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You mean avoiding the fact that increasing CO2 concentrations are causing global warming?
Now I am using these to help me and my peers understand the type of personality it takes to avoid the truth for whatever reason.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: Justoneman
You mean avoiding the fact that increasing CO2 concentrations are causing global warming?
Now I am using these to help me and my peers understand the type of personality it takes to avoid the truth for whatever reason.
originally posted by: Dfairlite
a reply to: 1947boomer
You wrote:
“You're conflating two different things. Emissions and atmospheric concentration. Your chart is about emissions. I'm talking about atmospheric concentration. Since the 50s the atmospheric CO2 concentration is up about 90-100 ppm (depending on the year you pick as your starting point). In the 100 years prior to that, the concentration rose about 80 ppm. So while our emissions are growing (not anywhere near exponentially) our additions to the atmosphere are much closer to linear than logarithmic.”
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No, I’m not conflating the two different things, but I will admit that my statement was terse and didn’t necessarily clarify the distinction between the two. So let’s talk about emissions of CO2 and concentration of CO2.
First, your statement that emissions are growing closer to a linear manner is bull puckey. Did you look at the chart? In the decade 1850 to 1860, the slope of the curve is barely positive, by 1950 the slope is going up at about a 45 degree angle; today it is going up at about an 80 degree angle. It is clearly concave upwards. It is much, much different than linear over the range 1850 to the present.
Moreover, total CO2 concentration in the atmosphere is also changing at a non-linear rate in the period 1850 to the present. Take a look at this graph:
www.co2levels.org...
Between 1850 and 1900, CO2 accumulated at an average rate of about 0.25 PPM/year.
Between 1900 and 1950, CO2 accumulated at about 0.32 PPM/year.
Between 1950 and 2000, CO2 it accumulated at about 1.2 PPM/year.
Between 2000 and the present, CO2 accumulated at about 2.25 PPM/year.
The rate of accumulation of CO2 is clearly also increasing with time. That shouldn’t be surprising since we’ve only been putting it in the air in a serious way for about 150 years and the residence time of CO2 in the atmosphere is about 300 years. Very little of the excess we’re put in has come out.
If one were to create a realistic model of the total concentration of CO2 as a function of time from 1850 to the present by curve fitting of the empirical data in that graph, I think it’s pretty obvious that you would end up with a constant term that describes the concentration prior to the industrial revolution and a term that adds to the concentration, with increasing time, starting at 1850. I also think It is clear from the shape of the curve that the term describing the amount of additional CO2 concentration added since 1850 will be either an exponential increasing with time or a power law increasing with time.
Now let’s look at the logarithmic dependence of temperature on CO2 concentration: In 2006, the climate scientist Willis Eschenbach published a model for the logarithmic dependence of excess temperature as a function of the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere. The model is: Excess Temperature = K [log2 (C2) – log2 (C1)], where C1 and C2 are the concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere at two different times (in PPM) and K is a constant equal to ≈ 2.35. In this model, C1 is the concentration before the buildup started, so it is treated as a constant; C2 is the concentration from 1850 on, it obviously is a variable, since it increases with time. The simple point I was trying to make in my previous post is that if you take a model for the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere that contains a constant term and an exponential or a power term that gets bigger with time, and plug it into Eschenbach’s equation, you will end up taking the log of a constant term plus the log of a term that has either an exponential or a power law in it. The log of a constant term is a constant, but the log of a term containing an exponential or power law is going to increase linearly, with time. That simply means that as long as the concentration of CO2 keeps increasing exponentially or as a power law, the temperature will keep increasing with time. I thought you were bringing up the logarithmic dependence of temperature with CO2 concentration to suggest that the diminishing heating effect due to increasing CO2 concentration will cause the rate of heating that we are currently experiencing to diminish. I’m just pointing out that mathematically, it can’t do that as long as we’re putting CO2 into the air at an ever increasing rate.
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You went on to write:
“Furthermore, burning every currently known available drop of fossil fuels will only result in about 700-800ppm (total) of CO2 in the atmosphere. Given that 800 is when we will see another 1C change from now and we have to get another 800 from there to see the next 1C rise, it's safe to say there is absolutely zero worry about with CO2 emissions.”
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I guess we both agree that when and if the CO2 concentration gets to 800 PPM, the temperature will get to about 3.5 C or about 7.5 F above the 1956 to 1980 baseline. I’m having a hard time understanding just exactly what your position is on this. You seem to be fully accepting that CO2 concentration in the atmosphere is increasing due to human activity and you seem to be fully accepting of the physics that says that that rise in concentration has caused an approximate 1 degree C rise in temperature and that when we get to 800 PPM there will have been another 1.5 degree C rise. Are you saying that a planet that is 7.5 degrees F hotter than the one we had in the 1950s is not worrying? You agree that human emitted CO2 is causing global warming, you just don't care?
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You went on to write:
“Of course, then there is the inconvenient fact that our adding CO2 to the atmosphere has prolonged life on this planet by hundreds of thousands of years (if not millions).”
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What calculation did you perform that allows you to come to that conclusion?
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You went on to write:
“And the ideal atmospheric makeup for plant growth is around 2000ppm of CO2.”
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There is no "ideal" CO2 concentration for plant growth in the abstract; some plants do better in a CO2 enriched environment and some don't because some plants are not genetically equipped to make use of the additional CO2 and some become less productive with increasing temperature. 2000 PPM would correspond to a temperature increase over the baseline of more than 13 degrees F. That would kill the grain crops on which we rely to feed our population.
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You went on to write:
“When you come to accept these facts the worry about CO2 emissions causing any sort of catastrophe becomes nothing but a joke.”
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I guess that’s true if you consider the prospect of losing a few billion of our fellow human beings needlessly to fire, flood, starvation, and war over the next half century to be a joke.
How many predictions did they get right?
That's a bunch of nonsense. It blatantly lies about the NASA study. The study was about CO2 in the thermosphere (you know what the thermosphere is, right?) and how it is reacts to CMEs. It has nothing to do with climate.
Carbon Dioxide is a Cooling Gas According to NASA
False, it is about what happens at the edge of space. Here is a discussion from when the NASA article first appeared, 6 years ago.
BOTH shoot up into space releasing energy from earth into space.
originally posted by: Phage
I'm sorry. I don't see anywhere in that article where anything is said about climate. Nor do I see where is it said that increasing levels of CO2 in the lower atmosphere has a cooling effect. Can you point that out for me. It is my understanding that the thermosphere is actually the outer reaches of the atmosphere. I don't think what goes on up there has much to do with what goes on 50 miles below.
So nasa steps in with a new climate report on how co2 is going to freeze not fry.
The article would seem to be about the effects of coronal mass ejections on the upper atmosphere. It is my understanding that it is not CMEs which cause the heating of the lower atmosphere (where CO2 levels are increasing), but infrared radiation. It seems the quoted article is in error when it says:
NASA's Langley Research Center has collated data proving that “greenhouse gases” actually block up to 95 percent of harmful solar rays from reaching our planet, thus reducing the heating impact of the sun.
CMEs are not "harmful solar rays", they are clouds of plasma.
Between 1850 and 1900, CO2 accumulated at an average rate of about 0.25 PPM/year.
Between 1900 and 1950, CO2 accumulated at about 0.32 PPM/year.
Between 1950 and 2000, CO2 it accumulated at about 1.2 PPM/year.
Between 2000 and the present, CO2 accumulated at about 2.25 PPM/year.
I guess we both agree that when and if the CO2 concentration gets to 800 PPM, the temperature will get to about 3.5 C or about 7.5 F above the 1956 to 1980 baseline.
You seem to be fully accepting that CO2 concentration in the atmosphere is increasing due to human activity
Are you saying that a planet that is 7.5 degrees F hotter than the one we had in the 1950s is not worrying?
What calculation did you perform that allows you to come to that conclusion [adding co2 has prolonged life on the planet]?
2000 PPM would correspond to a temperature increase over the baseline of more than 13 degrees F. That would kill the grain crops on which we rely to feed our population.
I guess that’s true if you consider the prospect of losing a few billion of our fellow human beings needlessly to fire, flood, starvation, and war over the next half century to be a joke.