Australia has had a drought for the last 5 years. Indeed, this is not natural.Pubic wrote:
Summer here should have started in november, its february and its only just starting. Parts of the country also had snow in January (supposed to be our hottest month) when they should have had lots of sunshine. Too much climate variation for it to be natural.CruZ4dR wrote:
My city had a rainday-streak of over 85 days the last months. That means that it rained every day in almost 3 months in a row. I doubt this is just a coincidence that all of a sudden we're breaking weather records every year.
As the USA is the world's supposed "super-power", it could take some initiative and do something. Maybe then China and other countries would start to follow suit. But what the fuck, why take the chance?madmurre wrote:
Seriously why would USA for instant stop the pollution if China don´t? everyone needs to ride the train if that´s the only way.
And to all those critics that state "it would damage the economy", lets take a look at the recent history of General Motors.
+1.Kukulcan wrote:
And we need that the countries apply them in the REALITY , not only ideally.
Well the last 5 years have been partly due to a bad El Nino, but global warming isn't helping either. In Australia, I would consider a 'good rain' to be a week of raining. Any less than that and no water reaches Sydney's dam. I can count the number of good rains on my hands.R3v4n wrote:
Australia have had a 16 year drought, snow in November (Summer), and a jump in an average temperature. And this is not caused by Global Warming?
We have even seen parts of the ice caps floating to NZ!
I could even go to count how many good rains we have had here and i could fit the number on one hand
I'll keep that in mind when Sydney's dam runs dry.It is called adaptation. We should all try it.
Never heard of gravity? There is no physical barrier keeping the atmosphere in. The mass of the molecules is affected by the earths gravity and pulled towards earth. The gas gets squashed together, creating a pressure of '1 atmosphere' (correct me if I'm wrong) at sea-level. As you go further away from the Earth, the air pressure is lessened. It would do you wise to google (or wiki) "The Carbon Cycle" - it explains how carbon is in an enclosed system and the role carbon dioxide plays.Fen321 wrote:
there is no barrier holding in this atmosphere i just can't see how it gets "trapped" indefinitely.
It does in an 11 year cycle. This is sun-spot activity. For example, increased activity creates the phenomenon of El Nino. There is an ocean current running from central America to Australia, across the equator. If there is more sun-spot activity, more solar radiation is released, heating the water at an earlier stage. In turn, this means that the water evaporates and creates rain before it reaches Australia. As a result, Australia is plunged into a drought.Fen321 wrote:
How do you base such a massive claim, but not follow it up. What happens if for some reason in the next year or two the sun increases or decreases in intensity?
You being serious...? The basic combustion reaction is as follows (presented without matter states):Fen321 wrote:
huh.....isn't a portion of the smoke Co2? If so why isn't it causing the same drastic effects that our produced Co2 has on the climate?
C + O2 ---> CO2
Carbon dioxide is the major product of combustion. When there is not enough oxygen, there is leftover carbon. It is those particles of carbon that are the "Soot" in smoke. Some smoke also comprises of water vapor, but that depends on the fuel (ie. if it contains hydrogen).
Hmm, I was going to mention that.Vilham wrote:
Ill say this once again... the BBC doesnt make claims if it doesnt see evidence to support it, they dont like making liars of themselves. If the BBC says they have seen evidence im inclined to believe them than say you. In the last 200 years we have burnt most supplies of fossil fuels that we can find... England used to be covered in forest, now its not... a hell of a lot of the worlds locked CO2 has been released. That will make an effect.
That about does it.
Mcminty.