| Here is a great, low emotion description that covers the "CO2 lags temperature change". Potholer54 cites his claims, and does a lot of work to run down where claims first originated, then reads that paper instead of just citing some random web blogger or popular news article. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQ3PzYU1N7A One of the problems cited: the temperature/CO2 graph probably came from an antarctic ice core sample ... and temperature leading/lagging there is different than in non-polar locations. Second, the climate is a complex feedback system; there isn't one independent variable and everything else is dependent. If something forces any of the variables in the feedback system it can affect the other variables. For instance, say the artificial release of CO2 by humans results in the thawing of the arctic, releasing gigatons of methane, at which point CO2 might no longer be the primary driver. Over geologic time there are different causes for these forcings, but that doesn't mean that the current forcing (human released CO2) isn't the current problem. He covers all of that and more, much better, in 13 minutes. [EDIT] I forgot to address "what's even the big issue with changes in global temperatures?" That is a supremely cavalier attitude. Nobody is saying AGW is going to kill off all life. In the long term life will recover. But in the short term we humans are going to have to deal with the consequences: displacement of millions of people through crop failures and loss of coast, disruption of economic systems, and more civil unrest. The US military is gaming out these scenarios because they believe the science, not because they are pinko tree huggers who hate freedom. |
Specifically, he points out that CO2 lags temperature by hundreds of years in the southern hemisphere, but that temperature lags CO2 by again hundreds of years in the northern hemisphere.
CO2 is claimed to have accelerated natural warming through a feedback loop - until it didn't, and temperatures began drifting down again.
That's fair enough. That's reasonably nuanced. I'm missing the extent to which this feedback loop actually made an impact though, because clearly it can't be the dominant driver or ultimate control lever. Otherwise, we'd have had a runaway greenhouse already.
> Nobody is saying AGW is going to kill off all life.
One might get that impression from the media narrative though.
> But in the short term we humans are going to have to deal with the consequences: displacement of millions of people through crop failures and loss of coast, disruption of economic systems, and more civil unrest.
I don't think that's such a big deal, all things concerned. Sometimes, people have to move. Sometimes, crops fail. Sometimes, coasts move. Sometimes, there's civil unrest. Telling people in China or Brazil that they'll have to cut down on their emissions is going to cause civil unrest. "Vote for me, I'll make you poorer" is not a winning political provision.
> The US military is gaming out these scenarios because they believe the science, not because they are pinko tree huggers who hate freedom.
They're also gaming out scenarios of mass epidemics, or political secession. What do you expect them to do?