Guest Sundancefisher Posted April 17, 2009 Share Posted April 17, 2009 I've read it, its arguments are fairly cogent and well thought out devoid of the sort of emotive cadence your posts have. I like the book. al Good to hear. Most people that believe in global warming just assume they were brain washed. Obvious you are probably more like me. You want to see the facts presented with clear understanding of conjecture and assumptions so that we can tell what is the fact and what is the guess. I have devolved to emoting over the years as the emotion on the other side is so great that the refusal to listen seems to promote fighting fire with fire for some... I think the general public can not understand the complex science needed to predict weather and temperature patterns over hundreds, thousands and even millions of years. As such they respond big time to the emotional call for help to save the dying planet. Emotion has now become 90% of the argument on the pro global warming side. Cheers Sun Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TerryH Posted April 17, 2009 Share Posted April 17, 2009 Just to stir the pot a bit, here's a link to an interesting article that the Gore/Suzukiites have conveniently ignored. Oh, I forgot, the science has been settled. http://my.telegraph.co.uk/discpad/blog/200..._in_co2_famine_ Here's a brief excerpt: "Many people don't realize that over geological time, we're really in a CO2 famine now. Almost never has CO2 levels been as low as it has been in the Holocene (geologic epoch) - 280 (parts per million - ppm) - that's unheard of. Most of the time [CO2 levels] have been at least 1000 (ppm) and it's been quite higher than that," Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Castuserraticus Posted April 17, 2009 Share Posted April 17, 2009 Just to stir the pot a bit, here's a link to an interesting article that the Gore/Suzukiites have conveniently ignored. Oh, I forgot, the science has been settled. http://my.telegraph.co.uk/discpad/blog/200..._in_co2_famine_ Here's a brief excerpt: "Many people don't realize that over geological time, we're really in a CO2 famine now. Almost never has CO2 levels been as low as it has been in the Holocene (geologic epoch) - 280 (parts per million - ppm) - that's unheard of. Most of the time [CO2 levels] have been at least 1000 (ppm) and it's been quite higher than that," Herein lies a key point - geological time vs human life span. Even many working geologists, who deal with the vast spans of geological time in their work everyday, don't connect the variability in the rock record with their lifetime. Scientist is a general term that covers dozens of different disciplines. Scientists are people who suffer the same biases and tendencies that everyone else does. And we are often wrong. A tiny proportion of theories test out to be true and many are untestable. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sundancefisher Posted April 17, 2009 Share Posted April 17, 2009 Herein lies a key point - geological time vs human life span. Even many working geologists, who deal with the vast spans of geological time in their work everyday, don't connect the variability in the rock record with their lifetime. Scientist is a general term that covers dozens of different disciplines. Scientists are people who suffer the same biases and tendencies that everyone else does. And we are often wrong. A tiny proportion of theories test out to be true and many are untestable. I believe in a temperature cycle. The question is are we on an downward tick of an upward trend or a downward tick on a downward trend? No one is studying long term climate variability. No one is putting money towards crops that can work in variable climates. When all I see is a US President saying global warming causes drought and floods he might as well as say global warming causes blizzards and heat waves. All someone needs to see is in some areas at some times of the year in some years it is warmer than normal. While in a totally different area of the world they are experiencing colder than average temperatures. Caught in the middle are people having normal temperatures. The Earth has never been nor will ever be uniform in temperature across the whole planet. For all the money spent on this...millions of people starve...millions die of disease...millions go without safe water. It really is sad. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Castuserraticus Posted April 18, 2009 Share Posted April 18, 2009 I believe in a temperature cycle. The question is are we on an downward tick of an upward trend or a downward tick on a downward trend? No one is studying long term climate variability. No one is putting money towards crops that can work in variable climates. When all I see is a US President saying global warming causes drought and floods he might as well as say global warming causes blizzards and heat waves. All someone needs to see is in some areas at some times of the year in some years it is warmer than normal. While in a totally different area of the world they are experiencing colder than average temperatures. Caught in the middle are people having normal temperatures. The Earth has never been nor will ever be uniform in temperature across the whole planet. For all the money spent on this...millions of people starve...millions die of disease...millions go without safe water. It really is sad. I'm not arguing with you. I have read scientific and non scientific papers on both sides of the "discussion". I just can't see the evidence that anthropomorphic affects are dominating other processes. I know that variations in solar intensity cause over 90% of our climate - the correlation is nearly perfect. There is absolutely no way that our 3% of CO2 contribution is going to overwhelm solar effects. I also have no doubt that correlation between computer models and actual climate patterns is sheer coincidence. There are more unknowns in their models than knowns (remember algebra). I've dealt with less complicated earth models - what do you want the answer to be? There is not a lot of real discussion going on (see creation vs evolution). The global warmers are passionate that the people who aren't worried are wrong and dooming the earth. Our side is just as passionate that the data and public are being manipulated. They have won over the media for the time being and seem to have the upper hand politically. If this gains sufficient momentum to become a major budget issue, I expect it will be looked at, from an historical perspective, as one of the biggest boondoggles ever. As for crops, I think we've messed with our food supply more than enough when a company like Monsanto can sue farmers for planting crops that have traces of their genetic modifications due to natural cross pollenization processes. As a scientist, I have enough experience with dealing with other scientists to know we suffer the same biases as everyone else. We fall in love with our ideas and consider those who agree with us to be smart and the others to be less so. Sometimes we get lucky and find a truth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sundancefisher Posted April 24, 2009 Share Posted April 24, 2009 good read... Energy Myths and Realities Keith O. Rattie Chairman, President and CEO Questar Corporation Utah Valley University April 2, 2009 Thank you for that introduction. Good morning, everyone. I’m honored to join you today. I see a lot of faculty in the audience, but I’m going to address my remarks today primarily to you students of this fine school. Thirty-three years ago I was sitting where you are today, trying to decide what to do with my career after graduating with my degree in Electrical Engineering. I made a decision to go to work for an oil company – Chevron - on what turns out to have been a false premise: I was convinced that by the time I reached the age I am today that America and the world would no longer be running on fossil fuels. Chevron was pouring lots of money into alternatives – and they had lots of money and the incentive to find alternatives - and I wanted to be part of the transition. Fast forward 33 years. Today, you students are being told that by the time you’re my age the world will no longer be running on fossil fuels. I’m going to try to do something that seems impossible these days – and that’s have an honest conversation about energy policy, global warming and what it means for America’s energy future – and for you, the generation that will have to live with the consequences of the policy choices we make. My goal is to inform you with easily verifiable facts – not hyperbole and propaganda – and to appeal to your common sense. But first a few words about Questar. Questar Corporation is the largest public shareholder-owned company headquartered in Utah, based on stock-market value, NYSE ticker STR. We’re one of two Utah-based companies in the S&P 500. Most of you know us as the parent company of Questar Gas, the utility that sends you your natural gas bill every month. But outside of Utah and to investors we’re known as one of America’s fastest-growing natural gas producers. We also own a pipeline company. I’m also proud to say that we’re the only Utah-based company ever to make the Business Week magazine annual ranking of the 50 top-performing companies in the S&P 500 – we were #5 in both 2007 and 2008, and we’re #18 in the top 50 in Business Week’s 2009 ranking, just out this week. At Questar our mission is simple: we find, produce and deliver clean energy that makes modern life possible. We focus on natural gas, and that puts us in the “sweet spot” of America’s energy future and the global warming debate. Natural gas currently provides about one-fourth of America’s energy needs. When you do the math, the inescapable conclusion is that greater use of natural gas will be a consequence of any policy aimed at lowering America’s carbon footprint. You cut carbon dioxide emissions by up to 50% when you use natural gas instead of coal to generate electricity. You cut carbon emissions by at least 30% and NOx emissions by 90% when you use natural gas instead of gasoline in your car or truck - and here in Utah you save a lot of money - you can fill up your natural gas car at a cost of about 80 cents per gallon equivalent. You also cut carbon emissions by 30-50% when you use natural gas instead of fuel oil or electricity to heat your home. But you didn’t come here for a commercial about Questar and I didn’t come here to give you one. Let’s talk about energy. There may be no greater challenge facing mankind today – and your generation in particular - than figuring out how we’re going to meet the energy needs of a planet that may have 10 billion people living on it by the middle of this century. The magnitude of that challenge becomes even more daunting when you consider that of the 6.2 billion people on the planet today, nearly two billion people don’t even have electricity -- never flipped a light switch. Now, when I started my career with Chevron in the mid-1970s the “consensus” at the time was that America and the world were running out of oil. Ironically, the media back then was also declaring a scientific consensus that the planet was cooling, fossil fuels were to blame, and we were all going to freeze to death unless we kicked our fossil fuel habit. We were told we needed to find alternatives to oil – fast. That task, we were told, was too important to leave to markets, so government needed to intervene with massive taxpayer subsidies for otherwise uneconomic forms of energy. That thinking led to the now infamous 1977 National Energy Plan, an experiment with central planning that failed miserably. Fast-forward to today, and: déjà vu. This time the fear is not so much that we’re running out of oil, but that we’re running out of time – the earth is getting hotter, humans are to blame, and we’re all doomed unless we find alternatives to oil, gas and coal -- fast. Once again we’re being told that the job is too important to be left to markets. Well, the doomsters of the 1970s turned out to be remarkably wrong. My bet is that today’s doomsters will be proven wrong. Over the past 33 years mankind has consumed more than three times the world’s known oil reserves in 1976 – and today proven oil reserves are nearly double what they were before we started. The story with natural gas is even better – here and around the world enormous amounts of natural gas have been found. More will be found. And of course, the 30-year cooling trend that prompted the global cooling scare in the mid-70s abruptly ended in the late 70s, replaced by with a 20-year warming trend that peaked in 1998. The lesson that we should’ve learned from the 1970s is that when it comes to deciding how much energy gets used, what types of energy get used, and where, how and by whom energy gets used -- that job is too important not to be left to markets. Now, I’d love to stand up here and debate the science of global warming. The mainstream media, of course long ago declared that debate over -- global warming is a planetary emergency, we’ve got to change the way we live now. I’ve followed this debate closely for over 15 years. I read everything I can get my hands on. I’m an engineer, so I try to bypass the media’s penchant for alarmism – “World coming to an end – details at 11” - and go straight to the actual science. My research convinces me that claims of a scientific consensus mislead the public and policy makers - and often reflect another agenda. Yes, planet earth does appear to be warming – but by a not so unusual and not so alarming one degree over the past 100 years. Indeed, global average temperatures have increased by about one degree per century since the end of the so-called Little Ice Age 250 years ago. And, yes carbon dioxide concentration in the upper atmosphere has increased over the past 250 years from about 280 parts per million in 1750 to about 380 parts per million today – that’s .00038. What that number tells you is that carbon dioxide – the gas that everyone in this room exhales every three seconds or so, the gas that plants need to grow - is a trace gas, comprising just four out of every 10,000 molecules in the atmosphere. But it’s a very important trace gas – without CO2 in the atmosphere, the earth would be a lifeless ball covered with ice. And yes, most scientists believe that humans are responsible for much of that increase. But that’s where the alleged consensus ends. Contrary to the righteous certitude we get from some, no one knows how much warming will occur in the future, nor how much of any warming that does occur will be due to man, and how much to nature. No one knows what the impact of warming will be, nor how easily people, plants and species will adapt to warming. When you hear someone claim they know, I suggest Mark Twain’s advice: respect those who seek the truth, be wary of those who claim to have found it. My views on this issue changed dramatically about a decade ago when I looked at the inputs to one of the global circulation models (GCM) that had been built to predict warming over the next century. If the only input were carbon dioxide, the output would be simple – doubling of the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere would result in only about a 1 degree increase in global average temperatures over the next 100 years. But the earth’s climate is what geek engineers refer to as a “non-linear, dynamic system”. There are dozens of inputs, and as I studied the model further I concluded that many of the inputs into these models are little more than the opinion of the scientist – in some cases, just a guess. For example, water vapor is the most important greenhouse gas – far more potent than CO2. [As an aside, if CO2 is a “pollutant” as some assert, then water vapor is also a “pollutant” – an absurd conclusion. But I digress]. I discovered that scientists do not agree on how to model water vapor, clouds, precipitation and evaporation. Some argue that clouds amplify CO2 forcing, others believe precipitation acts as the earth’s thermostat. The point is there’s no consensus this fundamental issue. But the reality for American consumers is that whether you agree that the science is settled or not, the political science is settled. The new Congress has promised to “do something”. Carbon dioxide regulation is coming. Indeed, President Obama’s hope of shrinking the massive federal budget deficit depends on vast new carbon revenues from a tax on carbon energy – so called “cap and trade”. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has promised a bill by May. Under cap-and-trade, the government would try to create a market for carbon dioxide by selling credits to companies that emit carbon dioxide. They would set a cap for the maximum amount of CO2 emissions. Over time, the cap would be lowered. In theory, this will induce companies to invest in lower-carbon technologies, thus reducing emissions to avoid the cost of buying credits from other companies that have already met their emissions goals. The costs of the credits would be passed on to consumers. Because virtually everything we do and consume in modern life has a carbon footprint, the cost of just about everything will go up. This in theory will cause each of us to choose products that have a lower-carbon footprint. Any way you slice it, cap and trade a tax on the way we live our lives – one that by design will produce a windfall for government. Here’s the crucial point. The long term goal is ‘80 by 50’– an 80% reduction in carbon dioxide emissions by 2050. Please indulge me as we do the math on what ‘80 by 50’ means, using Utah as an example. Utah’s carbon footprint today is about 66 MM tons per year. Our population is 2.6 MM. You divide those two numbers, and the average Utahan today has a carbon footprint of about 25 tons per year. An 80% reduction in Utah’s carbon footprint by 2050 implies a reduction from 66 MM tons today to about 13 MM tons per year by 2050. If Utah’s population continues to grow at 2% per year, by 2050 there will be about 6 MM people living in our state. So 13 MM tons divided by 6 MM people = 2.2 tons per person per year. Under 80 by 50 by the time you folks are about my age you will be required to have a carbon footprint of just 2.2 tons per year. Q: when was the last time Utah’s carbon footprint was as low as 2.2 tons per person? A: not since Brigham Young and the Mormon pioneers first entered the Wasatch Valley and declared “this is the place”. You reach a similar conclusion when you do the math on ‘80 by 50’ for the entire country. ‘80 by 50’ would require a reduction in America’s carbon footprint from about 20 tons per person per year today, to less than 2 tons per person per year in 2050 – again, a 90% reduction in per capita carbon footprint. Q: when was America’s carbon footprint as low as 2 tons per person per year? A: not since the Pilgrims arrived at Plymouth Rock in 1620. In short, ‘80 by 50’ means that by the time you folks are my age, you won’t be allowed to use anything made with - or made possible by - fossil fuels. So I want to focus you young people today on this critical question: “How on God’s green earth – pun intended - are you going to do what my generation said we would do but didn’t – and that’s wean yourselves from fossil fuels in just four decades?” That’s a conversation that each of you, and indeed, all Americans need to engage in now -- because when it comes to “how” there clearly is no consensus. Simply put, with today’s energy technologies, we can’t get there from here. The hallmark of this dilemma is our inability to reconcile our prosperity and our way of life with our environmental ideals. We Americans love our cars. We like the freedom to “move about the country” – to drive to work, fly to conferences, visit distant friends and family. We aspire to own the biggest house we can afford. We like to keep our homes and offices warm in the winter and cool in the summer. We like devices that use electricity – computers, flat screen TVs, cell phones, the Internet, and many other conveniences of modern life that come with a power cord. We want food that’s low cost, high quality, and free of bugs – which means farmers must use fertilizers and pesticides made from fossil fuels. We like things made of plastic and clothes made with synthetic fibers – and all of these things depend on abundant, affordable, growing supplies of energy. And guess what? We share this planet with 5.9 billion other people who all want the same damn things. America’s energy use has been growing at about 1.5 % per year, driven by population growth and prosperity. But while our way of life depends on ever-increasing amounts of energy, we’re downright schizophrenic when it comes to the things that energy companies must do to deliver the energy that makes modern life possible. We want energy security – we don’t like being dependent on foreign oil. But we also don’t like drilling in the U.S. Millions of acres of prospective onshore public lands here in the Rockies plus the entire east and west coast of the U.S. are off-limits to drilling for a variety of reasons, some legitimate, some not. We hate paying $2 per gallon for gasoline -- but not as much as we hate the refineries that turn unusable crude oil into gasoline. We haven’t allowed anyone to build a new refinery in the U.S. in over 30 years. We expect the lights to come on when we flip the switch, but we don’t like coal, the source of 40% of our electricity – it’s dirty and mining scars the earth. We also don’t like nuclear power, the source of nearly 20% of our electricity -- it’s clean, but we’re afraid of it. Hydropower, the source of about 6% of our electricity is clean and renewable. But it has also been blacklisted – dams hurt fish. We don’t want pollution of any kind, in any amount, but we also don’t want to be asked: “how much are we willing to pay for environmental perfection?” When it comes to global warming, Time magazine tells us to “be worried, be very worried” – and we say we are -- but we don’t act that way. Let me suggest that our conversation about how to reduce carbon dioxide emissions must begin with a few “inconvenient” realities. Reality 1: America’s and the world’s demand for energy will grow by 30-50% over the next two decades – in fact it will more than double and could triple by the time you’re my age. Simply put, America and the rest of the world will need all the energy that markets can deliver. We’re going to need it all – oil, natural gas, coal, nuclear, wind, solar, geothermal, biofuels. Reality 2: There are no near-term alternatives to oil, natural gas, and coal. Like it or not, the world runs on fossil fuels, and it will for decades to come. The U.S. government’s own forecast shows that fossil fuels will supply about 85% of total world energy demand in 2030 – roughly the same as today. Yes, someday we’ll find alternatives. But that day is still a long way off. It’s not about will. It’s not about who’s in the White House. It’s about thermodynamics and economics. Now, I was told back in the 1970s the same that you’re being told today: that wind and solar power are ‘alternatives’ to fossil fuels. A more honest description would be ‘supplements’. Taken together, wind and solar power today account for just one-sixth of 1% of America’s annual energy consumption today. Let me repeat that statistic – one-sixth of one percent -- .0016. I’m holding a pie chart showing total U.S. primary energy demand today. PowerPoint won’t even create a thin slice for wind and solar – it’s just a line. Back when I was starting my career Jimmy Carter declared that America would be out of oil and gas by 1990, and declared alternative energy the “moral equivalent of war.” Thirty years and $30 billion in government subsidies and all we get for all the wind farms and all the solar electricity plants in operation in this country today is a thin line on a pie chart. Undaunted by all of this, President Obama has proposed to double wind and solar power generation in this country by the end of his first term. I would first point out that the line on this pie chart will become a slightly thicker line by the end of his first term. I would also point out that wind and solar power doubled in just the last three years of the George W. Bush administration. I’ll grant you that W. started from a smaller baseline, so doubling again over the next four years will be a taller order. But if President Obama’s goal is achieved, wind and solar together will grow from one-sixth of one percent to a combined one-third of one percent of total primary energy use – and that assumes energy consumption remains stagnant, which of course it will not. The problems with wind and solar power become apparent when you look at their footprint. To generate electricity comparable to a 1,000 MW gas-fired power plant you’d have to build a wind farm with at least 500 very tall windmills occupying 40,000 acres of land. What about solar power? Well, here’s a photo of “America’s most productive utility-scale solar electricity plant”. It has a capacity 8.2 MW, and it’s located on 82 acres of land in southwest Colorado. When you take into account the fact that the sun doesn’t always shine, you would need roughly 250 of these plants, occupying roughly 20,000 acres to replace a single 1,000 MW gas-fired power plant. By comparison, a 1,000 MW gas-fired power plant can be built on about 10 -15 acres. [Another example, you’ll find a photo of Sempra energy’s El Dorado Solar near Las Vegas on their website. 10 MW – largest of its kind in North America – built next to a 500 MW gas-fired power plant. They plan to run the gas plant and “supplement” gas-power with solar when its available. This is the current state of the art]. The Salt Lake Tribune recently celebrated the planned startup of a 14 MW geothermal plant near Beaver, Utah. That’s wonderful! But the Tribune failed to put 14 MW into perspective. Utah has over 7,000 MW of installed generating capacity, primarily coal. America has one million MW of installed capacity. Because U.S. demand for electricity has been growing at about 2% per year – we need to build 10-20,000 MW of new capacity every year to keep pace with growth. There’s a worldwide building boom in new coal-fired power plants – over 200,000 MW under construction, over 30,000 MW in China. In fact, there are 30 coal plants under construction in the U.S. today that when complete will burn about 70 million tons of coal per year. Why did my generation fail to develop wind and solar? Because our energy choices are ruthlessly ruled, not by political judgments, but by the immutable laws of thermodynamics. In engineer-speak, turning diffused sources of energy such as photons in sunlight or the kinetic energy in wind requires massive investment to concentrate that energy into a form that’s usable on any meaningful scale. What’s more, the wind doesn’t always blow and the sun doesn’t always shine. Unless or until there’s significant breakthrough in high-density electricity storage – a problem that has confounded scientists for more than a century – wind and solar can never be relied upon to provide base load power. But it’s not just thermodynamics. It’s economics. Over the past 150 years America has invested trillions of dollars in our existing energy systems – offshore platforms, power plants, the grid, steam and gas turbines, railroads, pipelines, distribution infrastructure, refineries, service stations, boilers, airplanes, cars, trucks, appliances, etc. Changing that infrastructure to a system based on renewable energy will take decades and massive new investment. To be clear, we need all the wind and solar power the markets can deliver at prices we can afford. But please, let’s get real -- wind and solar are not “alternatives” to fossil fuels. [if time, explain why Bush’s hydrogen vision has gone nowhere]. Reality 3: Carbon cap and trade regulation will drive the cost of energy painfully higher. Obama’s budget puts the cost at $650 MM over the next decade. Some believe that this estimate could be off by a factor of three – suggesting the true cost will approach $2 trillion over the next decade. As I mentioned, the businesses that are forced to buy credits will pass this cost on in the price of their goods – we’ll all pay for it. Aside from the enormous cost, I hope you would ask: will cap and trade work? In my opinion the answer is no. It won’t work until we have viable alternatives to fossil fuels that can be delivered to markets at scale and at a cost that is politically and economically acceptable. The European Union implemented a cap and trade scheme in an effort to meet their Kyoto commitments to reduce carbon emissions to below 1990 levels by 2012. [Explain Kyoto if time]. There’s a reason why they’re failing: no country is willing to sacrifice their economy and their standard of living to do so. Europe’s cap and trade scheme was designed to fail – and it’s working as designed. Let me do the math to explain why Kyoto would have failed in the U.S. and why I think Obama’s cap and trade scheme will also fail. Americans were responsible for about 5 billion metric tons of CO2 emissions in 1990. By 2005 that amount had risen to about 5.8 billion tons. Let’s suppose that the U.S. had signed the Kyoto treaty back in 1997 – incidentally, Bill Clinton was President and Al Gore was Vice President when the Senate voted 95-0 to reject Kyoto - the U.S. would’ve committed to cut manmade CO2 emissions to 7% below that 1990 level – to about 4.6 billion tons, a 1.2 billion ton per year cut. Q: what would it take to cut CO2 emissions by 1.2 billion tons per year by 2012? A: a lot more sacrifice than just riding your Schwinn to work or school, and changing light bulbs. We could’ve outlawed gasoline. In 2005 gasoline use in America generated about 1.1 B tons of CO2. That would almost get us there. Or, we could shut down over half of the coal-fired power plants in this country – coal plants generated about 2 B tons of CO2 in 2005. Of course, before we did that we’d have to get about 60 MM Americans and a significant number of American businesses to volunteer to go without electricity. This simple math is not friendly to those who demand that government to mandate sharp cuts in manmade carbon dioxide emissions -- now. Reality 4: Even if America does cut CO2 emissions, the same computer models that predict manmade warming over the next century also predict that Kyoto-type CO2 cuts will have no discernible effect on global average temperatures for decades, if at all. The models show that Kyoto reductions would prevent only a small fraction of one degree of warming over the next 50 years. When was the last time you read that in the paper? We’ve been told that Kyoto was “just a first step.” Your generation may want to ask: “what’s the second step?” That begs another question: “how much are Americans willing to pay for ‘a first step’ that has no discernible effect on global climate?” The answer here in Utah is: not much, according to a public opinion poll conducted by Dan Jones and Associates published in the Deseret News. 63% of those surveyed said they’re worried about global warming. But when asked how much they’d be willing to see their electricity bills go up to help cut carbon dioxide emissions, only half were willing to pay more for electricity. Only 18% were willing to see their power bill go up by 10% or more. Only three percent were willing to see their power bill go up by 20%. Here’s the rub: many Europeans today pay at least 20% more for electricity as a consequence of their (failed) efforts to severe the link between modern life and CO2 emissions. If Americans aren’t willing to pay a lot more for their energy, how do we reduce CO2 emissions? Well, here are four things we can all agree on. First, we need to improve energy efficiency. Second, we need to stop wasting energy. Third, we need to conserve energy. Fourth, we need to rethink our irrational fear of nuclear power. I see Steve Creamer, the Chairman and CEO of Energy Solutions is here today. I’ll let Steve make the case for nuclear power. Fifth, we need to embrace one of the key recommendations of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change - substitute low-carbon natural gas for higher-carbon coal and oil. The good news: we can now do so without driving the price of natural gas to unacceptable high levels. Indeed, 2008 will be remembered in the energy industry as the year U.S. natural gas producers changed the game for U.S. energy policy. Smart people in my industry have ‘cracked the code’ – we’ve figured out how to produce stunning amounts of natural gas from shale formations right here in the U.S. [Explain difference between shale gas and shale oil]. As a result, we can now say with confidence that America and the world are “swimming” in natural gas. U.S. onshore natural gas production has grown more than 20% over the past three years, a feat that most energy experts thought impossible a few years ago. America’s known natural gas resource base now exceeds 100 years of supply at current U.S. consumption – and that number is sure to get bigger. Abundant supplies mean that natural gas prices over the next decade and beyond will likely be much lower than over the past five years. While prices may spike from time to time in response to sudden, unexpected changes in supply or demand – for example, hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico or extreme cold or hot weather – these spikes will be temporary. Greater use of natural gas produced in America - by American companies who pay American taxes - will help reduce oil imports. Unlike oil, 98% of America’s natural gas supply comes from North America. What’s more, we don’t need massive new investment in gas-fired power plants to substitute gas for coal. I mentioned earlier that America has about one million MW of installed electric generation capacity. Forty percent of that capacity is built to run on natural gas – about 400,000 MW. That compares to just 312,000 MW of coal capacity. But unlike those coal plants, which run at an average load factor of about 75%, America’s existing, installed natural gas-fired power plants operate with an average load factor of less than 25%. Turns out that we’ve got a quick and easy way to cut carbon emissions without driving the price of electricity through the roof – use clean burning, low-carbon, American-made natural gas in our existing, underutilized gas-fired power plants. Sixth, your generation needs to focus on new technology and not just assume it, as many in my generation did back in the 70s – and as many in Congress continue to do today. Just one example: there’s no such thing as “clean” coal. But given America and the world’s dependence on coal for electric generation, we need to fund R&D aimed at capturing and storing carbon dioxide from fossil fuel plants. [Mention USTAR funding]. To be sure, carbon capture and sequestration will be hugely expensive and it’ll take decades to implement on any meaningful scale. The high costs will be passed through in electricity rates to consumers. It’s not just the capture part - we’ll have to construct a massive pipeline grid comparable to our existing natural gas pipeline grid, and drill thousands of wells to transport and pump massive amounts of CO2 into the ground. The facilities required to do this will use huge amounts of energy – which most likely will come from fossil fuels, negating some of the carbon reduction benefits. We’re not sure where we’re going to put all this CO2. Questar is one of the largest owner-operators of underground natural gas storage. Gas storage is in high demand - we’re always looking for places to build cost-effective storage. But I can tell you that there aren’t many places left that are economic to develop. That will be the case with CO2 sequestration as well. But the point is, R&D aimed at allowing us to continue to use fossil fuels while waiting for breakthroughs in other technologies seems a rational thing to do. Seventh, it’s time to have an honest discussion about alternative responses to global warming than what will likely be a futile attempt to eliminate CO2 emissions related to fossil fuel use. In truth, while many scientists believe man’s use of fossil fuels is at least partly responsible for global warming, many also believe the amount of warming will be modest and the planet will easily adapt. Just about everyone agrees that a modest amount of warming won’t harm the planet. In fact, highly-respected scientists such as Harvard astrophysicist Willie Soon believe that added CO2 in the atmosphere may actually benefit mankind because more CO2 helps plants grow and increases biodiversity. When was the last time you read that in the paper? You’ve no doubt heard the argument that even if global warming turns out not to be as bad as some are saying, we should still cut carbon emissions – as an insurance policy – the so-called precautionary principle. While appealing in its simplicity, there are three major problems with the precautionary principle. First, none of us live our lives according to the precautionary principle. Let me give you just one example. Around the world about 1.2 million people die each year in car accidents – about 3,200 deaths a day. At that pace, 120 million people will die this century in a car wreck somewhere in the world. We could save the lives of 120 million people by banning cars and trucks, or by imposing a 5 mile per hour speed limit worldwide. How many of you can live with a 5 MPH speed limit to save 120 million lives? Of course we don’t – we accept trade-offs. We implicitly do a cost-benefit analysis and conclude that we’re not going to do without our cars, even if doing so would save 120 million lives. Don’t you think we should insist on an honest cost-benefit analysis for cap and trade regulation? Second, the media dwells on the potential harm from global warming, but ignores the fact that the costs borne to address it will also harm us. We have a finite amount of wealth in the world. We have a long list of problems – hunger, poverty, malaria, nuclear proliferation just to name a few. Your generation should ask: how can we do the most good with our limited resources? The opportunity cost of diverting a large part of current wealth to solve a potential problem 50-100 years from now means we do “less good” dealing with these other problems. Third, economists will tell you that the consequence of what is in effect a huge tax on the way we live our lives will be slower economic growth. Slower economic growth, compounded over several decades, means that we leave future generations with less wealth to deal with the consequences of global warming, whatever they may be. [Compare U.S. wealth in 1900 vs. today]. In truth, mankind has proven to be remarkably adaptive. Humans live north of the Arctic Circle where temperatures are below zero most of the year. Roughly one-third of mankind today lives in tropical climates where temperatures often exceed 100 degrees. In fact, you can take every one of the potential problems caused by global warming and identify lower-cost ways to deal with that problem than rationing energy use. For example, if in fact melting arctic ice causes the sea level to rise, a wealthier world will adapt over time by moving away from the beach or building retaining walls to protect beachfront property. What about the polar bear? Polar bears have survived sometimes dramatic climate changes over thousands of years, most recently the so called “medieval warm period” of 1000-1300 A.D. in which large parts of the arctic glaciers disappeared and Greenland was truly “green”. It’s an established fact that more polar bears die each year from gunshot wounds than from drowning. The first thing we need to do to protect polar bears is to stop shooting them. Let me close by returning to the lessons my generation learned from the 1970s energy crisis. We learned that energy choices favored by politicians but not confirmed by markets are destined to fail. If history has taught us anything it’s that we should let markets determine how much energy gets used, what types of energy get used, and where, how and by whom energy gets used. What’s more, no form of energy is perfect, thus only markets can weigh the advantages and disadvantages of different energy forms. Instead, government’s role is to set reasonable standards for environmental performance, and make sure markets work. I’ve tried to cover a lot of ground this afternoon. I hope my comments provoke at least some of you to become engaged in the discussion about America’s energy future. Most of all I wish you freedom, prosperity – and abundant supplies of energy at prices you can afford. Thank you for your attention, and now I’ll be glad to take rebuttal! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sundancefisher Posted April 27, 2009 Share Posted April 27, 2009 Looks like this week will be another cold one. How many days, weeks, months years does it take to convince someone that global warming is just global temperature fluctuations? The 1930's is still the warmest on record. The temperatures have been dropping since 1998. This past year was the coldest in Canada in 11 years. The IPCC removed the hockey stick model as their own people admitted there is no spike in temperatures in the past 10 years. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
reevesr1 Posted April 27, 2009 Share Posted April 27, 2009 Sun, if you are going to try to convince people that your theories are correct, might I suggest finding someone a bit more scholarly than a CEO of a Gas Company, particularly one with no advanced degree that I can find? Or maybe a speech at a school a trifle more prestigious than Utah Valley State? But his job and education level aside, maybe someone who would not utter this wonderful paragraph: In truth, mankind has proven to be remarkably adaptive. Humans live north of the Arctic Circle where temperatures are below zero most of the year. Roughly one-third of mankind today lives in tropical climates where temperatures often exceed 100 degrees. In fact, you can take every one of the potential problems caused by global warming and identify lower-cost ways to deal with that problem than rationing energy use. For example, if in fact melting arctic ice causes the sea level to rise, a wealthier world will adapt over time by moving away from the beach or building retaining walls to protect beachfront property. What about the polar bear? Polar bears have survived sometimes dramatic climate changes over thousands of years, most recently the so called “medieval warm period” of 1000-1300 A.D. in which large parts of the arctic glaciers disappeared and Greenland was truly “green”. It’s an established fact that more polar bears die each year from gunshot wounds than from drowning. The first thing we need to do to protect polar bears is to stop shooting them. I found the "retaining wall" line hysterical. Can someone add up the amount of beachfront property for me? What about islands near sea level? Just build a big wall, that'll do it! or this: Let me close by returning to the lessons my generation learned from the 1970s energy crisis. We learned that energy choices favored by politicians but not confirmed by markets are destined to fail. If history has taught us anything it’s that we should let markets determine how much energy gets used, what types of energy get used, and where, how and by whom energy gets used. What’s more, no form of energy is perfect, thus only markets can weigh the advantages and disadvantages of different energy forms. Instead, government’s role is to set reasonable standards for environmental performance, and make sure markets work. OK, let me turn to the lessons learned by the Economic Crisis of 2008/2009--Leaving the market to decide things for itself is not always the best path to trod upon. And who decides the reasonable standards? Back in the day, the "reasonable standards" allowed companies to do pretty much whatever they wanted to the environment. My home county has 4 superfund sites as a reminder of those times. Basically land that will never in my lifetime be used for anything. Now, we have standards to stop such behavior, but a little too late. I'm sure that economists back in those day said that if we put "draconian" environmental standards on companies, the economic price would be too high. "Let the market decide" would have been their rallying cry as well. Turns out they (the economists) were wrong. As I've said before, I don't have the slightest idea what the deal is with global warming. Lots of conflicting opinions and I do not have the expertise to make sense of it all. But I AM smart enough not to be dissuaded by a rambling CEO of a Gas company at some second rate university (no offense to any Utah Valley State grad on this site). Note: I just looked up Utah Valley State. No advanced degree programs. Some science, no engineering. They do offer a course in Diesel Mechanics though. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
seanbritt Posted April 27, 2009 Share Posted April 27, 2009 As an environmental archaeologist I feel I need to weigh in here. There is no question, beyond a doubt, that the empirical evidence shows there exists a phenomenon known as "climate change." The problem is, climate change has been happening throughout the history of this planet. There have been natural warming/cooling cycles since the end of the last ice age for which there is mounds of evidence in various types of data, including the pollen record, botanical record, etc. However, the one factor that our earth has never seen for most of its history is humans and the impact we have. In 1750, there were 750,000 people. Today there are over 6.7 billion and by 2150 that number is expected to rise to 9.7 billion. We ALL know what its like when more people start fishing a river. Everything about that river changes. Erosion increases, if its not catch and release-the numbers dwindle, if it is catch and release-the fish get harder to catch, etc. Same concept applies to the earth, but we're just figuring out now exactly what that impact means. And the overwhelming agreement is that these warming/cooling trends will continue, but will be exacerbated by human impact. In fact, there is strong evidence to show that the majority of the impact started with the advent of the industrial revolution and all the cumulative impacts that revolution had. Essentially, there will be more frequent violent natural disasters, regions will change, etc. However, the earth will survive. Weather or not we will depends on what we do about the situation. So what do we do about it. Yes, we can be cynical and deny what the professional experts are saying. But, we can also do something about it. Will turning off our lights for an hour make a difference? No. Will it raise awareness, maybe. Will shutting off our lights every night when we're not using them, recycling, using energy efficient appliances, etc. make a difference. Yes. Individually we may not make a dent. But we no longer live in an individualistic world. And only when we realize this will we make a difference together for future generations. Two interesting studies on how this applies to trout streams: "Low Flows, Hot Trout: Climate Change in the Clark Fork Watershed" July 2008 "Effects of Global Warming on Trout and Salmon in US Trout Streams" May 2002 The problem is the cumulative impacts, not the singular event. I'll leave with this one example. Due to long term warming trends, glaciers have been receeding in our mountains (in 10 years "Glacier National Park" will no longer have glaciers). These are the water towers for our country. As our water levels drop, demand increases. We all know what happens when water levels get too warm and too low, but what if now there is an even greater demand: human consumption. Anyone living/have lived in MT can attest to the challenges of this topic. Who will win out, fish or farmers? The populations of our countries major cities, or sportspeople? p.s. As for humans being adaptive. Yes, we are. However, for as many examples of situations where we have adapted, I can show you equal amounts where we haven't, including historic examples from Iceland where the civilization didn't adapt to traditional hunting/fishign methods, opting for their more traditional lifestyle. They died out and there is the archaeological evidence to prove it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
headscan Posted April 27, 2009 Share Posted April 27, 2009 I found the "retaining wall" line hysterical. Can someone add up the amount of beachfront property for me? What about islands near sea level? Just build a big wall, that'll do it! Sure. Worked for New Orleans. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Castuserraticus Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 Sun, if you are going to try to convince people that your theories are correct, might I suggest finding someone a bit more scholarly than a CEO of a Gas Company, particularly one with no advanced degree that I can find? ... People with advanced degrees are the only thinkers allowed? Does my BSc count or is that not advanced enough? Would the same statistics be more acceptable if they were stated by someone with an advanced degree? While I agree his speech is highly slanted towards natural gas, he makes no secret that he runs a gas company. When academics speak from their exhalted podiums, do we know who they are receiving their funding from or what their personal interests or political motives are? When I was graduating, the only people who stayed on for graduate degrees were the ones who couldn't find jobs. I guess I was unfortunate enough to get a job. There has always been a "holier than thou" attitude to advanced education that seems to have gained real political traction. Several of my profs would not have survived outside tenured academia. AT one major company I worked at, it was unspoken policy to keep the academics out of the working teams. I have worked with brilliant high school drop-out field staff and PhD's. Both knew their fields very well. I've also seen incompetence in both levels of education. At different times, I've considered returning to school to get an advanced degree. My wife is just completing a masters and her experience as an adult professional dealing with barely competent instructors makes me take pause again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
reevesr1 Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 People with advanced degrees are the only thinkers allowed? Does my BSc count or is that not advanced enough? Would the same statistics be more acceptable if they were stated by someone with an advanced degree? Castus, Absolutely not. I don't have an advanced degree, and actually got my undergrad after 8 yrs as a tech in the Navy. My degree advanced my ability to reason absolutely none. Interestingly enough, I was being sponsored to get an advanced degree, but as I was one of a very few engineers who got offered a job (1992 in Alberta), I took it. Having an advanced degree, or any degree at all, does not necessarily mean anything. But I have met some with advanced degree who were wicked smart (had to drop in a Good Will Hunting reference) and many who were perfectly capable of getting a job, yet chose to continue their education. That said, I did not find the speech well written or well reasoned, no matter what his education level was. If I were a advocate of humans not causing climate change, his is not the article I would use to advance my position. If I offended anyone with my tongue in cheek reference to his education level, I apologize. If I offended anyone from Utah Valley State, I apologize. If I offended anyone who believes in Global Warming, I apologize. If I offended anyone who does not believe in Global Warming, I apologize. That cover everyone? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
seanbritt Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 Rick- I would add, vertically challenged persons, wild boars, and teddy bears to the list too. That should then cover it. p.s. for what its worth, i think that speech was as verifiable as the ones written by the tobacco lobbyist "doctors" during their class-action suits, stating that there is no link between smoking and cancer. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sundancefisher Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 And the overwhelming agreement is that these warming/cooling trends will continue, but will be exacerbated by human impact. In fact, there is strong evidence to show that the majority of the impact started with the advent of the industrial revolution and all the cumulative impacts that revolution had. Essentially, there will be more frequent violent natural disasters, regions will change, etc. However, the earth will survive. Weather or not we will depends on what we do about the situation. Actually that has hardly been proved. It is actually just a hypothesis whose outcome can not be tested nor proven. I would say the planet and natural forces control the weather. We go along for the ride and only industrialization has saved humans. Going in the total reverse direction is very bad. Currently you have super credible scientists saying that they have studied this and found no link in their area of expertise. Then many of them say that it is proved by others. Problem is that others say they can't prove it but the other guy can. This brain washing has been delivered not by individual scientists but by a collective "impression". There is no proof Antarctica is melting due to global warming. The US research stations 50 year temperature record shows a decrease not an increase. Most places there are colder. The area that is calving off has been linked to ocean currents. Cyclical changes just like El Nino etc. Dr. Duncan Wingham, There is no link to Hurricanes. Dr. Richard Lindzen, Dr. Christopher Landsea. The factual geological evidence shows we are in a huge low as far as historical CO2 levels are concerned. Is the Earth warming? Dr. Syun-Ichi Akasofu says that the Earth does show warming. Many scientists see us climbing out of the little ice age. Records actually show warming for 300 years (not caused by man) and that it has slowed recently (not by man). There is a link to a huge list of the actual deemed participants to the IPCC documents that were quoted as agreeing with the theory when in fact they only reviewed and did not agree totally. As a result they show a desire from the IPCC to use mass hysteria and the media. Condoning press releases without scientific back up. Using an internal network to review papers rather than a true peer review. Rickr...do you still believe in the hockey stick model showing recent spike in temperatures? Are you aware that the IPCC found errors and has withdrawn that albeit very quietly? That was the "defining" proof that showed were were doomed. Now it does not exist and that since 1998...temperatures have been shown fallen. How do you argue with people that do not see this final point as a key element. How can you argue "man-made" global warming when the evidence is removed by the IPCC? Are you aware that there is lots of data on sea levels rising... Since 1910 the sea level rose about 160 centimeters. In the last 20 years that rise has slowed. Does that mean global warming is causing the sea levels to fall? Anyways... it is obviously frustrating when people believe without reading everything. Many people did not believe BreX could be a scam. Even when it fell to $5 people said it can't be true and started loading up. You may say a week of warm weather proves global warming...but then 11 years of cooling does not prove the opposite. I think deep down people want positive environmental change including conservation, true pollution reductions and recycling etc. They may in part feel that slapping a zero carbon limit on people makes sense if everything else is taken care of. In the end what should we all do? To go back to the 1800's and live would solve the problem. Need to get ride of half the planets population to support the food consumption without machinery, fertilizers and pesticides to sustain production. Everyone has to stop using computers, TVs, cars, plastics etc. Given that will never happen in China and India I guess our kids just need to give up and die since C02 won't kill them but this ill-conceived plan to revert the population out of the present age and into a reverse industrial revolution means starvation, disease and death. When the practical is ignored for the "chicken little theory" and that great power is given to panicked politicians looking for re-election...look out to us all! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
reevesr1 Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 I don't believe or not believe in any of the theories. As I said, I'm not informed enough to truly comment. But when I read anything supporting man made input, thousands of studies are cited (slight exaggeration perhaps) including NASA. You guys give me the CEO of a Gas Company and scientists mostly sponsored by other oil and gas companies (or coal companies, or republicans, etc.), and not many of those. I'm obviously using a bit of hyperbole here, which is probably fitting in this argument. For the most part, this whole argument has become boring (and my part in it as well) as it is utterly pointless. The sides have drawn their lines and neither is willing to cross. Too bad. It's been fun, but I think I'll check out of this one for awhile. I'd say forever, but hell, I'll just forget. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sundancefisher Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 The real "inconvenient truth" is that the fear mongers claim all the heat waves, all the cold snaps, all the tornados, all the hurricanes all the shrinking glaciers as "proof" of man-made global warming. ...but when and where there is nice weather, when their is cooling, when you have just regulars rain clouds, when the hurricanes don't materialize, where the glaciers are growing...are all just ignored . Why? Because that is not where the money and power is to be had . Right now the battle is between fear of the imaginary what ifs and certainty of the historical past. An what an epic battle it has become. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Castuserraticus Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 I don't believe or not believe in any of the theories. As I said, I'm not informed enough to truly comment. But when I read anything supporting man made input, thousands of studies are cited (slight exaggeration perhaps) including NASA. You guys give me the CEO of a Gas Company and scientists mostly sponsored by other oil and gas companies (or coal companies, or republicans, etc.), and not many of those. I'm obviously using a bit of hyperbole here, which is probably fitting in this argument. For the most part, this whole argument has become boring (and my part in it as well) as it is utterly pointless. The sides have drawn their lines and neither is willing to cross. Too bad. It's been fun, but I think I'll check out of this one for awhile. I'd say forever, but hell, I'll just forget. You're certainly right that neither side is listening much to the other. I expect the same arguments will continue for years while researchers on both sides toss out the occasional tidbit of new information to counter information from the other side. Unfortunately, it's not something that is easily ignored because western governments are committing massive amounts of taxpayer $$ to a problem that may or may not exist regardless of whether the spending will have any affect. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
seanbritt Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 The problem with this debate, and another other in which there is a monetary stake, is that the majority of science is biased. Oil companies, car manufacterers, even government at various levels have a financial stake in the outcome. Whether it involves changing practices and technologies, laws, etc., it all cuts into the bottom line. Even science from environmentalists is often slanted, as they have conservation as there #1 outcome. Don't get me wrong, I'm all for capitalism and conservation, but the only way we'll get the truth is is there are independent panels that conduct the research. And even then you can't rely on 1, but need to take many studies into consideration. Although many folks will continue to agree to disagree, I believe on a global scale we have reached a tipping point and the notion of global warming is here to stay, whether you believe it or not and like it or not. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AndyW Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 The problem with this debate, and another other in which there is a monetary stake, is that the majority of science is biased. Oil companies, car manufacterers, even government at various levels have a financial stake in the outcome. There is a big monetary stake for the scientists studying global warming and alot of the advocates as well. This is becoming a big business for them too. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sundancefisher Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 There is a big monetary stake for the scientists studying global warming and alot of the advocates as well. This is becoming a big business for them too. So very, very true. People tend to think of scientists doing work for the greater good. Conservation, protection of the planet etc. In fact they are just every day normal people with jobs, bills and desires for vacations, cars and nice TV's. They are not super people. Many profs that I knew in University slept with students. They are not moral super beings. They really enjoy what they do but they do it cause it pays the bills also. To pay the bills they need funding. To get funding they have to study something that someone else entirely wants to support and pay for. That funding is highly political and controlled and those people have extreme power to drive the direction of perceived understanding and study. When you ask for money to prove global warming...bang...money appears. When you ask for money to prove against global warming you are osticized. I was involved in that process once upon a time. This is truely a run away frieght train and the only way to change it is through the gradual slowing down via common sense. People see it is not all doom and gloom. They see that the temperature is not rising like the hockey stick diagram that IPCC finally threw out. Unfortunately when it slows down another group will again take over like in the 1970's that spoke of the doom and gloom of another ice age that we need to prevent. Wing nuts will always try and scare the herd into going their prescribed direction. Some of us that have the science training and can pick apart these supposed studies that speak of "may" or "could" or those whose studies are misinterpreted or poorly summarized can only just keep saying the obvious. Subjective conjecture does not make for good science. A study is not a study if it can not be duplicated. Weather computer models have a major flaw in that they can easily be misused if not all information is put in (people do not know everything that controls weather which is why we can not predict the weather in 5 days let alone 100 years) not to mention that no two outcomes come out the same. They pick the once outcome that suits their purpose. Studies that speak of doom and gloom based upon 1, 5, 10, even 20 or 50 years of data (however accurate or bogus) can not come an inch within being indicative of global warming trends. Those trends are 500 years long and have altered our weather up and down over millions of years. Just like we are a blip on the Earth's historical record, our accurate recorded weather is only a blip on that scale. Studies on dying coral. Coral dies for many reasons from tectonic, weather, storms, man-made pollution, physical destruction, changing water levels, increased sunlight, parasites, predators etc. There are coral reefs that are dead and are actually well above the sea level. CO2 global warming did not do that as it happened thousands of years ago. But wait...the water levels are rising again? What caused them to drop? Why not studies? Whether we argue weather stations in cities, located at meterological stations which in turn is located at airports can be deemed to be the source of a lot of bad data or poor data from poorly paid and managed russian army stations to studies of melting glaciers where a scientist I emailed admitted he did not even study the glaciers that are growing to compare why one grow and one shrinks etc...in the end...we still go fishing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest rickleblanc Posted April 28, 2009 Share Posted April 28, 2009 Hey Sundancefisher, what's your explanation for the water levels of local lakes that have dropped 6-8 feet during this past 11 year "cooling period"? Rick Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sundancefisher Posted April 29, 2009 Share Posted April 29, 2009 Hey Sundancefisher, what's your explanation for the water levels of local lakes that have dropped 6-8 feet during this past 11 year "cooling period"? Rick Natural changes in weather patterns usually as a result of a cycle such as El Nina etc. Some places in the world get warmer...some get colder. Some get wetter, some get dryer. There are also variability in rainfall in Alberta. Some areas are wetter and some are not. For a while many ponds were dry. After a few wetter years they have more water in them. Snowfall in the mountains has a huge effect on water levels in lakes in Alberta also. Less snow means less aquifer recharging. Many scientists figure an increase in temperatures increases water moisture and humidity which will increase snowfall. Some IPCC guys go so far as to say increasing temperatures increases storm events. If true we should be seeing a lot more snow. Except some then counter their own arguments by saying that some places get wetter and some get dryer. You can't have catestrophic change when you are in effect saying there is variability. The whole planet is not getting warmer. IPCC says that in their own reports. They just can not explain why some places are colder. Their models also can not predict why just like they can predict the past. If you think that for the past 1 million years that our lakes have always been perfectly full year after year after year then unfortunately you have bought too much of what the IPCC is selling. 11 years out of millions does not spell doom. Not to mention not all lakes in Alberta are having the same problem. For instance, Lake Sundance needs to top off the lake most Springs. This year we had enough moisture we didn't need to. A couple of years ago we did. That tells me nothing other than over a short period of time 2-100 years...stuff happens. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
orvisonly Posted April 29, 2009 Share Posted April 29, 2009 But if man induced global warming is a fraud, what will we have to feel guilty about? By the way Sheep - David Suzuki and Al Gore both have personal wealth in the eight figures. I ask you: Other than another 15 minutes on the stage, an Oscar, a Nobel Prize, and trippling his personal wealth, what could big Al the people's pal have to gain from wildly exaggerating and embellishing the facts around climate change? Rickr, while you're looking that up on Wikipedia, try finding some credible sources that are also skeptical of claims around climate change. There are hundreds of accredited scientists, full professors from top universities, nobel prize winners, and a former president of the National Academy of Sciences. For anyone with an open mind - you might want to read State of Fear. Go see The Inconvenient Truth. Finally, watch The Great Global Warming Swindle. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jones Posted April 29, 2009 Share Posted April 29, 2009 Not followed all of this but it seems like good discussion. perhaps rickleblanc can provide one example of a local lake that has dropped 6 to 8 feet in the past few years. there is no such thing anywhere in alberta or maybe is that just a fearmongering statement like so many silly statements that are not based on fact. if lakes have dropped that might reflect changes in precipitation but does not necessarily have anything to do with changes in temperature trends whether trending up or trending down. alberta and the world regions have cycled through wet and dry periods before and will do so again with or without man. BTW rickleblanc a warmer earth is a wetter earth. the vast desserts were largest during periods of massive world glaciations such as the biggie that was upon us 10 to 20 K years ago . but as sundance has noted the earth has cooled for the past decade and even official data groups like the global warmers over at NASA agree with that. their very own data show a cooling trend. but the mainstream media won't report it because their advertizers are all about being green these days and it would not be good to start saying oh gee we were wrong it is getting colder. that will fade when it is bloody obvious it is getting colder. at soem point the meida will have to back cycle,. they can only say it is getting warmer when the evidence is pointing to the opposite for so long. world temps have flatlined or declining and the key factor here is the sun as it has been terribly quiet. so quiet that it is a major concern that we could be entering a new mini ice age as has been experience in previous times when the sun was inactive and these were hard times for the planet. not good to be living in northern europe and russia and canada during ice ages. warm is beautiful. a warmer planet is a more diverse planet and that is basic biology. some side info to consider and that is the arctic ice has trended down in the past few years but it has been low before and it is worthwhile to remember amundson's voyage. the warming folks have said the arctic is doomed and yet arctic sea ice has increased in the past two years and is now within the normal range compared to the past 30 years. antarctic sea ice last fall was the greatest that it has been since 1979 when satellite data was first available. but you only hear about the few glaciers melting in western antarctic not about the huge increases in ice in the vast majority of antarctic's huge area. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sundancefisher Posted April 29, 2009 Share Posted April 29, 2009 Some people truly believe that the media is unbiased. I would be very surprised if they did not have their pollsters and surveys going monthly to see what attracts viewers. Anything threatening you life or potentially threatening your life has you riveted to CNN. People want chicken little according to what you watch daily rather than a nice warm bowl of chicken soup. The media need a link to make a story news worthy. A blizzard in Quebec, a flood in Manitoba, a hurricane in Florida...all work way better as a story (and actually become a story) if you say it is proof we are all going to die. Otherwise it is just a storm like any other of its kind, in any other year. Often the only thing different between past storms and present storms is there are people around to watch it, record it on video, blog about it and then blame global warming rather than preparedness. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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