What Do We Think About Climate Change

Discussion in 'All Things Boats & Boating' started by Pericles, Feb 19, 2008.

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  1. bntii
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    bntii Senior Member

    Here is a Bush bit:

    "Addressing global climate change will require a sustained effort, over many generations. My approach
    recognizes that sustained economic growth is the solution, not the problem – because a nation that grows
    its economy is a nation that can afford investments in efficiency, new technologies, and a cleaner environment."

    President George W. Bush 2003
     
  2. Jimbo1490
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    Jimbo1490 Senior Member

    Along with that you could add that we did not end the stone age because we had run out of stones, but because we found something better with which to work. It will be the same for burning petroleum distillates; when we find something better, we will surely make the switch. Finding that something takes a bit of prosperity, quite a bit, actually. Prosperity is the 'goose' that lays the 'golden eggs' of technical innovation. Limiting carbon will make everyone poorer. There's not even a question of this, really; only a question of how much poorer. So the carbon cutting schemes have the potential (likelihood, really) of killing the goose so the innovation that might bring us that 'something better' never happens or is severely delayed.

    On top of that, the best estimates are that the most aggressive carbon cutting schemes proposed will have no measurable impact on climate whatsoever.

    Jimbo
     
  3. Boston

    Boston Previous Member

    well that elicited a huge response
    the demon consensus must have struck a nerve

    I haven't had a chance to read through all these but I did get a decidedly polite private message from Jim asking me to please read the rebuttal of the orseskes study
    I thought it only fare to do so although both studies are rather outdated
    a brief review found the following although there may be other relevant reactions not listed


    before Peiser made his objections Orseskis corrected herself and a correction was printed
    this is not uncommon as science demands a level of accuracy not always easy to attain
    science Magazine then went on to flatly rejected Peiser’s rebuttal letter stating

    From: Etta Kavanagh [mailto:ekavanag@aaas.org]
    Sent: 13 April 2005 22:39
    To: Peiser, Benny
    Subject: Your letter to SCIENCE

    Dear Dr. Peiser,
    After realizing that the basic points of your letter have already been widely dispersed over the internet, we have reluctantly decided that we cannot publish your letter. We appreciate your taking the time to revise it.

    what they didnt say in the rejection letter was that there were a few more holes in the Peiser study (than in Orseskes) that they had found dishonest at best

    Peiser performed his survey with the keywords 'global climate change' and searched for 'all document types' (which would include non-scientific, non-peer reviewed publications) rather than limiting the search to 'articles' (i.e., peer-reviewed publications) as in Oreskes' study.

    Peiser later admitted that it was a mistake to include the papers in his survey and said that his main criticism of Oreskes' essay was "that [Oreskes] claim of a unanimous consensus on [anthropogenic global warming] (as opposed to a majority consensus) is tenuous"

    In a letter that Peiser submitted to the Australian Media Watch Peiser explained that he had retracted some of his original critique and elaborated on some of his comments: "I do not think anyone is questioning that we are in a period of global warming. Neither do I doubt that the overwhelming majority of climatologists is agreed that the current warming period is mostly due to human impact.

    any when I get time Ill skim through and see whats shaking loose
    interesting that the mention of a consensus stirred up the nest so hotly

    hmmmmmmmmmmmm
    how about another stir

    In February 2007, the IPCC released a summary of the Fourth Assessment Report. According to this summary, the Fourth Assessment Report finds that human actions are “very likely” the cause of global warming, meaning a 90% or greater probability.

    Here’s a list of scientifitic organizations that support the IPCC’s assessment..

    The International Council of Acadamies of Engineering and Technological Sciences (CAETS).

    European Academy of Sciences and Arts

    Network of African Science Academies

    National Research Council (US)

    European Science Foundation

    American Association for the Advancement of Science

    Federation of American Scientists

    American Meteorological Society

    Royal Meteorological Society (UK)

    Australian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society

    Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society

    Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences

    International Union for Quaternary Research

    American Quaternary Association

    Stratigraphy Commission of the Geological Society of London

    International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics

    International Union of Geological Sciences

    European Geosciences Union

    Canadian Federation of Earth Sciences

    Geological Society of America

    American Geophysical Union

    American Astronomical Society

    American Institute of Physics

    American Physical Society

    American Chemical Society

    American Society for Microbiology

    American College of Prevenetive Medicine

    American Public Health Association

    American Medical Association

    American Statistical Association

    The Institute of Engineers Austraila

    The Environmental Protection Agency (US)

    Federal Climate Change Science Program (US)

    Here’s some that agreed with the IPCC assesement who’s statement included the term scientific consensus…

    American Association for the Advancement of Science

    US National Academy of Science

    American Meteorological Society

    and here’s one that was noncommittal ..

    American Association of Petroleum Geologists (weird huh?)



    …actually in July 2007 the American Association of Petroleum Geologists revisied their statement.



    That means no remaining scientific body of national or international standing is known to reject the basic findings of human influence on recent climate.
     
  4. bntii
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    bntii Senior Member

    Foul! I call foul..

    The NSSWCA is not listed and they are definitely not in agreement.

    :)
     
  5. Jimbo1490
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    Jimbo1490 Senior Member

    Back in the day, eugenics was accepted by all the major national and international scientific bodies, including several from your list above. I suppose if it wasn't for WWII and all the revelations that followed shortly thereafter, many of these would have continued in their support of eugenics at least into the 1960's and later.

    These 'consensus' arguments are meaningless to most of the people reading this thread; we know how easy it is for the majority to go astray; just look at history for examples.

    The AGW hysteria has done no harm whatsoever to the petroleum industry; au contraire, it has HELPED them tremendously! Because environmentalists have successfully blocked US efforts to develop our own petroleum resources, a 'scarcity mentality' has developed among oil traders (who actually set the prices, just as with so many other commodities), driving prices way up. There's no real 'reason' why oil prices should have got so high; present prices are proof of that. Oil rises and falls on just the ANNOUNCEMENT that more oil has been found here or there, or a big storm is headed toward the Gulf of Mexico. No real 'reason' just a mind set; a 'feeling'.

    I remember a cartoon in an old Mad magazine from the 70's of a farmer driving out to a single pea plant in the middle of a big field. His arm is protruding from the window of his limousine and he's watering the single pea plant with a little bucket. His arm reveals that he's dressed in a fine suit and there is gawdy jewelry on his hand. In the distance behind him you can see that he's got one pea plant every 100 yards or so.

    The implication is that it's not in the farmer's interest AT ALL to plant more peas and drive the price of peas down. Likwise, it's not AT ALL in the interest of the petroleum industry to find and drill more oil and drive prices down. They can make FAR more money pumping less at higher prices. The environmentalists are doing the oil companies a fine service, something for which they would otherwise find themselves called to uncomfortable hearings in front of a hostile congressional committee, if they had done it themselves.

    Jimbo
     
  6. Jimbo1490
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    Jimbo1490 Senior Member

    I know the Russian academy does not concur. Are they not of international standing?

    Jimbo
     
  7. Guillermo
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    Guillermo Ingeniero Naval

    :D :D :D :D :D

    But Boston, you keep on not answering questions and posting already known information! Why????
     
  8. Boston

    Boston Previous Member

    very funny
    a quick search reveals no such organization
    only thing that came up was
    NSWCA
    the Nebraska Scholastic Wrestling Association
    Im betting they have no opinion on the subject

    G
    in regards to why I am limiting my responses to one question per read
    I can only waist so much time on this fruitless discussion as I think the decisions some people make are based more on choice than on scientific evidence
    so many questions get raised, and when answered, receive rather than acknowledgment a quick pass onto some other hardly viable question
    I actually just dropped in to see who was still stuck on the subject
    never intended to get roped into some hopeless effort to convince a group of folks who rather than admit that 90% of data does concur, focus on questions concerning the 10% that does not; it seems obvious that a group of mostly engineers is having a hard time with the basic empirical method by which most science is based



    Jim
    Ill check out the Russian academy
    when they made there statement
    and when the report I quoted was released
    my bet is its a mater of timing as to the accuracy of that statement
    however it makes little difference
    the minority view is outnumbered a hundred to one if one at all
    seems a pretty dam clear consensus to me
     
  9. bntii
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    bntii Senior Member


    Perhaps I got the acronym wrong...
    It is a international body of some standing which deftly presents the counter argument.
     
  10. Boston

    Boston Previous Member

    still my previous statement pretty much covers it


    from dictionary.com
    con⋅sen⋅sus   [kuhn-sen-suhs] Show IPA Pronunciation
    –noun, plural -sus⋅es.
    1. majority of opinion: The consensus of the group was that they should meet twice a month.
    2. general agreement or concord; harmony.
    Origin:
    1850–55; < L, equiv. to consent(īre) to be in agreement, harmony (con- con- + sentīre to feel; cf. sense ) + -tus suffix of v. action

    from the miriam webster online dictionary
    Main Entry:
    con·sen·sus
    Pronunciation:
    \kən-ˈsen(t)-səs\
    Function:
    noun
    Usage:
    often attributive
    Etymology:
    Latin, from consentire
    Date:
    1843
    1 a: general agreement : unanimity <the consensus of their opinion, based on reports…from the border — John Hersey> b: the judgment arrived at by most of those concerned <the consensus was to go ahead>
    2: group solidarity in sentiment and belief
    usage The phrase consensus of opinion, which is not actually redundant (see sense 1a; the sense that takes the phrase is slightly older), has been so often claimed to be a redundancy that many writers avoid it. You are safe in using consensus alone when it is clear you mean consensus of opinion, and most writers in fact do so.

    face it folks
    there is a consensus view concerning global climate change and its not exactly a close call either
    matter of fact its been referred to as the most lopsided view ever in the history of scientific theory
    with near total agreement bordering on unanimous if not actually unanimous within the scientific community

    best
    B
     
  11. Guillermo
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    Guillermo Ingeniero Naval

    Boston, are you seriously saying you haven't heard about the NSSWCA? :confused:
     
  12. Boston

    Boston Previous Member

    can you spell it for me

    maybe that will set off an alarm or two

    and I dont quite trust you
    your sense of humor is way to good
    so If I cant find it in a data base
    its not happening
    if it were a real outfit and not the girl scouts of America
    it should have come up in a Google search
     
  13. Guillermo
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    Guillermo Ingeniero Naval

    Well, as a matter of fact I do think now that we urgently need to cut CO2 emissions, not because of global warming at all, but just because that only can be got by drastical cuts in fossil fuels and carbon burning, which is economically good for countries not having enough reserves of those and, more importantly, to change the whole world's vehicles industry to producing alternative energies consuming units. This will produce the third industrial revolution in the world, creating millions and millions of jobs, which is precisely what we need to be able to recover from the present financial crisis the greedy and the incompetent ones have brought all of us in.

    A couple of weeks ago I was acting as moderator at a 'round table' on alternative energies from the sea, both for sea vessels and land uses. I asked the representative of the Spanish Shipowners' Association and other members of the table if they had ever thought in questioning IMO's reccomendations on the cutting of CO2 emmissions from ships, because it could become to prove to be nonsense from the enviromental point of view. This created a lot of risen eyebrows among them and the public, so I exposed my personal views on the AGW thingy and the NSSWCA. Everybody was very surprised and, after some interesting debate, the conclusion was that it is absolutely irrelevant if the world warms or colds to cut CO2 emmissions from ships, because what it is really important to shipowners is to reduce the conventional fuels consumption because of their cost. Very specially because heavy fuels will be banned in the mid term, so light crakcs (diesels) will become of universal use even for the huge powers.
    http://www.verkeerenwaterstaat.nl/e...hintobanonheavyfueloilforseagoingvessels.aspx

    Cheers.
     
  14. Guillermo
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    Guillermo Ingeniero Naval

    Boston,
    "No Sun Spots Will Cool your ***"
    I'm beginning to credit Jim when he says you do not read the posts in this thread! :rolleyes:
     

  15. Boston

    Boston Previous Member

    interesting
    Im suprised that sail powered isnt making more of a come back

    those clipper ships moved mountains in there day
     
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