The same site has an article on this issue, under "CO2 lags temperature". Essentially, CO2 can be both a forcing and a feedback. In other words, it can raise temperature on its own, or it can be released during a warming caused by something else (e.g. Milankovitch cycles) and amplify that warming. This kind of positive feedback effect - i.e. warming leading to further warming - explains why the climate has changed rapidly on occasions in the past, and why we should be concerned at warming now.
haven't got time right now to look at all of it, but...
carbond dioxide does not cause temperature changes - on average carbon dioxide levels lag 800 years AFTER temperature changes - look at the data from the carbon dioxide information analysis centre. (cdiac[dot]ornl[dot]gov) - case closed.
Prolonging the debate past the "Knock-out blow" above, shows that this is being treated as a political question and not a scientific one.
Also, if CO2 can't raise temperature, then what is happening at 1:00 in the following video?
"Earth: The Climate Wars - Battle Begins (Part3/6)"
Arganoid 2 years ago
The same site has an article on this issue, under "CO2 lags temperature". Essentially, CO2 can be both a forcing and a feedback. In other words, it can raise temperature on its own, or it can be released during a warming caused by something else (e.g. Milankovitch cycles) and amplify that warming. This kind of positive feedback effect - i.e. warming leading to further warming - explains why the climate has changed rapidly on occasions in the past, and why we should be concerned at warming now.
Arganoid 2 years ago
haven't got time right now to look at all of it, but...
carbond dioxide does not cause temperature changes - on average carbon dioxide levels lag 800 years AFTER temperature changes - look at the data from the carbon dioxide information analysis centre. (cdiac[dot]ornl[dot]gov) - case closed.
Prolonging the debate past the "Knock-out blow" above, shows that this is being treated as a political question and not a scientific one.
ttimothymurphy 2 years ago
@ttimothymurphy That depends on what caused the climate to change.
I'm interested to know which of the points here you disagree with:
Can't post url so google: skeptical science "Empirical evidence that humans are causing global warming"
(first result)
Arganoid 2 years ago
Stopping Climate Change...
It reminds me of King Canute.
ttimothymurphy 2 years ago