So, what you are trying to say is, we are certainly contributing to the global climate change and we can change / control it by not contributing to it?I'd think we could certainly not contribute to it with such gusto.
But it boils down to the almighty buck.
OMG is the sky falling?
Someone get a hold of ole Al Gore!
Quick!... hide the children!
Call the cops!
It will happen ( it is happening) slowly but inexorably. You can expect summers with 2-3 heatwaves as the norm. We’re seeing 40+ temperatures in Europe now (45 this year in France, and a few weeks later over 40 in a Paris, 41 in northern France and the highest ever recorded in the UK at 38. These temperatures will slowly creep up over the next 50 years or so. Once you get above 50 or 55 you cannot deal with it in high density population areas. The nightmare scenario is a 60 degree heatwave in a place like India, China or the continental US.
OMG is the sky falling?
Someone get a hold of ole Al Gore!
Quick!... hide the children!
Call the cops!
Your too old to worry about it
Me too for that matter.....think about the children, the poor suffocating children!
It has happened before, has it not?
Not while humans have been on the planet, living in cities with millions of people.
NOT TRUE. In the winter time we regularly have lows below 0 deg. Celsius, and we can have a stretch of several days where it does not get above freezing. This is true for even in the Houston area which is about 350 kilometers to the south of the Dallas-Fort Worth area.You just have a southern climate that is not yet susceptible to frost.
Ancient Roman era and medieval periods both had warmer temps, long before industrialization and automobiles.Not while humans have been on the planet, living in cities with millions of people.
Hello,
Could you tell me what is the accuracy of the increase in temperature, according to the IPCC, in the next years ???
Depends on which camp your in....i don't need any scientists to tell me we're screwing up, it's easy to see.
They can't tell you. They can only predict.Hello,
Could you tell me what is the accuracy of the increase in temperature, according to the IPCC, in the next years ???
It has happened before, has it not?
Yes, for instance the Permian-Triassic extinction event.
That's odd, because polaris is still in the same position it's always been. I doubt that NASA could cover that one up...I mentioned this in another thread. There has been a sudden shift in the axis of the Earth. It happened around 2006. Google this issue and you will see Youtube videos of Inuit talking about it. NASA denies it.
... You can expect summers with 2-3 heatwaves as the norm. We’re seeing 40+ temperatures in Europe now (45 this year in France, and a few weeks later over 40 in a Paris, 41 in northern France and the highest ever recorded in the UK at 38. ...
Not that hot - you'll get used to it ...
It's when you get really high humidity at the same time that it can wear on you.
It's probably 38 or 39 here. Later this evening I have a couple of hours of heavy outdoor labor planned. I'm sure I'll live, and have some more bug bites to show for it, maybe a bloody knuckle or two.
You guys should come to Vancouver. We have no comprehension of climate change. We can have a hot spell in May and then not get above 25º in July and August and we wouldn't bat an eyelash. It may go to 30º in early September and some call it an Indian Summer ie: shirts off after a frosty morning. It's all a bit confusing.
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Ancient Roman era and medieval periods both had warmer temps, long before industrialization and automobiles.
You need to dig into the detail, not make pronouncements or regurgitate stuff that clearly you don’t have a clue about.
If you can explain to me how pumping 2.5 trillion tons of CO2 into the atmosphere and a global increase in temperatures is the same as a mainly localized temperature blip in NW Europe is one and the same I might take notice. I won’t be holding my breath.
Medieval Warm Period - Wikipedia
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Yes, for instance the Permian-Triassic extinction event.
They say it was only a 10 degree increase that did it....the same ghg problem we've got now except it was from volcanoes supposedly.
You guys should come to Vancouver. We have no comprehension of climate change. We can have a hot spell in May and then not get above 25º in July and August and we wouldn't bat an eyelash. It may go to 30º in early September and some call it an Indian Summer ie: shirts off after a frosty morning. It's all a bit confusing.
Confusing it certainly is. During my childhood in the '60s and 70's in southern England we were absolutely guaranteed snow to play in every winter, often for weeks at a time. I was born a year before The Big Freeze in 1962, and there's been nothing like it since.
Winters are now very hit-and-miss, with the odd cold and snowy spell (last in 2012) but generally with wet and warm winters above freezing. Random indeed, but undisputedly less cold.
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- The Arctic has become warmer by 5 degrees. Australia has snowed.