2017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #52
Posted on 30 December 2017 by John Hartz
Editor's Pick
Vive la résistance: 10 ways people stood up for the planet in 2017
Grist / Justin Sullivan / Staff / Getty Images
One year ago, we wondered what would happen after a man who called climate change a Chinese hoax was elected president of the United States.
Certainly, 2017 will be remembered for a series of cringe-worthy political appointments, disappointing regulatory repeals, and controversial executive actions — not to mention Trump’s decision to exit the Paris Agreement. But it was also a year that birthed a new band of scrappy resisters who fought the climate-change denying, regulation-repealing powers that be.
As a result, 2017 was actually a pretty impressive year for resistance — and here are some of the efforts that led that charge:
Vive la résistance: 10 ways people stood up for the planet in 2017 by Justine Calma, Grist, Dec 27, 2017
Links posted on Facebook
Sun Dec 24, 2017
- Selective logging reduces biodiversity, disrupts Amazon ecosystems: study by Claire Asher, Mongabay, Dec 22, 2017
- Global Warming May Increase Volcanic Activity, Study Says by Pam Wright, Weather Underground, Dec 22, 2017
- China is methodically building the world’s most ambitious carbon market by David Roberts, Energy & Environment, Vox, Dec 22, 2017
- California Wildfires: What Happens When Trump’s EPA Ignores Climate Change Science? by Jonathan Samet, Newsweek, Dec 23, 2017
- Macron Tries To Keep the Paris Agreement Alive by Eric J Lyman, Pacific Standard, Dec 19, 2017
- Climate change in Lapland: The impact of global warming in the land of Santa Claus by Josh Gabbatiss, The Independent, Dec 23, 2017
- Virtual gold may glitter, but mining bitcoin contributes to global warming, AFP-JIJI/Japan Times, Dec 24, 2017
- 2017 in news: The science events that shaped the year, Nature, Dec 18, 2017
Mon Dec 25, 2017
- How blogs convey and distort scientific information about polar bears and Arctic sea ice by Bret Verheggen, My view on climate change, Dec 22, 2017
- 2017 in Photos: Capturing the Causes and Impacts of Climate Change by Julie Dermansky, DeSmog, Dec 24, 2017
- For Exxon, a Year of Living Dangerously by David Hasemyer, InsideClimate News, Dec 22, 2017
- Piloting aviation industry through a changing climate by Daisy Simmons, Yale Climate Connections, Dec 20, 2017
- Vietnam braces for typhoon as Philippine toll rises to 230 dead by Mi Nguyen & Manuel Mogato, Thomson Reuters Foundation, Dec 25, 2017
- 2017 Was the Year of the Billion-Dollar Disaster, Climate Central, Dec 20, 2017
- Government scientists blocked from the biggest meeting in their field by Sarah Kaplan, Speaking of Science, Washington Post, Dec 22, 2017
- From hotumn to meatmares: The words that defined our planet this year by Kate Yoder, Grist, Dec 22, 2017
Tue Dec 26, 2017
- Some curious things about Svensmark et al. reference list by Ari Jokimäki, Skeptical Science, Dec 25, 2017
- New Arctic Is Same As Old Arctic — Except Without The Ice by Steve Hanley, CleanTechnica, Dec 23, 2017
- Three 2016 extremes 'not ... possible' without human warming by Bruce Lieberman, Yale Climate Connections, Dec 18, 2017
- Spades, saplings and sheep: Iceland battles to restore long-lost forests by Marcello Rossi, Thomson Reuters Foundation, Dec 25, 2017
- US government climate report looks at how the oceans are buffering climate change by John Abraham, Climate Consensus - the 97%, Guardian, Dec 26, 2017
- If you want to propound the science, try a little empathy, Opinion by Craig Cormick, Cosmos, Dec 19, 2017
- Climate Change Is Happening Faster Than Expected, and It’s More Extreme by Bob Berwyn, InsideClimate News, Dec 26, 2017
- California is powering toward its climate goals. But it only gets harder from here. by Sammy Roth, The Desert Sun, Dec 26, 2017
Wed Dec 27, 2017
- Spring foliage appearing too early in the Alps?, SWI, Dec 25, 2017
- Government starts down pathway to net zero emissionsby 2050, New Zealand Herald, Dec 19, 2017
- This year has been an unequivocal disaster for the future of the planet, Opinion by Mark Kelly, CNN, Dec 26, 2017
- The biggest climate findings in 2017 by Chelsea Harvey, E&E News, Dec 21, 2017
- With science under siege in 2017, scientists regrouped and fought back: 5 essential reads by Maggie Villiger, The Conversation US, Dec 21, 2017
- Fake news is a threat to humanity, but scientists may have a solution by Dana Nuccitelli, Climate Consensus - the 97%, Guardian, Dec 26, 2017
- Fighting climate change with bioenergy may do ‘more harm than good’ by Morgan Erickson-Davis, Mongabay, Dec 26, 2017
- Global Warming Is a Slow-moving Civilization-ending Catastrophe by Evaggelos Vallianatos, HuffPost, Dec 26, 2017
Thu Dec 28, 2017
- Paper giant and its ‘suppliers’ are essentially one and the same, investigation finds by Michael Disabato, Mongabay, Dec 26, 2017
- The 10 Most Important U.S. Climate Stories in 2017 by Abbey Dufoe, Climate Central, Dec 27, 2017
- Polar Ice Is Disappearing, Setting Off Climate Alarms by Sabrina Shankman & Bob Berwyn, InsideClimate News, Dec 27, 2017
- Rapper's Lyrics about Climate Change Are Smart, Opinion by Mark Fischetti, Observations by Scientific American, Dec 27, 2017
- Does Record Snowfall Disprove Global Warming? 'Exactly the Opposite,' Scientist Says by Lorraine Chow, Ecowatch, Dec 27, 2017
- Megadisasters devastated America this year. They’re going to get worse. by Umair Irfan & Brian Resnick, Energy & Environment, Vox, Dec 28, 2017
- Sea Level Rise Is Creeping into Coastal Cities. Saving Them Won’t Be Cheap. by Nicholas Kusnetz, InsideClimate News, Dec 28, 2017
- Trump’s Five Biggest Energy Blunders in 2017 by James Temple, MIT Technology, Dec 27, 2017
Fri Dec 29, 2017
- Renewables generated triple the power of coal in 2017, UK figures show, Press Association, Guardian, Dec 28, 2017
- How to Get Wyoming Wind to California, and Cut 80% of U.S. Carbon Emissions by James Temple, MIT Technology Review, Dec 28, 2017
- Vive la résistance: 10 ways people stood up for the planet in 2017 by Justine Calma, Grist, Dec 27, 2017
- A Response For People Using Record Cold U.S. Weather To Refute Climate Change by Marshall Sheperd, Forbes, Dec 28, 2017
- Wildfires to Hurricanes, 2017’s Year of Disasters Carried Climate Warnings by Georgina Gustin, InsideClimate News, Dec 29, 2017
- It’s Cold Outside. Cue the Trump Global Warming Tweet. by Kendra Pierre-Louis, Climate, New York Times, Dec 28, 2017
- Climate change cases predicted to make a legal splash in 2018, Analysis by Sophie Hares & Sebastien Malo, Thomson Reuters Foundation, Dec 28, 2017
- Trump tweets overshadowed these major climate stories in 2017 by Zoya Teirstein, Grist, Dec 29, 2017
Sat Dec 30, 2017
- From the eMail Bag: Carbon Isotopes, Part 2: The Delta Notation by David Kirtley, Skeptical Science, Dec 28, 2017
- New research, December 18-24, 2017 by Ari Jokimäki, Skepticl Scince, Dec 28, 2017
- How Climate Change Deniers Rise to the Top in Google Searches by Hiroko Tabuchi, Climate, New York Times, Dec 29, 2017
- The President Doesn't Care to Understand Global Warming by Robinson Meyer, the Atlantic, Dec 29, 2017
- How We Know It Was Climate Change, Opinion by Noah S Diffenbach, Sunday Review, New York Times, Dec 29, 2017
- FACTBOX-On the boil: five climate lawsuits to watch in 2018 by Sebastien Malo & Sophie Hares, Thomson Reuters Foundation, Dec 28, 2017
- The 2017 Pacific Typhoon Season Saves its Worst for Last: 240 Killed in the Philippines by Jeff Masters, Weather Underground, Dec 26, 2017
- Trump's call for some 'good old global warming' ridiculed by climate experts by Michael McGowan & Joanna Walters, Guardian, Dec 29, 2017
"Hearing that the Trump administration would scrub federal sites of information on climate change or obscure other important research, researchers worked with dozens of coders, archivists, and librarians to preserve data sets and web pages from agencies, like the EPA, NOAA, and NASA"
Astonishing that things have come to this level of anti-science and blatant denial of reality, and blatant censorship of science. This is supposed to be the 21st century, not the medieval period of book burning. The year 2017 will go down in infamy as the dumbest year on record (and almost certainly one of the hottest based on data so far this year)
I feel protest marches and other shows of resistance are probably quite powerful. I dont think its a coincidence that Trumps approval ratings are all down near 30% now, it has to be the cumulative effect of protest, along with the nonsensical, damaging and self promoting things he says on a daily basis.
Seems that it's going to take more than protests.
How about some direct intellectual confrontation - demanding an explaination for why Republican feel comfortable using blatant (and juvenile) lies to rationalize refusing to pay attention to what sober serious science tell us about the physical Earth that we depend on for everything.
Here's a thought:
"Science’s Blue team educates Pruitt’s Red team - A Rough Outline."
https://confrontingsciencecontrarians.blogspot.com/p/blue-vs-red-team.html
or perhaps
https://confrontingsciencecontrarians.blogspot.com/p/hall-of-shame.html
citzenschallenge:
The ten actions identified in the Editor's Pick article of the OP are:
Only the first two are public protests.
The "resistance" comes from those who feel that they can trust the "97% consensus" mantra. Populations in large cities like New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Denver, Seattle, Portland, Washington, D.C., Detroit, Philadelphia, Baltimore, St. Louis, and Miami vote 75%+ 'democrat' and are the most likely places for demonstrations ("resistance"). It's easy to dupe those who can't verify scientific findings on their own. 99.9% of these people aren't scientists.
Makes one wonder where "biased" polsters draw their lines. Most conservative thinkers I know avoid biased pollsters
Millions of global warming/climate change protesters protesting in big cities where the environment can barely be be studied by those who protest. They have to depend on scientists to be honest and unbiased in their evaluations of each and every research study they perform using taxpayer dollars. Most big government environmental scientists have a bias IMO, otherwise they wouldn't worry about who becomes POTUS. George H.W. Bush Sr., Bill Clinto, George Bush Jr., and Barack Obama were all "globalists". (Remember George Sr.'s 'new world order' statement?)
Let us not forget where the UN IPCC came from and how it has progressed over the past 30 years and what the United Nations' ultimate goal is. Globalism. Un-elected government officials (they are appointed) being handed billions of dollars every year for climate research projects and advisory boards.
The corn-belt of the U.S. does lots of climate research. Farmers are a good source for spotting "climate change indicators".
Purdue University did a survey aimed at Agricultural Extension educators, agricultural advisors, and farmers. Over 90% (1,560) of those surveyed mostly believed that either the environment and humans are 50/50 responsible (~33%), the climate has changedand is mostly natural (~29%) or their is insufficient evidence to know with any certainty that the climate is occuring or not (~28%). Less than 10% believe it is happening and is caused by human activities.
It's easy to convince big city-dwelling populations. That's the only world they know. They generally can't understand how big the world really is.
The 20 most populated areas in the U.S. (previous list of cities plus 6 other highly populated areas) take up less than 14,000 square miles of the 3,500,000+ square miles United States land area (0.04% of the total U.S. land area). (Hillary Clinton received 10 million more votes in these 20 most populated areas. She won the popular vote by less than 3 million)
Big city dwellers are easy to antagonize.
If anything, Global Warming alarmism plays to those who don't have the luxury of exploring the world outside of their own city. They are the poorest of the poor.
Good luck in your celebration! The science isn't as 'cut-and-dry' as is portrayed by those who seem to love antagonizing people into a "resistance" they don't understand.
[JH] Blatant sloganeering snipped.
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https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2017/12/counting-down-to-year-of-dog.html
Let us not forget how often President Trump has stood up as species of the year
[JH] Sloganeering snipped.
Zippi62 @4
"Makes one wonder where "biased" polsters draw their lines. Most conservative thinkers I know avoid biased pollsters"
This is too anecdotal, and it is highly improbable that conservatives simply don't do polls.
"Millions of global warming/climate change protesters protesting in big cities where the environment can barely be be studied by those who protest. They have to depend on scientists to be honest and unbiased in their evaluations of each and every research study they perform using taxpayer dollars. "
Partly true, but you don't need to be a scientist to understand that we are altering the climate. All you need is a reasonable education. The evidence is pretty basic and overwhelming.
One data set or research paper might be unreliable, but we have numerous data sets and research papers,so its slander to suggest they are all somehow intellectually dishonest. Every paper discusses areas of certainty, and issues where uncertainty remains, so it's pretty transparent.
"Most big government environmental scientists have a bias IMO, otherwise they wouldn't worry about who becomes POTUS."
Not interested in your opinion, unless you can back it up with some information. Any sane person would worry about a president that tries to remove data from websites, and has scientifically illiterate views.
"George H.W. Bush Sr., Bill Clinto, George Bush Jr., and Barack Obama were all "globalists". (Remember George Sr.'s 'new world order' statement?)"
Irrelevant to the climate issue. You are also paranoid about globalism. The world has been globalising ever since we first started trading with each other. Imo the challenge is to get the global rules on a fair basis, and the balance of power right between nation states and larger global authorities, so that we avoid potential for abuse of power.
"Let us not forget where the UN IPCC came from and how it has progressed over the past 30 years and what the United Nations' ultimate goal is. Globalism. Un-elected government officials (they are appointed) being handed billions of dollars every year for climate research projects and advisory boards."
The Un doesn't primarily fund climate reseach, nation states do.
"The corn-belt of the U.S. does lots of climate research. Farmers are a good source for spotting "climate change indicators".
Yes, and they say the climate is changing.
"Purdue University did a survey aimed at Agricultural Extension educators, agricultural advisors, and farmers. Over 90% (1,560) of those surveyed mostly believed that either the environment and humans are 50/50 responsible (~33%)"
What makes you think farmers have any special insight on science? Their educational levels tend to be rather average or below average. They also tend to be Republican supporters and the Republican Party is sceptical of climate science, unfortunately. That's not to say farmers are inferior to anyone else, they aren't - and we rely on farmers for our very survival.
"Big city dwellers are easy to antagonize."
Well you might be right about that. I dont know why, but I have some good guesses on it. But its not really that relevant to the climate issue.
nigelj @6
The 'climate issue' is based upon the Earth's ability to receive an additional 616 billion tons of natural (from nature) CO2 (40% increase from pre-industrial levels) into a 5.5 quadrillion ton and continuously moving atmospheric system that already had a naturally induced 1.54 trillion tons of CO2 working in continuous circulation with a receptive biosphere and receptive 1,450,000,000,000,000,000 ton hydrosphere (oceans).
[TD] More than 100% of at least the past 50 years' (probably decades more than that) increase in atmospheric CO2 is from anthropocentric causes. Read the relevant post's Basic tabbed pane, then watch the video, then read the Intermediate tabbed pane. There are several lines of evidence, but really the algebraic one (mass balance) is sufficient and airtight. If you want clarification, more evidence, or want to argue, do so on that post, not this one.
Zippi62 @7
Oh big numbers! Anyone can post superfluous or irrelevant big numbers and long words pulled out of a hat like the rabbit.
As Moderator says, CO2 emissions are coming from fossil fuels etc. It's one of those things proven beyond doubt now.
Notice how none of the serious qualified sceptics like Spencer deny this, only the armchair eccentrics. Its embarassing watching people deny the obvious, and just shows their desperation and ignorance.
@ Moderator
Since the earth surface is 790,854,451,200,000,000 million square inches and the weight of one square inch of atmosphere at sea level weighs 14.7lbs. Then the total weight of the atmosphere is 1,162,556,043,264,000,000,000 lbs. Which I think is 1 sextillion lbs. since there are 2000lbs in a ton then the earth’s atmosphere weight in tons is 5,812,780,216,320,000 tons so the closest answer would be about 6 quadrillion tons "if" the Earth was flat.
Obviously the entire earth is not flat and other factors take that weight downwards.
In all actuality combustion only adds 12 grams of weight per molecule of CO2 to the atmosphere. The additional oxygen in CO2 was used from existing oxygen in our atmosphere. You can't add what was already there as far as "tons added". That's another scientific misnomer.
If you want to add the weight of additional carbon, then that's fine, but when you are scientifically disingenuous and add the whole as an overall "addition" to the atmosphere, then you surely need to be called out.
The 2 oxygen atoms will eventually be released back into the atmosphere away from the carbon through either photosynthesis or some other process. It's called the "carbon cycle" simply because oxygen (O2) is the transporter.
nigelj @8
I know what Spencer says. He's an intelligent meteorologist.
Those "big numbers" are important. That's why we don't have the "runaway effect".
I also know where emissions come from, but a disingenuous scientist like yourself can't add 44 grams of CO2 to Earth's atmosphere when the atmosphere originally maintained the 2 oxygen atoms that were added through combustion. Let's reduce the added "tonnage" to the atmosphere by 73% (0.7272727272727) and stick to the additional carbon atom that married a couple of oxygen atoms through combustion. OK?
Zippi62 @9
I don't see anyone claiming that it is the 'weight' of CO2 that is critical. Its extra quantity in ppm added to atmosphere as in the keeling curve.
However a certain weight is added to the atmosphere and this is additional weight. This is obviously a fact.
Oxygen is important and must be considered. It's the two oxygen atoms that allow the CO2 molecule to basically wobble around and this quantum property is what enables it to absorb energy. As in this graphic. This is mainly why CO2 absorbs heat (technically IR radiation) and O2 doesn't.
Zippi @62, Spencer is not simply an intelligent meterologist. He is a principal research scientist at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, and the U.S. Science Team leader for the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer (AMSR-E) on NASA's Aqua satellite. According to wikipedia.
He is also a creationist who believes humans are too insignificant in gods creation to cause climate change. Again, you can read this on his wikipedia profile page.
"I also know where emissions come from,"
Well you apparently don't. I can tell you where they don't come from: The oceans, humans, and volcanoes and theres plenty of information on this in the "most used climate myths" part of this website.
By CO2 not coming from humans, I meant respiration. This is essentially a neutral cycle. Additional CO2 is coming mainly from fossil fuel burning.
Microphysics works with a proper analogy. Added carbon into the atmosphere can be a good thing as long as the proper analysis is applied.
When insufficient oxygen is applied to combustion, then carbon monoxide is produced, which is a highly toxic gas. Carbon dioxide is not toxic and is very essential to most all living things.
nigelj @13
I get what you are saying. Humans are evil and produce excessive amounts of CO2. Every plant hates excessive amounts, even if those excessive amounts makes them less prone to droughts, more rigid, and require less water to survive. The animals that eat those plants get more carbohydrates into their own system. More carbohydrates are always good. It's basic sustenance.
[JH] Snide, argumentative, and false assertions snipped. Your willful and repeated violations of the SkS Comments Policy means you have relinquished your privilege of posting on this venue.
Zippi62@ 14
"Microphysics works with a proper analogy. Added carbon into the atmosphere can be a good thing as long as the proper analysis is applied"
Meaningless unsupported assertion.
" Carbon dioxide is not toxic and is very essential to most all living things."
Meaningless straw man argument. Nobody has claimed CO2 is poisonous in the way CO is poisonous. Merely that the build up of CO2 recently is causing dangerous climate change.
Various minerals are also essential to plant growth, but too much can kill the things.
We are bored with all these silly, weak denialist claims that are all such obviously nonsense. Can't you do better? Climate denialists are such losers.
Zippi62 @15
"I get what you are saying. Humans are evil and produce excessive amounts of CO2."
No, never said that. But some humans persist with bad habits even when they know they are bad habits.
"Every plant hates excessive amounts, even if those excessive amounts makes them less prone to droughts, more rigid, ..."
Maybe so to some extent, but the trouble is any advantages of extra CO2 in cell growth come up against limits, and are offset by the effects of higher temperatures that start to reduce cell growth and crop productivity particularly after 2050, and you have all the other negative effects of climate change, such as as sea level rise. The costs of climate change outweigh any benefits by a huge factor. This website has done numerous related articles, start reading them.;
"The EPA failed when they labelled CO2 as a "dangerous pollutant".
Really? The finding still stands in law and is unlikely to be changed. This doesnt look like failure to me.
"SKS also fails its own readers with its 'climate myth' about CO2 being a dangerous pollutant.
his website doesnt actually use that language. The language used is by the EPA. As far as I can tell this website just raises the normal concerns about CO2. Remember the EPA used those words dangerous pollutant in a legalistic sense, dont get too hung up on them, we know what they mean CO2 is a problem. Its not woryth all the energy debating whether its a pollutant or problem.
"SKS should redact many of its erroneous implications about CO2 in my opinion. Much of it is scientific conjecture."
I dont think so. The basics of climate science are well established science, not conjecture. Opinions like yours without some actual commentary, credible sources and understanding of the relevant basic science are pretty empty. Not saying you are badly educated, and happy new year and all that.
Zippi62 @20
"You are believing unfounded projections by overzealous environmentalists. "
No I just accept the peer reviewed research and IPCC science. I'm not into deep green environmentalism, although its preferable to the denialist blather.
You are sucked in by blogsites like Wattsup and iceagenow. These websites are emotive, politically driven, and make outrageous, stupid, inflammatory claims and huge cherry picks.
"There's not one person I know that wants to destroy our planet. "
So they claim. Know people by their actions and policies: Donald Trump for example.
"There's much more science out there that disproves the "limits" mantra."The Arctic Sea Ice Extent is currently in a heavy increase period.'
One year means nothing. Natural variation. The trend over the last 50 years approximately is far more important, and is of reducing sea ice cover and also thickness. Again, its one of those aspects of climate change that is incredibly well documented, and with increasing temperatures it can only get worse, unless you believe that higher temperatures cause water to freeze?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arctic_sea_ice_decline
I really was not inclined to enter this thread until Zippi62 insisted on making a ludicrous argument about C02 not being a pollutant.
In excessive concentrations any element can be deemed thusly. The current biodiversity evolved under relatively low atmospheric concentrations of CO2. Indeed, there is compelling evidence that species and genetic richness across the biosphere were higher quite recently until Homo sapiens began to carve its way through ecosystems across the planet. The bottom line is that high atmospheric concentrations of CO2 are NOT a pre-requisite for high adaptive radiation. Other eco-physiological factors are infinitely more important including paradoxially both stability and change.
As for increasing atmospheric concentrations of CO2 the net effect will be a significant reduction in diversity even if warming is excluded. This is because there will be decidedly non-linear effects of increased CO2 concentrations on plants and their associated consumers. Some plants will benefit at CO2 increases but many will not - this critically depends on the carbon pathway (C3, C4, ethylene) and how this leads to competitive asymmetries among plant communities. In other words the long evolutionary stasis that occurs under fairly stable abiotic regimes is being seriously undermined by the current athropogenic experiment. So phenology and non-linear dynamics is something that climate change contrarians continually ignore. This is because most of them don’t appear to have the reoevant expertise.
Then there is stoichiometry. Plants require more than carbon for optimal growth. Indeed C is by now essentially ‘junk’ in that it may accrue as biomass but this in no way creates healthier, fitter plants if vital nutrients like N and P are shunted out of plant tissues. In the Amazon there is even evidence now that most vegetation has reached a saturation point and that these forests are no longer sinks but sources of C. But I digress. N is generally much more limiting as a nutrient than C. The loss of N is already having significant consequences up the food chain. Most consumers, in particular herbivores, depend on N in their diet. Given that plant food is highly suboptimal to begin with, containing an array of allelochemicals, digestibility reducers, tannins, resins and other non-nutritive components, the loss of vitally important N from plants will lead to compensatory feeding by herbivores as they seek to acquire sufficient N. To compound the problem many plants possess N-based defenses; these plants are under the great rusk of becoming less well-defended from their antagonists as atmospheric concetrations of N rise rapidly. By contrast, plants with C-based defenses become much more toxic. Again, those repeating this silly mantra of ‘C is plant food’ continually expunge complex non-linear ecophysiological processes from their rhetoric. In their world, cause-and-effect relationships are linear, but complex adaptive systems just do not function in that way.
I am a population ecologist whose research involves the effects of primary and secondary plant metabolism on plant-insect interactions, and I continually cringe when I see this fatally flawed argument extolling the wonders of increasec atmospheric CO2 on nature dredged up. Few if any of those making this argument are qualified in the relevant fields.
Jeff H@20,
Thank you for sharing your knowledge of ecological adaptation to us.
To help me, non-expert in your field, to better understand it, please xplain how the availability of N as nutrient to the plants has changed with changing climate. I think not all plants can assimilate it from air where N is main ingredient. But those that do (e.g. beans) have no problems and are unnafected. How are the others affected? By changed composition of the soil which becomes depleted of N carrying compountds? Do you see any local climate treands around the world that affect local ecology by depleting N as nutrient?
And why do you think amazon rainforrests are lately becoming C source?
The new scientist article below evaluates the CO2 is plantfood nonsense.
www.newscientist.com/article/dn11655-climate-myths-higher-co2-levels-will-boost-plant-growth-and-food-production/
There are many problems with the plantfood idea, and only certain types of crops have improved yeilds of about 14%. This is best case scenario, so I think it is hardly going to revolutionise farming, or solve food scarcity problems, so in no way even comes close to justifying the risks of climate change. There are many safer alternatives for improved productivity of that magnitude or more.
nigelj@22,
The excuse of CO2 being plant food is indeed irrelevant (use the term 'a real nothingburger' if you are conversing with a Right-Winger and you want to poke-at-them).
OOPOF@23
Bullet 1 if that were the case then the planet would not have increased greening over the past 40 years. Plant are noticeably bigger and stronger now.
Bullet2 the increased co2 may have some negative consequences in the future. If the tcr is low as predicted by many papers then the net effect of increased c02 will most likely be positive through increased food yields. Food yields have been increasing steadily.
Bullet3 not sure how the increased absorption of co2 into the seas will create a negative effect. The biosphere has been increasing its absorption capacity of co2.
Bullet4 yeah...but we need to burn it now....we need energy and and the greens refuse to consider the nuclear option. If co2 is what you want to reduce then nuclear ome of your best option
Bullet5 yeah...wars are fought over fossil fuel energy.....another good reason to embrace nuclear
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Off-topic and sloganeering snipped.
Rhoowl @25
"Bullet 1 if that were the case then the planet would not have increased greening over the past 40 years. Plant are noticeably bigger and stronger now."
CO2 has caused some greening, but this effect saturates fairly quickly. Amazon is already becoming a carbon source for example.
"Bullet2 the increased co2 may have some negative consequences in the future. If the tcr is low as predicted by many papers then the net effect of increased c02 will most likely be positive through increased food yields. Food yields have been increasing steadily."
Read my comment @22 and the attached reference source in scientific american: Improvements in crop yields are small, and obviously negated by the negative effects of CO2 emissions
"Bullet3 not sure how the increased absorption of co2 into the seas will create a negative effect. The biosphere has been increasing its absorption capacity of co2."
Co2 absorption makes the oceans acidic (strictly speaking less alkaline) This causes damage to corals and shellfish because the acidity damages their shells. It's not just these organisms, because acidicication affects the whole food chain negatively and we have evidence that it has caused mass extinctions in the past. Refer the scientific american article below:
www.scientificamerican.com/article/rising-acidity-in-the-ocean/
"Bullet4 yeah...but we need to burn it now....we need energy and and the greens refuse to consider the nuclear option. If co2 is what you want to reduce then nuclear ome of your best option"
The Greens do not run the government or power stations Currently generating companies and governments are not interested in the nuclear alternative because of high capital costs, and slow buiding and regulatory process. We have other alternatives such as solar, hydro, wind and geothermal and costs are becoming very cost competitive with coal and gas. Refer cost of electricity by source on wikipedia.
"Bullet5 yeah...wars are fought over fossil fuel energy.....another good reason to embrace nuclear"
Wars will be fought over supplies of uranium, which would become stretched by building massive numbers of nuclear power stations. The resources of wind and the sun are free. Materials used for wind towers are abundant.
Rhoowl @25, just one more comment: You say "If the tcr is low as predicted by many papers then the net effect of increased c02 will most likely be positive through increased food yields"
And only a minority of papers predict TCR is low as below.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_sensitivity
nigelj,
You have comprehensively debunked the attempted counter-claims made by Rhoowl.
I would add that Rhoowl did not to provide a counter-claim to my first point that the 280 ppm level that existed for the last 2000 years was more than enough. No part of the counter-claim provided evidence that global plant growth was 'deficient' when CO2 was at 280 ppm.
I would however concede that an increase to 350 ppm would be a reasonable limit to the damage done to future generations, as has been established by many reports. So, today's generation having to lose personal benefits and opportunity in order to unprofitably rapidly bring the current CO2 levels back down to 350 ppm would be sufficient penalty for what regrettably got away with being developed.
Yes, nijelj comprehensively debunked Rhoowl’s ‘arguments’.
What frustrates me is that my comment earlier did the same and yet Rhoowl posts later making profoundly unscientific comments correlating plant biomass with fitness (i.e. Plants are noticeably bigger and stronger). Such a flippant remark would not pass muster in a peer-reviewed journal. What is meant by ‘stronger’ is anyone’s guess. The fact that terrestrial vegetation is already reaching and exceeding saturation points is clear by now. Moreover, as I said before, there are species-specific responses that differ, generating phenological asynchronies that must be factored into community and system-wide effects, along with changes in stoichiometry that will affect not only plant metabolism with trophic interactions.
Deniers see the world in a decidedly linear way: cause-and-effect relationships in complex adaptive systems, however, are profoundly non-linear. This may explain why there are so few population ecologists and environmental scientists among denier ranks.