938 words in 6 separate arguments sharing 9 examples.
6 separate arguments? I dislike multi-quoting but it may be necessary here.
Ok: Eagle1Div's five main arguments, restated for clarity.
1) Climate scientists have a vested financial interest in scaring people enough to get funding. This can lead them to ignore inconvenient results, distort findings ect
2) The media seem to sympathise with the scientists (the example given is the 'climategate' emails - why were not more media outlets denouncing the scientists?). Although not stated by E1D, i assume it is implied that they sell more papers through alarmism. He didn't say this, so I will only attack the first statement.
3) The amount of CO2 humans output is tiny compared to the planet's size.
4) CO2 isn't that potent anyway - look at methane and water vapour.
5) Besides, for any given area forest fires put out more C02 then any human industry except maybe China. (Got to get the chink bashing in somewhere!). I'm not sure how to reconcile this with point 3 or point 4, but never mind.
6) A lot of people 'believe' in anthropic global warming because it fulfils their need for action and hope.
Ok. 6 arguments, 3 relating to why people would want to believe and 3 relating to the science.
The science should be quicker and involves maths. we are going to have to agree on some data to use, and since you're challenging the validity of the data that might be difficult. In the meantime I'll note where I get the numbers from. Let me know if you find a more amenable reputable source.
ok.
http://www.iea.org/stats/indicators.asp?COUNTRY_CODE=29 gives the global CO2 emissions for 2008 from fuel combustion only as: 29381.43MT
(so not forest fires, cement production ect)
here:
http://unfccc.int/resource/cd_roms/na1/ ... TAR-03.pdf
gives CO2 in atmosphere in 1750 as 280+-10 ppm and in 1990 as 367 ppm. The same source states "The present atmospheric CO2 concentration has not been exceeded during the past 420,000 years, and likely not during the past 20 million years." A net increase of 87 ppm over 240 years, or a change of about 31%.
(wikipedia has the current level as 390ppm, which sounds about right, but we'll use the IPCC numbers)
I was going to calculate that increase in ppm as a tonnage and compare it to both the 2008 output and the total tonnage of the atmosphere. Problem is, at these low percentages, the exact tonnage of the atmosphere changes the numbers easily, and getting an exact tonnage is near impossible because the amount of atoms moving back and forth from gas to other states - eg rust binding up oxygen, the seas dissolving air, nitrogen being 'fixed' by bacteria. Not to mention increasing CO2 by burning hydrocarbons also increases water vapur and decreases oxygen by tiny amounts.
fuck it, lets have a go anyway: (5x10^15 / 10^6) *87 = 435x10^9 tonnes of extra CO2 in the air between 1750 and 1990.
2008 alone contributed a further 29*10^9 tonnes. Obviously not all of that stayed in the air - plants, algae ect. but if it did it would increase the ppm value by 5.8. This would be a 2% difference from the 1750 value, and this is only one year of emissions. You do plan on living for more then a year yes?
So. I can show that humans have and can increase the percentage of CO2 significantly. This might be enough refute your claim that 'humans are unable to affect the atmosphere significantly'. I think further work is needed in this thread to show that the small percentage of the atmosphere that is CO2 is significant.
Oh. what a coincidence. It happens to be covered in your next argument - the effect of CO2 is insignificant compared to methane and water vapour.
lets have a look here:
http://www.grida.no/publications/other/ ... .htm#tab61
fortunately, they've done the calc for us: taking into account the amount of the gas and it's ability to trap EM radiation, CO2 comes out a clear winner at 1.46 Watts per m^2. At a third of it's value Methane is bubbling along with 0.46 Wm^-2 and Nitrous Oxide huffing along well behind. Sure methane's a problem, but it's a smaller one in net effect and a much smaller one in volume. People are looking at it, but CO2 is bigger and requires a far more fundamental change to pretty much everything civilised.
But what of Water Vapour? Well, the thing with water vapour, is it's almost impossible to remove from the atmosphere. I mean, if only the earth periodically cooled (say for 8hrs of every 24). If only the temperature range of the planet varied enough to allow us to just condense this pesky water vapour out as a liquid and if only we had enough Storage Extra Area (SEAs for short). We are actually adding water vapour when we burn hydro-carbons but if you think that's the main problem you'd be an idiot.
Incidentally, does increasing the amount of CO2 by a third count as significantly affecting the earth's atmosphere when it results in an extra 1.46Wm^-2? Because, given the surface area of the Earth, I'd call that a significant bit of extra heat. Oh, but you do agree the Earth is warming slightly, so that's all good.
The last 'scientific' argument.
forest fires are more significant, except them damn chinese.
I was going to look at USA's CO2 emissions, the area of it's forest, calc the results of burning all of it and point at you and laugh. But someone's already done it:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 085029.htm
"Overall, the study estimates that fires in the contiguous United States and Alaska release about 290 million metric tons of carbon dioxide a year, which is the equivalent of 4 to 6 percent of the nation's carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel burning"
So it is significant. But only stopping all fires would still leave 95% of the USA's emissions intact.
For the record, China's 2008 CO2 emissions are 6508.24MT, some 22 times larger then the USA's.
Of course, that's only 4.91MT per person, compared to the USA's 18.38MT. As further consideration, I wonder how much of each country's total comes from making stuff for the other country?
ok. that does it for the science. I'm off to get my bike fixed and bake a quiche. If no-one else has turned up by then I'll tackle the 3 conspiricy theory arguments.
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