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Posted: Sun Nov 11, 2007 4:45 pm
Well here is a place were I can store a whole bunch of articles related to global warming. so tah-da!
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Posted: Sun Nov 11, 2007 4:47 pm
THIS IS A REALLY LONG ARTICLE! It was from Time magazine 2006 for the full article, go here: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1176980,00.html Quote: Global Warming Heats Up No one can say exactly what it looks like when a planet takes ill, but it probably looks a lot like Earth. Never mind what you've heard about global warming as a slow-motion emergency that would take decades to play out. Suddenly and unexpectedly, the crisis is upon us. It certainly looked that way last week as the atmospheric bomb that was Cyclone Larry--a Category 4 storm with wind bursts that reached 125 m.p.h.--exploded through northeastern Australia. It certainly looked that way last year as curtains of fire and dust turned the skies of Indonesia orange, thanks to drought-fueled blazes sweeping the island nation. It certainly looks that way as sections of ice the size of small states calve from the disintegrating Arctic and Antarctic. And it certainly looks that way as the sodden wreckage of New Orleans continues to molder, while the waters of the Atlantic gather themselves for a new hurricane season just two months away. Disasters have always been with us and surely always will be. But when they hit this hard and come this fast--when the emergency becomes commonplace--something has gone grievously wrong. That something is global warming. The image of Earth as organism--famously dubbed Gaia by environmentalist James Lovelock-- has probably been overworked, but that's not to say the planet can't behave like a living thing, and these days, it's a living thing fighting a fever. From heat waves to storms to floods to fires to massive glacial melts, the global climate seems to be crashing around us. Scientists have been calling this shot for decades. This is precisely what they have been warning would happen if we continued pumping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, trapping the heat that flows in from the sun and raising global temperatures. Environmentalists and lawmakers spent years shouting at one another about whether the grim forecasts were true, but in the past five years or so, the serious debate has quietly ended. Global warming, even most skeptics have concluded, is the real deal, and human activity has been causing it. If there was any consolation, it was that the glacial pace of nature would give us decades or even centuries to sort out the problem. But glaciers, it turns out, can move with surprising speed, and so can nature. What few people reckoned on was that global climate systems are booby-trapped with tipping points and feedback loops, thresholds past which the slow creep of environmental decay gives way to sudden and self-perpetuating collapse. Pump enough CO2 into the sky, and that last part per million of greenhouse gas behaves like the 212th degree Fahrenheit that turns a pot of hot water into a plume of billowing steam. Melt enough Greenland ice, and you reach the point at which you're not simply dripping meltwater into the sea but dumping whole glaciers. By one recent measure, several Greenland ice sheets have doubled their rate of slide, and just last week the journal Science published a study suggesting that by the end of the century, the world could be locked in to an eventual rise in sea levels of as much as 20 ft. Nature, it seems, has finally got a bellyful of us.
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Posted: Sun Nov 11, 2007 4:51 pm
Now a REALLY old article, I really love reading old artilces for the whole paper go here: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,969946,00.html Quote: Environmentalists staged Earth Day to dramatize a simple message: The planet is threatened by a host of man-made ills, from toxic landfills to ozone depletion. But at least one part of the message -- the theory that the buildup of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere will cause global warming -- has come under considerable attack. A small but vocal group of scientists contends that the case for warming is sketchy and based on inadequate computer models. Forces within the White House, led by chief of staff John Sununu, have seized upon the debate and persuaded President Bush to take a cautious approach to the problem. While not dismissing the greenhouse threat, the President has emphasized the need for more scientific research to help determine the proper policy response. This go-slow approach has irritated government officials in several other countries, especially in Western Europe. As the Europeans point out, many scientists still fear that global warming could take place unless strong action is taken to prevent it. Last week representatives from 18 nations gathered in Washington for a global-warming conference set up by the White House. The Administration had hoped to get a debate going on the uncertainties of the greenhouse effect. Instead, most of the delegates appeared to agree that the global-warming threat is real and potentially serious. In the face of this strong sentiment, President Bush denied that he was taking global warming too lightly. The President reconfirmed a U.S. pledge to cooperate in a United Nations effort to forge an international agreement on dealing with climate change. The greenhouse dilemma illustrates the difficulty of setting policy based on uncertain projections of the future. Scientists generally agree that an unchecked accumulation of greenhouse gases will eventually lead to warming, but no one knows when it will start, how much will take place or how rapidly it will occur. The most widely accepted estimate is a rise in the earth's average temperature of 1.5 degrees C to 4.5 degrees C (3 degrees F to 8 degrees F) as early as 2050. An increase in the upper part of that range could produce disastrous climatic effects, including rising sea levels and severe droughts in some areas. But the computer models that make the projections may not accurately reflect such factors as the role of clouds and the heat-absorbing capacity of the oceans. As these phenomena are better understood, warming projections will undoubtedly be revised in one direction or another. Evidence that greenhouse warming has already started is at best tenuous. Even though some scientists believe the concentration of CO2 in the air has shot up 25% since the early 1800s, the average global temperature has risen by no more than 0.5 degrees C (1.1 degrees F), and even that measurement is suspect. Moreover, the rise has been uneven. From about 1940 to 1970, a cooling period inspired some forecasters to predict a return of the ice ages. Despite the uncertainties, there is a broad consensus that nations should slow down the rate at which they are changing the atmosphere. Said West German Environment Minister Klaus Topfer at the Washington conference: "Worldwide action against the climatic threat is urgently required, even if the complicated scientific interrelationships of climatic change have not been fully understood."
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Posted: Sat Feb 16, 2008 11:24 am
hey there, here's one: http://www.autoblog.com/2008/02/13/will-peak-oil-trigger-mad-max-society/ I've never watched the movie, but the article speaks for itself...
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Posted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 10:23 am
Let's all try to use less power and cars and walk where ever we an.
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