demosthenes
Member
Does this effect lakes?
If lakes are near the coast they could become part of the ocean. Internal lakes will not be effected.
Does this effect lakes?
Does this effect lakes?
We will deal with it but it will be at the last minute like always.
A friend of mine recently told me that most natural volcanoes produce more heat than humans could ever produce via cars/power plants ect,ect.
and this is been going on since forever.
Anyone, agree with this?
I work in the coal industry so you can probably just discredit my opinion right off the top. That said, yes.So what do you propose? We keep mining so they can keep their jobs?
It didn't have to be like that. Much blame goes to the influential fossil fuel industry monopoly and daft politicians. Look at Germany actually training people for a renewable energy economy and making it work.Well the steam coal market is just about killed off entirely, particularly in the Appalachian basin in the eastern US, so you won't have much to confiscate pretty soon. Guess it's time to go after natural gas a little harder.
My question is, where is all the electricity going to come from when coal and NG are dead? In 2014 wind power accounted for 1.7% of total US energy consumption while solar was at 0.4%. In total, renewables (primarily hydro-electric, wood, and bio-fuels) accounted for less than 10%. Our reliance on fossil fuels is still extremely high and quite frankly a lot higher than most people seem to realize.
Show this picture to the thousands of miners in Eastern KY, WVa, and Southwest VA who are currently out of work and on the fast track to poverty.
My take as well. Humans are not good nor evil creatures, but rather "improvisation and avoiding catastrophe in the last minute by strapping chewing gum into a straw" type of creatures.
One friend of mine is a geologist and he also believes that climate change is happening but due to natural reasons (and no, he is far from being a crazy neocon). Thing is, whetever climate change is man made or no, that is a moot point. Human civilization needs a certain set of weather conditions in order to thrieve and be able to sustain agricultural output. We should employ whichever means to that end, full stop.
If lakes are near the coast they could become part of the ocean. Internal lakes will not be effected.
What about The Great Lakes? They are connected to the sea but i think the St Lawrence seaway flows out to the ocean.Not unless they are directly fed by the ocean. Landlocked lakes will probably dry up if anything
Humanity will deal with it but our current civilization will not.
We will deal with it but it will be at the last minute like always.
Not unless they are directly fed by the ocean. Landlocked lakes will probably dry up if anything
Germany still burns a lot of coal. Also, they don't deal with the same demands and infrastructure issues we deal with in the massive, sprawling US.It didn't have to be like that. Much blame goes to the influential fossil fuel industry monopoly and daft politicians. Look at Germany actually training people for a renewable energy economy and making it work.
The picture kind of downplays the 100% genuine threat of global warming/climate change.
What about The Great Lakes? They are connected to the sea but i think the St Lawrence seaway flows out to the ocean.
I remember that story about an ice age coming:
Solar activity will fall by 60 per cent between 2030 and 2040 causing a "mini ice age".
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1079128
What about The Great Lakes? They are connected to the sea but i think the St Lawrence seaway flows out to the ocean.
Carbon doesn't erode ozone.
Ok. But are you sure? I'm thinking the outflow into the ocean will be reduced due to increased resistance from the higher sea level.They're too far inland. They'll be fine.
I work in the coal industry so you can probably just discredit my opinion right off the top. That said, yes.
We should continue to research and transition towards renewable sources of energy but forcefully accelerating that timeline with overly-restrictive regulations does nothing but shoot us in the foot. Instead of killing off industries that provide thousands of good jobs to Americans we should find ways to burn coal and NG cleaner and more efficiently while this inevitable transition is taking place.
I work in the coal industry so you can probably just discredit my opinion right off the top. That said, yes.
We should continue to research and transition towards renewable sources of energy but forcefully accelerating that timeline with overly-restrictive regulations does nothing but shoot us in the foot. Instead of killing off industries that provide thousands of good jobs to Americans we should find ways to burn coal and NG cleaner and more efficiently while this inevitable transition is taking place.
... what logic is this?
Goodbye humanity, we had a run.
Don't worry about me, I've been planning on transitioning into another industry for a few years now. I don't really have any attachment to coal and frankly I'm sick of working in such a politically charged field.I'm sorry to hear about your situation but isn't it an issue of supply and demand at this point?
We will survive. We're very adaptable. We did survive the Ice Age on primitive tech.
Worse comes worse, we'll have to start all over, civilization wise.
The issue is by not doing anything now, we're guaranteed the likely deaths of millions or more.
If this means an entire civilization without japanese moe vita games then I'm not sure thats a civilization I want to live in.
Whats gonna happen to the caribbean islands? Or islands in general?
A friend of mine recently told me that most natural volcanoes produce more heat than humans could ever produce via cars/power plants ect,ect.
and this is been going on since forever.
Anyone, agree with this?
Some of the factors are outside of the US' control but others certainly aren't. By no means do I think corporations should be unlegislated or allowed to run freely with no regulations but I think we have gone too far too quickly.
I work in the coal industry so you can probably just discredit my opinion right off the top. That said, yes.
We should continue to research and transition towards renewable sources of energy but forcefully accelerating that timeline with overly-restrictive regulations does nothing but shoot us in the foot. Instead of killing off industries that provide thousands of good jobs to Americans we should find ways to burn coal and NG cleaner and more efficiently while this inevitable transition is taking place.
I remember that story about an ice age coming:
Solar activity will fall by 60 per cent between 2030 and 2040 causing a "mini ice age".
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1079128
I agree with your edit. I honestly just hate seeing what has happened to this area of the country. So many hard working men who know nothing but coal mining and have no other options in the area for work. Any other industries coming to the area would be great, as would help in transitioning into them. That said, we still have the energy issue I brought up earlier. It has to come from somewhere while we get this new tech figured out.We haven't gone far enough quick enough.
EDIT: instead of complaining about regulation, the people in the coal industry should be bitching about the government not helping them transition into other fields of labor.
Coal companies in the US are declaring bankruptcy regularly these days, it's not like they're swimming in cash. I am all for increased movement towards sustainability and efficiency but like I said there is a point where you have gone too far. Obviously many will disagree with me on where that point is but that's expected.Canada appears to adopt processes towards sustainable mining: http://mining.ca/towards-sustainable-mining
However, from what I've seen from the bosses of said mining companies in the US, they often refuse to go the "cleaner" route because it is more expensive. If they are forced to, they can simply use that as an excuse to let people go. As with anything environmental, rightwing politics and greed are going to work against anything sustainable.
As the climate gets hotter and hotter, we'll likely start needing to use more and more fresh water to maintain our civilization, especially if people from the coasts start moving inland. Not to mention the droughts global warming will bring as well. I mean, it's already happening all over the world.
I thought this was debunked into a very, very minimal impact based on how warm we keep getting year over year.
Anyway, any city near the coast is in for a rude awakening. The bigger question is what we'll do with all the structures (basically houses) near the water - just abandon them?
A friend of mine recently told me that most natural volcanoes produce more heat than humans could ever produce via cars/power plants ect,ect.
and this is been going on since forever.
Anyone, agree with this?
Do the Earths volcanoes emit more CO2 than human activities? Research findings indicate that the answer to this frequently asked question is a clear and unequivocal, No. Human activities, responsible for a projected 35 billion metric tons (gigatons) of CO2 emissions in 2010 (Friedlingstein et al., 2010), release an amount of CO2 that dwarfs the annual CO2 emissions of all the worlds degassing subaerial and submarine volcanoes (Gerlach, 2011).
The published estimates of the global CO2 emission rate for all degassing subaerial (on land) and submarine volcanoes lie in a range from 0.13 gigaton to 0.44 gigaton per year (Gerlach, 1991; Varekamp et al., 1992; Allard, 1992; Sano and Williams, 1996; Marty and Tolstikhin, 1998). The preferred global estimates of the authors of these studies range from about 0.15 to 0.26 gigaton per year. The 35-gigaton projected anthropogenic CO2 emission for 2010 is about 80 to 270 times larger than the respective maximum and minimum annual global volcanic CO2 emission estimates. It is 135 times larger than the highest preferred global volcanic CO2 estimate of 0.26 gigaton per year (Marty and Tolstikhin, 1998).
That's different than just saying they'll dry up. Dry up to me sounds like natural causes.
The most frightful part about this is that it would happen very quickly, and by quickly I mean about a decade's span of time.
Its mind blowing to me that something as slow as global climate change still happens faster then the pace of the human species ability to react to it. We're slower than the goddamn planet guys
Those consequences mean that I'll be having beach front property thoughThe thing I don't get about climate change denial is that it means that you say 'yes, I accept that more CO2 is being pumped into our atmosphere than at any point in human history and yes I accept that this will end up significantly altering the makeup of the atmosphere, but it won't actually affect the amount of heat stored by said atmosphere'.
Actions have consequences. :/
Such a jump would be Fallout-level disastrous. Literally sudden-end-of-civilisation cataclysmic.Yes, there is evidence that the Younger Dryas period ended with a 13F degree warming within just a few years.
There really is nothing we can do at this point right? Like we've reached the point if no return a few years ago. I assume At this point the only thing we can do is prepare