How do you measure this?kenneal - lagger wrote: So gradual that we are going backwards rapidly. y.
Climate split from Ukraine thread
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- biffvernon
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No. The argument we presented was that if we did not abandon fossil carbon the consequences would be dire.johnhemming2 wrote:I would argue that this particular argument has not been lost it is merely that progress is gradual.
We did not abandon fossil carbon and the consequences are dire.
The argument was lost.
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Talking of James Hansen, nuclear power is another area where' he's gone a bit off piste.
Fortunately Mark Jacobson comes to our rescue:
http://web.stanford.edu/group/efmh/jaco ... Hansen.pdf
Fortunately Mark Jacobson comes to our rescue:
http://web.stanford.edu/group/efmh/jaco ... Hansen.pdf
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By the length of time that we have to do something about it and by the amount of the reduction of carbon use per year that we will have to make.johnhemming2 wrote:How do you measure this?kenneal - lagger wrote: So gradual that we are going backwards rapidly. y.
Also, there is a set amount of carbon that we can burn to reach the 2 deg C political target. We have more than enough discovered oil and coal to reach this target but governments like ours are actively encouraging the increasing of the discovered inventory while actively discouraging the uptake of the renewable energy that must replace the fossil fuels. How is that not going backwards?
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
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Can you please then give me the figures that you use to state that we are "going backwards rapidly"?kenneal - lagger wrote:By the length of time that we have to do something about it and by the amount of the reduction of carbon use per year that we will have to make.johnhemming2 wrote:How do you measure this?kenneal - lagger wrote: So gradual that we are going backwards rapidly. y.
Also, there is a set amount of carbon that we can burn to reach the 2 deg C political target. We have more than enough discovered oil and coal to reach this target but governments like ours are actively encouraging the increasing of the discovered inventory while actively discouraging the uptake of the renewable energy that must replace the fossil fuels. How is that not going backwards?
- biffvernon
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You don't need the figures to understand the direction of travel, just the sign on the figures.johnhemming2 wrote: Can you please then give me the figures that you use to state that we are "going backwards rapidly"?
Our government has committed itself in legislation to maximising production of UK fossil carbon resources when it should have legislated to minimise such use.
Come on, John, what is it you don't understand about global warming?
It's very clear the UK is getting climate policy wrong.
I haven't been able to identify a single policy change over the last couple of years that either increases the rate of decarbonisation or increases the rate of energy efficiency improvement above preexisting rates. There there have been a whole slew of policies facilitating new carbon or slowing efficiency improvements.
I haven't been able to identify a single policy change over the last couple of years that either increases the rate of decarbonisation or increases the rate of energy efficiency improvement above preexisting rates. There there have been a whole slew of policies facilitating new carbon or slowing efficiency improvements.
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clv101s post refers to the second differential with respect to time. He refers to increasing the rate of decarbonisation
If we assume the measurement is decarbonisation and within that the increase in the use of renewables. If we are continuing to decarbonise at a constant rate then we are not going backwards.
To me one of the key priorities is technological improvements with both PV and wind. Those do seem to be happening.
I accept that globally the use of fossil fuels is increasing, however. That is "going backwards". However, it is worth working out where the increased burning is.
If we assume the measurement is decarbonisation and within that the increase in the use of renewables. If we are continuing to decarbonise at a constant rate then we are not going backwards.
To me one of the key priorities is technological improvements with both PV and wind. Those do seem to be happening.
I accept that globally the use of fossil fuels is increasing, however. That is "going backwards". However, it is worth working out where the increased burning is.