- #36
pattylou
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Yes, it is my understanding that the oceans cycle warm/cold every 25 years, and that the dip in global temps ca 1948-1973 were precisely correlated with a cooling trend in the oceans. The current cooling trend is right on schedule. The question is whether long term warming is occurring when you take this cycle out of the equation, and the answer appears to be yes.Andre said:The oceans have been cooling a bit in the last two years for instance.
Ice shelfs break off continuously. Nothing "distressing" with that.
I assume you have seen satellite imagery over the northern polar region comparing ice today, vs 10 years ago.
Ex: Here is Greenland, 1992 vs. 2002:
http://usinfo.state.gov/gi/img/assets/4475/110804climate.jpg
(not sure if I linked that right, click on the link otherwise.)
I disagree that there is "nothing distressing" here.
There is sufficient evidence in the ODP sediment cores to suggest that the Antarctic ice sheet is bigger as it ever has been, including in the "ice ages". So we have a lot of statements but even about the ones that are true, we still don't know if it is relevant, if we can exclude CO2 as main climate forcing driver.
Not much to say here, except that "global warming" has been replaced with "global climate change" because it has become obvious that some areas are cooler, due to changes in ocean currents and so on. Still, my understanding is that within Antarctica, there are regions of serious melting, resulting in loss of krill and threats to the species (whales) that feed on the krill.
Actually, can you reference that the Antarctic Ice Sheet is not melting? I just spent ten minutes on google, and couldn't find much to sipport youir claim. As a last ditch effort to get a feel for the accuracy of your statement, I did the following experiment:
Google: Antarctic ice sheet climate change "is melting" (7000 hits)
Google: Antarctic ice sheet climate change "is not melting" (90 hits)
So a reference would be useful, I'll add it to my list of reading.
It may very well be that the climate change is partly anthropogenic but it is also very possible that the main forcing is not CO2 but for instance high altitude waper vapor produced by jet aircraft or soot or other factors and it would be an ethernal shame if we wasted the Kyoto assets on something that was innocent in the first place. And then again, where is the catastrophic part coming in?
Yes, that may be possible, see my comments on "precautionary," previous post. The catastrophic part? Depends on your POV. I think the loss of species on a daily basis is catastrophic. In other words, we're witnessing it. I think the rise in sea level that is predicted, will be catastrophic. The recent weather patterns (changes in hurricane intensity, etc) may not be due to climate change - but if they are, as is occasiionlly suggested, that is clearly catastrophic. Europe may cool significantly in the next decades, as warm water from the gulf (I think?) no longer travels up the conveyor to warm Europe.
There are predictions that the third world will be least able to cope with a changing climate, and will be hit hardest economically. This is catastrophic, especially as we are fighting so hard to improve health and education in the third world, as the planet's population is near to bursting.
More catastrophe in the news:
A startling scientific study last week revealed that Bangladesh’s biggest island, Bhola, had been shrunk to half its size over the past 40 years by rising waters, making half a million people homeless.
from http://www.sundayherald.com/50323
But some people hold, and this is reasonable after a fashion, that none of the above is catastrophic. Some people hold that life is never static, and change is fine, and even good. If the population crashes, really nothing is lost. We just start over. To these people, then, there will be no catastrophe. Depends on your point of view.
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