Re: Possible temp rise of 3 degrees before 2050 : Fri Mar 30, 2012 3:00 pm
BrisbaneRhino wrote: DHM - sadly I think your view on world action is what is most likely to happen. The evidence for global warming and its impacts are simply too vague for any government to risk annihilation by trying to do something meaningful about it. It won't be until the worst effects become unavoidable to everybody that anything meaningful will be done. If you take that position, an interesting question is whether the government should in fact divert spending away from carbon reduction schemes and into schemes to offset the physical impacts of global warming. As for oil running out, I'm not sure the 40 years is right BTW. There is plenty more fossil fuel available if you're willing to pay more and more to get it. Ten years ago shale oil would not have been included in reserves forecasts because at $70-$80/barrel to produce nobody would have dreamed of touching it when the market was around $35-50 (and on a genuine marginal cost basis the Saudis can produce oil for way less than that). Now it seems profitable - even though its environmentally destructive and hugely energy intensive to produce. I just googled it, I'm no expert - I'm sure it's wrong. http://www.imeche.org/knowledge/themes/ ... il-run-out I guess that consumption is only going to go up (although once Jeremy Clarkson is 6 feet under that should give us an extra 5 years of petrol). There have been end of the world scenarios quite a few times since the war. I lived through the most realistic which was about the time the US decided to put cruise missiles within range of Moscow in the early 80's. That's the closest I'll ever get to the end of civilisation as we know it. |
BrisbaneRhino wrote: DHM - sadly I think your view on world action is what is most likely to happen. The evidence for global warming and its impacts are simply too vague for any government to risk annihilation by trying to do something meaningful about it. It won't be until the worst effects become unavoidable to everybody that anything meaningful will be done. If you take that position, an interesting question is whether the government should in fact divert spending away from carbon reduction schemes and into schemes to offset the physical impacts of global warming. As for oil running out, I'm not sure the 40 years is right BTW. There is plenty more fossil fuel available if you're willing to pay more and more to get it. Ten years ago shale oil would not have been included in reserves forecasts because at $70-$80/barrel to produce nobody would have dreamed of touching it when the market was around $35-50 (and on a genuine marginal cost basis the Saudis can produce oil for way less than that). Now it seems profitable - even though its environmentally destructive and hugely energy intensive to produce. I just googled it, I'm no expert - I'm sure it's wrong. http://www.imeche.org/knowledge/themes/ ... il-run-out I guess that consumption is only going to go up (although once Jeremy Clarkson is 6 feet under that should give us an extra 5 years of petrol). There have been end of the world scenarios quite a few times since the war. I lived through the most realistic which was about the time the US decided to put cruise missiles within range of Moscow in the early 80's. That's the closest I'll ever get to the end of civilisation as we know it. |
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