ScienceDaily (Nov. 24, 2009) —
In a provocative new study, a University of Utah
scientist argues that rising carbon dioxide
emissions -- the major cause of global warming --
cannot be stabilized unless the world's economy
collapses or society builds the equivalent of one
new nuclear power plant each day.
"It looks unlikely that there will be any
substantial near-term departure from recently
observed acceleration in carbon dioxide emission
rates," says the new paper by Tim Garrett, an
associate professor of atmospheric sciences.
Garrett's study was panned by some economists
and rejected by several journals before
acceptance by Climatic Change, a journal edited
by Stanford University climate scientist Stephen
Schneider. The study will be published online
the week of November 23.
sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/11/091123083704.htm
•• There is one major problem with this article
— its basic premise: "carbon dioxide
emissions -- the major cause of global
warming."
Since neither IPCC nor anyone else has
provided one iota of valid data for global
warming nor have they provided data that
climate change is being effected by
commerce and industry, and not by natural
phenomena.
"It looks unlikely that there will be any
substantial near-term departure from recently
observed acceleration in carbon dioxide
emission rates," says the new paper by Tim
Garrett, an associate professor of atmospheric
sciences.
•• Where and how has he "recently observed
acceleration in carbon dioxide emission
rates"????
— —
| "Much of the scientific community today has lost its
| focus. It has accepted things like evolution as fact,
| without room for questioning. When an unproven
| theory becomes the foundation of much of our
| sciences, accepting its unproven tenets without
| question and ignoring anything that doesn't fit the
| theory, then the whole thing becomes a house of
| cards. What's worse is that we are training our
| researchers not to question."
> Is Global Warming Unstoppable?
>
Eliminate all the conservatives, and you eliminate the global warming problem.