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techno900



Joined: 28 Mar 2001
Posts: 4161

PostPosted: Sat Jul 06, 2013 7:44 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

From Wikipedia / Fueser's post - Looks like the Kyoto Protocol is pretty much a bust. Maybe the US had some insight into the folly.

Quote:
The 37 countries with binding targets in the second commitment period are Australia, all members of the European Union, Belarus, Croatia, Iceland, Kazakhstan, Norway, Switzerland, and Ukraine. Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine have stated that they may withdraw from the Protocol or not put into legal force the Amendment with second round targets.[15] Japan, New Zealand, and Russia have participated in Kyoto's first-round but have not taken on new targets in the second commitment period. Other developed countries without second-round targets are Canada (which withdrew from the Kyoto Protocol in 2012) and the United States (which has not ratified the Protocol).
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feuser



Joined: 29 Oct 2002
Posts: 1508

PostPosted: Sat Jul 06, 2013 8:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

techno900 wrote:
From Wikipedia / Fueser's post - Looks like the Kyoto Protocol is pretty much a bust. Maybe the US had some insight into the folly.

Quote:
The 37 countries with binding targets in the second commitment period are Australia, all members of the European Union, Belarus, Croatia, Iceland, Kazakhstan, Norway, Switzerland, and Ukraine. Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine have stated that they may withdraw from the Protocol or not put into legal force the Amendment with second round targets.[15] Japan, New Zealand, and Russia have participated in Kyoto's first-round but have not taken on new targets in the second commitment period. Other developed countries without second-round targets are Canada (which withdrew from the Kyoto Protocol in 2012) and the United States (which has not ratified the Protocol).


The US the largest of the top-per-capita consumers of carbon and a potential leader in renewable technologies never ratified the treaty. A folly, indeed.

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isobars



Joined: 12 Dec 1999
Posts: 20935

PostPosted: Sat Jul 06, 2013 9:46 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I posted proof years ago that the U.S. is prohibited by federal law from signing the Kyoto Protocol. The last times it was tried, the Senate voted 95-0 and 99-1 against it. Besides being illegal to sign it, it would be a signed blank check from the U.S. treasury to the rest of the world. The stupid Trojan Horse excludes China, has not been shown by scientific analysis to do anything for the environment, failed in Europe, will cost many times as much as the Irag War with no benefit, declares CO2 -- your breath and absolutely necessary for plant life -- a toxin, and is a purely political scam right up there with cap & trade.
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isobars



Joined: 12 Dec 1999
Posts: 20935

PostPosted: Sat Jul 06, 2013 11:43 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

From the WSJ at http://tinyurl.com/olxq8o9 :
Science Is About Evidence, Not Consensus

Last week a friend chided me for not agreeing with the scientific consensus that climate change is likely to be dangerous. I responded that, according to polls, the "consensus" about climate change only extends to the propositions that it has been happening and is partly man-made, both of which I readily agree with. Forecasts show huge uncertainty.

Besides, science does not respect consensus. There was once widespread agreement about phlogiston (a nonexistent element said to be a crucial part of combustion), eugenics, the impossibility of continental drift, the idea that genes were made of protein (not DNA) and stomach ulcers were caused by stress, and so forth—all of which proved false.

<snip>

And that is where the problem lies with climate change. A decade ago, I was persuaded by two pieces of data to drop my skepticism and accept that dangerous climate change was likely. The first, based on the Vostok ice core, was a graph showing carbon dioxide and temperature varying in lock step over the last half million years. The second, the famous "hockey stick" graph, showed recent temperatures shooting up faster and higher than at any time in the past millennium.

Within a few years, however, I discovered that the first of these graphs told the opposite story from what I had inferred. In the ice cores, it is now clear that temperature drives changes in the level of carbon dioxide, not vice versa.

As for the "hockey stick" graph, it was effectively critiqued by Steven McIntyre, a Canadian businessman with a mathematical interest in climatology. He showed that the graph depended heavily on unreliable data, especially samples of tree rings from bristlecone pine trees, the growth patterns of which were often not responding to temperature at all. It also depended on a type of statistical filter that overweighted any samples showing sharp rises in the 20th century.

I followed the story after that and was not persuaded by those defending the various hockey-stick graphs. They brought in a lake-sediment sample from Finland, which had to be turned upside down to show a temperature spike in the 20th century; they added a sample of larch trees from Siberia that turned out to be affected by one tree that had grown faster in recent decades, perhaps because its neighbor had died. Just last week, the Siberian larch data were finally corrected by the University of East Anglia to remove all signs of hockey-stick upticks, quietly conceding that Mr. McIntyre was right about that, too.

So, yes, it is the evidence that persuades me whether a theory is right or wrong, and no, I could not care less what the "consensus" says.
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mac



Joined: 07 Mar 1999
Posts: 17736
Location: Berkeley, California

PostPosted: Tue Jul 16, 2013 11:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Let's see if any of the deniers actually read this and post a reasoned response. I'm not holding my breath....

http://scienceblogs.com/gregladen/2013/06/19/why-you-sound-so-stupid-when-you-say-global-warming-has-stopped/
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GURGLETROUSERS



Joined: 30 Dec 2009
Posts: 2643

PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 3:27 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Really??

I suspend three men (or three women) over a pit with a roaring inferno deep in its bowels. I tell them that they must all agree the correct answer to the question, 'Is there a god?'

Failure to give the correct answer, as judged by a panel of peers all using the latest evidence, will see them burn in the fires of hell!

So what would they say? (Oh, I forgot to point out that it is the Middle Ages,.... or the present day if its a fundamentalist Islamic society!)

Where reputations and careers are involved, what people claim may not necessarily be what they actually believe. Never, has this applied more so than in the global warming debate!!
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mrgybe



Joined: 01 Jul 2008
Posts: 5180

PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 9:56 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

He demands a reasoned response from people he refers to as "deniers" to an article, the title of which describes people who disagree with the blog author as "stupid".
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nw30



Joined: 21 Dec 2008
Posts: 6485
Location: The eye of the universe, Cen. Cal. coast

PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 10:19 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

mrgybe wrote:
He demands a reasoned response from people he refers to as "deniers" to an article, the title of which describes people who disagree with the blog author as "stupid".

Which is why it's the perfect article for mac to post.
Which begs the question, what took him so long, it's like a month old?


Last edited by nw30 on Wed Jul 17, 2013 10:22 am; edited 1 time in total
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mac



Joined: 07 Mar 1999
Posts: 17736
Location: Berkeley, California

PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 10:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Selective reading and lack of critical thinking at work, from the resident denier who cherry-picks as a hobby:

Quote:
He demands a reasoned response


I said that I doubt I would get a reasoned response, or even any indication that the deniers would read the article.

A quick summary, for those unwilling to read outside their biases.

1. Most of the thermal mass where excess heat can be stored is in the ocean, (93.4%), as compared to 2.3% in the atmosphere and the remainder on all remaining terrestrial mass.

2. The article showed a long term temperature time series, showing a steady increase for the last 100 years or so. Only if the past 10 years are snipped out and looked at outside of the context of the chaotic overall record can anyone argue that "global warming has stopped"--as our denier has. Cherry-picking at work,.

3. The substance of the article is a time series showing heat in the oceans, with a specific citation (Balmeseda, Trenberth and Kallen, 2013. Distinctive climate signals in reanalysis of global ocean heat conent. Geophysical research letters 40(1-6)) that shows heat accumulation in the ocean during the period of time that deniers have argued, based on cherry-picked information, that global warming has stopped.

Like I said, I wasn't holding my breath. Maybe Lord Monckton has something pithy to offer?
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mac



Joined: 07 Mar 1999
Posts: 17736
Location: Berkeley, California

PostPosted: Wed Jul 17, 2013 11:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Then there's this, http://climate.nasa.gov/key_indicators#seaLevel actual data for CO2, temperature, sea and land ice and so forth. I got here because the data shows that the rate of sea level rise has increased from 1.7 mm/year during the 20th century to 3.16 mm/year since 2000. Hmm, that's the period that the deniers say global warming has stopped. Could they be wrong? Follow the money.
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