Ocean Current That Keeps Europe Warm Is Weakening Because of Climate Change (washingtonpost.com) 193
The Washington Post: The Atlantic Ocean circulation that carries warmth into the Northern Hemisphere's high latitudes is slowing down because of climate change, a team of scientists asserted Wednesday, suggesting one of the most feared consequences is already coming to pass (Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; alternative source). The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation has declined in strength by 15 percent since the mid-20th century to a "new record low," the scientists conclude in a peer-reviewed study published in the journal Nature. That's a decrease of 3 million cubic meters of water per second, the equivalent of nearly 15 Amazon rivers.
The AMOC brings warm water from the equator up toward the Atlantic's northern reaches and cold water back down through the deep ocean. The current is partly why Western Europe enjoys temperate weather, and meteorologists are linking changes in North Atlantic Ocean temperatures to recent summer heat waves. The circulation is also critical for fisheries off the U.S. Atlantic coast, a key part of New England's economy that have seen changes in recent years, with the cod fishery collapsing as lobster populations have boomed off the Maine coast.
The AMOC brings warm water from the equator up toward the Atlantic's northern reaches and cold water back down through the deep ocean. The current is partly why Western Europe enjoys temperate weather, and meteorologists are linking changes in North Atlantic Ocean temperatures to recent summer heat waves. The circulation is also critical for fisheries off the U.S. Atlantic coast, a key part of New England's economy that have seen changes in recent years, with the cod fishery collapsing as lobster populations have boomed off the Maine coast.
Ayup (Score:1, Interesting)
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feedback mechanisms to dump excess heat
That sounds very inaccurate, slowing current won't "dump" the excess heat in any sense of the word. It simply won't move as much of it towards higher latitudes (at least that's the easy to imagine consequence). To "dump" the heat you'd need to get more of it to radiate back to outer space, i.e. negate the greenhouse gasses effects.
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If AMOC stopped then the climate of Europe would line up with that of its corresponding North American latitudes. Which is to say, it would be come like Canada, not the North Pole. New Foundland is snowier than contemporary France but the latter's albedo would not significantly change. In any event, the AMOC is unlikely to stop any century soon without a significant forcing event. Perhaps if a meteor hits Greenland.
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Ice forms on oceans fairly easily, but ice during arctic night paradoxically keeps the arctic warm(ish) by acting as an insulating blanket on top of the ocean. (the air's cold but life below the ice is busy)
Ice during the arctic day is a good light reflector but there's not so much of it anymore and the ice thickness is decreasing, meaning it disappears sooner in summer and takes longer to reform in winter. Both these add to the warming effects.
Snow on land needs moisture in the air and that comes from ocea
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yeah....but not before it freezes the crap out of Europe.....
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That's one of them-there feedback mechanisms that cools the poles in the event they get too hot.
Except if ocean currents slow down, weather becomes more localized. Same if the jet stream stops, which it will if the conveyor stops.
Re: Ayup (Score:2, Insightful)
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"So when will the poles stop warming"
They won't. The mechanisms will simply change a little.
The atlantic conveyor may slow, or descend below the surface before reaching Europe but it won't stop bringing warm water northwards even if it stops bringing warm weather. It's that water which matters as its where all the energy is. Weather is just what you see as a side effect.
Incidentally if it did stop or slow down dramatically, apart from the other effects noted one of the more obvious details would be a fairly
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Depends. Could be a blip (in geological time) of a few decades or hundreds of years, or the system could be bistable, and the new pattern becomes the norm for the next millennia or dozen.
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From the records of the most recent comparable atmospheric CO2 excursion, the time scale is going to be more like 100 thousand years. 120 thousand quite plausibly, it depends how far we turn the heat up.
That's still a "blip" geologically. Hell, it's barely a "bump" in terms of archaeology - Homo Sapiens as a species is between two and three times that old. Going back 100 thousand years would take us back through Neolithic and Mesoli
Re:Ayup (Score:4, Interesting)
Europe needs to get ready for a few years of colder winters.
For now, I'm not seeing any. Just see the "War on Christmas": when I was a kid, the Christmas was white every single year, with multiple months of snow. There wasn't a single white Christmas this decade. This year, there was a single day of snow, the day before Easter.
(Yeah, a real scientist would look at measurements rather than color of Christmas, but using this particular set of data points is far more accessible to an average voter.)
That's about it about northern Poland getting cooler. Once the current stops down for real, we'll see the effects, but for now, we're getting full brunt of literal "global warming".
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You do realize that the poster you quoted there is a Global Warming denier, right?
Don't understand (Score:2)
Re:Don't understand (Score:4, Informative)
Amazon sells about 30-40 million books, the Library of Congress has about that many.
So an Amazon is roughly equal to a Library of Congress.
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Amazon sells about 30-40 million books, the Library of Congress has about that many. So an Amazon is roughly equal to a Library of Congress.
This is as bad as expressing electrical power in watts. A Library of Congress is a unit. An Amazon is that unit over time.
Because of Climate Change? (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't get me wrong, I personally think that ACC is real, and a problem. But––
The story I heard on NPR [1] today said:
...scientists disagree about what's behind the sluggish ocean current...
but did go on to say:
The only thing we really can do is obviously try and prevent global warming because that's the root cause of why we think it's weakening now...
[1] https://www.npr.org/2018/04/13... [npr.org]
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Global warming caused me to cheat on my wife. She understands now that I'm the real victim here.
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Well, you're conservative so I can 100% believe you cheated on your wife.
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Would you prefer I cheat on my husband?
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Would you prefer I cheat on my husband?
Feminization is caused by plastics, not global warming. Some of those plastics are shaped just like sex hormones...
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Well, you're conservative so I can 100% believe you cheated on your wife.
Right, because there is no other assumption you could make about a cheater other that they are a Republican - like that famous Republican, Bill Clinton.
Oh wait.
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Global warming to own the libs.
Re: Because of Climate Change? (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, telethon-funded NPR is real well-known for their organized propaganda campaigns. Next they'll be inserting communist doctrine into the weekly puzzle and a airing Wait Wait Don't Resist Me.
I heard theories about how a deluge of lower-debsity fresh water from the melting ice caps could make this ocean current go haywire at least a decade ago. Now that it might be happening and we might know the cause, associating that cause with the observed occurrence isn't propaganda, it's reasonable conjecture.
If p
old news (Score:1)
And people said my Fish Coats business was nuts (Score:2)
I was just a little ahead of my time. But the business plan was sound.
Who cares what slashdotters think? (Score:2, Insightful)
Ocean Warming & Acidification (Score:1)
Ocean Warming & Acidification - Dr. Alex Cannara [youtube.com]
Gradually rising temperatures and seas are but a mere inconvenience next to the impending mass extinctions in the oceans and disruption of ocean currents. It is happening now, and there are already large dead zones that are now incapable of supporting life. To prevent global catastrophe will require enormous amounts of clean energy, not the symbolic non-solutions [roadmaptonowhere.com] that are in vogue today.
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What a bunch of nonsense. The planet has gone through plenty of hot and cold phases. For all that we know we are on the long tail of exiting an ice age. Every glaciation has killed plenty of species.
Human civilization based on the climate patterns in the last hundred years being affected is not a global catastrophe, neither is your beach house being swept away because you're too dumb to carry out a long term risk assessment that's not based on denial and blind hope.
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Vote. Or, if you're flippant about math, statistics, and science, don't.
Re: Ocean Warming & Acidification (Score:1)
Lmao, yeah we should make windmills and put solar on your baseball cap.
Idiot.
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A jest, but insightful about wishful green thinking. Wind/solar/battery technology will progress until it solves all our problems; all we need is faith, a bit of time, and mountains of money. Maybe. That physical reality and math impose limitations is not something that most people are equipped to understand.
Here's a thought: at least try to follow the math of people who have taken the time to lay it out simply. Sure it is easier to remain an ignorant tool, comfortably ensconced within the green herd, but i
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Texas [eia.gov] is primarily powered by natural gas and coal, with a bit of highly subsidized wind. However, while gas+wind may reduce emissions some, it is incapable of scaling to replace fossil, and will forever be dependent on it. The cost of wind today is deceptively low because it pushes the subsidies and required backup generation into another column. No one is suggesting coal as the alternative; just be realistic about expectations. Nor does most of the world have such conveniently co-located wind+gas resource
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Texas [eia.gov] is primarily powered by natural gas and coal, with a bit of highly subsidized wind.
I applaud the good link, that's an interesting map. Tiny opposition to your point is it does mention TX is #1 in wind.
However, while gas+wind may reduce emissions some, it is incapable of scaling to replace fossil, and will forever be dependent on it.
True. This is probably just a difference on emphasis - I'd emphasize that it can be minimized. I'm also a proponent of nuclear power, but that's a different convo.
The cost of wind today is deceptively low because it pushes the subsidies and required backup generation into another column. No one is suggesting coal as the alternative; just be realistic about expectations. Nor does most of the world have such conveniently co-located wind+gas resources.
I do agree, we should be realistic. I bring up Germany, and the real results of them leading the solar industry in the 90's, and it rocking their stock market. Solar was profitable for them, not because it saved costs of elect
not a problem (Score:5, Interesting)
I mean what could possible go wrong with stopping 1 small group of ppl while allowing others to grow far bigger in their emissions.
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You're asking what could go wrong with showing a little leadership?
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The Paris accord might not be enough but at least it's an attempt. After all the first step to identify an addiction is to realize we might have a problem. And when it comes to China and most other countries you have to ask yourself are you being fair? Per person we use more energy, generate more waste and suck up more resources than most of these "poor" countries. I remember one show which showed a cocoa farmer who spent his entire life farming the stuff to make chocolate but had never tasted a single
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I mean what could possible go wrong with stopping 1 small group of ppl while allowing others to grow far bigger in their emissions.
Those *other* people you quoted are currently the largest investors in solar, nuclear, and green technologies. They have curbed emission increases an order of magnitude faster than most of the west.
I think you best get your own house in order before you start looking out the window and realise the grass is greener next door. But I get it, coal won't jobs itself.
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China hit peak coal a few years ago. They are doing far, far more than the US to clean up. The US has no excuse.
Re: not a problem (Score:2)
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Secondly. pretty funny that you picked an article from EIA about China, which was based on 2015 numbers. The prediction was that coal usage would fall in China. But, it does not. It continues to grow. It slowed down a bit relative to their GDP, but once their GDP growth rate picked up, so did the coal. [reuters.com] But the real use of th
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First off, you are right that I did NOT speak about Americas increase in Coal exports TO CHINA. It is something that I am opposed to. In addition, it is CHINA'S consumption, not ours.
So If China exports coal, it's China's fault. But if America exports coal, it's also China's fault. Typical WindBourne logic.
China isn't even in the top 5 export destinations for American coal in 2017. It was actually less than 3.5% of your coal exports. So more bullshit from you.
Secondly. pretty funny that you picked an article from EIA about China, which was based on 2015 numbers. The prediction was that coal usage would fall in China.
The article was from September 2017 and the prediction was accurate. If you can find a more recent one show us.
But, it does not. It continues to grow. [reuters.com]
Your own link shows China increased only 0.4% in coal use and
However, as a portion of total energy consumption, coal usage fell 1.6 percentage points to 60.4 percent last year, while clean energy, including natural gas and renewables, rose 1.3 percentage points to 20.8 percent from 2016, the communique showed. That indicates the country remains on track to fulfil its promise to decarbonise its economy and reduce air pollution, as it vowed to cut the coal portion to below 58 percent of total energy consumption by 2020.
So it rose 0.4% in one year and is expected to stay flat
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Ah yes, the "countries with 3-4 times the population of the United States should pollute less than the USA" line of entitled dipshittery.
Re: not a problem (Score:2)
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Re: not a problem (Score:2)
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The fact is, that I told the truth, while you continue to troll.
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Without the massive investment that America gov made into NASA R&D on PV and Li-ion batteries, we would have very little today.
Yes, my family bought these, BUT, it took gov and businesses to make them available. MOre importantly, we are but a FAMILY. If EVERY American family (which they can not esp since those aerogel windows will not pay off for nearly 30 years ) did what we did, the dent in CO2 from
Not new, Known unfortunate effect (Score:5, Insightful)
The sad truth is most folks don't realize how fragile our planet is, it's a finely balanced chaotic system where a slight change in something as small as the CO2 concentration in the air is enough to cause a massive shift in climate. Nature normally takes thousands of years but we're essentially speeding it up into centuries or even decades. It's been known for years that the ocean sea currents could change with climate change and unfortunately it looks like it's coming true. If the oceans current shutdown it won't just cause Europe to get cooler. It could disrupt the monsoon rains which allow India to farm and provides water. If you have a billion people starving to death, I wouldn't want to explain to them how this wasn't my fault and I'm not sharing.
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I wouldn't want to explain to them how this wasn't my fault and I'm not sharing.
No worries, you'll be dead before that happens.
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This is mental. The earth is billions of years old, and it has had a climate able to support life for hundreds of millions of those years. How could you possibly describe such a system as "fragile"? Are you aware that the sea levels have risen and fallen by hundreds of meters over that time? That vast sheets of miles-thick ice used to cover areas that once teemed with tropical plants? That the enormous Sahara was covered in vegetation and water a scant 15,000 years ago -- a cyclic pattern that has been repe
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Uh, every recorded mass extinction event in history? All of which came from the environment changing to fast for life to evolve or migrate.
Yes, climate change denialism is mental indeed. It's already costing you hundreds of billions every year - dealing with record storms and forest fires isn't free.
Re:Not new, Known unfortunate effect (Score:5, Interesting)
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Such as.....? Climate change is real, universal health care provides better care for less money, a high minimum wage creates jobs, and vaccines don't cause autism. If some cultist is completely immune to reason on issues that affect the rest of the human race, blunt force application of facts [youtu.be] is the only option left, along with public mockery. Like when Jon Stewart asked the lunar conspiracy theorist that
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I do relate to DCFusor. In Europe, I'm a conservative. In America, I'm acrimonious because I think the risk of stopping or changing the fre
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When I go to a doctor not owned by a big conglomerate (Carilion in this area) - who knows I don't have insurance, they charge me cost + fixed fee - and it's 1/6th or 1/10th what the "official rates" are (more info in link below from a pro pointing out how to get this deal...).
I paid ~$300 -total- for office visits, a few single spaced pages
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all the suggestions about what to do about it are pointless and not being adopted anyway...liberals bad .......I'm sick of it and sick of the utterly false idea that if one politician is wrong, the other one must be right - never stated but always assumed by people trying to force partisan bullshit down my throat.
Liberals want to make laws protecting people that you don't care about, so what? Conservatives (read oil industry lobbyists) want you to ignore climate change. Believe or not believe, they really don't care, they spout FUD trying to get everyone to ignore the issue for their short-term profits. Do nothing. Don't vote. You're already picking a side.
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What ad hom. The only sort of person who could claim to be insulted would be sex and/or race baiters like this piece of shit [dailykos.com] who finds the most pathetic excuse to call Bernie Sanders a racist, while himself being a big supporter of Hillary "Superpredators" Clinton.
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> The earth is billions of years old, and it has had various climate settings able to support very different lifeforms over various periods for hundreds of millions of those years.
When somebody say "fragile", there is a context. Fragile in the context of AGW is about sustaining billions of human life.
Clarity and Order (Score:1)
Let's sort things out "easily" (you know in science that's an euphemism for "mostly but there are also other things you don't talk about") for many people who doesn't understand how this "Climate Change" works.
0) Our Climate lies in equilibrium of freshwater-saltwater. A difference in salt concentration is what makes the ocean water currents move; just like pressures differences make air move.
1) Higher temperatures mean ice (freshwater) reserves melt faster. This implies a "shift" in equilibrium towards les
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The last time the climate changed a fraction as fast as it is now, a world wide extinction event occurred, nearly killed all life.This is faster. Even that time it was caused by a cataclysmic event, like a huge meteor or something. There is nothing normal about what is happening. Maybe it was bound to happen. Probably not. Hard to tell. No second Earth with no humans to compare against.
Wasn't this predicted as natural 20+ years ago? (Score:1)
... Because of Climate Change (Score:2)
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I no longer believe any assertion that contains the phrase "because of climate change."
"You made a coherent, rational point about this article, which was written because of climate change, and it makes you sound intelligent."
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and I'm getting about a foot of global warming deposited onto my driveway. Yup, this science is definitely settled.
Well, as long as it's only a foot of global warming then there's nothing to worry your little head about.
But if you were getting a foot of climate change that's a whole other thing. We all (well those of us with more than about two neurons to rub together and who have been paying attention) know that climate change means more extreme swings in intensity. What once would have been some late season flurries can now be <gasp> a foot of snow with an increase in intensity.
So yeah, IMO, your foot of snow in
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. Yup, this science is definitely settled.
I'm sorry: the science is NEVER settled. If it is, it's dogma. You might as well stay with religion, because random($Holy_Book) is singularly, literally correct and everything else is absolutely wrong, and they'll TELL you that upfront. If you fight it, then either somehow you've misunderstood the words and need a re-education OR the $Evil_Deity has you under control. (The Earth, Gods Creation, is still the Center of the Universe, right? RIGHT?? If not, back in you go and we'll try it again later.)
All s
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Then its a good thing that church has as many followers that the War on Christmas does.
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There are fewer Big Deal's in science than proving established theories wrong. See the recent meta-study on how a couple glasses of wine may not be so healthy [vox.com] for you after all.
Climate change "skeptics" are free to come up with their own superior studies to prove their case. This is the kind of thing nobel prizes are awarded for, not to mention all the cash Exxon would be happy to give them. Until that happens, though, they're as grounded in science as anti-vaxxers are.
Re: It's the middle of April (Score:2)
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Not when grants are awarded primarily for producing results as opposed to verifying them.
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Re: It's the middle of April (Score:1, Troll)
Climate is changing? Interesting.
Please, let me know when it didn't?
Personally, I'd rather we spent the $trillions on known, well-understood issues where we can see sizable concrete benefits that help billions of people, than waste it chasing ephemeral results in a situation where the error-bars overshadow the conclusions.
But I'm sure I'm just a shill for Exxon, right?
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Let me phrase the answer in a way [xkcd.com] you might be able to comprehend.
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I think Randall Munroe is hilarious, but his graph proves nothing except one needs to finesse the data to try to make that point.
For example he picked "22000 years ago" as a starting point....why? it's not a particularly round number, like 50k or 25k or even 10k.
But you're posting AC, you're not interested in discussion, are you? Post as something other than AC and I'll waste my time refuting you both.
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Read the top of the image. It explains it.
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Oh I get that, but to start ones' "warming graph" at the last ice age is a bit obviously tendentious, isn't it?
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You're missing the point here: What's alarming is the current rate of change. It's nothing less than catastrophic.
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No, it isn't. Perhaps that word doesn't mean what you think it means.
1) Look at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] - note in particular the deceptive changing of scales. The rightmost 1/5 of the graph covers the last 20k years; the next graph covers 980k years. Compress the right most graph into the same scale as the 980k year graph, and the current temp spike looks....almost identical to repeated, near "instant" (in that timescale) spikes in temp and CO2. And these happen periodically, about every 120k
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Climate change or not, the RIGHT thing to do regardless is find better ways to meet our electrical needs. Oil/Coal can and should be mostly replaced as soon as possible.
Progress and advancement as a species. Just think about the conflicts that could be reduced if no one on the globe had to worry about energy production.
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Personally, I'd rather we spent the $trillions on known, well-understood issues where we can see sizable concrete benefits that help billions of people
I suggest we spend the money on finding an alternative to fossil fuels before they run out. Dependable energy is more important than the climate.
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"I suggest we spend the money on finding an alternative to fossil fuels before they run out. "
Effectively, they'll never run out, they'll just become more and more expensive to obtain - to the point where you need to expend almost as much energy to obtain the energy as you get.
The bigger problem at the moment is that we already developed a workable solution (Molten salt nuclear power) in the 1960s and then threw it away for political reasons.
All the handwaving about renewables ignores the simple fact that r
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Willfully obtuse.
Lots of people are tools of their own free will, but you could try sending Exxon an invoice for your efforts.
Re: It's the middle of April (Score:4, Interesting)
Not change? On average, for virtually all of the last 250 million years.
The last century has seen more change than in any given ten million year period. I assume you've done calculus. Ok, maybe not.
Nobody is spending trillions on climate change. If they had done so, it wouldn't be a problem. It's because they're too busy spending it on known things like warships, cruise missiles, nuclear warheads and pay raises for bankers and the uber-wealthy that there's a problem.
No, I have absolutely bugger all sympathy for your argument.
Oh, and Get Off My Lawn!
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"The last century has seen more change than in any given ten million year period. "
In this you're entirely wrong. Do you realize that? Entirely, completely, thoroughly, colossally wrong. From where did you get such hyperbole (and think it was right)?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Specifically, https://upload.wikimedia.org/w... [wikimedia.org]
Look, the current spike has been replicated barely 100k years ago (note in particular the decptively changing scale of that graph...the rightmost 20% of the graph covers 20k years
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If you have a DC power supply and you increase the voltage at some gradual rate, what happens is you introduce high frequency "ringing" into the signal. In fact, there will be points in time where not only is the voltage decreasing, but it will actually drop below the original value. You can confirm this easily by connecting an oscilloscope and capturing the signal. Will you then begin to doubt that you ever turned the voltage up at all?
This property is common to all non-linear dynamical systems, that is to
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lol!
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There's not going to be global cooling. In 6 years, Galactic Overlord Zenu is going to come back and rapture up all the level 7 or higher Scientologists and then blow up the planet.
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If you have NO IDEA who Xenu is, please read it.
Pretty sure it was that place Kubla Khan did a bunch of stuff way back when.
Or, come to think of it, isn't it an Olive Newton John song? So Xenu must have been an old boyfriend, pretty sure that's why Xenu is referred to as "An Old One".
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Or, come to think of it, isn't it an Olive Newton John song?
And an Olivia Newton John movie. And it was totally awesome in a bad way. In an enjoyable way.
Re:This will hold for the first ten years of cooli (Score:5, Informative)
There is no "cooling trend". The current as it is today provides anomalously warm temperatures to northwestern Europe. If this current is fully disrupted, the UK and friends will end up having the same general climate as northern Canada. Along with northen Canada, it then will slowly warm in accordance with the generally accepted global rates.
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This is Slashdot!
Here, global warming is a conspiracy thought up by an alliance of greedy scientists and secret globalists in their war against the honest, hard-working executives of the petrochemical and other carbon industries.
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