Mr Kissyfur wrote:
Captain Caveman wrote:
Mr Kissyfur wrote:
Given that we were able to profoundly affect the environment merely through the use of CFCs, it seems unlikely that our wholesale emission of greenhouse gases isn't also having an effect.
You're conflating two
very different things there, chap.
Absolutely knowingly, of course. But my basic point was that humankind's activities clearly can have very wide-reaching effects on the environment.
Well, yes, of course. I guess any number of Mankind's activities qualify on that front, from nuclear bombs to oil spills. But we're talking about a very
specific effect on the environment here - climate change - and to that end, I don't think yours was a very good analogy at all.
Like I said, CFCs are a catalyst for ozone molecule decay, and thus, by the very definition of the term "catalyst", they are only needed in minute quantities to have this effect and, crucially, are not actually directly involved in the reaction, or changed by it. I mean, this is A-Level chemistry type stuff, fully and unequivocally empirically validated by actual, unambiguous observation, such that no-one in right mind would take issue with it.
That's very different from alleged CO2-induced catastrophic and profound climate change; in this instance the CO2 is itself the agent, not a mere catalyst; the system (entire atmosphere/oceans/planet/Sun etc.) involved is infinitely more complex than mere ozone molecules in isolation and is not chemical in nature. There are vastly more complexities, variables and outright unknowns. Our understanding of basic ozone chemistry is well established and predictable, formed as it is on relatively simple principles of mere Chemistry, whereas our understanding of the entire ecosystem and the Sun is anything but. I mean really, your comparison is surely spurious?
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The fact that the process for GHGs doing the climate change shuffle isn't as clear is true, but the argument against man made climate change seems to be "look, the climate changes all the time, how can little old us possibly effect something so big!!?!?!?", which is clearly a bollocks position.
The models that underpin the whole GHG global warming hypothesis are, by their very definition, a gross approximation of "the real thing", given the complexities and unknowns involved. In my profession, as well as many others, we have occasion to use complex, proprietary modelling software costing tens of thousands of pounds, for something so narrow field, mundane and predictable by any standard - sound waves only, and their propagation. And yet, even here, the number of times I have seen the results of "garbage in, garbage out"?
At least in the case of acoustics, we can be confident of the veracity of the basic 3D models underpinning such calculations, yet we by no means have such a luxury in the case of global warming *and* the data could be wrong.
I have an interest in Astronomy; in that field there are "burners of stars" - simplistic, virtual computer models to attempt to simulate the life cycle and behaviour of a single star, of varying mass. Despite all that we know, or think we know, we cannot get these models to replicate what actually happens in even common stars (let alone the more exotic types), even in very basic terms. By comparison, the complexity of these models pale to insignificance compared to global warming predictive models. To my mind, the eventuality that these could be wrong, and in fact very likely *are* IMO, does not seem like a "bollocks position".
And anyway, your parody of the sceptic position is just that mate - a parody. No-one has said that Mankind cannot affect the environment, as I've said, because to do so would clearly be bollocks.
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Again, no-one is necessarily saying we shouldn't *plan* for climate change - this is happening regardless. It's the alleged principle *cause* that is the nub of the debate, and the suggested "cure".
The suggested "cure" is inherently a good idea even if man made climate change isn't a real thing.
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Is it an inherently good idea though?
Imagine if actually, the relatively miniscule amounts of CO2 we're talking about, actually had bugger all climatical effect and the scientists were wrong. That would mean that actually, there would be no need to limit CO2 production - we could burn coal to make cheap energy (NB - I am ignoring *proven, genuine* pollutants such as SOx, NOx, these would obviously need to be cleaned up at source to avoid acid rain/smog, but not Global Warming in this example).
We could forget all about punitive CO2 limits on our industries and businesses (that the Chinese et al choose to ignore anyway - as if we weren't already uncompetitive enough anyway). We could stop "carbon trading" and all the cost, gravy train etc. that this entails. Car engines could be more *energy* efficient and cheaper to produce. Scientists could then devote their careers (and our money) on stuff that actually really did matter, instead of what is, to my mind at least, an unstoppable academic bandwagon?
It's fair to say that if the scientists ARE wrong on this, then that itself would prove to be an economic catastrophe in its own right. Which I guess is yet something else to consider.