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Peak Oil & Global Warming - Radio Debate
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isfahan
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PostPosted: Thu Jul 24, 2008 11:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
(edit) But I don’t agree with this below.

I don't see any correlation at all.

The idea of world government goes a long way back in the proto-socialist tradition so it was by no means exclusively restricted to the imaginary Illuminati or the NWO which is a relatively new term. When I was a child my Dad belonged to a pen-friend's club called the World-Wide Brotherhood and that's where I first got my ideas for One World.


You mean you disagree with world government?

The anti-NWOers here present seem to equate world government with the NWO whereas what I'm saying is that there is a tradition for benign world government which goes a long way back, long before the NWO or the erstwhile Illuminati.
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 9:00 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

isfahan wrote:
Quote:
(edit) But I don’t agree with this below.

I don't see any correlation at all.

The idea of world government goes a long way back in the proto-socialist tradition so it was by no means exclusively restricted to the imaginary Illuminati or the NWO which is a relatively new term. When I was a child my Dad belonged to a pen-friend's club called the World-Wide Brotherhood and that's where I first got my ideas for One World.


You mean you disagree with world government?

The anti-NWOers here present seem to equate world government with the NWO whereas what I'm saying is that there is a tradition for benign world government which goes a long way back, long before the NWO or the erstwhile Illuminati.


I agree with most of this.

Simplesimon wrote:
“It's apparent that there is a strong correlation of those on this forum who attack anyone raising matters to do with Zionists / Israel / Jews, and those who defend (overtly or not) world government.

It strikes me that this fits the classic "Jewish conspiracy theory" model rather well. As does censoring discussion of it.

Maybe there's nothing in it, but it should make one very suspicious of forums where debate is castrated by rules about what can be discussed, like that miserable sham truthmove, with their pledges of political correctness.

I'm glad things are a little more free and open here.”


Isfahan wrote:
“You mean you disagree with world government?”

To a satanic Zionist world government, yes I disagree with. Which has been going on for at least 2600 years and kept mostly in the hereditary family way and marriages. With them hiding in different relatively less evil empires throughout history and failing to get there way.


Man made global warming, (experienced as climate change as weather patterns, mostly change hotter and cooler in various places as the average temperature goes up) enough to make crops fail.
Not to forget all the chemical pollution from industry (“corporate right” or “collective left” agric business) pollution from wars, genetically changed FOOD and Pharmaceuticals to list a few of our problems.

I would say is all intentional, is/and will be used as a weapon against us/you we. Like terrorist do by slight of hand. But in reality it should viewed as a declaration of war on the majority of us/you we as there intention is to Cull, Murder most of us/you we.
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blackcat
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 9:30 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
there intention is to Cull, Murder most of us/you we.

To continue to cull us! WW1, WW2, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq. Communism, Nazism, neo-Conservatism. All their little projects.

_________________
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 10:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Man made global warming, (experienced as climate change as weather patterns, mostly change hotter and cooler in various places as the average temperature goes up) enough to make crops fail.


I believe this is a very important observation you make here, Andrew. When I have made it in the past it gets ignored, presumably because it doesn't fit in comfortably with any of the dogma that is currently being touted around.

The Planet's biosystem is so huge and complex that it is likely that what is really happening is that some areas are warming while others are cooling. It has been demonstrated that warming in certain areas which, for example, cause a melting of polar ice can lead to the desalination of the Gulf Stream leading to a cooling effect in northern Europe.



Quote:
"Both, the climatic simulations as well as the reconstructions, indicate that variations in the Atlantic Ocean circulation could have been the key mechanism responsible for the abrupt climatic change that took place over the ice age.

This circulation plays a fundamental role in the regulation of climate on a global scale, since it transports large quantities of relatively warm water from low latitudes to northern regions, softening the climate of countries like Norway or Ireland in comparison with other regions in the same latitude, but with much harsher climates, like Alaska or New York."

Mitch Battros, Earthchanges Media.


Mitch Battros argues that the real cause of Climate Change are Solar Winds affecting the Sun and the electromagnetic resonance which follows on Planet Earth. That may well be true and I don't dispute it.

But that doesn't get the Climate Deniers off the hook, allowing them to espouse their poisonous message. Man-made pollution is now so massive that it really must be brought under control. Such great levels of pollution are bound to affect the Planet's biosystem to its detriment and all life along with it.
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 12:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

blackcat wrote:
Quote:
there intention is to Cull, Murder most of us/you we.

To continue to cull us! WW1, WW2, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq. Communism, Nazism, neo-Conservatism. All their little projects.



Blackcat wrote:
To continue to cull us! WW1, WW2, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq. Communism, Nazism, neo-Conservatism. All their little projects.


Thanks for the correction Blackcat.
A wise man accepts correction and a fool rejects it.

I also believe that if we won’t fight to stop WW3 it will be many magnitudes worse than what the world as seen before with perhaps about 2 Billion deaths and totalitarian world government and culling afterwards, if “they” get their way, for a time.

Sometimes I don’t understand JAH - Muad' Dib Teaching until he gives me correction and then “Out of the Blue” via intuition (Father really) tells me Oh yes I understand more clearly now if I can listen to my intuition without all the other confusing clutter going on in my thoughts which I have to continually learn the difference between the two, but it does become much easier and feels great. I suppose it starts with humbleness really and is great to have JAH - Muad' Dib to help me or anyone who wants to learn.

Anyway, thanks Blackcat.
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 1:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

It wasn't meant as criticism or correction Andrew, just a reminder that they have form. Smile
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 1:19 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20080722.ARCTICMAIN22  /TPSto
ry/TPInternational/America/

The race to own the top of the world
Melting icecap has circumpolar countries - including Canada - scrambling to
bolster their claims to Arctic territory and the oil and gas riches beneath
its seabed
July 22, 2008
PAUL KORING


MOSCOW -- 'We were there first and we can claim the entire Arctic, but if
our neighbours like Canada want some part of it, then maybe we can negotiate
with them," says Vladimir Zhirinovsky, the flamboyant Russian
ultranationalist, who happily hands out pictures of a Russian flag sitting
on the seabed at the North Pole.

Mr. Zhirinovsky, the populist leader of Russia's misnamed Liberal Democratic
Party, is often derided in the West as an extremist xenophobe, but a clash
over who controls the top of the world and the oil and gas beneath the
Arctic seabed seems inevitable.

The Russians staked the North Pole as theirs and last summer dropped a flag
on the seabed to prove it, much to the mocking outrage of Prime Minister
Stephen Harper's government.

"This isn't the 15th century. You can't go around the world and plant flags
and say, 'We're claiming this territory,' " fumed former foreign minister
Peter Mackay, who failed to mention that his predecessor had tromped ashore
tiny and disputed Hans Island, claimed by both Canada and Denmark, and
planted the Maple Leaf.

Supposedly cooler heads prevailed in Greenland this spring at a meeting of
the five circumpolar countries: Canada, Denmark, Norway, Russia and the
United States. They agreed "to the orderly settlement of any possible
overlapping claims" in a joint communiqué called the Ilulissat Declaration.

But the race to claim the top of the world and, more importantly, reap the
vast bonanza of oil and gas believed to lie beneath the Arctic seabed is
only just getting under way.

Since last summer's brouhaha, Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has
repeatedly tried to chill the passions, suggesting that the flag planting
wasn't really staking a territorial claim. He often notes that U.S.
astronauts left flags on the moon without claiming it.

But global warming hasn't made the moon's riches easier to plunder.

Modern man's burning of fossil fuels may be melting the Arctic icecap,
making it technically and economically feasible - especially in an era of
red-hot energy prices - to pry open the globe's last great untapped
reservoirs of oil and gas.

That prospect has set off a scramble among countries with Arctic coastlines
to try to bolster their claims under the United Nations Convention on the
Law of the Sea.

The "rapid melting of the polar icecaps," says a European Union report, will
allow the "accessibility of the enormous hydrocarbon resources in the Arctic
region," and is "changing the geo-strategic dynamics of the region."

No surprise, then, that Russia is conducting naval exercises in the Arctic.
Canada had soldiers stamping about in the North this spring, and some
analysts fear power projection, not talks at the UN, will decide who
controls the Arctic.

Under the Convention on the Law of the Sea, countries can extend their zones
beyond 200 nautical miles (about 370 kilometres) from their coasts if they
can prove the outer edge of the continental shelf extends beyond that
distance. Hence, the contentious Russian claim to the Lomonosov Ridge.

The prize may be huge. One study estimates 400 billion barrels of oil lie
beneath the Arctic seabed, beyond the existing 200-nautical-mile economic
zones where countries can regulate and control drilling. That's a little
less than the proven reserves of Saudi Arabia and Iran combined.

Russia's still-to-be-formalized claim to the 2,000-kilometre-long Lomonosov
Ridge, which rises more than 3,000 metres off the Arctic Ocean floor and
extends from Russia all the way to North America, could be just the
beginning of a new squabble.

Canada and Denmark have disputed Russia's claim. All three countries may
wind up bolstering each other's claim as they attempt to divvy up the Arctic
with the pole as the midpoint.

Even if Artur Chilingarov, the 2007 Russian expedition leader, was indulging
in a bit of swashbuckling bravado when he claimed "the Arctic is Russian,"
the scramble is on to find geological evidence to push territorial claims
into the centre of the Arctic Ocean.

Suggestions for politicians to cease firing salvos of accusatory,
claim-staking rhetoric across the pole can be heard in Canada as well.

"Nationalist arguments that feature alarmism and more than a little paranoia
only conceal the facts about Canada and the Arctic," Whitney Lackenbauer, a
history professor, said in a paper on Arctic sovereignty released yesterday
by the Canadian International Council.

While the five circumpolar countries say they can divvy up and run the
Arctic among themselves once their claims are sorted out, others warn of
dire environmental consequences.

As the ice recedes, new rules are needed to prevent "a rush to exploit all
the available resources of the Arctic - another Klondike - and avoiding the
destabilizing effects of massive infrastructure developments," said
Jacqueline McGlade, executive director of the European Environment Agency.

*****

Northwest Passage

Canada is boosting its presence in the Far North to solidify its claim to
the passage

Lomonosov Ridge

Russia claims the ridge is an undersea extension of its land mass.

Shrinking rink

Median minimum extent of sea ice cover over the years

KEY DISPUTES

1. Canada and the United States both claim a valuable pie-shaped slice of
the Beaufort Sea. Ottawa draws its boundary straight north out to sea along
the 141st meridian, while Washington prefers a line equidistant from the
coasts. At stake is an offshore undersea basin expected to hold a motherlode
of oil and gas.

2. Norway and Russia have a similar dispute over how to draw their maritime
boundary. Moscow echoes Canada's self-serving preference for "due north"
along a meridian, while Norway claims a big chunk jutting into the Barents
Sea based on its ownership of tiny, remote Bear Island. Not surprisingly,
one of the world's richest and yet-to-be exploited gas fields lies beneath
its shallow waters.

3. Canada sees value in its claim to the Northwest Passage - the winding
route between its Arctic islands leading from the Atlantic to the Beaufort
and thus providing a northern shortcut linking Europe and Asia. However,
Washington argues (and it seems anyone else in the world that has voiced an
opinion) that the Northwest Passage is an international strait - wider at
its narrowest than the 12-nautical-mile extent of territorial waters. And
therefore no different from other vital international sealanes such as the
Straits of Hormuz or Gibraltar.

4. Tiny, barren and unpopulated, Hans Island, in the middle of Nares Strait
separating Canada's Ellesmere Island from Denmark's Greenland, is also
disputed. Both countries lay claim to the 1.3-square-kilometre island, which
could become a test case for resolving the jumble of overlapping claims in
the Arctic.

5. Even the maritime boundary line separating Alaska from Russia and running
from the Bering Sea north to the Arctic Ocean, supposedly fixed in a 1990
pact between the former Soviet Union and the United States, may be coming
unravelled. The Russian Duma has never ratified the pact and while Russia
was supposed to inherit all of the international treaties agreed to by the
Soviet Union, some Russian parliamentarians want the deal reopened.

PAUL KORING, TONIA COWAN/THE GLOBE AND MAIL

Source maps prepared by Hugo Ahlenius,

UNEP/GRID-Arendal, http://www.unep.org

SOURCES: United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP);F. Fetterer and K.
Knowles; National Snow and Ice Data Center; United States Geological Survey;
Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme; Conservation of Arctic Flora and
Fauna; World Conservation Monitoring Centre; United States Energy
Information Administration; International Energy Agency; Barents Euro-Arctic
Council; Comité professionnel du pétrole, Paris; Institut français du
pétrole; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; The World Bank;
Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, division of Spill
Prevention and Response; United States Coast Guard; ESRI Data & Maps;
shadedrelief.com; World Data Center for Marine Geology & Geophysics;
University of Durham.

Energy giants forging ahead

Gazprom, the Russian energy giant, ordered two huge, semi-submersible,
offshore drilling platforms this month. These are massive units tough enough
to drill in the iceberg-strewn Barents Sea, where one of the world's largest
untapped gas fields lies deep beneath frigid waters.

While environmentalists fret and scientists frantically revise
ever-shortening predictions of when global warming will melt the Arctic's
ice, oil and gas giants are spending billions to drill deeper and farther
offshore.

Most of the drilling - including Russia's huge new Shtokman field in the
Barents Sea - is on the continental shelf, but even richer fields may lie
far offshore in the High Arctic.

The U.S. Geological Survey estimates a quarter of the world's undiscovered
oil and gas lies in the Arctic. Many of the potentially richest basins are
yet to be drilled or explored. The Amundsen and Makarov basins, lying on
either side of the long, underwater Lomonosov Ridge, claimed by Russia, may
hold rich reserves, said Viktor Posyolov, deputy director of the Russian
Institute of Ocean Geology in St. Petersburg. He says bottom-sampling work
conducted by Russian, Canadian and Danish scientists may be needed to sort
out the geology and thus the sovereignty of the Arctic. But the scientists
are strapped for money, he said, and would welcome some circumpolar
co-operation.

The energy giants, meanwhile, are forging ahead. Russian Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin this week visited the Sevmash shipyard - still closed to
non-Russians - where a massive oil rig designed to operate in pack ice at
-50 degrees is being built. Paul Koring



This entire planet belong to God and no-one else.

Neither the Russians nor anyone else OWNS one square inch of this prison
planet.

http://jahtruth.net/godgovmt.htm
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PostPosted: Fri Aug 08, 2008 10:49 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Some more info isfahan, on the solar debate.


The simple physics explanations for the greenhouse effect that you find on the internet are often quite wrong. These well-meaning errors can promote confusion about whether humanity is truly causing global warming by adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.

Some people have been arguing that simple physics shows there is already so much CO2 in the air that its effect on infrared radiation is "saturated"— meaning that adding more gas can make scarcely any difference in how much radiation gets through the atmosphere, since all the radiation is already blocked. And besides, isn't water vapor already blocking all the infrared rays that CO2 ever would?


The arguments do sound good, so good that in fact they helped to suppress research on the greenhouse effect for half a century.

In 1900, shortly after Svante Arrhenius published his pathbreaking argument that our use of fossil fuels will eventually warm the planet, another scientist, Knut Ångström, asked an assistant, Herr J. Koch, to do a simple experiment. He sent infrared radiation through a tube filled with carbon dioxide, containing somewhat less gas in total then would be found in a column of air reaching to the top of the atmosphere. That's not much, since the concentration in air is only a few hundred parts per million. Herr Koch did his experiments in a 30cm long tube, though 250cm would have been closer to the right length to use to represent the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. Herr Koch reported that when he cut the amount of gas in the tube by one-third, the amount of radiation that got through scarcely changed. The American meteorological community was alerted to Ångström's result in a commentary appearing in the June, 1901 issue of Monthly Weather Review, which used the result to caution "geologists" against adhering to Arrhenius' wild ideas.

Still more persuasive to scientists of the day was the fact that water vapor, which is far more abundant in the air than carbon dioxide, also intercepts infrared radiation. In the infrared spectrum, the main bands where each gas blocked radiation overlapped one another. How could adding CO2 affect radiation in bands of the spectrum that H2O (not to mention CO2 itself) already made opaque? As these ideas spread, even scientists who had been enthusiastic about Arrhenius's work decided it was in error. Work on the question stagnated. If there was ever an "establishment" view about the greenhouse effect, it was confidence that the CO2 emitted by humans could not affect anything so grand as the Earth's climate.

Nobody was interested in thinking about the matter deeply enough to notice the flaw in the argument. The scientists were looking at warming from ground level, so to speak, asking about the radiation that reaches and leaves the surface of the Earth. Like Ångström, they tended to treat the atmosphere overhead as a unit, as if it were a single sheet of glass. (Thus the "greenhouse" analogy.) But this is not how global warming actually works.

What happens to infrared radiation emitted by the Earth's surface? As it moves up layer by layer through the atmosphere, some is stopped in each layer. To be specific: a molecule of carbon dioxide, water vapor or some other greenhouse gas absorbs a bit of energy from the radiation. The molecule may radiate the energy back out again in a random direction. Or it may transfer the energy into velocity in collisions with other air molecules, so that the layer of air where it sits gets warmer. The layer of air radiates some of the energy it has absorbed back toward the ground, and some upwards to higher layers. As you go higher, the atmosphere gets thinner and colder. Eventually the energy reaches a layer so thin that radiation can escape into space.

What happens if we add more carbon dioxide? In the layers so high and thin that much of the heat radiation from lower down slips through, adding more greenhouse gas molecules means the layer will absorb more of the rays. So the place from which most of the heat energy finally leaves the Earth will shift to higher layers. Those are colder layers, so they do not radiate heat as well. The planet as a whole is now taking in more energy than it radiates (which is in fact our current situation). As the higher levels radiate some of the excess downwards, all the lower levels down to the surface warm up. The imbalance must continue until the high levels get hot enough to radiate as much energy back out as the planet is receiving.

Any saturation at lower levels would not change this, since it is the layers from which radiation does escape that determine the planet's heat balance. The basic logic was neatly explained by John Tyndall back in 1862: "As a dam built across a river causes a local deepening of the stream, so our atmosphere, thrown as a barrier across the terrestrial [infrared] rays, produces a local heightening of the temperature at the Earth's surface."

Even a simple explanation can be hard to grasp in all its implications, and scientists only worked those out piecewise. First they had to understand that it was worth the trouble to think about carbon dioxide at all. Didn't the fact that water vapor thoroughly blocks infrared radiation mean that any changes in CO2 are meaningless? Again, the scientists of the day got caught in the trap of thinking of the atmosphere as a single slab. Although they knew that the higher you went, the drier the air got, they only considered the total water vapor in the column.

The breakthroughs that finally set the field back on the right track came from research during the 1940s. Military officers lavishly funded research on the high layers of the air where their bombers operated, layers traversed by the infrared radiation they might use to detect enemies. Theoretical analysis of absorption leaped forward, with results confirmed by laboratory studies using techniques orders of magnitude better than Ångström could deploy. The resulting developments stimulated new and clearer thinking about atmospheric radiation.

Among other things, the new studies showed that in the frigid and rarified upper atmosphere where the crucial infrared absorption takes place, the nature of the absorption is different from what scientists had assumed from the old sea-level measurements. Take a single molecule of CO2 or H2O. It will absorb light only in a set of specific wavelengths, which show up as thin dark lines in a spectrum. In a gas at sea-level temperature and pressure, the countless molecules colliding with one another at different velocities each absorb at slightly different wavelengths, so the lines are broadened and overlap to a considerable extent. Even at sea level pressure, the absorption is concentrated into discrete spikes, but the gaps between the spikes are fairly narrow and the "valleys" between the spikes are not terribly deep. (see Part II) None of this was known a century ago. With the primitive infrared instruments available in the early 20th century, scientists saw the absorption smeared out into wide bands. And they had no theory to suggest anything different.

Measurements done for the US Air Force drew scientists' attention to the details of the absorption, and especially at high altitudes. At low pressure the spikes become much more sharply defined, like a picket fence. There are gaps between the H2O lines where radiation can get through unless blocked by CO2 lines. Moreover, researchers had become acutely aware of how very dry the air gets at upper altitudes — indeed the stratosphere has scarcely any water vapor at all. By contrast, CO2 is well mixed all through the atmosphere, so as you look higher it becomes relatively more significant. The main points could have been understood already in the 1930s if scientists had looked at the greenhouse effect closely (in fact one physicist, E.O. Hulbert, did make a pretty good calculation, but the matter was of so little interest that nobody noticed.)

As we have seen, in the higher layers where radiation starts to slip through easily, adding some greenhouse gas must warm the Earth regardless of how the absorption works. The changes in the H2O and CO2 absorption lines with pressure and temperature only shift the layers where the main action takes place. You do need to take it all into account to make an exact calculation of the warming. In the 1950s, after good infrared data and digital computers became available, the physicist Gilbert Plass took time off from what seemed like more important research to work through lengthy calculations of the radiation balance, layer by layer in the atmosphere and point by point in the spectrum. He announced that adding CO2 really could cause a degree or so of global warming. Plass's calculations were too primitive to account for many important effects. (Heat energy moves up not only by radiation but by convection, some radiation is blocked not by gas but by clouds, etc.) But for the few scientists who paid attention, it was now clear that the question was worth studying. Decades more would pass before scientists began to give the public a clear explanation of what was really going on in these calculations, drawing attention to the high, cold layers of the atmosphere. Even today, many popularizers try to explain the greenhouse effect as if the atmosphere were a single sheet of glass.

In sum, the way radiation is absorbed only matters if you want to calculate the exact degree of warming — adding carbon dioxide will make the greenhouse effect stronger regardless of saturation in the lower atmosphere. But in fact, the Earth's atmosphere is not even close to being in a state of saturation. With the primitive techniques of his day, Ångström got a bad result, as explained in the Part II . Actually, it's not clear that he would have appreciated the significance of his result even if he had gotten the correct answer for the way absorption varies with CO2 amount. From his writing, it's a pretty good guess that he'd think a change of absorption of a percent or so upon doubling CO2 would be insignificant. In reality, that mere percent increase, when combined properly with the "thinning and cooling" argument, adds 4 Watts per square meter to the planets radiation balance for doubled CO2. That's only about a percent of the solar energy absorbed by the Earth, but it's a highly important percent to us! After all, a mere one percent change in the 280 Kelvin surface temperature of the Earth is 2.8 Kelvin (which is also 2.8 Celsius). And that's without even taking into account the radiative forcing from all those amplifying feedbacks, like those due to water vapor and ice-albedo.

In any event, modern measurements show that there is not nearly enough CO2 in the atmosphere to block most of the infrared radiation in the bands of the spectrum where the gas absorbs. That's even the case for water vapor in places where the air is very dry. (When night falls in a desert, the temperature can quickly drop from warm to freezing. Radiation from the surface escapes directly into space unless there are clouds to block it.)

So, if a skeptical friend hits you with the "saturation argument" against global warming, here's all you need to say: (a) You'd still get an increase in greenhouse warming even if the atmosphere were saturated, because it's the absorption in the thin upper atmosphere (which is unsaturated) that counts (b) It's not even true that the atmosphere is actually saturated with respect to absorption by CO2, (c) Water vapor doesn't overwhelm the effects of CO2 because there's little water vapor in the high, cold regions from which infrared escapes, and at the low pressures there water vapor absorption is like a leaky sieve, which would let a lot more radiation through were it not for CO2, and (d) These issues were satisfactorily addressed by physicists 50 years ago, and the necessary physics is included in all climate models.

Then you can heave a sigh, and wonder how much different the world would be today if these arguments were understood in the 1920's, as they could well have been if anybody had thought it important enough to think through.


For Further Reading
References and a more detailed history can be found here and here.

http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2007/06/a-saturated-gass y-argument/#more-455
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PostPosted: Fri Apr 24, 2009 1:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Just had this through, dunno what I believe on it but Peak Oil would be a catalist for the powers that be switching their control grip to food and water! Also their love of Big Brother, anyhow:

Quote:
Talk � �The Last Oil Shock�
David Strahan, Oil Depletion Analysis Centre (ODAC)

Thursday, 23rd April 2009 - 8.00pm, Council Chamber, Uttlesford District Council, London Road, Saffron Walden




David Strahan is an award-winning business correspondent, investigative journalist and documentary film-maker, with many years experience of popularising some of the most difficult and important stories in business and science. For a decade he reported and produced major investigations for BBC television�s flagship business strand The Money Programme, and for its world-renowned science documentary series Horizon. He is now also the author of a provocative but authoritative book about �peak oil�, called The Last Oil Shock.

The Last Oil Shock is a wake-up call to a world sleepwalking towards potential catastrophe: global oil production is set to �peak� and go into terminal decline, almost certainly by 2020 if not very much sooner. And when our daily oil supply begins to shrink, the potential effects could include soaring fuel prices, financial collapse, economic depression and worse. �Peak oil�, or the last oil shock, represents a threat far more serious than international terrorism, and just as urgent as global warming.

The Last Oil Shock has already won high praise from senior oilmen. Former Shell chairman Lord Oxburgh wrote: "This is a well researched and documented book and David Strahan pulls no punches in his analysis of the world's impending energy problems...I commend it as a really good and informative read on a topic that affects us all." Richard Hardman, CBE, former head of Exploration at Amerada Hess and president of the Geological Society, commented: �This book should be compulsory reading for all those in Government in this and every other significant oil consuming country. Take note and avert the greatest crisis since the Second World War.�

The Last Oil Shock explodes many of the myths held dear by governments, oil companies and environmentalists, and in particular shows:

1. Biofuels and hydrogen are utterly inadequate to make good the looming transport fuel deficit
2. How �running out� of oil may paradoxically worsen climate change
3. How traditional economics critically underestimates the importance of energy, and therefore the severity of the last oil shock.
4. How the oil reserves of Middle East OPEC countries are almost certainly far smaller than claimed, meaning the global peak will come sooner rather than later
5. How the invasion of Iraq was not �all about oil�, but all about peak oil
The ODAC report "Preparing for Peak Oil: Local Authorities and the Energy Crisis" is available here: http://www.odac-info.org/sites/odac.postcarbon.org/files/Preparing_for _Peak_Oil.pdf

Price: Free
This event is being organised by Walden in Transition, part of the growing �Transition Towns� movement, where local communities work together to lessen their dependence on fossil fuels. For more on Walden in Transition see: http://www.walden-in-transition.org.uk


Also someone sent a link to this that might prove useful:-

http://www.eia.doe.gov:80/emeu/ipsr/supply.html

Quote:
March 2009 International Petroleum Monthly
Posted: April 13, 2009
Next Update: Early May 2009


Petroleum (Oil) Production

Monthly Quarterly Annual
World Crude Oil Production (Including Lease Condensate), Part A - Algeria, Angola, Argentina, Australia, Azerbaijan, Brazil, Canada, China, Colombia, Denmark, Ecuador, and Egypt 1.1a NA 4.1a
World Crude Oil Production (Including Lease Condensate), Part B - Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Libya, Malaysia, Mexico, and Nigeria 1.1b NA 4.1b
World Crude Oil Production (Including Lease Condensate), Part C - Norway, Oman, Qatar, Russia, Former U.S.S.R., Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, and United States 1.1c NA 4.1c
World Crude Oil Production (Including Lease Condensate), Part D - Venezuela, Vietnam, Yemen, Other, World, OPEC, Persian Gulf, and North Sea 1.1d NA 4.1d
OPEC Crude Oil Production (Excluding Condensate) - OPEC Countries and Total OPEC 1.2 NA 4.2
World Natural Gas Plant Liquids Production - Algeria, Canada, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Former U.S.S.R., United States, Persian Gulf, OAPEC, OPEC, and World 1.3 NA 4.3
World Oil Supply - United States, Persian Gulf, OAPEC, OPEC, and World 1.4 2.2 4.4

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kbo234
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PostPosted: Fri Apr 24, 2009 2:00 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Here's a fellow with some interesting things to say about 'peak oil' and the manipulation of the price of oil and food.

Part One


Link


Part Two


Link


Part Three


Link


goes to part 8
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Disco_Destroyer
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PostPosted: Fri Apr 24, 2009 2:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

You don't need to convince me Wink I'm keeping an open mind, besides I don't drive anyway Laughing
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uselesseater
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PostPosted: Sun Apr 26, 2009 2:13 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Andrew. wrote:
Some more info isfahan, on the solar debate.

In reality, that mere percent increase, when combined properly with the "thinning and cooling" argument, adds 4 Watts per square meter to the planets radiation balance for doubled CO2. That's only about a percent of the solar energy absorbed by the Earth, but it's a highly important percent to us! After all, a mere one percent change in the 280 Kelvin surface temperature of the Earth is 2.8 Kelvin (which is also 2.8 Celsius).


So a doubling in CO2 + the 'thinning and cooling' = 4W/m2 ? Is this what it is saying?

Also, the point about CO2 'saturation'. Are they saying that the current 385ppm is only at lower levels and is less at higher levels? It would have to be very low to be on the upside of the curve.

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TonyGosling
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PostPosted: Sat Feb 08, 2014 1:54 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

there is no shortage of oil

Massive Oil Discovery Is Deathblow For Saudis
By MONEY MORNING STAFF REPORTS, , Money Morning
http://moneymorning.com/articles/this-massive-discovery-has-put-the-sa udis-into-a-panic/
It's the biggest find in 50 years and the media is completely ignoring it...
It is 6 times larger than the Bakken, 17 times the size of the Marcellus formation, and 80 times larger than the Eagle Ford shale.
All told the recent discovery outside a sleepy Australian town contains more black gold than in all of Iran, Iraq, Canada, or Venezuela.
The current estimates of 233 billion barrels are just 30 billion barrels shy of the estimated reserves in all of Saudi Arabia.
Now, one renowned international energy expert predicts the proven reserves will be much bigger.
"The find may land at 300 or 400 billion barrels, making it one of the greatest unconventional oil discoveries any of us will see in our lifetimes," says Dr. Kent Moors and advisor to six of the top 10 oil producers and active consultant to 20 world governments.
"It represents a bona-fide redrawing of the global energy map as we know it," Moors says, "and the mainstream media is completely ignoring it."
Editor's Note: Experts value this find at over $20 trillion. To see the one stock that will deliver a record payday, go here.
Where the Hell is Coober Pedy?
To the people who call this place home, the oncoming oil boom means nothing will ever be the same ($20 trillion worth of oil can do that to a town).
The boom is centered around a place called Coober Pedy, an inhospitable speck on the map in Southern Australia.
The big draw is the riches found in the region's vast geological structure, the Arckaringa basin.
Encompassing an area in excess of 30,000 square miles, what's buried within the basin is enough black gold to completely change the global oil landscape-not to mention the lives of early investors.
Analysts believe this is equivalent to investing in Saudi Arabia in the early 1950's.
And according to this inner circle briefing by Dr. Moors, one little company controls the whole thing.
Editor's Note: This is the biggest find in 50 years and it will create unheard of fortunes for investors who act now. Watch this unbelievable video to learn more.


The Death Knell for OPEC
This massive find has been likened to the Bakken and Eagle Ford shale oil projects in the U.S., which have created legitimate boom times in Texas and North Dakota.

Even at the lowest estimate, Coober Pedy is set to make Australia a net oil exporter; at the higher estimate, Australia would become one of the world's biggest oil exporters.

"What we're seeing up there is a very, very big deposit," says South Australia's mining minister, Tom Koutsantonis, "This is a key part to securing Australia's energy security now and into the future."

Editor's Note: Access to Dr. Moors' exclusive briefing on the investment potential in the Arckaringa basin is available for a limited time only. Go here to view it now.

http://moneymorning.com/articles/this-massive-discovery-has-put-the-sa udis-into-a-panic/

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