
November 7th 06, 10:17 AM
posted to alt.global-warming,sci.environment,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.environment
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jun 2005
Posts: 244
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Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change
In article ,
Retief wrote:
On Mon, 6 Nov 2006 09:23:23 +0000, John Beardmore
wrote:
All the GH gases are equivalent to CO2 of 430 ppm.
This is simply not true:
http://www.profc.udec.cl/~gabriel/tu...cp1/1-11-2.gif
Clearly these different gases have different absorption spectra, and
can never be "equivalent to CO2"...
They can have a net thermal effect similar to CO2.
They absorb at different wavelengths, and they absorb at different
efficiencies. No, they are not similar.
The technique demonstrated by claiming "equivalence" is called
"begging the question" (a well known logical fallacy).
But if "net thermal effect" is what the comparison is all about, why
don't you compare it to something people can see and touch -- say, a
burning candle? "This is equivalent to XXX extra candles burning per
square mile of Earth's surface"... Oh, but then you wouldn't be able
to fold in the CO2 boogeyman...
That is, the response of CO2 to a shifting spectrum is different than
the other gases.
What do you mean by a "shifting spectrum" ?
The sun behaves approximately as a black body. If the sun increases
in temperature (and output), the spectrum shifts towards the blue (and
increased UV).
You're confusing intensity with temp. They are 2 different things.
And NOAA notes that the solar emission spectrum has changed:
http://www1.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/p...olar_variabili
ty/lean2000_irradiance.txt
"Estimated increases since 1675 are 0.7%, 0.2% and 0.07% in broad
ultraviolet, visible/near infrared and infrared spectral bands, with
a total irradiance increase of 0.2%."
So ?
So, many of those other (so-called "equivalent") greenhouse gases also
interact with incoming solar flux, and thus those gases are NOT
_equivalent_ to CO2. Their behavior is qualitatively and quantitively
different.
BTW, from a historical standpoint, we are at a very low atmospheric
CO2 concentration...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:P...on_Dioxide.png
Not from a human civilization standpoint. What does it matter what
happened
millions of years ago? Heck, why not go back to the big bang -- CO2 was
zero
then!
Oh, you mean that the Earth supports no life, because a "climate
catastrophe" (as you predict impending) has exterminated all life,
when those past CO2 concentrations went up to an estimated 5-6000 ppm?
I's sure that if he'd intended to say something stupid and out of
context he could have managed it without your help !
He has asserted that CO2 will cause a global catastrophe. And we can
examine this claim by looking at historical records. You even quoted
Lloyd Parker's question "What does it matter what happened millions of
years ago?"
Indeed! Why do we believe that increasing CO2 will be any more
catastrophic than it was a million years ago?
Please list the extent of human civilization a million years ago.
Flooding what is now New York wouldn't have had much effect a million years
ago. Would it today?
Again, current CO2 levels are exceptionally low, compared to past
history. And we note that those high levels did not exterminate life
on Earth.
Retief
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