I seem to have gone on a bit... And it's all horribly off-topic, but why not? It's Tuesday..
Noob Saibot wrote:
i) CO2 in the atmosphere is the principal cause of the greenhouse effect, which is what makes our planet hospitably warm.
Erm... No. The principle greenhouse gas is water vapour - I believe that it contributes something like 97% of the present greenhouse effect. I think that what you meant to say is that CO2 is the principle "forcing gas"... Water vapour is in a state of equilibrium dependent upon local temperature, so if an excess is added to the atmosphere it's balanced out by precipitation in a matter of days. CO2 doesn't work that way, its removal is a very slow (if at all) process so once added to the atmosphere it stays added for a considerable time, which is why it has a sort of "multiplier" effect on warming. The effect is "enhanced" because most of the world's CO2 is dissolved in the sea and as gases are less soluble in warm water than cold, if the seas warm up more CO2 is released... And so on.
Noob Saibot wrote:
ii) Increasing the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere increases the effect.
That appears to be the case, but it's far from simple...
Noob Saibot wrote:
iii) Human activity has significantly increased the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere over the last century.
That is one contention. Problem is,
which bits of human activity are the main contributors. Reading sites like T2000 and some of the "eco-nuts" it's assumed that cars are the major culprits, other sites suggest that personal transport contributes less than 0.5% of the CO2 burden.
As I see it, one of the major problems of the extreme polarisation of views about AGW is that there is little reasoned debate anymore - it's become like opposing religions, each with its own view of "how many Angels can dance on the head of a pin" and an absolute conviction that it, and only it, is right.
Noob Saibot wrote:
... Yes significant natural climate changes have occurred in the past, but the timescales on which these restored themselves was typically tens of thousands of years - the sorts of timescales mentioned in the Martian report!
It looks to me that the GW debate has become stuck on "CO2 etc" and other views, such as GW is related to sun output seem to have been sidelined. The reason that I drew reference to the NASA Martian pictures (which BTW cover a timescale of
three years, not thousands) is that there appears to be some form of global warming occuring on Mars - the only (I assume) source of which has to be the sun (unless, as I joked, the Martians have taken to 4x4s in a big way), so perhaps external factors are of considerably more importance than much of the AGW lobby are willing to give them credence.
It both worries and frightens me that massively-impacting legislation is likely to be implemented based on less than half the "story" - and that such legislation, whilst possibly financially and socially crippling may have negligible effect on the climate.
Noob Saibot wrote:
Having said I wouldn't go on about it, it seems I have, sorry for the rant!
Oops... So have I...
Sorry..