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Additional questions about climate change?

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Sorry I am posting more than one question in this post, I'm just having some trouble finding answers to these climate-change related questions.

Will climate change be beneficial for a few creatures who may thrive from higher temperatures? I've heard reports of an increase in many insects.

What are perhaps the main differences between this current warming period and past events?

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4 ANSWERS


  1. A warm climate will be good for species that like warm climates. Humans are such a species.

    The only difference between past climate change and the present situation is the cause and speed of the present situation. The cause is human activity and it will take "only" a few hundred years or so instead of many thousands of years to change.


  2. 6 billion humans polluting in their own way.  We have the technology to move past the carbon debate. We do not have time to go through the government red tape. With oil on the decline, we have to make massive changes, swiftly. But we have to take the time to get it right. We can not do this twice, or three times - like in the past; we have to put our money in the best return on investments and where we get multiple benefits. We have had most of this technology for 20 years but have not implemented it. We know what is cost effective; we know where we need better technology. Without governments mandating renewable resources that do not harm the environment, we are doomed. The fossil fuel depression with global warming will be the worst economic downturn in world history. But this is not doom and gloom; we have the ability to fix our mess and enough time. Solar Concentrating Electric Power Plants, wind, wave, small hydro-electric, geothermal, and nuclear energy are what we need. We must have a pollution surcharge where we pay the real price (health effects, global warming and cleanup) for oil, natural gas, coal, cigarettes, cooling towers, cars, trains and airplanes. Raising the price of fossil fuel today gives us more time to solve these problems and helps pay for the 20 Trillion Dollars worth of renewable energy over the next 10 years. Remember knowledge is power and this information is very powerful. Humans have 50 trillion dollars worth of stuff that runs on cheep oil, natural gas, or coal.

    I attended the Focus the Nation at Sierra College on 1-31-08. The event was the 2% Solution, a 2% reduction over 40 years to solve global warming. Oil is a nonrenewable resource and we are running out-but not soon – anyone now want to pay $30 per gallon for gas. The problem is the oil will be gone in less than 30 years at present rates of consumption without projected increases and shortages (gone at least to run cars, heat homes, power electric plants or air travel). The 2% Solution is ok for the USA for a 10 year plan to cut 20%, but I would prefer a 5% Solution over the next 10 years for a 50% reduction. At the same time, we have to be building renewable energy so at the end of 10 years we can cut an additional 20%. With the peak of oil in the 1970’s, peak NG in the 1990’s, having mined cheep coal, the peak of ocean fishing in the 1980’s, and the peak of uranium in the 1990’s, humans must stop procrastinating and make real changes to keep earth sustainable including in the energy debate, finance and regulation. Over the next 90 years carbon dioxide is projected to skyrocket as human’s burn more fossil fuels, but we have to come up with what will take its place and cleanup our mess. One of the big problems we have is at some time Yellowstone will blow its top again, as the magma move closer to the surface, creating a nuk winter. After that we will not have to worry about the destruction of the ozone layer, global warming or pollution.

    Many of mankind’s advancements cause earth surface to warm, destroy the ozone layer, kill off endanger species, heat cities, and in some way cause more dramatic destruction.  Blacktop and buildings (roads, roofs and parking lots-heat cities), deforestation (air pollution, soil erosion), duststorms (increase hurricanes and cyclones, cause lung diseases), fires (cause pollution, mud slides, and deforestation), refrigerants (like CFC's) and solvents (including benzene destroy the ozone layer raising skin cancer rates) and plastics; cars, airplanes, ships and most electricity production (causes pollution including raised CO2 levels and increased lung and other diseases); these human problems we must fix to keep life on earth sustainable! Humans have destroyed half of the wetlands, cut down nearly half of the rain forest, and advance on the earths grasslands while advancing desertification which increases duststorms.

    The result is:  change is on the way, we just do not know what changes (where and when). Look beyond the hype, beyond the weather, beyond a quarterly report and beyond today. President Bush has made a choice of energy (ethanol) over food and feeding the starving people around the world; this is a choice China has rejected. The fact is Bush wants to buy food from out side the USA to send to starving people since our grain is not available. Now what USA Presidential candidate is giving you the facts so you can make an educated decision of which one to vote for?

    But with that we must understand we have never seen what is now happening before. CO2 has never lead to temperature change, but temperature change has led to increases in CO2. The models have to be made as we go along with current evidence! But again adding a small amount of CO2 to the atmosphere enlarges the earths sun collection causing warming; increase water in the atmosphere and it forms clouds cooling earth but sometimes causing flooding. Even natural events are warming earth and causing destruction. The sun has an increased magnetic field causing increases in earthquakes (more destruction), volcanoes (wow, great destruction), and sun spots. Lighting produces ozone near the surface (raising air pollution levels). The USA Mayor's have taken a stand and I believe are on the right track, we can have control and can have economic growth. The sun is available to produce energy, bring light to buildings and makes most of human’s fresh water. Composting is the answer to desertification. New dams are the answer to fresh water storage, energy and cooling earth by evaporation, we need many small ones all over (California needs 100 by 2012 and we are far behind).

    That is why I founded CoolingEarth.org, a geoengineering web sight where you can learn more about earth, the atmosphere, and how to sustain life on earth’s surface. Watch for changes in the sight coming soon.

  3. I doubt if anyone really knows all the answers to that..  Sure some species are bound to do better, but who knows which ones.  Scientists can speculate and make their best educated guess but it is complex.

    Rapid changes would make it impossible for some to migrate fast enough.  Whereas in previous more gradual changes they may have had more time to adapt or migrate.

    What could happen to some species can be predicted with some certainty because of where they live, like on an island, or on a mountain where they run out of altitude where they can survive.

    Polar bears have been given as one example of a species running out of habitat.  

    The idea of insects migrating further north into temperate areas from tropical or subtropical areas has been talked about.

    There are so many species.  

    Some places would be wetter, some dryer, and even during warming periods, some places cool, or stay the same.   There are charts in the international climate report that show this at:

    http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1...

    Al Gore's movie talked about this stuff as did the TV documentary 6 Degrees.  

    There's another older movie which can be watched online.

    After The Warming   at:

    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=...

      

    The 6 Degrees one was a little too Hollywood for me, but you might learn something.  

    A measurable difference is about 30% more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere than at any other time in the last 4000,000 years at least.  

    This has occurred during the time frame of the industrial revolution of the past 150 years or so.



    http://realclimate.org/   has a lot of information

  4. I don't know that you could look at the past and see anything different other than the volcanoes.  And that may be the clue.  I don't know if any insects can survive in the choking smoke of a volcano.  But, that's what seems to be happening.  There's no volcanoes so the insects are just so happy.  

    And frolicking about!

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