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-   -   What's more current than the weather? (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=7861)

Griff 12-26-2019 07:24 AM

purty though

Undertoad 12-29-2019 12:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad, pointing out that RCP8.5 is unlikely (Post 1026714)
RCP 8.5 "assumes the fastest population growth (a doubling of Earth’s population to 12 billion), the lowest rate of technology development, slow GDP growth, a massive increase in world poverty, plus high energy use and emissions."

World poverty is decreasing rapidly... innovation in solar and storage and efficiency continue. Emissions in developed countries are kinda flat.

NY Mag Intelligencer now agrees, with a very thorough and well-researched article: We’re Getting a Clearer Picture of the Climate Future — and It’s Not as Bad as It Once Looked.

It finds that RCP8.5 is now highly unlikely, in light of a new International Energy Agency report which puts warming at, most likely, about 3 degrees by end of 2100.

Author has conversations with climate scientists about this, and from his POV, there's a developing consensus on it (bold mine):

Quote:

I’ve spent the last few weeks trying to wrap my head around all of this, speaking with energy analysts and climate scientists (including Hausfather) about just what these projections mean for our understanding of where we are headed. Nearly every one has told me the IEA projections, while limited in ways, nevertheless represent a more plausible projection of the medium-term energy future than is contained in RCP8.5. Most — though not all — told me that they did not see RCP8.5 as a plausible scenario, even in the absence of meaningful climate policy. Honestly, this surprised me; while objections to RCP8.5 have been around for a decade or more, those who view it skeptically now seem to outnumber those who see it as useful — at least as a vision of a “business as usual” future.
This doesn't mean it's not a problem; three degrees of warming still has a large impact, just not the nightmare scenarios of RCP8.5.

tw 12-29-2019 02:44 PM

So don't worry; be happy.

sexobon 12-29-2019 05:48 PM

Let the sunshine, let the sunshine in, the sunshine in
Let the sunshine, let the sunshine in, the sunshine in
Let the sunshine, let the sunshine in,…

Gravdigr 12-29-2019 07:55 PM

I'll take an order of Sunshine, please.

Damn moist here lately...

Luce 12-30-2019 08:52 AM

35 damn degrees in Tucson.

I moved here specifically because I was told it was warm.

Griff 12-30-2019 09:24 AM

Moisture issues here as well. At least it's warmer than Tucson... /s I want my ski mountain back!

Gravdigr 12-30-2019 03:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Luce (Post 1043820)
35 damn degrees in Tucson.

I moved here specifically because I was told it was warm.

It's a dry heat.

:stickpoke

Luce 12-30-2019 03:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gravdigr (Post 1043870)
It's a dry heat.

:stickpoke

I love that line.

When it's 120F, it doesn't matter what kind of heat it is.

Gravdigr 12-30-2019 07:53 PM

Heard some comedian say "That's like getting hit by a bus, and someone saying "Yeah, but it's a dry bus"."

Gravdigr 01-11-2020 10:24 AM

The wind and the rain.

OMG, the wind and the rain.

Griff 01-11-2020 11:01 AM

Yeah, fucked pattern right now.

fargon 01-11-2020 12:04 PM

21F on my patio rite now, mostly sunny.

monster 01-11-2020 12:32 PM

So. Much. Rain. Up to about three inches so far, I heard. Ran a 5K in it this morning, it was ankle deep. If it was falling as snow, though, we'd be beyond buried right now, so there's that.

xoxoxoBruce 01-12-2020 12:07 AM

Saturday and Sunday near 70 with rain overnight. The yard is very squishy.


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