CapelDodger
Penultimate Amazing
In my own subjective experience (born in '54) I've seen a great deal achieved on environmental issues. I'm old enough to remember smog and rivers carrying lumps of mucky foam and exotically coloured slicks, so there have been some great advances. Which is just as well, we really couldn't carry on like that (as the Chinese are starting to realise now).
The things we sorted out were, as it turns out, the easy and visible ones. Rivers on fire make great TV, and there comes a point when Los Angeles's uniquely-coloured sky stops being a feature and starts being a problem.
Agricultural run-off has long been recognised as a problem, but not for the agriculturalists - and the agro-industrial complex is huge. Taking that problem seriously is far from easy, and unless an economically significant fishery is affected what goes on in the ocean is generally invisible. Not to you, Warmer1, but then your subjective experience is outside the norm
. (When I look at the sea it always runs through my mind that while it may look big, that's just the top!)
As for AGW, no chance. Ever. Not in the wildest of dreams. What happened in Kyoto was gonna stay in Kyoto.
The oceans are likely to cause the first major crisis, with AGW only a contributary factor, but the weather happens where we live and so gets the attention. As does agriculture, but the chances of collapse in ocean-systems are far greater, and that will grind against the 7+ billion more than most people appreciate.
This air-breathing bias is why the development of agriculture is identified with civilisation, and the fisherman's contribution gets written out of history. On another scale, it's why deniers obsess about surface temperatures when what's of interest is the whole fluid system we live in. Most of which is ocean, of course, by many measures : area, mass, heat-capacity, biological ancestry, to name but a few.
The things we sorted out were, as it turns out, the easy and visible ones. Rivers on fire make great TV, and there comes a point when Los Angeles's uniquely-coloured sky stops being a feature and starts being a problem.
Agricultural run-off has long been recognised as a problem, but not for the agriculturalists - and the agro-industrial complex is huge. Taking that problem seriously is far from easy, and unless an economically significant fishery is affected what goes on in the ocean is generally invisible. Not to you, Warmer1, but then your subjective experience is outside the norm
As for AGW, no chance. Ever. Not in the wildest of dreams. What happened in Kyoto was gonna stay in Kyoto.
The oceans are likely to cause the first major crisis, with AGW only a contributary factor, but the weather happens where we live and so gets the attention. As does agriculture, but the chances of collapse in ocean-systems are far greater, and that will grind against the 7+ billion more than most people appreciate.
This air-breathing bias is why the development of agriculture is identified with civilisation, and the fisherman's contribution gets written out of history. On another scale, it's why deniers obsess about surface temperatures when what's of interest is the whole fluid system we live in. Most of which is ocean, of course, by many measures : area, mass, heat-capacity, biological ancestry, to name but a few.