Conspiracy theories surrounding human influenced climate change, what's up with that?


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CBDunkerson wrote:
Terrinam wrote:
How do you explain the IPCC itself later calling those models unrealistic?

I explain it by those cloud models having been unrealistic... which perforce requires that they existed.

For example, the climate models used in the first assessment report mostly estimated cloud cover based on relative humidity without taking other factors into account. That was "unrealistic"... but it WAS a model of cloud behavior.

As time has gone on, the cloud modeling has gotten more realistic... but it will always be 'unrealistic' to some degree. Otherwise, it wouldn't be a model. "All models are wrong, but some are useful."

Quote:
Your second source admits they can't model clouds reliably.

...for tropical cumulus clouds and over the Southern Ocean. They're much better for the rest of the planet, and if/when they tackle those (and a few other) remaining complexities they'll basically be global weather models... in addition to climate models.

Quote:
That means the same lack of reliable modeling they had a problem with in 2007 was still present in 2017.

Only if you also believe that today's lack of universal cell phone coverage is the same as what was present in 2007. The problem still exists... it is just much smaller now.

None of which changes the fact that cloud models HAVE existed for decades now. Nor the fact that the uncertainty range of cloud feedbacks has been narrowed down to a small positive factor. Nor the fact that climate models can now reliably model regional cloud coverage in most circumstances. In short... none of the things I said about cloud models have been contradicted / challenged EXCEPT for intermittent statements that cloud models don't exist at all. Which clearly isn't the case.

So... what exactly is in dispute?

My criteria for being able to model clouds includes one important word: Reliable.

You have to date shown nothing that meets that test fully. And it is pass/fail.

It is just that simple.

Admitting science has an area it is lacking in models is not a weakness. Does the idea science lacks truly reliable cloud modelling in any way detract from the proven record of global climate model reliability, or does it make that accuracy an even bigger accomplishment?

Liberty's Edge

Terrinam wrote:
My criteria for being able to model clouds includes one important word: Reliable.

So, when you wrote things like; "That outright states they cannot yet model clouds" what you meant was 'they cannot yet model clouds reliably'... whereas I have been talking about whether they can model clouds at all.

That said... 'reliably' is subjective. Are daily weather reports "reliable"? Weather models still get those wrong occasionally... and fail more often for the three, five, and ten day forecasts. Yet the very reason we now HAVE ten day forecasts is that the weather models get them right more often than not.

Climate models now get clouds right more often than not. So... are they 'reliable' or no?

Quote:
You have to date shown nothing that meets that test fully. And it is pass/fail.

Only if you have some very specific (unstated) level of accuracy which you have defined as the "reliable" point. To me 'reliability' is a spectrum... where climate models have gone from being completely unreliable for predicting cloud impacts forty years ago to being accurate for most locations / conditions now.

Quote:
Admitting science has an area it is lacking in models is not a weakness.

Which was never in question. Every comment I have made about cloud modelling has included some reference to outstanding limitations. I have just been saying that we CAN model clouds and the uncertainties have been whittled away to the point that they no longer pose a challenge to general estimates of overall warming and climate change.


CBDunkerson wrote:
Terrinam wrote:
My criteria for being able to model clouds includes one important word: Reliable.

So, when you wrote things like; "That outright states they cannot yet model clouds" what you meant was 'they cannot yet model clouds reliably'... whereas I have been talking about whether they can model clouds at all.

That said... 'reliably' is subjective. Are daily weather reports "reliable"? Weather models still get those wrong occasionally... and fail more often for the three, five, and ten day forecasts. Yet the very reason we now HAVE ten day forecasts is that the weather models get them right more often than not.

Climate models now get clouds right more often than not. So... are they 'reliable' or no?

Quote:
You have to date shown nothing that meets that test fully. And it is pass/fail.

Only if you have some very specific (unstated) level of accuracy which you have defined as the "reliable" point. To me 'reliability' is a spectrum... where climate models have gone from being completely unreliable for predicting cloud impacts forty years ago to being accurate for most locations / conditions now.

Quote:
Admitting science has an area it is lacking in models is not a weakness.
Which was never in question. Every comment I have made about cloud modelling has included some reference to outstanding limitations. I have just been saying that we CAN model clouds and the uncertainties have been whittled away to the point that they no longer pose a challenge to general estimates of overall warming and climate change.

I think this highlights a key difference in thinking between us.

"Right more often than not" in weather forecasting generally means people occasionally have a bad day. "Right more often than not" in global climate models means millions of extra people die due to faulty predictions. Global climate modelling cannot be held to the same level of quality as weather forecasting because of the sheer scale of potential consequences for a bad prediction. Nor can such models be held to the same scale of quality as most scientific models simply because lives are actually on the line.

So, I don't allow global climate models the same leeway I would any other scientific model. They have an all-or-nothing test with me. I don't want my descendants to die because of bad predictions.

I accept reality. There is never going to be a fault-free model. Mistakes will be made, and millions of people will die. This is unavoidable.

That does not mean that global climate modelling should have the same laxity of standards in other areas of science. Just due to the sheer scale of consequences, "reliably model clouds in most areas of Earth" cannot be accepted as "model clouds." Accepting it as such needlessly puts millions or even billions of lives at risk.

"Reliably" means "right more often than not everywhere" with me because of this. This means reliable modelling of clouds on every region of Earth. Given the risk involved, I don't think this is too much to ask.

I apologize for not being clear before now. I was trying to find how to properly word it.

Liberty's Edge

Terrinam wrote:
So, I don't allow global climate models the same leeway I would any other scientific model. They have an all-or-nothing test with me.

At which point you have bigger problems than clouds... because nothing in the climate models is 100% accurate. For example, they separate the atmosphere into artificial layers to simulate the different molecular content and other conditions at different altitudes... in reality these changes progress smoothly with altitude rather than in fixed steps. Over time the models have added more and more layers to get closer to this reality, but they remain models... not perfect simulations.

Quote:
I accept reality. There is never going to be a fault-free model. Mistakes will be made, and millions of people will die. This is unavoidable.

So... you accept that models will never be perfect. You accept that millions of people will die (indeed, by some estimates already have died) due to global warming regardless of what we do at this point... so what is 'different' about cloud modelling?

Quote:
"Reliably" means "right more often than not everywhere" with me because of this. This means reliable modelling of clouds on every region of Earth. Given the risk involved, I don't think this is too much to ask.

In that there remains insufficient data and knowledge to do that... it literally IS too much to ask. It can't be done... yet.

That said, the accuracy of local cloud modeling has gone from 'virtually nil' to 'correct most of the time' over the past ten years. Further, the specific areas of remaining uncertainty have been identified and multiple lines of study are looking in to ways to resolve them. There seems little reason to doubt that most of these issues will be addressed over the next decade and thus the uncertainty range around clouds reduced to the point that it disappears in the rounding.

However, even before that happens... I don't think 'millions of lives' can be put on the current uncertainties around clouds. Their effect on global warming has been constrained to 0.2 to 0.7 W/m^2 C within standard deviations... a small positive feedback. All claims that they will provide a huge negative feedback offsetting 50% or more of warming have been outright dis-proven. Ergo, the only impact they should have on global policy debates is a small increase in the urgency of dealing with global warming.

Yes, the cloud uncertainty at (some) local levels is greater, but we have more time to address local impacts. We have a few years to get CO2 emissions under control... and then decades to rebuild our infrastructure to protect against the changes which will be caused by the warming we didn't prevent. With the ongoing improvements I see no reason to doubt that climate models will be ready to meet that long term task... and they are already good enough to meet the more immediate question of how soon we need to stop emissions. Ten years ago there was a very small chance that a huge negative cloud feedback might mean we had more time. That has now been downgraded from highly unlikely to outright impossible.


CBDunkerson wrote:
At which point you have bigger problems than clouds... because nothing in the climate models is 100% accurate. For example, they separate the atmosphere into artificial layers to simulate the different molecular content and other conditions at different altitudes... in reality these changes progress smoothly with altitude rather than in fixed steps. Over time the models have added more and more layers to get closer to this reality, but they remain models... not perfect simulations.

And those problems that I have will quickly become the problem of climate scientists if they are lax about the idea of seeking perfection.

Let's be blunt: Do you think people are going to care about guaranteed inaccuracy when their loved ones are lying dead before them because of a faulty prediction? Or do you think they will want some kind of accounting or, worse, vengeance?

The inaccuracies in these models have consequences far beyond getting a simple prediction wrong. Some of those consequences will be very personal for the people behind the models, even if they are not impacted directly by the faulty predictions.

Quote:
So... you accept that models will never be perfect. You accept that millions of people will die (indeed, by some estimates already have died) due to global warming regardless of what we do at this point... so what is 'different' about cloud modelling?

What makes you think I hold cloud modelling any different than any other incomplete area of global climate modelling? Cloud modelling is just the portion we are discussing. That is why I mostly switched to discussing global climate models when discussing laxity of standards. It would not be fair to hold one portion any different than the others.

Quote:
In that there remains insufficient data and knowledge to do that... it literally IS too much to ask. It can't be done... yet.

I hold that the "yet" part is sufficient evidence that it is not too much to ask. Just that it means I have to wait for the results I am asking for.

Quote:
That said, the accuracy of local cloud modeling has gone from 'virtually nil' to 'correct most of the time' over the past ten years. Further, the specific areas of remaining uncertainty have been identified and multiple lines of study are looking in to ways to resolve them. There seems little reason to doubt that most of these issues will be addressed over the next decade and thus the uncertainty range around clouds reduced to the point that it disappears in the rounding.

I'm willing to wait that decade. Of course, that means taking necessary steps now to help alleviate the impact of humanity on the climate based on current predictions. I am not arguing we should not act based on what data we have; it would be decidedly suicidal.

Quote:
However, even before that happens... I don't think 'millions of lives' can be put on the current uncertainties around clouds. Their effect on global warming has been constrained to 0.2 to 0.7 W/m^2 C within standard deviations... a small positive feedback. All claims that they will provide a huge negative feedback offsetting 50% or more of warming have been outright dis-proven. Ergo, the only impact they should have on global policy debates is a small increase in the urgency of dealing with global warming.

Yet, it is a key part of an anti-climate science argument that has far-reaching impacts both on those debates and potentially on climate science itself. We know it ended well this time, but this is far from the first attempt and will be far from the last.

Rest on your laurels on this if you wish. You have plenty of warning of the potential consequences, and the deaths that will result.

Quote:
Yes, the cloud uncertainty at (some) local levels is greater, but we have more time to address local impacts. We have a few years to get CO2 emissions under control... and then decades to rebuild our infrastructure to protect against the changes which will be caused by the warming we didn't prevent. With the ongoing improvements I see no reason to doubt that climate models will be ready to meet that long term task... and they are already good enough to meet the more immediate question of how soon we need to stop emissions. Ten years ago there was a very small chance that a huge negative cloud feedback might mean we had more time. That has now been downgraded from highly unlikely to outright impossible.

We're not going to make it, entirely because people will use lack of complete reliable cloud estimates and other need-to-be-fixed-quickly weaknesses to slow down the process until it's too late. Just like certain recent uncertainties about important funding for NASA.

We need to secure our foundation before we build further. Those who oppose climate science are getting more bold in how they target the scientific organizations that provide necessary data for understanding the climate, and gaining more political power in certain key nations. It doesn't matter we're proven right if we end up cut off from the necessary data to finally force true action before we even get started adapting.

Did you think Climategate was a one-time deal?


I can't even follow what you're arguing against or what you think should or shouldn't be done.
Cloud models, like all climate models, are not perfect, but improving. They may be worse than most other aspects at this point, but again they're still being worked on.
We should continue to use them anyway, despite that, since overall modelling is more accurate with them than not using any cloud modelling.

You say we should act based on the data we have, but you also say we should "secure our foundation before we build further" and that thbe lack of perfect cloud estimates will be used against us.

So what's your recommendation? What should be done that isn't being done already? Who's resting on their laurels? Do you think climate scientists don't know the models aren't perfect or aren't bothering to improve them?

Liberty's Edge

Terrinam wrote:
Let's be blunt: Do you think people are going to care about guaranteed inaccuracy when their loved ones are lying dead before them because of a faulty prediction? Or do you think they will want some kind of accounting or, worse, vengeance?

I don't see how this hypothetical can even happen.

Climate models are (along with other evidence) the things which showed us, starting about 50 years ago, that global warming was going to kill people. Yet little to nothing was done for decades after that... and now people are indeed dying from effects of climate change.

Why would anyone blame climate models for those deaths? The models were right. People died, and will continue to die, because of failure to take action in response to the warnings.

Quote:
We're not going to make it, entirely because people will use lack of complete reliable cloud estimates and other need-to-be-fixed-quickly weaknesses to slow down the process until it's too late.

...weren't you the one saying that climate models are inaccurate because they couldn't model clouds (with an unspoken 'reliably' added on later)?

Yet the observed warming has been within the uncertainty range of even the relatively primitive models used for the first IPCC report. The models have been correct all along. So why would people be angry at climate scientists and/or ignore climate models as they continue to be correct and become more precise?

Wouldn't they rather turn that anger against those who have been lying to them for decades as the problem worsened? Indeed, isn't that already happening?


thejeff wrote:

I can't even follow what you're arguing against or what you think should or shouldn't be done.

Cloud models, like all climate models, are not perfect, but improving. They may be worse than most other aspects at this point, but again they're still being worked on.
We should continue to use them anyway, despite that, since overall modelling is more accurate with them than not using any cloud modelling.

You say we should act based on the data we have, but you also say we should "secure our foundation before we build further" and that thbe lack of perfect cloud estimates will be used against us.

So what's your recommendation? What should be done that isn't being done already? Who's resting on their laurels? Do you think climate scientists don't know the models aren't perfect or aren't bothering to improve them?

This entire discussion is about whether or not climate models are capable of modelling clouds. I hold that they're not, due to lack of coverage for one region of Earth. CB holds that they are, due to covering the majority.

This is purely about each of us trying to convince the other on our stance. Something that will never be done, but it helps distract from the other endless conversation.

The bit towards the end, about it being used against science, is mostly to show how an unfortunate unpreventable reality is a very big negative of CB's stance. Whether or not it should have a large impact is a very dangerous position to work from, since I can show it is having that level of impact.

So, this isn't about the scientists being complacent. They're not, as the two IPCC assessments and the document on the history of climate change models show.


CBDunkerson wrote:
I don't see how this hypothetical can even happen.

Three words: Hot Coffee Lawsuit.

Another example: Warnings on chainsaws about not stopping the running blades with genitals.

Another example: A man sued God.

Quote:

Climate models are (along with other evidence) the things which showed us, starting about 50 years ago, that global warming was going to kill people. Yet little to nothing was done for decades after that... and now people are indeed dying from effects of climate change.

Why would anyone blame climate models for those deaths? The models were right. People died, and will continue to die, because of failure to take action in response to the warnings.

Because people are unreasonable, illogical, and fully willing to blame others for their own failures?

Take a good, long look at the ongoing argument in America about immigration. Or about vaccines. Or the conspiracy theories about global warming. People are perfectly willing to be unreasonable to the extreme. It's covered in just about every chapter of human history.

Quote:
...weren't you the one saying that climate models are inaccurate because they couldn't model clouds (with an unspoken 'reliably' added on later)?

Nope. That was Quark. This was my comment on it:

"Climate science doesn't even have a basic idea of how Earth's climate system works. We can't model the most basic mechanism of it. But that doesn't mean that climate science is wrong in its conclusions; you don't need the equations for the relationship behind mass, gravity, momentum, and kinetic force to understand a big rock falling onto your head will kill you. And climate disaster is a very big rock."

I bolded the important part. I was arguing that what climate science is saying is so obvious that we don't need the complex equations and models to see the disaster coming. I was wrong about them not having the basic idea down, but my comment about it being that obvious still stands.

Quote:

Yet the observed warming has been within the uncertainty range of even the relatively primitive models used for the first IPCC report. The models have been correct all along. So why would people be angry at climate scientists and/or ignore climate models as they continue to be correct and become more precise?

Wouldn't they rather turn that anger against those who have been lying to them for decades as the problem worsened? Indeed, isn't that already happening?

The same reason they blame vaccines for autism. They can be unreasonable sods who prefer their own beliefs over reality, even when those beliefs are harmful, self-destructive, or even suicidal.

Pick up a history book and read it and see how often people have been that kind of unreasonable. We've fought wars because of it. Spanish-American War, for example. World War 2 was caused by that kind of unreasonableness.

Or go back to 2016 and take a good look at a certain event that happened in America in November. People are perfectly willing to follow those they outright know are liars if they prefer the lie over harsh reality.


Terrinam wrote:
thejeff wrote:

I can't even follow what you're arguing against or what you think should or shouldn't be done.

Cloud models, like all climate models, are not perfect, but improving. They may be worse than most other aspects at this point, but again they're still being worked on.
We should continue to use them anyway, despite that, since overall modelling is more accurate with them than not using any cloud modelling.

You say we should act based on the data we have, but you also say we should "secure our foundation before we build further" and that thbe lack of perfect cloud estimates will be used against us.

So what's your recommendation? What should be done that isn't being done already? Who's resting on their laurels? Do you think climate scientists don't know the models aren't perfect or aren't bothering to improve them?

This entire discussion is about whether or not climate models are capable of modelling clouds. I hold that they're not, due to lack of coverage for one region of Earth. CB holds that they are, due to covering the majority.

This is purely about each of us trying to convince the other on our stance. Something that will never be done, but it helps distract from the other endless conversation.

The bit towards the end, about it being used against science, is mostly to show how an unfortunate unpreventable reality is a very big negative of CB's stance. Whether or not it should have a large impact is a very dangerous position to work from, since I can show it is having that level of impact.

So, this isn't about the scientists being complacent. They're not, as the two IPCC assessments and the document on the history of climate change models show.

So basically you're quibbling over exactly how good they have to be to count?

And somehow that brings in "millions will die" - apparently due to using the best cloud models we have, even if they're not yet good enough for you?


thejeff wrote:
Terrinam wrote:
thejeff wrote:

I can't even follow what you're arguing against or what you think should or shouldn't be done.

Cloud models, like all climate models, are not perfect, but improving. They may be worse than most other aspects at this point, but again they're still being worked on.
We should continue to use them anyway, despite that, since overall modelling is more accurate with them than not using any cloud modelling.

You say we should act based on the data we have, but you also say we should "secure our foundation before we build further" and that thbe lack of perfect cloud estimates will be used against us.

So what's your recommendation? What should be done that isn't being done already? Who's resting on their laurels? Do you think climate scientists don't know the models aren't perfect or aren't bothering to improve them?

This entire discussion is about whether or not climate models are capable of modelling clouds. I hold that they're not, due to lack of coverage for one region of Earth. CB holds that they are, due to covering the majority.

This is purely about each of us trying to convince the other on our stance. Something that will never be done, but it helps distract from the other endless conversation.

The bit towards the end, about it being used against science, is mostly to show how an unfortunate unpreventable reality is a very big negative of CB's stance. Whether or not it should have a large impact is a very dangerous position to work from, since I can show it is having that level of impact.

So, this isn't about the scientists being complacent. They're not, as the two IPCC assessments and the document on the history of climate change models show.

So basically you're quibbling over exactly how good they have to be to count?

And somehow that brings in "millions will die" - apparently due to using the best cloud models we have, even if they're not yet good enough for you?

Basically, yes.

And, yeah. When you get into global-scale effects, "millions will die" is pretty much the norm. We have over seven billion people.

Even if a major mistake kills only 0.1% of the population, that is still nearly 8 million people dead.

Shadow Lodge Contributor, RPG Superstar 2010 Top 8

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Terrinam wrote:
Three words: Hot Coffee Lawsuit..

Not to get off on a tangent, but that’s a bad example—that case is unfairly maligned as an example of a frivolous lawsuit.

That lady was sitting in a parked car when she spilled her coffee. She suffered third degree burns and went into shock—nearly dying—because McDonalds served their coffee at a temp that even they admitted was too hot to drink.

She also tried several times to settle out of court, initially only asking McDonalds to help with her medical bills, and even agreed to mediation, but McD basically told her to go screw, repeatedly.


Benchak the Nightstalker wrote:
Terrinam wrote:
Three words: Hot Coffee Lawsuit..

Not to get off on a tangent, but that’s a bad example—that case is unfairly maligned as an example of a frivolous lawsuit.

That lady was sitting in a parked car when she spilled her coffee. She suffered third degree burns and went into shock—nearly dying—because McDonalds served their coffee at a temp that even they admitted was too hot to drink.

She also tried several times to settle out of court, initially only asking McDonalds to help with her medical bills, and even agreed to mediation, but McD basically told her to go screw, repeatedly.

It wasn't supposed to be an example of a frivolous lawsuit. I intended it as an example of a lawsuit that looked frivolous, but turned out legitimate when you considered details not readily apparent.

The chainsaw example was the only one where human stupidity was involved. The third one was an example of a lawsuit purely intended to make a point; the guy sued God to demonstrate a system weakness towards allowing frivolous lawsuits.

Liberty's Edge

The ability of people to make irrational decisions won't be changed when the models and other evidence go from overwhelming to some arbitrarily defined 'even more overwhelming' level.

Rather, we will eventually reach a point where the amount of money to be made trashing fossil fuels exceeds the amount of money to be made continuing to prop them up. At that point, armies of paid propagandists will switch sides and the 'opinions' of those who believe what they are told to believe will shift virtually over-night... think 1984 'we have always been at war with Eastasia'.

That tipping point is now fast approaching. Indeed, for much of the world it has already passed. Only a few countries with particularly large fossil fuel reserves still have large disinformation campaigns going on, and even there they are holding on by a thread as renewable power costs continue to plummet.


The same thing was said about evolution, in particular about the religious objections. The biggest organized source of those objections, the Catholic Church, ceded the argument in 1950 and admitted evolution is right in 1996.

We're still dealing with ongoing, entrenched opposition to it. The same opposition that led the recent push against vaccines and has been leading the push against climate science.

The same thing was said about opposition to the Earth being round. They lost all scientific legitimacy over two thousand years ago. They haven't even had propaganda support from outside their own shouting chambers in at least five hundred years. We're still dealing with them.

No, they will not go away just because the propaganda shifts. They'll do what they always do, form their own underground propaganda, and continue the fight. Just like they did with evolution, vaccines, and the world being flat.

We're at the beginning of the fight, not the end; projecting the end of the battle is how a lot of people got a very surprising blow dealt to their power and the continued legitimacy of their voices back in November of 2016. The people who oppose climate science want you to make the mistake you are currently making. It's worked out for them before.

We're not talking about eliminating voices or irrational decisions. We're talking about eliminating any legitimacy they have in the public sphere. Reducing them to the same level of open mockery as the Flat Earthers have. Because if you are going to wait for them to be silence by propaganda, you'll likely still be waiting for it to happen two thousand years from now.

Don't let knowledge become arrogance. That's how science loses this fight.

Legitimacy in the public sphere does directly affect politics, such as deciding whether or not NASA has a government over it that wants to defund its climate research, and is often easily divorced from what is factually correct. Especially when it comes to the level of sacrifice involved, which very little of the world seems to actively believe. Actions speak much louder than words, and very few people act in a way that reflects a want to make the sacrifices necessary. Simply being right isn't getting the job done. So in order to take the actions necessary to avert total climate disaster, we need to be overwhelmingly right.


Evolution is directly tied to some religious beliefs in ways that climate change is not. Climate change denial is astro-turf - it's directly the result of big money protecting fossil fuel profits. When that changes, as it is starting to because the financial advantage is starting to shift, we'll see drastic changes in that legitimacy.

There will always be hold-outs of course, but Flat Earthers don't have any political sway. They exist, but they're irrelevant.

As for needing to be overwhelmingly right, they continue to improve the science. They also continue to make predictions and discuss current results and theories while they do so. Because that's how science works.
I still can't tell what you want done that isn't being done - other than "I want perfect models now."


You've obviously never dealt with the "climate disasters are the act/wrath of God" crowd. The idea that humanity could have the technology to, essentially, play god with weather even if unintentional and as a result of long-term actions is very much treading on ground essential to their religious beliefs.

I'm not arguing there won't be holdouts. I'm arguing we can make them irrelevant. I'm not certain of your point?

I want us to take action to prevent climate disaster. Real action. Not the carbon credit "I feel pretty!" bull$%^^ some think will somehow make a difference. Actually limiting CO2 outputs to levels necessary, adopting new technologies, beginning to adapt infrastructure so there might be something left of human civilization come 2100, and so on. But to do that, we need the public convinced it's necessary. And so far, the models, predictions, theories, sheer amount of data, and such are not doing the job. People want climate disaster mitigated, but for the most part they don't want to be inconvenienced by it.

Liberty's Edge

New US electricity production Jan & Feb 2018;

40 MW Natural Gas
565 MW Solar
1,568 MW Wind
0 MW Everything else

Total capacity;
43.47% Natural Gas
23.21% Coal
3.64% Oil
29.68% zero carbon (i.e. Nuclear, Hydro, Wind, Solar, etc)

So, 'clean' electricity (from a global warming perspective) has passed Coal and Oil (note, oil for transportation is not included here) combined. It is growing faster than natural gas... while coal and oil electricity production are both declining.


Last things first.

”CB” wrote:

<snip> a link and some data </snip>

So, 'clean' electricity (from a global warming perspective) has passed Coal and Oil (note, oil for transportation is not included here) combined. It is growing faster than natural gas... while coal and oil electricity production are both declining.

Shall we look at the relevant data?

Total Available Installed Generating Capacity

Natural Gas 512.55 43.34%
Coal 273.29 23.11%
Nuclear 108.18 9.15%
Water 100.89 8.53%
Wind 90.73 7.67%
Oil 42.10 3.56%
Solar 32.32 2.73%
Biomass 16.55 1.40%
Geothermal Steam 3.85 0.33%
Waste Heat 1.26 0.11%
Other* 0.79 0.07%
>>>Total 1,182.51 100.00%

It’s also worth noting that coal and oil electricity production is declining primarily due to natural gas – the impact of renewables is barely measurable.

* “Other” includes purchased steam, tires, and miscellaneous technology such as batteries, fuel cells, energy storage, and fly wheel


”Terrinam” wrote:
You're just derailing from my point.

Really? I mean, look how broad/wide-ranging the discussion has been on this thread and the most “damning” indictment against my argument is that it is a derail?

Wut?

”Terrinam” wrote:
”Quark Blast” wrote:

Lastly:

Recycling plastics instead of letting them accumulate as micro-detritus in the global ocean-cum-"landfill", thus contributing mightily to a marine life die-off of Big 5 extinction level, is not such a lame effort as Terrinam would have us believe.

Right. Because dumping large quantities of deadly chemicals into the ocean and heat into the air is really better than plastics.

We're still poisoning the ocean either way. We're just picking which poison we prefer to look at.

Saving the ocean is irrelevant to recycling plastic. Having those resources around for the future so someone else can come up with a way to restore the ocean is the goal at this point.

No, we’re still poisoning the ocean both ways. Therefore plastics recycling is very much relevant.

Each source of pollution stresses the oceanic ecosphere in ways that are multiplicative not additive.

@ Terrinam said a bunch of stuff I’ve already said about the abject nonsense CB has been proffering on climate modeling and clouds.

Thanks T!, saves me the hassle.

Also, many of the other ocean pollution sources have a shorter residence time than plastics. Reducing plastics now has at least a 500-year continuous ROI.

”Terrinam” wrote:
I want us to take action to prevent climate disaster. Real action. Not the carbon credit "I feel pretty!" bull$%^^ some think will somehow make a difference.
This is not so very different from my phrasing regarding this very salient point:
”Quark” wrote:
Imagine if global humanity, all of us individually together, actually tried to reduce CO2 emissions (instead of the mutual back-patting parade we call the Paris Agreement)?


The military paid for a study on sea level rise. The results were scary.
Climate change, even at the current CO2 equivalent load, is and will continue to wreck human-impaired ecosystems the world over.

So, for instance, the trend of the problem with Lake Tai has been known about for decades:
In China, a Lake’s Champion Imperils Himself
Yet today it is in the worst shape on record.

We see much the same issues deteriorating Lake Tanganyika and the other Rift Valley lakes:
Pollution, low water levels threaten Lake Tanganyika

And lake Chad:
Pollution in the north shrank Lake Chad

And Lake Urmia:
Lake Urmia: how Iran’s most famous lake is disappearing

The Aral Sea:
Aral Sea's Eastern Basin Is Dry for First Time in 600 Years

And the near-failed-state of Venezuela is not to be outdone:
Venezuela's Guri dam hasn't recovered from drought; electricity rationing may return

And though the Great Salt Lake is about half what it once was due to diversion of water for irrigation, the Great Lakes will be overrun by invasive species to make up for not drying up and relatively good water quality control:
Mapping the Spread - AIS and Lost in the Ruffe

And don’t even get me started on the state of the world’s major rivers.

AGW makes all of these problems worse, not better. We are certainly at the beginning of the 6th Great Extinction on Earth. It cannot be prevented at this point, only mitigated.

The Paris Agreement is not a significant part of that mitigation.


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CBDunkerson wrote:

New US electricity production Jan & Feb 2018;

40 MW Natural Gas
565 MW Solar
1,568 MW Wind
0 MW Everything else

Total capacity;
43.47% Natural Gas
23.21% Coal
3.64% Oil
29.68% zero carbon (i.e. Nuclear, Hydro, Wind, Solar, etc)

So, 'clean' electricity (from a global warming perspective) has passed Coal and Oil (note, oil for transportation is not included here) combined. It is growing faster than natural gas... while coal and oil electricity production are both declining.

Nuclear is not zero carbon. Ignoring the sheer amount of steel and other fossil fuel products required just to build a nuclear power plant, have you ever examined how much oil is spent just mining and refining fissile materials? And the other, much worse, environmental effects of nuclear waste?

Suggesting nuclear is somehow a clean energy in any capacity is, to be blunt, dancing right into insanity. It's one of the dirtiest we have, on every level, and it's potentially a far worse ecological disaster than the carbon-heavy power sources. Ignoring even meltdowns, just the nuclear waste is an ongoing problem even with those low levels of implementation.

Unfortunately, it may be a necessary evil due to population levels.


Quark Blast wrote:

Really? I mean, look how broad/wide-ranging the discussion has been on this thread and the most “damning” indictment against my argument is that it is a derail?

Wut?

Derails are distraction tactics intended to lead someone down a path where what they can say is undermined.

”Terrinam” wrote:

No, we’re still poisoning the ocean both ways. Therefore plastics recycling is very much relevant.

Each source of pollution stresses the oceanic ecosphere in ways that are multiplicative not additive.

This is an oversimplification of the climate mechanisms. The truth is, some stresses are multiplicative, some are additive.

Plastic in the ocean is additive; it doesn't increase heat retaining or reflection much, and barely kills off certain necessary living organisms, and thus has a much lessened long-term effect on the ocean. For the most part, the reason why it's such of a big deal is it's unsightly. Most life in the ocean will survive plastic just fine, and what won't isn't going to survive humanity anyway due to other reasons.

Cities are multiplicative, due to numerous reasons; the pollution generated, the heat they reflect back into the atmosphere, the resulting climate changes from what is effectively an artificial mountain, the power they require and resulting pollution from that... It goes on and on.

Farming is multiplicative as well. Just that one we can't do without.

Unfortunately, a lot of the carbon dioxide output is necessary. And if my estimate is right, the amount necessary just to keep us from environment-destroying wars is higher than the Paris Agreement and has been since before that agreement was even drafted.

Quote:
Also, many of the other ocean pollution sources have a shorter residence time than plastics. Reducing plastics now has at least a 500-year continuous ROI.

Shorter residence times =/= shorter impact durations or impact strength. Plastics, for the most part, have a negligible impact duration and very little impact strength compared to many other pollutions. And with killing off the ocean, impact duration and impact strength is the key.


To explain where I'm coming from on the minimum necessary CO2 levels, I'm adding this.

These are the essential needs to provide to citizens for national stability in most types of society:

Food
Water
Shelter
Employment
Transportation
Medical Care
Education
Entertainment

Skimp on any of those and you have problems. In particular, skimping on entertainment is not wise; humans have gone to war and had civil wars out of boredom. Skimping on food or water is suicidal.

Now, we come to the ugly part: On the global scale, none of those needs are not being met under the current resource distribution and most have insufficient resources devoted to them. In other words, we're not spending enough on most of them and are wasting the ones we are.

Unfortunately, something like the Paris Agreement requires global political and societal stability in order to be anything close to effective. Which means that in order for an agreement like that to have any possibility of being realistic, we need to be spending far more resources than we currently are for our population level.

If we don't have that stability, instead of global pollution reduction we get environment-destroying wars and civil wars and end up in far worse shape than we would have been if we hadn't even attempted such an agreement.

That is why the Paris Agreement is unrealistic. It may have the science behind it as far as chemistry, but it's ignoring the human element far too much. And the human element happens to be the one most important, since it's the one that caused the current problem to begin with.


Though that is mostly a distribution problem, correct? It's not that we're using too little energy to meet those needs, it's that the benefits are being taken by a small fraction of the populace, leaving too little for the rest.
Spending more resources is likely not the solution. Trends suggest the vast majority of those resources would benefit the top, leaving at best a small trickle down to actually meet those needs.

I'm also not at all sure the Paris Agreement leaves us worse off. Needs are already not being met and wars are already happening. Climate wars are already happening. The idea that we should just ramp up carbon production until everyone is happy and content and only even consider the environment after that isn't tenable either.

Liberty's Edge

Quark Blast wrote:
Shall we look at the relevant data?

You realize the values you cited are virtually identical to the ones you were casting as 'non relevant', right? They're all within less than 0.5% of the values I cited.

Basically, you just got the same data from a different month.

Quote:
It’s also worth noting that coal and oil electricity production is declining primarily due to natural gas

True over the past ~15 years. False over the past ~3.

Quote:
the impact of renewables is barely measurable.

Nonsense. Solar and Wind accounted for 94.7% of net new US electricity generation in 2017.

Yes, a significant amount of new natural gas electrical production is still coming on line each year... but that is now being offset by roughly equal amounts of old natural gas electrical production being retired.

This is exactly what natural gas did to coal ~2003... net new coal production went to zero and stayed there for about five years before going sharply negative as construction of new coal plants stopped. Wind and solar have now similarly reduced natural gas to net zero new production. In 15 years natural gas will be where coal is now (~23%) and coal will be where oil is (~3%)... if they are lucky. Current trends suggest that the rise of solar and wind will be faster than natural gas and many existing fossil fuel plants will have to be shut down before end of life as they will cost more to operate than they can earn.

Liberty's Edge

Terrinam wrote:
Nuclear is not zero carbon.

Ok, I should have said zero operational carbon. All construction emits some carbon.

Quote:
Ignoring the sheer amount of steel and other fossil fuel products required just to build a nuclear power plant, have you ever examined how much oil is spent just mining and refining fissile materials?

Solar and wind power require steel too. As more clean energy comes online mining, refining, and various other processes will in turn also become cleaner.

Quote:
And the other, much worse, environmental effects of nuclear waste?

Irrelevant to carbon emissions, but also why I said "So 'clean' electricity (from a global warming perspective)...". Precisely because nuclear is not 'clean' from other perspectives.

Quote:
Suggesting nuclear is somehow a clean energy in any capacity is, to be blunt, dancing right into insanity.

Reality is not insanity. Nuclear is 'clean' energy in respect to global warming. The atmospheric carbon generated from construction is comparable to that for any other type of power plant (i.e. wind, solar, coal, natural gas)... and those construction emissions are insignificant compared to operational emissions of fossil fuel plants.

Quote:
That is why the Paris Agreement is unrealistic. It may have the science behind it as far as chemistry, but it's ignoring the human element far too much.

I disagree.

It is the science which suggests the Paris Agreement is unrealistic... and only human nature which makes it possible.

That is, the numbers suggest that we would need to reduce carbon emissions much more rapidly than we have to date, making it unlikely to happen from a scientific standpoint.

However, solar and wind power are in a 'virtuous cycle' where ever greater deployments are leading to ever greater cost reductions... which will spur human greed to build these new power sources more and more rapidly to cash in. Thus allowing for the possibility of future decarbonization at rates which would seem improbable based on analysis of past performance.


CBDunkerson wrote:
Ok, I should have said zero operational carbon. All construction emits some carbon.

I would disagree with that too based on how it is right now. Keep in mind uranium has to be mined, refined, and enriched. This doesn't come without a significant expense of energy.

But, that wasn't entirely my contention.

And, you addressed that issue with this:

Quote:
Solar and wind power require steel too. As more clean energy comes online mining, refining, and various other processes will in turn also become cleaner.

So, I agree with you that it will eventually become carbon free as far as is feasible.

Quote:
Irrelevant to carbon emissions, but also why I said "So 'clean' electricity (from a global warming perspective)...". Precisely because nuclear is not 'clean' from other perspectives.

I would disagree that it is clean from a global warming perspective. Much of the environmental impact of nuclear waste can include long-term damage that can impact climate. Even ignoring melt downs and construction costs and with uranium going carbon neutral, we're still dealing with a lot of highly-dangerous waste that can easily render an area incapable of supporting life, and which can emit heat for quite some time due to ongoing nuclear decay.

Quote:
Reality is not insanity. Nuclear is 'clean' energy in respect to global warming. The atmospheric carbon generated from construction is comparable to that for any other type of power plant (i.e. wind, solar, coal, natural gas)... and those construction emissions are insignificant compared to operational emissions of fossil fuel plants.

If it were reality, I would agree with you. But you forget that nuclear reactions, even just nuclear decay, give off heat. A lot of it, given the fact it is a significant reason why Earth is warm enough to support life. (There's at least some effort to determine if Earth's radioactive heat is fission or fusion.)

Yes, Earth's climate systems are at least partially nuclear powered. Shocked me when I learned of it.

Nuclear energy is demonstrably not clean as far as global warming is concerned given that it is such of a vital part of Earth being warm enough to support life. As such, I would really rather we be concerned with this now and begin mitigation early rather than when we're trying to figure out why carbon dioxide elimination didn't do anything to stop or even mitigate global warming in two hundred years.

Quote:

I disagree.

It is the science which suggests the Paris Agreement is unrealistic... and only human nature which makes it possible.

That is, the numbers suggest that we would need to reduce carbon emissions much more rapidly than we have to date, making it unlikely to happen from a scientific standpoint.

However, solar and wind power are in a 'virtuous cycle' where ever greater deployments are leading to ever greater cost reductions... which will spur human greed to build these new power sources more and more rapidly to cash in. Thus allowing for the possibility of future decarbonization at rates which would seem improbable based on analysis of past performance.

Let's not forget human nature includes such things as going to war over a bucket, going to war over a chair, nearly going to war over a pig, fighting a war that impacted the political make-up of at least part of the world because a couple of newspapers decided to see if they could start a war, and sometimes going to war because we're bored. I wouldn't be surprised if boredom didn't explain most of my examples.

That virtuous cycle you speak of is only possible if solar and wind are implemented as part of the infrastructure (which is amazingly difficult in many parts of the world) and will last through change-overs in government, political ideology, and even violent rebellions.

Tell me, how likely are solar and wind to provide a positive contribution if armed rebellions firebomb them as part of overthrowing governments or violent protest?

That's why political and social stability are key. Both are insufficient on Earth right now, and as time passes in increasingly short supply.


Terrinam wrote:
CBDunkerson wrote:
Irrelevant to carbon emissions, but also why I said "So 'clean' electricity (from a global warming perspective)...". Precisely because nuclear is not 'clean' from other perspectives.

I would disagree that it is clean from a global warming perspective. Much of the environmental impact of nuclear waste can include long-term damage that can impact climate. Even ignoring melt downs and construction costs and with uranium going carbon neutral, we're still dealing with a lot of highly-dangerous waste that can easily render an area incapable of supporting life, and which can emit heat for quite some time due to ongoing nuclear decay.

Quote:
Reality is not insanity. Nuclear is 'clean' energy in respect to global warming. The atmospheric carbon generated from construction is comparable to that for any other type of power plant (i.e. wind, solar, coal, natural gas)... and those construction emissions are insignificant compared to operational emissions of fossil fuel plants.

If it were reality, I would agree with you. But you forget that nuclear reactions, even just nuclear decay, give off heat. A lot of it, given the fact it is a significant reason why Earth is warm enough to support life. (There's at least some effort to determine if Earth's radioactive heat is fission or fusion.)

Yes, Earth's climate systems are at least partially nuclear powered. Shocked me when I learned of it.

Nuclear energy is demonstrably not clean as far as global warming is concerned given that it is such of a vital part of Earth being warm enough to support life. As such, I would really rather we be concerned with this now and begin mitigation early rather than when we're trying to figure out why carbon dioxide elimination didn't do anything to stop or even mitigate global warming in two hundred years.

Sure, it generates heat - and in fact is usually used to generate power by boiling water. As do some forms of solar power, for that matter. (Or all of the uses of any form of energy, if you want to be technical, in addition to that actually used for heat. Heat is a waste product of pretty much everything.)

But they don't contribute to the actual long term climate change problem we're facing. They don't add heat trapping carbon to the atmosphere. If it was just the heat directly generated by burning fossil fuels we had to deal with, there wouldn't be a problem. It's the feedback loop that atmospheric carbon creates that is.

That you don't seem to understand this makes it hard to take anything you're claiming seriously.

Terrinam wrote:

That virtuous cycle you speak of is only possible if solar and wind are implemented as part of the infrastructure (which is amazingly difficult in many parts of the world) and will last through change-overs in government, political ideology, and even violent rebellions.

Tell me, how likely are solar and wind to provide a positive contribution if armed rebellions firebomb them as part of overthrowing governments or violent protest?

Are they harder to implement as infrastructure than coal plants or oil fired plants? (Other than politically, in backward areas like the US.)

Are they more likely to be firebombed in an armed rebellion than other power plants?


Oil power plants and solar panels do not continue to generate heat for hundreds of years after power generation has stopped. Nuclear waste does. As such, as far as our predictive modelling for climate change, each pound of nuclear waste adds one permanent pound of additional heat source. In effect, it adds to the amount of heat being trapped by being a source of heat that does not go away.

And fighting climate change is not just about carbon dioxide. If it was that simple, the solutions would be easier to argue for. We also have to prevent or help mitigate other sources of climate change, such as the weather impacts of the heat island effect in cities or the climate degradation, including loss of at least one glacier, caused by deforestation. If we ignore those other sources, we fail and waste resources.

Also, something you are failing to grasp with your question in your exclusion of political inconvenience is that the human factor is what caused this problem and politics are part of the human factor. Ignoring them for the equation produces an inaccurate result.

And, yes, solar panels are more likely to be firebombed. They are more likely to be on buildings targeted by violent protest.

Liberty's Edge

Terrinam, there are numerous problems with the arguments you are putting forth (e.g. 'it is more likely that hundreds of buildings with solar panels will be bombed than one fossil fuel plant generating the same amount of electricity' ??)... but ultimately the most relevant fact remains how relatively insignificant the factors you cite are.

Nuclear power contributes to global warming because of the heat it generates? You might as well argue that people shouldn't exercise because their extra body heat will melt the ice caps. All 'extra heat' is not equally relevant... we must look at relative amounts, and when we do we find that greenhouse warming really is the only game in town.

Greenhouse gases are currently warming the planet at a rate of approximately 2.5x10^14 joules per second. That is the equivalent of setting off four Hiroshima type nuclear bombs... every second of every day. Nothing else comes close.

Waste heat generated by all of human industry (not just electricity production let alone just nuclear power) equals a little less than 1% as much heat as greenhouse warming. If waste heat growth were to continue at the rate it did over the 20th century (which seems unlikely given slowing population growth and dwindling fuel supplies) this could become a significant global warming factor in a couple hundred years. Right now... not so much.


Terrinam wrote:

Oil power plants and solar panels do not continue to generate heat for hundreds of years after power generation has stopped. Nuclear waste does. As such, as far as our predictive modelling for climate change, each pound of nuclear waste adds one permanent pound of additional heat source. In effect, it adds to the amount of heat being trapped by being a source of heat that does not go away.

The largest nuclear plant in the US can produce 3,900 MW, or... (and this is actually 3 separate reactors)

3,900,000,000W

From the Sun, the Earth receives (after counting for albedo):

174,000,000,000,000,000W

The largest reactor in the world would be approximately 0.00002% of the Earth's energy budget.

It's not nothing, but it is pretty damn close. Even if you double it (assuming that the controlled max is less than uncontrolled max), we're still not talking about a big increase. Taking Earth's average temperature of 58 degrees F and increasing it by lets be generous and say 0.0002% (or 50 times more than the doubled value of the reactor, or 100 times the reactors value) and you still get 58 degrees. Specifically, you get 58.0116, a 0.0116 degree increase. And that's with 50 nuclear plants with 3 reactors each melting down into uncontrolled release.

Also, the Earth itself produces a lot of heat. About:

47,000,000,000,000W

Several orders of magnitude more than a nuclear power plant (roughly 1,500 nuclear plants worth of heat).


CBDunkerson wrote:
Terrinam, there are numerous problems with the arguments you are putting forth (e.g. 'it is more likely that hundreds of buildings with solar panels will be bombed than one fossil fuel plant generating the same amount of electricity' ??)... but ultimately the most relevant fact remains how relatively insignificant the factors you cite are.

Part of it is a mistake in scale on the end of those replying to me. Specifically, sometimes assuming the challenge presented carries an inherent equivalency of scale only for the answer to suggest that implementation may not.

I was asked if solar panels are at higher risk of firebombing. I was not asked if there is a greater likelihood of an equivalent amount of solar energy output in structures being firebombed than there is for oil power or coal power. I answered the question asked, not the question intended.

There is a method to my madness. Think about it a bit.

Quote:
Nuclear power contributes to global warming because of the heat it generates? You might as well argue that people shouldn't exercise because their extra body heat will melt the ice caps. All 'extra heat' is not equally relevant... we must look at relative amounts, and when we do we find that greenhouse warming really is the only game in town.

To be honest, deforestation seems to be a greater threat to larger amounts of ice than planetary temperature. The Arctic ice cap melts regularly (we have records of it melting completely back as far as 1940) and the Antarctic has stabilized.

And, realistically, all extra heat is equally relevant at the base scale. One pound of extra heat from each source is still one pound of extra heat affecting the planet. It is only by comparing the amounts that they appear not to be a problem worth worrying about. Yet, deforestation also has a negligible effect upon planetary temperature, yet its indirect effects are still extremely dangerous and still altering climate on a global scale.

Quote:
Greenhouse gases are currently warming the planet at a rate of approximately 2.5x10^14 joules per second. That is the equivalent of setting off four Hiroshima type nuclear bombs... every second of every day. Nothing else comes close.

I can think of a few things that would easily exceed that, but I assume you don't want to head down that rabbit hole. I know I don't. Let's just say I agree to save on the headache pills for everyone?

Quote:
Waste heat generated by all of human industry (not just electricity production let alone just nuclear power) equals a little less than 1% as much heat as greenhouse warming. If waste heat growth were to continue at the rate it did over the 20th century (which seems unlikely given slowing population growth and dwindling fuel supplies) this could become a significant global warming factor in a couple hundred years. Right now... not so much.

And the really bad effects of climate change won't hit for a couple hundred years. I fail to see how this proves a point that is not detrimental to you elsewhere in this thread.

Part of the point in focusing so much on climate change now is to not repeat the same mistakes that got us in this situation to begin with. That means, sometimes, focusing on things that are not a problem now, but will be very far down the road.


Irontruth wrote:
Terrinam wrote:

Oil power plants and solar panels do not continue to generate heat for hundreds of years after power generation has stopped. Nuclear waste does. As such, as far as our predictive modelling for climate change, each pound of nuclear waste adds one permanent pound of additional heat source. In effect, it adds to the amount of heat being trapped by being a source of heat that does not go away.

The largest nuclear plant in the US can produce 3,900 MW, or... (and this is actually 3 separate reactors)

3,900,000,000W

From the Sun, the Earth receives (after counting for albedo):

174,000,000,000,000,000W

The largest reactor in the world would be approximately 0.00002% of the Earth's energy budget.

It's not nothing, but it is pretty damn close. Even if you double it (assuming that the controlled max is less than uncontrolled max), we're still not talking about a big increase. Taking Earth's average temperature of 58 degrees F and increasing it by lets be generous and say 0.0002% (or 50 times more than the doubled value of the reactor, or 100 times the reactors value) and you still get 58 degrees. Specifically, you get 58.0116, a 0.0116 degree increase. And that's with 50 nuclear plants with 3 reactors each melting down into uncontrolled release.

Also, the Earth itself produces a lot of heat. About:

47,000,000,000,000W

Several orders of magnitude more than a nuclear power plant (roughly 1,500 nuclear plants worth of heat).

The largest reactor in the world is literally in the world. Of the heat produced by the Earth, a full 21,000,000,000W is nuclear. I provided a link earlier that talks about that and efforts to identify if it's fission or fusion.

That is significantly more heat than carbon dioxide currently provides, making nuclear higher on the list of heating for the planet.

Secondly, the U.S. plant is a small fry. Canada has one with twice that capacity and Japan with nearly three times. And all of that is with nuclear still being, as far as the world goes, insignificant as a power production method currently implemented.

I must ask... Are you trying to say that because it's not a problem now, it won't be a problem later?


thejeff wrote:

Though that is mostly a distribution problem, correct? It's not that we're using too little energy to meet those needs, it's that the benefits are being taken by a small fraction of the populace, leaving too little for the rest.

Spending more resources is likely not the solution. Trends suggest the vast majority of those resources would benefit the top, leaving at best a small trickle down to actually meet those needs.

I'm also not at all sure the Paris Agreement leaves us worse off. Needs are already not being met and wars are already happening. Climate wars are already happening. The idea that we should just ramp up carbon production until everyone is happy and content and only even consider the environment after that isn't tenable either.

I just now saw this post. Your lack of an avatar makes you too easy to overlook :p

It is somewhat a distribution problem, but solving that problem would involve ramping up transportation which, at current, would involve ramping up carbon dioxide. It's going to be far longer than we wish to implement carbon neutral transportation on the scale necessary. Unfortunately, as much as we may not like it, solving the issues that are causing a lot of the current instability and slide toward increased global warfare is going to involve ramping up carbon dioxide. Even if temporary increases in some areas, such as the necessary ramp-up for solar panel production for large scale implementation over a short period of time.

The Paris Agreement is, pretty much, a waste of time. It's not feasible under any realistic implementation strategy, involves goals that are quite likely simply unattainable due in part to factors outside of science, and ultimately serves as a sort of blockade to any more effective agreement being negotiated. It ultimately doesn't leave us worse off than doing nothing because, in effect, it amounts to doing nothing. Especially in light of how easily it is simply withdrawn from.


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Terrinam wrote:

Part of it is a mistake in scale on the end of those replying to me. Specifically, sometimes assuming the challenge presented carries an inherent equivalency of scale only for the answer to suggest that implementation may not.

I was asked if solar panels are at higher risk of firebombing. I was not asked if there is a greater likelihood of an equivalent amount of solar energy output in structures being firebombed than there is for oil power or coal power. I answered the question asked, not the question intended.

There is a method to my madness.

Except that you weren't asked that out of the blue. You were asked in response to your own question:

Quote:
Tell me, how likely are solar and wind to provide a positive contribution if armed rebellions firebomb them as part of overthrowing governments or violent protest?

That clearly implies at least a significant reduction in capacity.

So as a back of the envelope guess, I suspect while it's more likely that some solar panels will be so damaged, it's less likely they all will be. It all comes out in the wash - the equivalent power plant is less likely to be destroyed, but if it is, it's all gone. (Applies to natural disasters as well, btw)

Also worth pointing out that rooftop solar isn't the only kind. There are solar farms too, which are more the equivalent of power plants in scale. Not likely to be incidentally damaged, though they could be targeted like any power plant.
Wind tends to be distributed and rural - not attached to buildings likely to be targeted in protests.


thejeff wrote:
Terrinam wrote:

Part of it is a mistake in scale on the end of those replying to me. Specifically, sometimes assuming the challenge presented carries an inherent equivalency of scale only for the answer to suggest that implementation may not.

I was asked if solar panels are at higher risk of firebombing. I was not asked if there is a greater likelihood of an equivalent amount of solar energy output in structures being firebombed than there is for oil power or coal power. I answered the question asked, not the question intended.

There is a method to my madness.

Except that you weren't asked that out of the blue. You were asked in response to your own question:

Quote:
Tell me, how likely are solar and wind to provide a positive contribution if armed rebellions firebomb them as part of overthrowing governments or violent protest?

That clearly implies at least a significant reduction in capacity.

So as a back of the envelope guess, I suspect while it's more likely that some solar panels will be so damaged, it's less likely they all will be. It all comes out in the wash - the equivalent power plant is less likely to be destroyed, but if it is, it's all gone. (Applies to natural disasters as well, btw)

Also worth pointing out that rooftop solar isn't the only kind. There are solar farms too, which are more the equivalent of power plants in scale. Not likely to be incidentally damaged, though they could be targeted like any power plant.
Wind tends to be distributed and rural - not attached to buildings likely to be targeted in protests.

Oops. I wasn't paying enough attention this morning.

Though, I am starting to wonder about wind power. The way some of my neighbors talk about it, I kinda wonder if wind turbines don't give off some kind of frequency that drives some humans nuts. The people who have it are nice, though. I wouldn't rule out wind turbines being firebombed just because they're wind turbines.


Terrinam wrote:
Irontruth wrote:
Terrinam wrote:

Oil power plants and solar panels do not continue to generate heat for hundreds of years after power generation has stopped. Nuclear waste does. As such, as far as our predictive modelling for climate change, each pound of nuclear waste adds one permanent pound of additional heat source. In effect, it adds to the amount of heat being trapped by being a source of heat that does not go away.

The largest nuclear plant in the US can produce 3,900 MW, or... (and this is actually 3 separate reactors)

3,900,000,000W

From the Sun, the Earth receives (after counting for albedo):

174,000,000,000,000,000W

The largest reactor in the world would be approximately 0.00002% of the Earth's energy budget.

It's not nothing, but it is pretty damn close. Even if you double it (assuming that the controlled max is less than uncontrolled max), we're still not talking about a big increase. Taking Earth's average temperature of 58 degrees F and increasing it by lets be generous and say 0.0002% (or 50 times more than the doubled value of the reactor, or 100 times the reactors value) and you still get 58 degrees. Specifically, you get 58.0116, a 0.0116 degree increase. And that's with 50 nuclear plants with 3 reactors each melting down into uncontrolled release.

Also, the Earth itself produces a lot of heat. About:

47,000,000,000,000W

Several orders of magnitude more than a nuclear power plant (roughly 1,500 nuclear plants worth of heat).

The largest reactor in the world is literally in the world. Of the heat produced by the Earth, a full 21,000,000,000W is nuclear. I provided a link earlier that talks about that and efforts to identify if it's fission or fusion.

That is significantly more heat than carbon dioxide currently provides, making nuclear higher on the list of heating for the planet.

Secondly, the U.S. plant is a small fry. Canada has...

The US plant has fewer reactors, but the size of the reactors is larger than the ones in Canada, on par with some of the reactors in Japan, and bigger than others. Don't confuse "installed" with "individual reactor". 8,900Mw installed is actually the result of multiple reactors, not one big one (usually 8-10).

Nuclear accidents are horrific and have tremendous long term consequences. Global warming is not one of those consequences. Except maybe as a secondary effect as nuclear power plants are replaced with coal or natural gas.

Liberty's Edge

Terrinam wrote:

I answered the question asked, not the question intended.

There is a method to my madness.

Yes, it is called 'arguing in bad faith'.

The "question intended" is the "question asked". If you know the difference, but pretend otherwise, it is deliberate miscommunication.

Quote:
The Arctic ice cap melts regularly (we have records of it melting completely back as far as 1940) and the Antarctic has stabilized.

Ummm... no.

The Arctic (i.e. Greenland) ice cap is about 18 million years old and Antarctica is losing ice at a rate of about 2,000 gigatons per year.

Quote:
Part of the point in focusing so much on climate change now is to not repeat the same mistakes that got us in this situation to begin with. That means, sometimes, focusing on things that are not a problem now, but will be very far down the road.

Which doesn't change the fact that waste heat from human industry won't be a problem, even very far down the road, unless we somehow come up with ways to continue rapid growth of human population and fossil fuel consumption beyond what the apparent resources of this planet could possibly support. At which point... we are talking about a future involving technologies that we can't guess at and thus cannot plan for.


CBDunkerson wrote:
Terrinam wrote:
The Arctic ice cap melts regularly (we have records of it melting completely back as far as 1940) and the Antarctic has stabilized.

Ummm... no.

The Arctic (i.e. Greenland) ice cap is about 18 million years old and Antarctica is losing ice at a rate of about 2,000 gigatons per year.

Because I sometimes like to track these things down: This seems to be an exaggeration of a common claim that it was warmer in the Arctic around 1940 and that the melting then was greater than now.

There actually was an Arctic warming and melting period in the late '30s, but it took cherry picking only a couple temperature stations to get the temperatures above modern averages and the extent of the melting was much less.

Also, these claims surfaced about a decade ago so all the "modern" and "today" comparisons were to then. The Arctic has gotten warmer and more ice-free since.

Liberty's Edge

So... a further fictionalized version of an outdated claim which was based on fraudulent analysis to begin with?

I have to wonder what dark corners of 'alternative media' one has to frequent to be infected with that level of wrongness.


Well, I haven't seen it in my perusal of Flat Earth claims. Not sure if that's good or not.


CBDunkerson wrote:
Nuclear power contributes to global warming because of the heat it generates? You might as well argue that people shouldn't exercise because their extra body heat will melt the ice caps.

Because I wanted to apply numbers to this, I did.

If I take average world sports and exercise per day at 20 minutes (I extrapolate a Chinese number from the mid-2000s for the world average, as I'm only after rough numbers), then on average 1/72 of the human race is so engaged at any given time. It's plausibly higher, lots of places play more sports than China, but I'll round down for conservatism and round numbers to 1/100.

The mass of humanity is, roughly, 400 million tons or so. If I divide that by 100, I get 4 million tons of humans engaged in sports or exercise at any given moment.

Spent nuclear fuel in the world is hard to find out, but it seems to be somewhere in the quarter-million to half-million ton range, or eight to sixteen times less than the mass of exercising humans.

By God, get off that soccer field before you doom us all!


”Terrinam” wrote:

Most life in the ocean will survive plastic just fine, and what won't isn't going to survive humanity anyway due to other reasons.

<snip>

Unfortunately, a lot of the carbon dioxide output is necessary. And if my estimate is right, the amount necessary just to keep us from environment-destroying wars is higher than the Paris Agreement and has been since before that agreement was even drafted.

<snip stuff about how we need to make CO2 by the gigaton>

That is why the Paris Agreement is unrealistic. It may have the science behind it as far as chemistry, but it's ignoring the human element far too much. And the human element happens to be the one most important, since it's the one that caused the current problem to begin with.

<and somewhat later>

The Paris Agreement is, pretty much, a waste of time. It's not feasible under any realistic implementation strategy, involves goals that are quite likely simply unattainable due in part to factors outside of science, and ultimately serves as a sort of blockade to any more effective agreement being negotiated. It ultimately doesn't leave us worse off than doing nothing because, in effect, it amounts to doing nothing. Especially in light of how easily it is simply withdrawn from.

Ahhh… a cynicism to warm my heart. Now all you have to do is dress hip and you too can be a Cynical Hipster

”Terrinam” wrote:
Plastics, for the most part, have a negligible impact duration and very little impact strength compared to many other pollutions. And with killing off the ocean, impact duration and impact strength is the key.

Tell that to the coral reefs.

:p

Micro-plastics and (especially) nano-plastics are worse than you think.

.

”CB” wrote:
Solar and Wind accounted for 94.7% of net new US electricity generation in 2017.

Measure net if you want. Pollution happens on gross.

”CB” wrote:

Yes, it is called 'arguing in bad faith'.

The "question intended" is the "question asked". If you know the difference, but pretend otherwise, it is deliberate miscommunication.

Someone should heed his own advice.

Just say’n.
:|

.

”thejeff” wrote:
Also worth pointing out that rooftop solar isn't the only kind. There are solar farms too, which are more the equivalent of power plants in scale. Not likely to be incidentally damaged, though they could be targeted like any power plant.

Just wait till we start building mega-installations of Li-Ion batteries. A prime target to be sure. Can you say, “BOOM”?

:D


Changes in global water supply hint at future conflicts and crises

This --> Is why the Paris Agreement as is will fail

WP" wrote:

The chemical is also a powerful greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming.

The paper’s findings are “environmentally and politically quite serious,” Robert Watson, a former NASA scientist who organized bracing flights high into the Antarctic stratosphere to study ozone depletion in the 1980s, said in an emailed statement.

“It is not clear why any country would want to start to produce, and inadvertently release, CFC-11, when cost-effective substitutes have been available for a long while...”

“Not clear” the learned scientist says. Read more history I say.

What will history teach Robert Watson? Why the Tragedy of the Commons of course.

Liberty's Edge

Quark Blast wrote:
It’s also worth noting that coal and oil electricity production is declining primarily due to natural gas – the impact of renewables is barely measurable
”CB” wrote:
Solar and Wind accounted for 94.7% of net new US electricity generation in 2017.
Quark Blast wrote:
Measure net if you want. Pollution happens on gross.

Another example of arguing in bad faith; make a ridiculously false claim, get called on it, change the subject.

That 94.7% net figure shows that, far from being "barely measurable", solar and wind are now responsible for nearly all of the ongoing decline of coal and oil electricity production. It is natural gas which now has little impact, because new natural gas plants are barely keeping up with retirement of old ones... leaving no new capacity to pick up for closing coal and oil plants.


This site is a bit of a nightmare to peruse in its current format, and I've been busy with life.

Irontruth wrote:

The US plant has fewer reactors, but the size of the reactors is larger than the ones in Canada, on par with some of the reactors in Japan, and bigger than others. Don't confuse "installed" with "individual reactor". 8,900Mw installed is actually the result of multiple reactors, not one big one (usually 8-10).

Nuclear accidents are horrific and have tremendous long term consequences. Global warming is not one of those consequences. Except maybe as a secondary effect as nuclear power plants are replaced with coal or natural gas.

Total output from the reactors, combined with the basic calculation of how much fuel has to be involved to generate that much energy, is what matters. Then multiply that by the number of reactors necessary for a population of around ten billion, as opposed to the current minority input that nuclear power has.

You're focusing on what is. My argument is about what will be.

CBDunkerson wrote:

Yes, it is called 'arguing in bad faith'.

The "question intended" is the "question asked". If you know the difference, but pretend otherwise, it is deliberate miscommunication.

Of course, Mr. Pot. I understand your position perfectly.

Quote:

Ummm... no.

The Arctic (i.e. Greenland) ice cap is about 18 million years old and Antarctica is losing ice at a rate of about 2,000 gigatons per year.

Your claim about Antarctica was already debunked in a reply to QB. You can check the direct article in this link.

Also, the Greenland ice sheet is not the Arctic ice pack.

Quote:
Which doesn't change the fact that waste heat from human industry won't be a problem, even very far down the road, unless we somehow come up with ways to continue rapid growth of human population and fossil fuel consumption beyond what the apparent resources of this planet could possibly support. At which point... we are talking about a future involving technologies that we can't guess at and thus cannot plan for.

You mean, like genetically-engineered batteries or working fusion reactors? Or clothes that generate electricity?

Oh, and those clothes? Fossil fuel product. Imagine how many tons of oil would need to be pulled out of the ground just to make PEDOT clothes common. Keep in mind we're talking at least 15 million tons of textiles annually for just the United States.

You're focused entirely on the pure energy usage of oil that you keep missing all of the ways we're inventing for investing fossil fuels that will mitigate reductions in fossil fuel usage from switching to alternative energy. And then thinking it's some kind of mystery when all you have to do is pick up a science magazine sometime.

thejeff wrote:

Because I sometimes like to track these things down: This seems to be an exaggeration of a common claim that it was warmer in the Arctic around 1940 and that the melting then was greater than now.

There actually was an Arctic warming and melting period in the late '30s, but it took cherry picking only a couple temperature stations to get the temperatures above modern averages and the extent of the melting was much less.

Also, these claims surfaced about a decade ago so all the "modern" and "today" comparisons were to then. The Arctic has gotten warmer and more ice-free since.

Actually, it's based on an old photo of a submarine surfacing in an ice-free Arctic Circle. I might be off about the decade; it might be 1950s.

However, that doesn't mean the Arctic isn't warmer than it was back then. Just that the melting of sea ice isn't as important of a danger and the danger areas (the land-based ice sheets) seem to be more heavily affected by things other than planetary temperature. That doesn't mean it's not having an effect, so much as it's far from the only problem we have to solve if we wish to stop the ice from melting.

Coriat wrote:
CBDunkerson wrote:
Nuclear power contributes to global warming because of the heat it generates? You might as well argue that people shouldn't exercise because their extra body heat will melt the ice caps.

Because I wanted to apply numbers to this, I did.

If I take average world sports and exercise per day at 20 minutes (I extrapolate a Chinese number from the mid-2000s for the world average, as I'm only after rough numbers), then on average 1/72 of the human race is so engaged at any given time. It's plausibly higher, lots of places play more sports than China, but I'll round down for conservatism and round numbers to 1/100.

The mass of humanity is, roughly, 400 million tons or so. If I divide that by 100, I get 4 million tons of humans engaged in sports or exercise at any given moment.

Spent nuclear fuel in the world is hard to find out, but it seems to be somewhere in the quarter-million to half-million ton range, or eight to sixteen times less than the mass of exercising humans.

By God, get off that soccer field before you doom us all!

That's the amount now, when it's producing somewhere around two percent of the world's power. When it's producing around 90% of current world power requirements, you're looking at around 11,250,000 tons of nuclear waste annually. And each annual contribution compounds with prior contributions; as such, the amount of nuclear waste would have that 11 million range as the starting figure and it would continue to increase. If you wait ten years, you have over 112 million tons of nuclear waste to produce additional heat.

Note this is assuming that any amount of additional power requirements over today's amount is provided by other sources. If instead nuclear ends up the primary and stays that way and grows with the population, then you're probably talking about a massively higher figure.

Quark Blast wrote:

Tell that to the coral reefs.

:p

Micro-plastics and (especially) nano-plastics are worse than you think.

The coral reefs are dying from too much heat anyway. Eliminating plastics from the ocean won't save them. Coral reefs fall under the category of "won't survive humanity anyway due to other reasons."


There is some science to suggest that switching to renewable energy might not stop our extinction or the world's environmental collapse anyway.

So, uh... Thoughts?

Liberty's Edge

Terrinam wrote:
Your claim about Antarctica was already debunked in a reply to QB. You can check the direct article in this link.

That link being a year old claim based on unpublished un-peer reviewed research by the one group which hasn't been finding large and increasing Antarctic ice mass loss...

Even if we ignored all the problems with Zwally's (still unpublished) research, it wouldn't support your claim that Antarctica has "stabilized". The word stabilized means that things have stopped changing. Instead, Zwally states in the article that a change his 2015 research had predicted taking "two to three decades" (i.e. ice mass gain going to zero) had instead happened in just two years. That's not 'stabilized' by any stretch of the imagination.

Nor does Zwally claim that things will stop where they are. He has always (even back in 2015) maintained that global warming WILL cause Antarctica to lose ice. He just thought that was 20 to 30 years away in 2015... and then that it was hitting the turning point in 2017.

In reality, Zwally's research contains significant flaws. When those are corrected for his methodology yields results in line with multiple other methods of estimating Antarctic ice loss... finding that it is large and accelerating.

When you have to go to a unique outlier, and then misstate their position, to make your case... you've really done the opposite.

Quote:
Also, the Greenland ice sheet is not the Arctic ice pack.

...and neither of those is the "Arctic ice cap" terminology you actually used.

However, it doesn't really matter, because none of those things, "melts regularly (we have records of it melting completely back as far as 1940)" as you claimed.

CBDunkerson wrote:
At which point... we are talking about a future involving technologies that we can't guess at and thus cannot plan for.
Quote:
You mean, like genetically-engineered batteries or working fusion reactors? Or clothes that generate electricity?

No. I'd think it would be clear that already existing technologies are, by definition, not future technologies which we can't even guess at yet.

Quote:
You're focused entirely on the pure energy usage of oil that you keep missing all of the ways we're inventing for investing fossil fuels that will mitigate reductions in fossil fuel usage from switching to alternative energy.

Could you restate this using sentences? I think you're making some sort of point about non-energy based uses of fossil carbons, but I'm not sure what it is.

Quote:
Actually, it's based on an old photo of a submarine surfacing in an ice-free Arctic Circle. I might be off about the decade; it might be 1950s.

If you bother to look in to the background, beyond just reading the global warming denial propaganda, you will find that this photo is misrepresented, doctored, or both. I'd give you the details, but there are actually enough of these 'Arctic submarine' hoaxes out there that I can't be sure which one you are referring to.

In any case, no... the Arctic sea ice does not melt out regularly. The Arctic ocean was last ice free (for part of the year anyway) about 2.6 million years ago. Quibbling over 1940s vs 1950s isn't going to cut it.


Re: Arctic submarine/melting Arctic ice cap

Near as I can tell, this is what's going on there: Arctic Ice, being sea ice and not anchored to land, shifts and drifts around, cracking, splitting apart and opening areas of open water, which quickly freezes on the surface, but stays thin enough for the sub to bust through.

The various photos of submarines are real, but they're not anything like "an ice-free Arctic Circle". Patches open up and then close again and have for at least as long as we've been able to get out there. Almost certainly much longer.

This may refute certain wild claims by those now going "omigod open water in the Arctic its proof of global warming", but it's not any actual refutation of climate change. If you wanted to do that, you'd need to look at things like total ice extent and thickness, compared over previous decades.

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