by rwwff » Mon 05 Jun 2006, 02:08:43
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('azreal60', '
')Simply, I see this as one of the worst paths we can take. I would rather see demand destruction and less electricity usage than us plunder our coal in 100 years or less and kill the ability of this planet to support human life in the process.
See now, this is the rub thats costing yall support. None of the science out there supports the assertion that global warming can "kill the ability of this planet to support human life." Now it can do a hideous amount of damage, and kill billions if things go just so, but humans are the most absolute ferocious of predators, able to catch, kill, and eat anything from flys to blue fin tuna, and able to move at will, and construct artificial environments to suit our preferences. Extinction wise, I'm more worried about the current lack of pressure from natural selection on the human genetic code than I am about global warming or peak oil. Now maybe either of those two will return Darwin's find to active status, but not necessarily so.
There is also reasonable evidence that the Earth system, even with vastly more CO2 in the atmosphere does have a fairly solid temperature cap somewhere in the range of 22C. So, until
Science publishes a paper that demonstrates extinction of homo.* via global warming, hyperbole about the end of human life is just more "The Day After Tomorrow" hollywierd stuff.
Is 22C and 2000ppm CO2 (and friends) comfortable? No.
Would it be nice if we could avoid it? Sure.
Is there any reason to suggest that we will avoid it? No.
100 millian Indian familes want, and are going to get, airconditioners.
I think that about says all we need to know about the direction of CO2 concentrations.