r-j
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I think you left out a 'tThe cooler air can support the high moisture content so it gets dumped as rain or snow.
I think you left out a 'tThe cooler air can support the high moisture content so it gets dumped as rain or snow.
Snow falling. In Australia. In summer. That is all
[qimg]http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2013/12/06/1226776/639641-61280220-5dee-11e3-8eb9-1c57f26bd260.jpg[/qimg]

June 12 2012 (6-12-2012) is the middle of winter in Australia not the middle of summer. I shouldn't think it was necessary to tell anyone over the age of 8 that seasons are the opposite in the North and South hemispheres.
Now isn't this remarkable?
4 years later, minus much of the hype, minus much of the fear-based profiteering, and things have shifted even more towards a more balanced, realistic view of the situation.
This article for the NY Times has come to my attention today, and though it's a few months old, I'm rather puzzled by the duplicity of it. It's the one where they talk about how global warming has been flat for the past 15 years. Maybe this has been covered in the forums before?
Anyways, here's a paragraph I don't get:
Now, here is a crucial piece of background: It turns out we had an earlier plateau in global warming, from roughly the 1950s to the 1970s, and scientists do not fully understand that one either. A lot of evidence suggests that sunlight-blocking pollution from dirty factories may have played a role, as did natural variability in ocean circulation. The pollution was ultimately reduced by stronger clean-air laws in the West.
So, they are saying that more pollution stabilized the world's temperature, but then when pollution was reduced, global warming increased over a 20 year period (mid 70's to late 90's) -- before becoming flat again for the past 15 years. That doesn't make any sense, does it? Unless you admit that AGW is a shaky concept (though certainly it isn't completely void, and does very likely exist, don't get me wrong!) Here's the link.
I also notice that they're using the rebranding of global warming and calling it climate change instead -- and yet they're using it exclusively to talk about global warming. The rebranding thing has been around for a few years now.
I'm all for cutting out real pollution. And any thinking person is. However, reading this nonsense might give cause to wonder if it is a good idea for China and India and Russia to cut their air pollution nightmare as the West did decades ago. After all, if the global warming carbon connection is to be believed, and if the actual history is anything to go by, won't this spell a rapid rise in global temperature? After all, that's what happened according to the NY Times article.
http://www.news.com.au/technology/e...mmer-that-is-all/story-e6frflp0-1226775945701
The news story is for snow right now, which would be the middle of summer in Australia. And it says on the site that the time stamp doesn't fit the image.
Who knows? Them Aussies, they is strange mate.
I hear it also gets quite warm in the desert there as well.
Forbes Magazine originally linked by MacDoc
http://www.forbes.com/sites/william...-in-sight-for-spains-escalating-solar-crisis/
A bit more on Spain's Solar Issues
I believe Spain generates over 50% of electricity viasolar panelsrenewables and now the government wants to tax it heavily.
(from the article)
On 1 August protesters, many of which were wearing solar panels, arrived outside a prison in Barcelona to “turn themselves in” for being supporters of solar energy that they claim the government’s hefty fines would effectively criminalise.
Spain’s draft laws that would make self-generated solar more expensive than regular grid electricity could expose the country’s banks to a €20 billion (US$26.6 billion) bubble, according to analysts NPD Solarbuzz.
Proposed new laws would fine those with solar panels making use of the old off-grid, self-consumption programme (known as “autoconsumo”) by as much as €30 million (US$39.9 million) if they did not connect to the grid.
http://www.pv-tech.org/news/npd_solarbuzz_spains_solar_u_turn_could_expose_20_billion_pv_bubble_5647
Spain's solar police to kick in your door
The latest nail in the coffin for Spain’s solar energy producers is an Energy Law amendment which allows inspectors to enter private properties without a court order. It's a move lawyers believe could set a worrying precedent.
http://www.thelocal.es/20131112/spains-solar-police-to-kick-in-your-door
Arizona Mulls Solar 'Tax'
SustainableBusiness.com News
The future of solar net metering in Arizona is under attack, with the state's largest utility Arizona Public Service (APS) proposing changes that undermine cost benefits for residential solar installations.
Under a plan submitted in July with the state's public utility commission, APS proposes two options for future residential solar customers – both of which will reduce potential financial returns homeowners would receive on their investment.
http://www.sustainablebusiness.com/index.cfm/go/news.display/id/25103
The Industrial Revolution was already well under way, and the use of steam led to all sorts of questions which ultimately led to thermodynamics (and very efficient steam engines). According to thermodynamics the Earth should be much colder than it is, leading to the question of why. Fourier came up with the hypothesis and later Tyndall identified the mechanism - today we know it as the greenhouse effect.Per post #1674. Why were they studying greenhouse gases in 1820? ??? This was before the Industrial Revolution?
Did someone think some atmospheric trend already was occuring, or what?
Russian Natural-Gas Dispute With Ukraine Threatens New Cutoff to ...
www.bloomberg.com/.../russian-gas-dispute-with-ukraine-threatens-new-...
Sep 21, 2011 - If supplies to the EU were cut, “it would be very damaging” to European confidence in Russia's reliability as a gas supplier. Russia, whose once ...
That is one of the great things about general scientific knowledge. Mankind has a base understanding of our planet, chemistry, physics, thermodynamics, biology etc...., that continues to grow. But rarely is that knowledge useful directly. What happens when a problem comes along that needs solving is what we call a synthesis. A person or group of people take that scientific knowledge from disparate scientific fields and synthesize it together in ways never originally conceived by the original researchers. Generally the next step is to hash together a hypothesis and then what is called a "proof of concept" trial or trials to confirm or deny the synthesis. Next step generally is peer review which can be quite a vigorous debate and quite nasty at times. Especially when the synthesis causes a fundamental change in the way society views the world. Then the engineers, inventors etc... come in and try and make something useful out of it all.
With AGW we are still in the peer review stage, but it is coming to a close, as the scientific consensus is overwhelming. Mostly the last bit of resistance to this new view of the world is becoming ever more marginalized. They are still vocal though, because the change was so fast it is less than one generation and completely changes the way we view the world and our impact on our environment. Society takes longer to adjust. We simply don't take every man woman and child back to school to relearn every time something changes like this. Some will seek the new knowledge, and hopefully be able to discern the difference between the consensus and the vocal but ever more marginalized minority opinion. But others will just ignore it all and leave it to the "experts" to hash out.
To further confound the issue, AGW mitigation synthesis, hypothesis, and "proof of concept" phases with their nasty peer review process is beginning. And that isn't even close to consensus yet. To sum it up simply. We now know what is happening, but we really don't know what to do about it yet. Some of us think we know, but that hasn't even come close to consensus. Society watching this struggle often sees the two, AGW and AGW mitigation, as the same thing. They aren't, but considering the poor quality of the reporting in the general press, it is understandable. So when people see a AGW mitigation proposal they don't agree with, they have a tendency to hope that AGW is wrong, so they won't have to deal with that mitigation proposal. It is the "Ostrich with its head in the sand" or "Deer caught in the headlights" effect.
It is my opinion that we should just get on with it. Mitigation doesn't have to be perfect or in consensus to work. Government should use their influence to promote many forms of mitigation to get them up and running, then let market forces decide which ultimately are cost effective.