Score:1)
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There will be no strong environmental law as long as American corporations have the same rights as human beings.
There are two problems with this claim. First, it doesn't follow. Strong environmental law is not at all precluded by corporate personhood or rights of anyone. Second, corporate personhood doesn't mean that corporations have the same rights as human beings. What rights they have are deemed necessary in order for the human members of the corporation to exercise their rights. So by the construction of the legal fiction, corporate personhood grants exercise of a limited subset of human rights.
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Superfund is actually an example of lack of strong environmental law.
No. Try again. Just because it's not effective in outcome doesn't mean it's not strong environmental law. And once again, this has nothing to do with the status of corporations in the US.
this is a joke like China agreement with America (Score:2)
The fact is, that CO2 emissions is NOT tied to ppl, but GDP. As such, normalization needs to be based on emissions per GDP.
In addition, many nations love to cheat on information about estimates. What is needed is a single means of measuring all over the world. That is what OCO2 will bring us. It can measure CO2 flowing
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Well, what else are they gonna do? No-one in the real world is going to hire them to do a real job.
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I fully agree with you - but - carbon dioxide is not in any way "pollution". It's plant food. It has likely contributed to our greening planet, which has caused deserts to shrink and our food output to reach record highs.
Either we explicitly want to cut down on CO2 production due to our skilled models saying it will hurt us - and/or we stop various forms of pollution. It's very unscientific to pretend there the same thing.
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According to current definitions of "pollutant", CO2 fits the bill.
According to Skeptical Science. Which is kind of like saying that under current definitions of "safe", cigarettes fit the bill (according to Philip Morris).
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If you actually read the site you'd see that the definition comes from the EPA. Linking to that particular page when this nonsense crops up saves time, as that page shows that calling CO2 is accurate in the English language, and also under EPA guidelines.
If it's clearly so wrong, debunk it. We can wait.
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as that page shows that calling CO2 is accurate in the English language, and also under EPA guidelines.
Clearly your English needs some work, I can't tell WTF you're trying to say, here.
I see you've gone from quoting a propaganda site to a tyrannical armed bureaucracy that directly funds that propaganda, and many others. I don't think that's better.
The only thing about the Federal government worse than the IRS is the EPA [scotusblog.com].
As for EPA's determination of CO2 as a pollutant, the Office of Inspector General review their finding, and concluded that not only did they not follow basic scientific method in coming to
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B) PLEASE read the scientific papers on this subject, as they do not claim that. The only possible way you can believe those claims to be true is if you go elsewhere for your science education. The land ice is shrinking massively, and sea ice is expanding, and temperatures have been increasing for 20 years, just not as much as expected, which has been countered by the rise in sea temperatures.
Please enlighten yourself, as you seem intelligent, but you get your science information from non-scientists.