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I hope the Climate Activists are proud of the effect their lies are having on the younger generation

If this survey is real the messages these young people are receiving are completely wrong.

We need to reduce our impact on our planet but CO2 is a complete red herring. The current ECS (temperature increase for a doubling of CO2 in the atmosphere) is centred around 3°C (IPCC AR6). The 2°C will destroy civilisation is simply made up.

 

 

  • Roger Bryant:  The German Greens have done well so far, forcing the closure of viable nuclear plants so the electricity shortfall is produced by burning lignite or importing fossil fuel electricity from Poland.

    Not really an accurate summary of the situation.

    It was the centre-right CDU that exited nuclear, namely Angela Merkel. 

    The reason lignite is being burnt is that the miner and energy producer RWE (which has two large open-cast mines at Hambach and Garzweiler SW of Cologne which are continually the subject of demonstrations), has a government contract to do so which runs a while yet and cannot be forced to stop early (people and politicians have tried). 

    By the end of 2020, almost half of the electricity in Germany came from sustainables (46%). Current goal is 65% by 2030. We might well get there earlier. 

  • These ECS estimates are the problem as I agreed above, but a lot of work has been done which suggests that somewhere between about 0 and 1 degrees brings the models into better alignment with measured temperatures over the last 40 years or so. The IPCC is extremely good at ignoring data that doesn't match the script because its whole being and money supply are to provide proof of man-made warming (from its own terms of reference!). As I said above it is an entirely political organisation, not a principally scientific one.

  • In the 60 years of CO2 measurements at Mauna Loa the CO2 content of the atmosphere has risen by around 100ppm from just over 300ppm to just over 400ppm. If this rate is constant, which it probably isn’t, a doubling of CO2 from the 1960 level will take 180 years from 1960 or 120 years from now. That takes us to 2140. Assuming an increasing rate of emissions maybe we will have a doubling of CO2 levels by 2100. If we can reduce a bit the doubling may be by 2150 or beyond.

    What is the effect of this doubling? The E&T piece on the Nobel Prize suggests that the ECS is over 2°C. 

    https://eandt.theiet.org/content/articles/2021/10/nobel-prize-in-physics-recognises-climate-modelling-breakthroughs/

    The IPCC AR6 WG1 has a number of figures:

    A.4.4 The equilibrium climate sensitivity is an important quantity used to estimate how the climate responds to radiative forcing. Based on multiple lines of evidence,21 the very likely range of equilibrium climate sensitivity is between 2°C (high confidence) and 5°C (medium confidence). The AR6 assessed best estimate is 3°C with a likely range of 2.5°C to 4°C (high confidence), compared to 1.5°C to 4.5°C in AR5, which did not provide a best estimate.

    https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1/downloads/report/IPCC_AR6_WGI_SPM_final.pdf

    I will take their best estimate of 3°C for the ECS. This suggests the with rising emissions we may get a 3°C Global increase by 2100. With steady or falling emissions 3°C may be reached by the middle of the next century or beyond. As I have stated many times before we have a climate problem, not a climate emergency.

    I don’t see any realistic proposals from the Green Parties. They have lots of demands but very little facts on timescales and resource requirements. The German Greens have done well so far, forcing the closure of viable nuclear plants so the electricity shortfall is produced by burning lignite or importing fossil fuel electricity from Poland.

    We live in a circa 20 year old two bedroom apartment with only two outside walls. What heat we do need comes from the district heating which burns actual waste wood from the local timber industry. I walk to work. We do own a diesel car but I don’t see it is energetically sensible to replace it with an EV in view of the limited mileage (kilometerage) that it does. A major part of my employers business is the manufacture of wire and cable systems for electric railways and EVs.

  • Roger Bryant: 

    [PBL]

    1.Human activity is putting greenhouse gases into the atmosphere at a rate of some 50+ bn CO2 equivalent tonnes per year.

    2.The greenhouse effect has been known and understood for some 200 years.

    3.The result of the greenhouse effect is tropospheric warming.

    4. So how big is the warming associated with the greenhouse effect caused by anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions?

    [End PBL quote]

    As you are aware I agree with the first three and for 4. follow the other information that you have posted as well as AR6 WG1 which suggest an ECS of around 2°C.

    That makes your position clearer. 

    You have said previously that the “problem” is not CO2. Since greenhouse gas emissions are given in CO2 equivalents, that suggests you were claiming that anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions are not the problem. It would follow you were denying the conjuction of 1-3. Now that you have said that you are affirming 1-3, it follows that in fact you agree that greenhouse gases are “the problem”. But it seems rather that you think “the problem” (namely ECS) is not in the range that people are worrying about, but rather that it is much lower. 

    You seem to be wrong about what AR6 suggests. I quote directly from FAQ 7.3.

    [AR6 WG1 FAQ] This Sixth Assessment Report concludes that there is a 90% or more chance (very likely) that the ECS is between 2°C and 5°C.

     

    [RB]

    In another reply you seem to take the typical ‘green’ endless resources viewpoint.

    Straw man.

    Costs are relative to, well, politics. Let me remind ourselves of the words of John Maynard Keynes in the midst of WWII: “Anything we can actually do, we can afford.” (1942 BBC Address, Collected Works XXVII).

    I think we can cover our rooves with PV plates, cover our walls with insulation, and exchange our windows. We can “actually do” it. Ergo, according to Keynes, we can afford it.

    Indeed governments can print money but many of the resources required to carry out the ‘green’ movements demands are finite and highly polluting and energy intensive to produce/refine.

    I don't know which “green movement” you might be talking about. Here in Germany we have a Green party, which is about to reenter government. They have concrete proposals for transitioning towards carbon neutral, and it is probably the main reason why they did so well in the recent elections.

    What are your solutions to AGW and what are their resource requirements?

    That is a general question which has a general answer, namely the same as anyone else's. Reduce my carbon footprint, which at the moment is primarily building heating, which I have been discussing on other threads. And join in on work aiming to get society's footprint well down.

  • We had an EPC assessment done, which concluded that we were using the original usage before we implemented our changes - so government don't understand what we have done, it is not in their model.

    Ah yes - even simple things like insulating the sloping section of a roof, instead of the flat of the ceiling does not seem to be handled properly,  or in most 1970s ‘chalet style’ buildings, where the gap is vented by the roof tiles and air rushes from front to back between floorboards of upstairs and plaster board ceiling of downstairs makes a huge difference, but this loss is unaccounted for.

    bed29a16f18c78dd6bd8445743949a44-huge-chalet-house.jpg
    1970s Wimpey ‘Chalet’ with open ended floor void  - I have one of these. Filling the gap makes a huge diference

    A few years of fuel bills may well be a better guide to the cost of heating a non-standard set-up than the EPC - the fact that even the chaps doing it cannot explain the sums behind it, but just put things into the computer hopefully, is a big clue as to the level of understanding.

    Mike.

  • Hello PeterRT. 

    I agree that we can make some reductions in energy use, and most of us have done at least some of that. We have double glazing, roof insulation, as far as is reasonable draught-proof houses, do not generally go racing in our cars and similar. Of course, we are using resources that may run out at some time, but this is inevitable unless we and all future generations use none! With anything more than just surviving we are bound to, and unless the world population decreases hugely, which it doesn't seem to be doing, we are stuck. Assuming that civilisation continues, we cannot stop resource use, but we can look very carefully at what and why they are used. An example is changing our entire car stock for new ones that use more rare resources does not seem very sensible, the same with heat pumps. Rebuilding the entire electrical infrastructure would take huge new resources, all of which are very energy-intensive, and the overall gain is in reality quite small. The general indicator for decisions ought to be the energy payback period, in other words, “how long does it take to show an advantage in overall energy”, and is this longer than the lifetime of the use. In the case of cars, this is somewhat dubious, probably better homes have an overall gain with more insulation. There is a fixation on emissions, and some of those like PM2.5 from vehicles have a very dubious science background, the savings overall are probably non-existent. 

    In all these things one needs to follow the money very carefully, and many proponents deliberately do not do this, they are devoid of economics knowledge. It is a very powerful indicator of actual gainers and losers, the losers usually being the poorer parts of our societies. Such discrimination is in my view morally wrong and basically criminal, it is a means of exploitation. You will note the antics of XR and insulate Britain, they are hypocritical in energy wastage, and simply wish to cause disruption and inefficiencies in our society.

  • I think that we should focus on the use of valuable resources like coal and gas that will run out eventually. My ideas are informed by the book ‘Sustainable Energy - without the hot air’ written by David JC MacKay.

    I believe that we should be looking to make use of these resources as efficient as possible while minimising any emissions, including CO2. Then we should be identifying alternatives to these resources but taking the time to understand and offset the potential environmental damage done by these resources. Human beings are fortunate in that we have lived through a very stable part of Earth's history, so change is inevitable. We should be thinking about how to build homes and infrastructure so that is can survive these changes.

    Then each individual should be thinking about how to reduces their usage of energy. This is something that we have followed and in the last 15 years have reduced out the energy usage in our home by nearly 50%, which saves about £1,000 per year.

    As an engineer, I built a model of the home, identified the major areas of loss and thought about cheap ways of resolving it. I found government advise to be useless. We had an EPC assessment done, which concluded that we were using the original usage before we implemented our changes - so government don't understand what we have done, it is not in their model.

    If we all did this it would have a massive impact.

  • So Peter you have accused me of two abusive posts as well as violating the IET’s code of conduct. Have you reported this to the moderation team?

    As far as I can tell asking you a direct question is classed as abusive. Are we just supposed to accept what the professor/god says?

    You said in a response to David Stone:

    I have set out a list of propositions for Roger Bryant so he can show me with which of those he disagrees.

    The only list I can find is this:

    The issue is this. 

    1.Human activity is putting greenhouse gases into the atmosphere at a rate of some 50+ bn CO2 equivalent tonnes per year.

    2.The greenhouse effect has been known and understood for some 200 years.

    3.The result of the greenhouse effect is tropospheric warming.

    4. So how big is the warming associated with the greenhouse effect caused by anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions?

    As you are aware I agree with the first three and for 4. follow the other information that you have posted as well as AR6 WG1 which suggest an ECS of around 2°C.

     

    In another reply you seem to take the typical ‘green’ endless resources viewpoint.

    Costs are relative to, well, politics. Let me remind ourselves of the words of John Maynard Keynes in the midst of WWII: “Anything we can actually do, we can afford.” (1942 BBC Address, Collected Works XXVII).

    I think we can cover our rooves with PV plates, cover our walls with insulation, and exchange our windows. We can “actually do” it. Ergo, according to Keynes, we can afford it.

    Indeed governments can print money but many of the resources required to carry out the ‘green’ movements demands are finite and highly polluting and energy intensive to produce/refine.

    What are your solutions to AGW and what are their resource requirements?

  • You have a great deal to learn about Africa. I will reply to the other things later, but this continual complaint about “tone” is beginning to get to me. It is very rude indeed.

    I will remind you of the racialist rejection of Whites from Rwanda and now South Africa, the tribal war and genocide in Rwanda of Tutsis by Hutus, the wars in northern Uganda, etc. These are still there, just not top of the news on the BBC. You seem to have an incredibly distorted view of the world.

    Germany is now burning much coal because its “renewables" policy is failing badly and some coal stations have been restarted, partly due to the nuclear ban by the left and possibly you. If RWE were stopped from mining how long do you think Germany could survive with inadequate and intermittent electricity?

     

  • davezawadi (David Stone): 
    …. the several Africa Countries I have been in, ….

    African people (if I may generalise) are likely the most experienced in the world at getting along with those with whom they violently disagree. Can we learn from them? I think so. 

    Beginning, maybe, with the way we currently talk to each other on this thread.