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Originally posted by Stevy
Ok this is a very big plan but it can work.....
The best way to ride of the unwanted greenhouse gassed is to nuke a few holes in the atmosphere... (yes i know 'NUKE') But the best thing about it is the radiation from the blast or blasts it will allso be sucked into space along with a big lot of the unwanted methane ... It will work...
then after a period of time the atmosphere will recover.... And there we have it mother nature restored to her full glory Fresh air....
Originally posted by Muaddib
Originally posted by Stevy
Ok this is a very big plan but it can work.....
Err....that will not work at all.... You nuke the atmosphere btw and then you have to deal with nuclear fallout, which is not going to be "sucked into space".... and if you "poke more holes in the atmosphere" then you are letting in more harmful flux from the sun which will create even more problems.
The atmosphere protects us from the harmful rays that the flux from the sun is constantly sending into space and you want to "poke more holes into the atmosphere"?....
I kind of believe you are not thinking clearly, for whatever reason, or you don't know any better.
[edit on 17-2-2006 by Muaddib]
since you dont think the first one would work even though i have read on a respectfull website that scientists think it would... (and sorry cant remember the site) Maybe a search on google will bring up the site...
But anyway here is another way to fix this prb
Imagine a fleet of vessels spreading
iron dust into the seas to spur the growth of huge crops of plankton, which in
turn consume tons of carbon dioxide, the primary gas responsible for the
greenhouse effect. This is a radical example of a proposal to offset global
warming through innovative technical fixes, according to Climate Controls, an
article in the November issue of Reason magazines.
As negotiators from around the world prepare to meet in Kyoto to work out
an international treaty to deal with the rising global temperatures observed
by many scientists, major participants argue that the only way to address
global warming is to reduce levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse
gases. But there may be more effective ways to cure the problem without
imposing the economic hardships likely to result from dramatic cutbacks in
emissions and fuel use, according to author Gregory Benford, a professor of
physics at the University of California at Irvine.
"Now is the time to take seriously the concept of 'geoengineering,' of
consciously altering atmospheric chemistry and conditions, of mitigating the
effects of greenhouse gases rather than simply calling for their reduction or
outright prohibition," says Benford. In a little-noticed 1992 report, the
National Academy of Sciences studied mitigation proposals, finding them to
have a relatively low implementation cost.
Not all of the proposed technical solutions are as controversial as iron-
dumping ships. "An easy, although limited, way to remove carbon dioxide is to
grow plants -- preferably trees, since they tie up more of the gas in
cellulose, meaning it will not return to the air for many years," says
Benford. "About half of the U.S. carbon dioxide emissions could be captured
if we grew tree crops on economically marginal croplands and pasture. These
forests would also enhance biodiversity, wildlife, and water quality."
"Another way to cool the planet is to reflect more sunlight back into
space, before it heats up the earth and the atmosphere," says Benford. "We
could compensate for the warming effect of all greenhouse gas emissions since
the Industrial Revolution by reflecting less than 1 percent more of the
sunlight." This could be achieved by installing white roofs on homes and
buildings, using lighter colored pavement for roads and parking lots, or, even
more dramatically, by spreading dust in the stratosphere to reflect sunlight
before it reaches the earth, Benford says.
"Of course the concept of geoengineering may seem outlandish at first
blush," acknowledges Benford. "But geoengineering merely recognizes
explicitly what everyone already understands: that human activity has an
impact on the planet."
Benford calls for a series of well-controlled, reversible experiments on a
local scale to learn more about the effectiveness and unintended consequences
of these proposals before proceeding at a global level.
"We may find these ideas to be more practical and less expensive than the
draconian proposals on the agenda at Kyoto," Benford says. "It might take
only a few billion dollars to mitigate the U.S. emission of carbon dioxide.
Compared with stopping people in China from burning coal, this is nothing."
Reason (www.reason.com...) is a monthly magazine of political and social
commentary based in Los Angeles.
Originally posted by Stevy
Ok this is a very big plan but it can work.....
The best way to ride of the unwanted greenhouse gassed is to nuke a few holes in the atmosphere... (yes i know 'NUKE') But the best thing about it is the radiation from the blast or blasts it will allso be sucked into space along with a big lot of the unwanted methane ... It will work...
then after a period of time the atmosphere will recover.... And there we have it mother nature restored to her full glory Fresh air....
Originally posted by GrowingConspiracy
Originally posted by Stevy
Ok this is a very big plan but it can work.....
The best way to ride of the unwanted greenhouse gassed is to nuke a few holes in the atmosphere... (yes i know 'NUKE') But the best thing about it is the radiation from the blast or blasts it will allso be sucked into space along with a big lot of the unwanted methane ... It will work...
then after a period of time the atmosphere will recover.... And there we have it mother nature restored to her full glory Fresh air....
so if the president wrote you and said we want to hear your idea on how to prevent global warming you would say nuke the planet because the sucktion of air afterward would clense the earth. wow... what about plant life and animal life has that come to mind? if every plant dies then shortly after from radiation or fallout, every human will die after the plants die too so that is quite a stupid idea, seriously, nuke your own planet that you live on wow, genius.
The second option, "growing crops of trees" is more viable but it will need a massive effort on the part of millions of people around the world, as well as massive funding. Even if this is done, which is highly unlikely, it will still not stop the current climate shift. Once climate shift begins, it continues until the Earth itself finds a balance, which will affect us all, and which is currently affecting us.
[edit on 17-2-2006 by Muaddib]