Kirt Griffin wrote:
Hi Alex,
I guess there was no consideration that more CO2 causes more
vegetative growth. I know my forest is going gangbusters.
Cheers,
Kirt
Yes, that's well understood and part of the story -- but it's a story
about Yellowknife, not Atlanta. Circumpolar warming is far greater
than in mid-latitudes and tropics:
atmosphere and ocean circulation transports heat to polar regions,
with surface area far smaller than the regions at lower latitudes where
it's collected -- so greenhouse heat increases, due to global
atmospheric CO2 change, become
concentrated in the Arctic, resulting in shorter snow cover seasons,
more heat collected during Arctic summers, longer growing seasons, and
advance of the treeline to regions that were treeless thirty years
ago. Thawing of permafrost liberates methane (aka natural gas), 30x
worse than CO2 as a greenhouse gas. All that lost snowcover means
absorption of solar radiation which was previously reflected back to
the sky. Loss of sea ice will also result in absorption by the Arctic
Ocean. The whole system is full of the wrong kind of feedback - which
is what "tipping point" is all about. This is a gigantic experiment.
We seem to have no idea what we've done to this planet despite more
than fifty years of very solid science and warnings about fossil fuel
energy consumption -- see
http://www.aip.org/history/climate.