Admiral Valdemar wrote:That, it can safely be said, is over 95% of all life on Earth dead and most of the land turned to dust with barely any modern aquatic species since up to the North Sea, the water will be over 40 degrees all year round.
I just did some maths; and if my SWAG is correct, in order to raise just the top 10% of the water in the world's oceans from an average of 17C to your 40C, it would require:
31,647 times the energy consumed by the world in one year (2001)
518.52 times the energy in world's estimated coal reserves (2003)
345.68 times the energy in world's estimated total fossil fuel reserves (2003)
898.77 times the total energy from the Sun that hits the Earth in 24 hours
2.46 times the total energy from the Sun that hits the Earth in 1 year
However, this is just the top 10% or so of the world's water. Below 500m, the average temperature of water is 1.5C, and it acts as a heat sink for the upper surface of the oceans. To heat that part up from 1.5C to 24.5C (the same 23C difference between 17C and 40C), you'd need:
284,820 times the energy consumed by the world in one year (2001)
4666.67 times the energy in world's estimated coal reserves (2003)
3111.11 times the energy in world's estimated total fossil fuel reserves (2003)
8088.9 times the total energy from the Sun that hits the Earth in 24 hours
22.16 times the total energy from the Sun that hits the Earth in 1 year
The Maths is based off of:
1.40E+021 kg of water in the world's oceans split into:
1.40E+020 kg of surface water (upper 10%)
1.26E+021 kg of deep water (remaining 90%)
96,296 joules needed to raise 1 kg of water 23 degrees C in temperature. (gotten from the handy calculator at
Linka)
3.90E+022 energy in world's estimated total fossil fuel reserves (2003)
2.60E+022 energy in world's estimated coal reserves (2003)
4.26E+020 energy consumed by the world in one year (2001)
1.50E+022 total energy from the Sun that hits the Earth in 24 hours
5.48E+024 total energy from the Sun that hits the Earth in 1 year
You can see that to get to that nice hot 40C it would require quite a lot of energy, of which the only realistic source of energy would be the sun.
In fact, to raise the surface temperature of the top 10% of that water only 1C would require only 11% of the Sun's yearly output on earth, as compared to 1,376
times our annual energy consumption which does tie in well with the explanation that a more active solar cycle is responsible for our temperature increases...not our puny efforts.