CapelDodger
Penultimate Amazing
You're enjoying the show too, aren't you
The problem isn't well meaning scientists or lay people. It's those people that have the well known disorder, the Authoritarian Liberal Progressive Controller Personality Disorder whether or not it has morphed into the full blown megalomelanoma of EcoFascism.
So what. Forgive me for pointing this out yet again, but I I am not an alramist and find your assumption that I am insulting.So what? Forgive me for pointing this out, but I find this is quite typical of the alarmist mindset. There's such a panic about the problem they don't stop to think about "what".
I would say little since the trend is still upwards.What did the $13 Billion spent on carbon trading do for the problem last year? What effect did all of the wind turbines erected, and the billions spent, do last year, that's "what".
That is an insane analogy - there are many working speedometers. The Mauna Loa observations are just one such 'speedometers'.People like the make the analogy that this is a car heading for a brick wall. Now we're pumping the brakes and nothing is happening but the guy in the back seat keeps screaming "pump harder!". Without a working speedometer it's impossible to tell if if it's working or if we're just exercising our legs.
There is no faith invoved. The fact is that spenting money to reduce CO2 emissions will reduce CO2 emissions and you agree with mne below.You're going on faith because you'll notice the good folks at Mauna Loa say otherwise.![]()
Your are wrong: Since CO2 is the primary driver of global warming, it is physically obvious that reducing CO2 will reduct global warming.I'm not saying these don't reduce CO2, it's obvious they do, what I'm saying is you're going on faith that this is an effective way of dealing with the problem.
If measures don't have any effect on the problem then the immediacy of them being implementedon a larger scale is even more immediate.If these measures don't have any effect on the problem then the immediacy of them being implemented isn't as great.
The current policies on CO2 reductions are not based on the minority opionions of alarmists or deniers or warmers or any other climate cranks.If that's the case then it stands to reason alarmism is hurting our effort not helping it. That's something to consider.
The only reason holocaust denial comes to everyone's mind is because it's the most well known because it's the most offensive and insane.
No - it is not linear but the average annual increase over the 10 years is about 0.5% (0.537%).So it's linear and 0.5%, that's even less alarming. Thanks.
That combined with their lack of science background. I've spent almost a week explaining how a constant 1% increase is linear when you're talking about the rate of emissions. You'd think something as simple as "It's 1% then it's 1% and then it's 1%, so it doesn't change and it therefore constant" would be a no brainer but it isn't, it's always a fight over the simplest of things.
In addition to wanting to control everything they want to appear like they are experts. It doesn't take very long to see they lack some very basic fundamentals. By I try to help them when I can, it's part of being skeptical in a room of believers.
It's still possible to refer to them as AGW deniers but still review their books, engage them in debate and debunk their work. The term doesn't carry all of these other associations you want it to. This is what the deniers want because it would serve their main goal which is to get people to think of them as an oppressed minority which is hogwash.
If we are looking at emissions, the situation is even more non-linear!I have a science background and I still don't know if I understand you. An annual 1% increase is not linear, it's exponential. I suppose what you might mean is the rate of increase in atmospheric CO2 (or emissions, whichever value you are using) is constant. That's somewhat of a pedantic point. The rate of emissions is not the rate of increase of emissions. Two distinct values.
The reason that no one has answered your "doubling of atmospheric CO2" question is two-fold:And dodge noted. I asked when we could see a doubling of atmospheric CO2 and the current accepted sensitivity of +2.5C at the current rate of 0.5% but nobody has been forthcoming.
I agree that is not cherry picking. But there are signs of incompetence in your researchlol, I Googled "climate model study impact 1% increase in CO2 per year " and these were the papers on the very first pages. That's the furthest thing from cherry picking.
I have a science background and I still don't know if I understand you. An annual 1% increase is not linear, it's exponential. I suppose what you might mean is the rate of increase in atmospheric CO2 (or emissions, whichever value you are using) is constant. That's somewhat of a pedantic point. The rate of emissions is not the rate of increase of emissions. Two distinct values.
No, it isn't. You are wrong.That just doesn't make sense. A constant is linear by definition. You are wrong.
I don't know if you understand physics or not but you're saying here amounts to "a constant acceleration isn't constant because the velocity increases". It pure baloney.
No, it isn't. You are wrong.
You're still acting like you don't understand percent. A constant acceleration would be 'the speed increases 10mph/h.' If the acceleration is 10%/h it is absolutely not constant, it's geometric.
No, it isn't. You are wrong.
You're still acting like you don't understand percent. A constant acceleration would be 'the speed increases 10mph/h.' If the acceleration is 10%/h it is absolutely not constant, it's geometric.

We were talking about climate models and emissions scenarios that could lead to a +7C planet.
When they input the CO2 level it's based on a compound 1% increase.
The increase is always 1% above the previous years levels (at least in most surveys, some use ranges, but most use the 1%)
The actual increase is constant at 0.5%, but it seems many of the models just use CO2 and not all of the GHG's.
Apparently that's why they use 1%, and it makes sense.
Unless of course the purpose of the study is only about emissions levels, then they tend to use ranges.
I know it's just people being deliberately naive, no one could be this clueless.
If you happened to say "The velocity due to gravity is constant" I wouldn't think twice about it because I know enough to know you meant acceleration.
Why this has taken a week of explaining is quite frankly bizarre. Every year we release more CO2 into the air, it's about 1% greater every year.
I think I can explain it. It's because you are one of those Global Warming Deniers. So if you say something it's Wrong. So it doesn't matter what it is, it must to the True Follower of the Right Path of Warm, be cast into the evil pit. Especially if he finds it confusing, that's the work of the devil incarnate.I'm going to explain this as best as I can. It seems pretty straightforward to me but here goes.
The increase is an average. So as I've pointed out, it the acceleration increase to 1.01g after a year, that's 1%.
Over the following year the acceleration goes from 1.01g to 1.0201g. That's an increase of 1%.
The next year there is another 1% increase, the acceleration goes from 1.0201g to 1.030301g.
It should be very obvious the increase is constant at 1%. Not the difference, or delta increase, the percentage increase in acceleration. It's 1% every year.
Why is this so hard to understand![]()
I think I can explain it. It's because you are one of those Global Warming Deniers. So if you say something it's Wrong. So it doesn't matter what it is, it must to the True Follower of the Right Path of Warm, be cast into the evil pit. Especially if he finds it confusing, that's the work of the devil incarnate.
Saving the world is a serious business.
No we weren't.
It was in the models you referenced, but they weren't global climate models. They were designed to investigate particular aspects of climate response to warming, such as tropical storm behaviour and deep ocean heat-uptake.
"They" do not always input a 1% cumulative increase in CO2 into global predictive models. In fact the models are run against a suite of emissions scenarios, because nobody (not even you) knows what the actual emissions outcome will be. Many will involve falling emissions at some point in the scenario.
No they don't. Surveys? You seem to be a little adrift.
If your model is built to probe tropial storm behaviour in a warming and warmed world you're not going to factor in methane from premafrost melt. You'll go with CO2 and water vapour, which is quite enough to be getting on with.
It doesn't apply to global predictive models, of course.
They use ranges for what? This is semantically void.
With all the promise that exponentiality always brings. Linear gets you there in the end, but exponential is the smart way to riches.
As to CO2 emissions, the data is so noisy that a 1% annual increase in the rate of emissions is not discernible with any statistical significance. We're talking the second derivative here.

When you say "It's 1%, then 1% then 1% then 1% then 1% then 1% then 1%" and somebody says "That isn't constant" you shake your head and weep a little. You have to.That's the Dunning-Krueger factor. You know so little that you believe you know all that matters, and most of what you think you know ain't so.
Back on topic: Are Skeptics Changing Their Minds?
Yes.
Alarmists are creating skeptics and here is a recent study showing how it's bad for business
Why dire climate warnings boost skepticism.