B
bizorky
Guest
SD2,
I don't think there is anything absolutely sure about this issue except that climate changes are due to many causes. So we have to set this present variation within history and ask whether it actually is particularly different from others in terms of causes. This will require a greater appreciation for past climate variability as a fact of life. This includes variability that has occured within human history and before human production of GHG's.
I don't intend to be pedantic by pointing out that the major climate drivers are forces far beyond ourselves. Even a superficial look at climate history illustrates that far more significant changes have happened due to those drivers, and not us. We are not in control, just part of the action.
But just how much so? That is the question that is open to debate. I think it would be wrong to say that the science is settled and that humans alone are the cause.
Much of todays concern revolves around the idea of what the world will be like in 100 years. The modelling for these "predictions" is just that, modelling. It is not, nor should it be mistaken with, reality. Yet this modelling is at the centre of contemporary policy activity. Today, we observe a 0.6C degree increase in temperature (averaged) over a 120 year period, and an increase in carbon dioxide, and assume that the source is us. But previous temperature increases within climate history have often had corresponding increases in carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide is too often referred to as a pollutant, but it is actually essential to life, and it is produced and used by organisms ranging from us, to plantlife, to bacteria in the ocean. If C02 is available, it will be utilized. It does not get publicized that much, but the planet is quite green, and additional C02 actually allows plants to become more resilient. Please note, I don't raise this point as some superficial argument for the production of GHG's; it is simply a fact worth mentioning.
As for rational reasons to do something about "unnatural" GHG's, the difficulty is that if you do follow the worst-case scenarios of GHG's and their supposed impact on climate, policies such as Kyoto do virtually nothing to mitigate those supposed future impacts. Moreover, present accords do virtually nothing for many developing nations which are going to be allowed to adopt large-scale energy production that will emit GHG's. To be short, there is not all that much rationality with respect to present plans for future scenarios.
I don't think there is anything absolutely sure about this issue except that climate changes are due to many causes. So we have to set this present variation within history and ask whether it actually is particularly different from others in terms of causes. This will require a greater appreciation for past climate variability as a fact of life. This includes variability that has occured within human history and before human production of GHG's.
I don't intend to be pedantic by pointing out that the major climate drivers are forces far beyond ourselves. Even a superficial look at climate history illustrates that far more significant changes have happened due to those drivers, and not us. We are not in control, just part of the action.
But just how much so? That is the question that is open to debate. I think it would be wrong to say that the science is settled and that humans alone are the cause.
Much of todays concern revolves around the idea of what the world will be like in 100 years. The modelling for these "predictions" is just that, modelling. It is not, nor should it be mistaken with, reality. Yet this modelling is at the centre of contemporary policy activity. Today, we observe a 0.6C degree increase in temperature (averaged) over a 120 year period, and an increase in carbon dioxide, and assume that the source is us. But previous temperature increases within climate history have often had corresponding increases in carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide is too often referred to as a pollutant, but it is actually essential to life, and it is produced and used by organisms ranging from us, to plantlife, to bacteria in the ocean. If C02 is available, it will be utilized. It does not get publicized that much, but the planet is quite green, and additional C02 actually allows plants to become more resilient. Please note, I don't raise this point as some superficial argument for the production of GHG's; it is simply a fact worth mentioning.
As for rational reasons to do something about "unnatural" GHG's, the difficulty is that if you do follow the worst-case scenarios of GHG's and their supposed impact on climate, policies such as Kyoto do virtually nothing to mitigate those supposed future impacts. Moreover, present accords do virtually nothing for many developing nations which are going to be allowed to adopt large-scale energy production that will emit GHG's. To be short, there is not all that much rationality with respect to present plans for future scenarios.




