I don't need evidence that the planet is warming, I need a cost/benefit analysis of what meaningful impact (if any) such "strong actions" could possibly have on this trend.
During the last century, CO2 emissions have been steadily rising year-over-year, in line with population growth across the globe. Given that this trend is now stalling naturally, the warming trend should follow suit. This leads me to the question: How bad is the "do literally nothing" scenario really?
What makes you believe temperature isn't accellerating? CO2 in the atmosphere won't go away on its own for hundreds of years, and trapping more and more heat will have exponential effects leading to chaotic climate instability. CO2 is not declining, even in the pandemic year it is still rising sharply way beyond extreme levels for tens of thousands of years: https://www.co2levels.org/
"If this trend continues, by the end of the next century atmospheric CO2 would approach 900 ppm—just below levels during the Paleocene thermal extinction 54 million years ago."
That's my point. It won't continue. Nothing grows to infinity. CO2 levels are rising due to an increase in emissions year-over-year. This increase is guaranteed to stop on its own. We don't know what happens if emissions stabilize at current levels. Perhaps CO2 concentration will continue to rise for a while, perhaps it will stabilize rather quickly. Absent any other factors, the long term trend is always for CO2 levels to (slowly) sink.
If I naively extend the following correlation, just going from 420 to 520 would require adding another 30 Gt of CO2 of annual emissions (almost doubling current levels):
Same problem, you're name-dropping an extinction event which has, at best, a speculative relation to climate change in general and CO2 levels in particular. Certainly you will find such events where changes in CO2 coincide with extinction, but you will also find events where they don't.
> Lots of countries are looking to go from 1950's economy to modern standards, many live in rural areas that develop etc.
That is true and I'm not ruling it out, but that then begs the question what difference (if any) the comparably small population of already developed countries could make by curbing their emissions.
> Why do you believe CO2 tends to drop?
The cycles of the past million years. After every sudden peak, CO2 levels drop... until the next peak.
> The accumulated CO2 don't follow emission drops in the graph.
For one, there have been no sustained drops in emissions. Secondly, these graphs have different smoothing functions applied to them. Still, they do track each other pretty closely. Around the time of WW2, you see several years of constant CO2 levels, despite increasing cumulative emissions.
> Humanity is driving faster downhill without any brakes.
That's the mental image you like to use. I like to use this one:
Sequestration, basically. All of those fossil fuels we burn today have at one point not returned into the atmosphere. An increase in CO2 also leads to an increase in vegetation. Ocean acidification is a concern that I can't dismiss, but that's true of many concerns and I can't cater to them all.
> Those CO2 peaks mark descents into Ice Ages and cataclysmic events during millions of years.
I was referring to the interglacial cycles, these are not cataclysmic per se.
As for the descent into an ice age, according to the interglacial cycle, we were right on schedule for that. Perhaps our ancestors will thank us for averting it?
CO2 concentration will mix with other gases, so the dynamic is different. It is still concerning even though the numbers work differently than temperatures. CO2 accumulates over longer time, so appear smoother also.
> Given that this trend is now stalling naturally, the warming trend should follow suit
Even a cursory argument should make it obvious this is untrue: CO2 is cumulative, so emitting the same amount year over year will continue increasing warming.
This is an oversimplification. If it just stayed in the atmosphere indefinitely after emission, then the rate of increase in CO2 concentration should match the rate of increase of CO2 emission. In reality, this just isn't the case, because an increase in CO2 concentration leads to an increase in uptake on the surface. This increased uptake may well be a negative in some ways (ocean acidifaction), but it may also be a positive in other ways (agricultural yields).
I'm not sure what discussion you are having, but mine is centered around reality.
Looking at this graph, if annual emissions stay roughly constant (around WW2) then CO2 levels also stay roughly constant, even though cumulative emissions are rising:
You are badly misreading that graph. Emissions (black line) is the derivative of atmospheric CO2. The fact that they appear to line up doesn't mean what you seem to think it does; the increase in emissions is the cause of the increasing slope of the atmospheric CO2 value, not the direct value.
I can't make sense of this. If CO2 emissions drive CO2 concentration, how can the former be the derivative of the latter?
I can (sort of) make sense of it the other way around: The rise in atmospheric CO2 is the derivative of emissions per unit of time. This isn't true, but maybe it works as a model. It then follows that the derivative of a constant function (i.e. emissions over time stay constant because growth has stopped naturally) is zero (i.e. there is no rise in concentration). In that case, we simply agree.
The derivative of the function is the rate of change in that function. The rate of change in atmospheric CO2 is the rate of emissions.
This is modulo natural sources and syncs, of course, but CO2's half-life in the atmosphere is long enough that on the immediate timescale those influences can be ignored. We're not going to reach a new steady-state for some time even if emissions remain constant; rather than constant emissions resulting in constant concentration, constant emissions will result in concentration rising at a constant rate on any near-term (< century) timescale.
> This is modulo natural sources and syncs, of course, but CO2's half-life in the atmosphere is long enough that on the immediate timescale those influences can be ignored.
On the immediate time scale, anything can be ignored. Climate change is not about what's going to happen immediately.
Excess CO2 "officially" has a half-life of around 20 years, but this begs the question as to what "excess" actually means. If an increase in CO2 leads to an increase in plant growth and therefore an increased capacity of further uptake down the road, that excess may now in fact be required to maintain plant growth. Those "excess plants" can't wait for all the other plants to decompose and return to the carbon cycle, because that happens on a much longer timescale.
I haven't seen anyone say that the end of population growth will stop the growth in climate emissions. I have seen it almost universally said that the growth in people with a certain level of wealth (e.g., enough to buy energy-consuming technology such as refrigerators and cars) does cause climate emissions to grow.
Fair enough, let's say CO2 will not stop immediately after population growth stabilizes, but rather after wealth growth stabilizes. However, population growth is strongly related to low levels of wealth, and vice versa.
Activists often like to point at the high per-capita rate of emissions of people in developed countries, but that ignores that there are far fewer such people and that their birth rates are usually below replacement levels. The climate itself obviously doesn't care about emissions per-capita.
This is also another reason why the crux of the problem is not with developed countries. They have all the wealth to optimize and reduce their emissions, but if the developing world is bound towards a similarly high standard of living, that can't really make much of a difference. If anything, the focus should be on making that development as "clean" as possible, which is not the same problem as reducing emissions at home, except for some technological overlap. Alternatively, developing countries could simply be denied our standard of living through international policy. That, of course, would be an injustice.
> This is also another reason why the crux of the problem is not with developed countries.
By far the most emissions, now and historically, are in developed countries. The cause of our current problems is the failure of developed countries, the US in particular, to act.
> By far the most emissions, now and historically, are in developed countries.
If you want to play the blame game for historical emissions, sure, the developed countries are the biggest culprits. That however has no bearing on future emissions.
No policy of today will undo historical emissions, except maybe a significant sequestration effort, but I don't see any of that in the broader discussion. It's all about how the US needs to reduce current emissions, which would still only amount to 15% of worldwide emissions if eliminated completely.
We also can see that the majority of current emissions are coming out of developing countries, unless for some reason you want to count China into the developed countries.
The last two US presidential elections and the way the US population handled Covid has really left me thinking that we're doomed when it comes to global warming.
I will say this: The opposition wants you to think that and to spread it to others. They mean to look implacable - not a novel negotiating strategy, if you think of it.
I think if we got disarmed their narrative of power and implacability, and realized our own power, the issue would be settled promptly. The truth is, most Americans are concerned about climate change and have been for awhile.
And the best solution is extremely popular: Tax carbon production, and use 100% of that tax revenue as a Universal Basic Income (or Negative income tax, same thing)
I believe pretty much every politician in the world, no matter their political side, would do the same. Politicians either do nothing or do too little when it comes to solving problems having very long lifespans, the reason being the need for immediate public approval; every action would require loads of money spent now on something whose results would be visible in decades, long after they would seek for a re/election.
Dont mind me. I'm just complaining about the record low temperatures caused by global warming & the devil gas CO2. Seriously, living in a red zone makes me feel warm so thank you to the good data scientists for massaging that data all nice & warm. Its all about the mind over matter folks. I know you all feel me.
We need to hunt down every last CO2 molecule terrorist to save the planet, folks, cause this record cold caused by global warming is really freaking me out.
Makes my head spin. Good thing I have so many experts to do the thinking for me. I hope the experts are paid good cause I wanna give them all my money to save my poor head from spinning off
This was a clever take back in 2008. However, by now most people understand that an increased average global temperature doesn't mean it is uniformly warmer everywhere, it means more extreme weather events. One cold month doesn't mean that a decades long trend is false.
Glad I could catch you up on the debate! hopefully you will think of more interesting and convincing arguments in the future. If you really want to argue that climate change isn't real, you'll have to do better.
Nah, I'm so backwards, my vision is all sideways watching the vortex go up & down and not side to side. And the geo-magnets are all messed up, moving around too. It's surely the devil terrorist gas CO2, I'm telling you! That's the cause of everything. Darn that devil gas. It's even messing up the climate on other planets too
The tabs are so confusing: they switch the reference average, not the period. So if you use a 1981-2010 average as a reference, the anomalies are higher. A tab UI is probably not the best for this.
And still the average temperature from raw data shows cooling for recent years. It´s a big problem when data is adjusted to show a trend that isn´t there anymore.
Also, have a look at the climategate-scandal to see the mindset of the scientists behind the adjustments of raw data sets to show warming where there is none.
“I’ve just completed Mike’s [Mann] Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (i.e. from 1981 onwards) and from 1961 for Keith’s [Briffa] to hide the decline.”
—Dr. Phil Jones, Director of the Climatic Research Unit, disclosed Climategate e-mail, Nov. 16, 1999
“Also we have applied a completely artificial adjustment to the data after 1960, so they look closer to observed temperatures than the tree-ring data actually were…”
—Dr. Tim Osborn, Climatic Research Unit, disclosed Climategate e-mail, Dec. 20, 2006
“…If you look at the attached plot you will see that the land also shows the 1940s warming blip (as I’m sure you know). So, if we could reduce the ocean blip by, say 0.15 deg C, then this would be significant for the global mean—but we’d still have to explain the land blip…”
—Dr. Tom Wigley, University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, on adjusting global temperature data, disclosed Climategate e-mail to Phil Jones, Sep. 28, 2008
“We, therefore, do not hold the original raw data but only the value-added (i.e. quality controlled and homogenized) data.”
—Climatic Research Unit web site, the world’s leading provider of global temperature data, admitting that it can’t produce the original thermometer data, 2011
I don't see cooling, I see 5 yr trend being warming and 2021's 12M average not done yet. Averages are slower and can hide information, though new records will arrive next year when whole 2021 is accounted for. Earliest signal due in 6 months after July 2021.
Longer term graphs should raise concern for existing life today:
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