Schneibster
Unregistered
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2005
- Messages
- 3,966
That's more like it.
Now, there are several caveats here.
First, this is a one-year trend. The previous nine years had increases.
Second, this is a reduction in emissions, not a reduction in CO2 in the atmosphere. The US still emitted 5.877 billion metric tons of CO2 in 2006, and that is still the most of any country in the world. It also (combined with Canada) makes North America the most of any continent.
Third, the winter and summer in 2006 were both unusually mild- and the first is a likely result of global warming.
Fourth, these figures were compiled by an administration notorious for inaccurate facts and suppression of facts.
Fifth, these figures are preliminary.
So overall, what we're saying here is that preliminary data from a source that has been shown to give inaccurate data in the past and has every motivation to give inaccurate data in this case, indicates that we made less of a problem last year than every other year in the last decade, but still more of a problem than any other country in the world, and that the fact we made less of a problem is probably down to the symptoms of the problem. Neato.
Let's investigate the size of the problem, shall we? Hmm, 300 million people- six billion tons of CO2- that's twenty tons of CO2 per person per year. Probably more than your house weighs. Getting that down to ten tons looks like a major problem to me. That would cripple the economy. And the problem's still not solved; we're still emitting three billion tons a year, and we have nothing to eat.
The sheer magnitude of the problem is daunting. That we've wasted ten years playing kiddie "I'm not so what are you" games is unconscionable. But the idea that there are people (like you, Azure) who want to ignore it awhile longer in the hope it will just go away on its own is incredible- absolutely beyond belief.
The physics of the situation is undeniable: we know that CO2 is a greenhouse gas, and we know that increasing it increases the greenhouse effect; we've known that for over a hundred years. We know that the Earth's average temperature is increasing, and that no other factor is increasing with it but CO2. We know that we're pouring CO2 into the atmosphere at a rate that makes us a major force in the environment.
The question, as I've stated repeatedly, is not, "will it get warmer;" the answer to that is obvious to anyone who can add. The questions are, "how fast and how much?" And the answers increasingly appear to be, "faster than we thought," and "more than we will find convenient by a long shot."
Is it doom for the human race? Unlikely; we're highly adaptable and we know a lot of things we can use to survive. But it may well be the end of industrial economies, and I don't know about you but I kind of like having a refrigerator and a car and a computer, to name three that come to mind quickly. Not to mention it's nice to eat. Maybe we ought to do something about it instead of arguing about the obvious.
Gee, ya THINK??!?