111 comments on Implications of the Ayres Warr Model of Economic Production: An Introduction
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111 comments on Implications of the Ayres Warr Model of Economic Production: An Introduction
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Nevermind. I thought you had something worth responding to.
I'll let the fact that was a thought experiment and, as italicized, not one grounded in reality, speak for itself except to mention there was also ZERO mention of all other positive feebacks, e.g., permafrost, Arctic Amplification. Note the bolded phrase. See, what's likely actually running through your head is, "We can burn 61%" and the EVER part sort of gets set aside by the subconscious.
Monbiot, for all his usual radicalism, is being irresponsible here. I suppose he's trying to make a point that we really CAN'T burn all that carbon, and, look! we haven't even included feedbacks and stuff!, but that's a dangerous, and potentially fatal, game to play. People hear what they want to hear and disregard the rest, at least according to Simon and Garfunkel. Giving them any help in this regard is not smart, imo.
The recent paper from MIT is the one you should be paying attention to, not an op-ed.
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2009/roulette-0519.html
I am utterly non-plussed at the willingness of some PO advocates to look for an excuse for AGW to not be a serious problem. It makes no sense.
Cheers
The MIT article you linked makes no mention of the possible dramatic overestimation of global FF reserves. A more convincing analysis of GW would address this likelihood.
Whether they are aware some think they may be overstated or not, I don't know. I do know it could not possibly be less relevant.
The above quote means that even if we only have between 1/2 and 1/3 of the FFs generally thought to exist, we still can't burn them all.
There are so many holes in this line of thinking about FFs and climate it's tiresome to have to repeat them to so many posters.
By the way, calling it a likelihood there are far fewer FFs than generally stated because a couple studies posited the thought is a stretch, and certainly not a scientific statement. Given there is far less certainty surrounding coal reserves than oil reserves, and there are large arguments about oil reserves, I'd think you'd be more careful about declaring their "likely" amounts.
Cheers
Thought lately about coal?
I wonder what they used here. My optimism came because of my impression that the economy was going to do a lot worse than they are predicting.
You are right about keeping an eye on the issue however.