CapelDodger
Penultimate Amazing
"Do more than is expected of you... and they'll expect you to do more."
-- Ziggy
"Give them a homily, and they'll say they'd prefer an epigram." CapelDodger
"Do more than is expected of you... and they'll expect you to do more."
-- Ziggy
Does that mean the twin mantras of raise taxes and fine the nasty capitalists and industrialists.... might not work?
From a cynical point of view (on which I'm an expert) it's better not to persuade people to plan for AGW, since they'd be competing with us. Better to hold the high ground (so to speak) when they discover they need it. And there are indeed business opportunites. I'm sure many businesses have acknowledged the reality of AGW and are planning on that basis, to the extent that they can. (The top Exxon echelon may well not believe the propaganda they push.)
Probably more businesses assume no significant change from the status quo - we've seen the "End of History", after all. Journey's end. AGW, Peak Oil - wha'?
GoogleEarth for Cardiff, UK, if you're unfamiliar with its location. For a time, about 1850-80, the busiest port in the world by bulk. (London was the busiest by value, obviously. Cardiff imported bananas, molasses, rum and tobacco, not silks and spices of the Orient.)
My house is at 10m elevation, two-story, and stone-built. It can be proofed against the occasional flood, but my garden would suffer mightily. Salt-water flooding, not good. All the same, it should see me out.
Go short on dollars. Go long on minerals. Steer well clear of complex leveraged financial instruments - get into what you can clearly distinguish from high-falutin' woo-talk with graphs. (Not advice you really need, of course.)
There could well be a dot.con-like frenzy in the alternative-energy sector at some point, which would we worth riding if you get out at the right time. Once that's over, the reality-based AE market will probably be under-priced, a good time to get in on a carefully considered basis. You'll have more evidence to go on by then.
While your capital is soundly parked and earning, you could consider punting some high-falutin' AE technology with graphs and charts and PowerPoint, oh yes. A scientifically-proven sure thing that just needs development capital. The next MicroSoft. Nothing so crass as free-energy, of course. Something plausible.
They say poachers make good gamekeepers. Who better to do the woo than we?
100 feet, and close to a good supply of water and a good supply of food. My garden is safe.My house is at 10m elevation, two-story, and stone-built. It can be proofed against the occasional flood, but my garden would suffer mightily. Salt-water flooding, not good. All the same, it should see me out.
Yep. Good advice all.Go short on dollars. Go long on minerals. Steer well clear of complex leveraged financial instruments - get into what you can clearly distinguish from high-falutin' woo-talk with graphs. (Not advice you really need, of course.)
There could well be a dot.con-like frenzy in the alternative-energy sector at some point, which would we worth riding if you get out at the right time. Once that's over, the reality-based AE market will probably be under-priced, a good time to get in on a carefully considered basis. You'll have more evidence to go on by then.
That really deserves aWhile your capital is soundly parked and earning, you could consider punting some high-falutin' AE technology with graphs and charts and PowerPoint, oh yes. A scientifically-proven sure thing that just needs development capital. The next MicroSoft. Nothing so crass as free-energy, of course. Something plausible.
They say poachers make good gamekeepers. Who better to do the woo than we?
My house is at 10m elevation, two-story, and stone-built. It can be proofed against the occasional flood, but my garden would suffer mightily.
100 feet, and close to a good supply of water and a good supply of food. My garden is safe.
You both seem secure from weather and water. Your only problems would be human caused: either state or rabble.
Gee... with those two problems what else do you need?
I am optimistic. Of course I was weaned on cheap SciFi paperbacks where the scientists were the good guys with all the answers and always got the girl.![]()
I am optimistic. Of course I was weaned on cheap SciFi paperbacks where the scientists were the good guys with all the answers and always got the girl.![]()
Good article on upcoming bottlenecks in nuclear plant construction - 30 orders are now in process from 16 suppliers.
After more than a decade since the last U.S. reactor began operation, 16 companies and consortia are preparing to submit applications to build more than 30 new plants.
...There are lots of applications for coal-powered base-load plants that are already in process, from what I've read.
It's a matter of the quantity of heat retained by the extra water vapor (and CO2, and other greenhouse gases) vs. the quantity of heat reflected by additional cloud cover. The additional cloud cover doesn't balance the additional heat retention, at least not at any level we're likely to see before things get very uncomfortable.What I fail to understand is that, the warmer the atmosphere gets (to a certain point) the more water vapor is in the atmosphere. Water vapor traps in heat as well if not more than CO2 but there is an equilibrium that will have to be met simply because the more watervapor in the air the more cloud cover and the more cloud cover there is the more of the suns rays being reflected back into space.
Reid is stuck between a rock and a hard place. The no-nukes NIMBYs in Nevada are mostly his constituents, and he also has to get along with other Democrats in the Senate whose constituents are "environmentalist" no-nukes rather than NIMBYs. Meanwhile, Nevada needs power, and it's coal or nuke- choose your poison. Personally, at this point, I think environmentalism is about to split in two: the nukers, and the no-nukers. If I was him, I'd be waiting for the other shoe to drop before I ran my mouth. He might get some Republican votes if he swings nuke- the question is, will they be enough to offset the NIMBYs?Sen. Harry Reid talked today about green energy in Nevada. He said "maybe" coal isn't the best way to proceed with the plant(s) in our county. He suggested geothermal or wind (a wind farm already is part of the first plant's plan).
Reid clammed up when asked about nuclear power. "That's too controversial," he said, "and shouldn't be a part of this conversation."![]()
How do you leave nuclear out of an alternative-energy conversation? Reid's fought the high-level, nuclear-waste repository plan at Yucca Mountain since he was elected to the Senate in 1986. His primary argument has been why should Nevada have to take other state's waste when we don't have nuclear power ourselves?
I believe he's about to be hoist on his own petard. Las Vegas needs more power desperately. Reid's going to fight coal and nuclear?
With any luck.My hope is as the carbon dioxide increases in the atmosphere, it will help reduce the politicos' hyperventilation.![]()
It's a matter of the quantity of heat retained by the extra water vapor (and CO2, and other greenhouse gases) vs. the quantity of heat reflected by additional cloud cover. The additional cloud cover doesn't balance the additional heat retention, at least not at any level we're likely to see before things get very uncomfortable.
That would depend upon the amount that cloud cover increases as a function of temperature. I do not know the answer, and I suspect that finding it would be a very time-consuming venture and might well lead into modeling of questionable veracity. I do know that it isn't sufficient to keep the Arctic from melting, since it appears to be doing so and the cloud cover doesn't seem to be increasing.I understand that, I guess if I were to put my question into better words it should have came out more like this.
At what temperature would there be a hypothetical equilibrium from reflected energy and heat retention.
It appears that the temperature that it's likely to be in a decade or two will be uncomfortable for anything living year-round on the ice in the Arctic, since there won't be any in the summer. How uncomfortable this will be for the human race remains to be seen, but I suspect that there will be both expected sea level rises and unexpected and therefore unquantifiable effects of other kinds. A great deal of the problem is that we don't know for sure what will happen, we just know that how things have been for the last several millennia has been comfortable and now things are going to be different. If you're comfortable and things change, then most likely you're uncomfortable. How uncomfortable? Well, that depends on the nature and magnitude of the changes.What temperature is considered uncomfortable and why?
I can only guess, but I strongly suspect a long way, considering we're already seeing continent-sized ice shelves fall into the sea in the Antarctic, and predicting the very strong likelihood of complete melting of all the ice in the Arctic in summer in the next decade or two based only upon visible evidence as opposed to models.Lastly how far beyond the comfortable temperature threshold would it be when this equilibrium occurs.
I will testify to the fact that you have previously derided AGW, though I see no point in searching up examples. You're being skeptical- the evidence is trending strongly against your former opinion, and your opinion is changing. This is a good thing, and it's happening for many people- we can only hope quickly enough.From what I have seen and read if the global warming that is actually occurring right now is because of a natural cycle of things then everything will eventually go back to "normal". However if this warming trend has actually been influenced by human industrialization than it is basically too late and a run away global warming effect is already taking place. I ask about this equilibrium simply because I am actually leaning towards the opinion now that we may have something to do with this warming trend as bad as I had liked to disagree with it before there is far too much authority agreeing that AGW is taking place.
Keep the obvious physics of the situation in mind, and consider the raison d'etre of conservatism: if things are good now, then change is bad.I am not sold on the fact that global warming will be a bad thing in the long run at least not yet.
... Personally, at this point, I think environmentalism is about to split in two: the nukers, and the no-nukers. If I was him, I'd be waiting for the other shoe to drop before I ran my mouth. He might get some Republican votes if he swings nuke- the question is, will they be enough to offset the NIMBYs?
Tomorrow our governor is to meet with eight other western governors in Deadwood, South Dakota ...
Reid clammed up when asked about nuclear power. "That's too controversial," he said, "and shouldn't be a part of this conversation."![]()
How do you leave nuclear out of an alternative-energy conversation? Reid's fought the high-level, nuclear-waste repository plan at Yucca Mountain since he was elected to the Senate in 1986. His primary argument has been why should Nevada have to take other state's waste when we don't have nuclear power ourselves?
I believe he's about to be hoist on his own petard. Las Vegas needs more power desperately. Reid's going to fight coal and nuclear?