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You may want to reconsider that claim. While CLOUDS did demonstrate that cosmic rays can produce aerosols in the middle regions of the troposphere, it did not demonstrate that those aerosols have any effect on cloud production.
Are you talking about Solar irradiance or sunspot activity? If it is sunspot activity wouldn't temperatures tend to follow an eleven year cycle? If it is irradiance you are talking about can you provide some evidence of such a correlation?
Who says we are all going to die in a burning inferno, exactly? I haven't heard that claim from anyone. That would be a bit of an outrageous strawman argument on your part, would it?
From your link:
I present this Link with an explanation from someone way more qualified than myself to explain it.
But, Kirkby adds, those particles are far too small to serve as seeds for clouds. “At the moment, it actually says nothing about a possible cosmic-ray effect on clouds and climate, but it’s a very important first step,” he says.
From your link:
I'll leave this link to the BBC article about the models needing to be revised here.
However, Dr Kirkby stressed that these particles are still far too small to seed clouds and so it is premature to conclude that cosmic rays have a significant influence on climate.
Except that the cold period actually started well before the Maunder Minimum occurred.
Like what was observed in the Maunder Minimum and Dalton Minimum's also I found some graphs on the net just tracking the number of sunspots compared to the temp data and they correlate pretty closely.
Like the following, Sunspots and temp graphs I'd be willing to bet that it goes like that for every single year.
Increase in sunspots in summer fine hot weather, but in winter it is a sign of cold weather.
That's sort of silly. Of course the Sun provides heat and light. The trouble is more CO2 means that more heat is held within the atmosphere. Now, if there was some evidence that the output of the Sun has changed a lot in the last 100 years you might have something. But there isn't.
You also have to explain away how without the sun terrestrial organisms such has humans, land animals, fish, etc. wouldn't even exist if the sun didn't heat and provide light to the earth for everything to thrive as species.
A "burning inferno" is quite a gross exaggeration. And your claim that anyone is claiming that is nothing but a strawman argument. A false argument.
Not so much, maybe an exaggeration,
Another strawman. Please provide an example of a climate scientist claiming the destruction of the Earth. CO2 levels haven't been 0.03% for quite some time but you should revisit that ".0003%". You should also try to understand exactly what the effect of that anthropogenicly added CO2 is.
I fail to see how an ecosystem so delicate that an increased contribution of a gas that only makes up .03% of the atmosphere can cause the destruction of earth when mans contribution to the .03 percent is like .0003%.
But we aren't worried about running out of oxygen, are we? And we aren't worried about the end of life, are we? You are very fond of creating strawman arguments (false arguments), aren't' you?
The other thing that doesn't make sense is that CO2 is plant food. More CO2 means bigger plants and subsequently more oxygen. We know life can survive with a CO2 ppm level into the thousands as indicated by the fossil records.
Except that the cold period actually started well before the Maunder Minimum occurred.
Summer of 2012 was the hottest on record for North America yet sunspot numbers were low.
That's sort of silly. Of course the Sun provides heat and light. The trouble is more CO2 means that more heat is held within the atmosphere. Now, if there was some evidence that the output of the Sun has changed a lot in the last 100 years you might have something. But there isn't.
A "burning inferno" is quite a gross exaggeration. And your claim that anyone is claiming that is nothing but a strawman argument. A false argument.
Another strawman. Please provide an example of a climate scientist claiming the destruction of the Earth. CO2 levels haven't been 0.03% for quite some time but you should revisit that ".0003%". You should also try to understand exactly what the effect of that anthropogenicly added CO2 is.
No, it is blogger Nigel Calder (a "science writer") who concludes that the graph shows that. Please provide evidence supporting his claim that nanometer sized aerosols can form condensation nuclei. CLOUDS did not do so.
There is graph that was omitted that pretty much comes to the conclusion that cosmic rays contribute to clouding effects.
Yes, I suppose your confirmation bias would make it hard to believe that temperatures in the US in the summer of 2012 were the highest every recorded.
I have a hard time believing that.
They did?
Especially when those same scientist predicted a very active Hurricane season and it's one of the lowest active hurricane seasons in a long time.
“NOAA’s outlook predicts a less active season compared to recent years,” said NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco, Ph.D.
Has the energy output of the Sun changed enough to account for the increase in temperatures?
How can you say the sun doesn't account for climate change when it clearly does?
How also can you account for the fact that in the prehistoric age CO2 was 1000+ ppm yet there weren't any coal fire plants or cars roaming around the earth then.
Global flooding? You mean like with Noah?
I guess James Hansen predicting global flooding and a rise of 6 degrees Celsius isn't a scientist claiming the destruction of earth?
Your source for that claim? The number is actually about 4%. But the problem is, most naturally produced CO2 is part of a cycle, it is released then is again sequestered. Most of the CO2 produced by burning fossil fuels is not. It is "old" CO2 which has been hidden away for a very long time. That which is not reabsorbed by the environment remains in the atmosphere, it doesn't go away, it continues to accumulate. The evidence that the rise in CO2 is due to human activity is that the ratio of Carbon13/Carbon12 is lower than they have been in 10,000 years. This can only be due to the burning of fossil fuels, which are low in Carbon 13 because of radioactive decay.
When it went from 387 ppm to 400ppm you have to admit that humans contributed 13% of that. Which isn't possible because humans only produce a fraction of a percent of total CO2 output.
And what happens when an ice cube melts in a glass, does the water level go up or down?
Disclosure Agent
I would encourage people to get on youtube and look for the suspicious 0bservers channel...... learn the science and look into it for yourself....
Oh. That 2013. Sorry, I got my years mixed up but the season isn't over and the number of named storms is about average. In any case, in reading through the reasons for the 2013 prediction, it really had nothing to do with global warming, as demonstrated by the 2012 prediction. All it really shows it that predicting hurricane activity from year to year is pretty difficult to do.
Here is the link for the NOAA 2013 very active hurricane season.
No. We don't.
We all know the man-made global warming people have been caught fudging the numbers.
It is when they make unsubstantiated claims which directly contradict the findings of the scientists who performed the experiment.
So calling someone out as a "science writer" in an attempt to undermine his credibility isn't a very good strategy to use.
He gives no explanation other than:
And here is a post by another person giving an alternate explanation for the the low C13 isotope count.
Well, now I’m going to provide what appears to be further evidence that there could be a substantial natural source of the long-term increase in CO2.
The scientists of the IPCC strongly disagree with you as do the vast majority of climate scientists.
All I'm saying is that there isn't enough data to conclude that the climate change we are seeing today is man-made.
No. Only certain coastal regions. But I'm glad you've backed off from that "burning inferno" claim.
I also stand by my statement on the alarmist creating a culture of fear stating in a round about way we are going to be underwater.
BUT, at the same time, it does no good to cling to denial.