Posted on 09/12/2014 7:59:12 AM PDT by Signalman
Written by Stephen Leahy at "motherboard"
Heres the frightening implication of a landmark study on carbon emissions: By 2018, no new cars, homes, schools, factories, or electrical power plants should be built anywhere in the world, ever again, unless theyre either replacements for old ones or carbon neutral. Otherwise greenhouse gas emissions will push global warming past 2˚C of temperature rise worldwide, threatening the survival of many people currently living on the planet.
Every climate expert will tell you were on a tight carbon budget as it isthat only so many tons of carbon dioxide can be pumped into the atmosphere before the global climate will overheat. Weve already warmed temperatures 0.85˚C from pre-industrial levels, and the number rises every year. While no one thinks 2˚ C is safe, per se, its safer than going even higher and running the risk that global warming will spiral out of our control completely.
Last year, the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report established a global carbon budget for the first time. It essentially stated that starting in 2014, the carbon we can afford is up to around 1,000 billion tons of CO2. In other words, our cars, factories, and power plants can only emit 1,000 billion tons (1,000 Gt, or gigatons) of CO2 into the atmosphere if we want to have a greater than 50/50 chance of keeping our climate below 2˚C of warming.
Even considering that humanity pumped 36 gigatons of CO2 into the atmosphere last year alone, 1,000 Gt still seems like a big budget. It might even seem like we have room to spare.
Maybe not.
New research shows that we may not have been paying attention to the entire CO2 emissions picture. Weve only been counting annual emissions, and not the fact that building a new coal or gas power plant is in reality a commitment to pumping out CO2 for the lifespan of a given plantwhich usually ranges from 40 to 60 years. These future emissions are known as a carbon commitment.
A new study has tallied the carbon commitments from all existing coal and gas power plants by looking at their annual CO2 emissions and current age. The study assumes an operating life of 40 years. A 38-year old coal plant will have far smaller future CO2 emissions, and thus smaller carbon commitment than one built today. The study, Commitment accounting of CO2 emissions, determined that most new power plants that went online in 2012 have a very large carbon commitment19 Gt of CO2.
I recall hearing that exact same warning 35 years ago.
Read tbe rest here, if you dare...
http://motherboard.vice.com/en_ca/read/the-carbon-age-needs-to-end-in-2018
Because every other prediction they have had ha been accurate...
When will the bullshit end. Haven’t they realized they are a joke.
Weren’t we supposed to run out of oil by now also?
He could stop exhaling.....and ask a couple million liberal friends to join him. There’s more than one way to decrease C02 output if he’s so worried about it.
Yes, we ran out several years ago ... that’s why gas prices are so high!
OK, so provide a viable replacement in exactly that time and we’ll talk.
I’m working on a $5,000 luxury sedan powered by unicorn farts. Stay tuned.
Its all about money and control. We are carbon based life and life forms but somehow according to the environmental lunatics, we need reject all of it and go back to the stone age.
They want us to live in caves.
“the Future Belongs to The Wildly Imaginative”...
Amazing how they’re always able to find out just BEFORE the deadline. Greenie weenies must be really smart! [ sarc tag not needed for this post. Sarcasm too extreme. ]
Better turn off all those volcanos, too.
Why do people keep posting this crap?
“Every climate expert will tell you weÂre on a tight carbon budget . . ..”
Lying is not a good tactic.
Heck, the meteorologists can’t get tomorrow’s forecast right. So we should believe what they say will happen in 200 years?
My father had commercial greenhouses when I was young. During the winter when the greenhouse vents were closed and heat was generated by gas and coal boilers pumping steam through pipes, we also had large gas burning CO2 generators that did nothing but pump CO2 into the greenhouses to be circulated by fans through plastic tubing. I don't recall the greenhouses ever overheating as a result. The plants would consume the excess CO2 pretty quickly when the sun was shining.
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