http://chrisvernon.co.uk/2009/12/carbon ... dy-peaked/
Also see this great blog from Ugo Bardi:
http://cassandralegacy.blogspot.it/2012 ... oiler.html
Moderator: Peak Moderation
I have a hunch that "peak emissions" will happen about the same time as "peak population." I expect there will not be a significant decline in greenhouse emissions until human economic activity is being forcibly reduced because dieoff has started.clv101 wrote:And here's my updated blog, three years on:
http://chrisvernon.co.uk/2012/12/recognising-reality/
Apparently there is evidence that emissions have risen regardless of a drop in economic activity, even with a dramatic industrial decline... feedback loops could already have instigated runaway.UndercoverElephant wrote:I have a hunch that "peak emissions" will happen about the same time as "peak population." I expect there will not be a significant decline in greenhouse emissions until human economic activity is being forcibly reduced because dieoff has started.clv101 wrote:And here's my updated blog, three years on:
http://chrisvernon.co.uk/2012/12/recognising-reality/
They might have, but there is no reason to believe this is true. 55 million years ago there was a very fast (by geological standards, not by the standards we are now setting) release of carbon, accompanied by the highest temperatures on Earth since the extinction of the dinosaurs. This did not lead to a runaway greenhouse effect. It is highly probable that the feedback effects we have already set in motion are enough to set off the "methane burp" we presume to have caused that previous CO2 and thermal maximum. But it is also true industrialised civilisation could not survive this sort of rise in global temperature (a rise of between 6 and 10 degrees). It would be curtains for most of the human race.peaceful_life wrote:Apparently there is evidence that emissions have risen regardless of a drop in economic activity, even with a dramatic industrial decline... feedback loops could already have instigated runaway.UndercoverElephant wrote:I have a hunch that "peak emissions" will happen about the same time as "peak population." I expect there will not be a significant decline in greenhouse emissions until human economic activity is being forcibly reduced because dieoff has started.clv101 wrote:And here's my updated blog, three years on:
http://chrisvernon.co.uk/2012/12/recognising-reality/
I hope you're right UE.UndercoverElephant wrote:They might have, but there is no reason to believe this is true. 55 million years ago there was a very fast (by geological standards, not by the standards we are now setting) release of carbon, accompanied by the highest temperatures on Earth since the extinction of the dinosaurs. This did not lead to a runaway greenhouse effect. It is highly probable that the feedback effects we have already set in motion are enough to set off the "methane burp" we presume to have caused that previous CO2 and thermal maximum. But it is also true industrialised civilisation could not survive this sort of rise in global temperature (a rise of between 6 and 10 degrees). It would be curtains for most of the human race.peaceful_life wrote:Apparently there is evidence that emissions have risen regardless of a drop in economic activity, even with a dramatic industrial decline... feedback loops could already have instigated runaway.UndercoverElephant wrote: I have a hunch that "peak emissions" will happen about the same time as "peak population." I expect there will not be a significant decline in greenhouse emissions until human economic activity is being forcibly reduced because dieoff has started.
There is one other factor I'm not taking into account, and that is that the sun is continually getting warmer. So maybe the difference in solar radiation between 55mya and today would be enough to set the runaway greenhouse going, but I think it is much more likely that the climate would eventually recover, just as it did 55mya. Even if some humans survived, there would by that time not much left in the way of recoverable fossil fuels.