govols/cc
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If he were overly alarmist would that change your view of his work? Also, has he ever authored or reviewed a peer reviewed paper that includes these models you mentioned that support anthropogenic global warming? I'm not talking about hypotheticals or Monte Carlo simulations but real world examples. And, could you please cite it?
Regardless of one's political beliefs, and whether humanity's contribution to climate change is overstated or understated, there actually are people losing their homes, their land, and their lives thanks to rising water levels.
The Maldives will be non existent in the near future at this pace, and there are probably over a hundred cities around the world only a few feet of sea level above them with populations of a million plus. Venice is flooded most of the year. New York City is one of them. Sandy wasn't a massive storm by any means but we all saw how flooded NY city became from the swells.
You can only build up defenses against mother nature for so long, and regardless of what is the root cause in rising sea levels, there will be consequences either way. I think we should spend less time bickering over the politics of it and start accounting for the logistics of how we are going to deal with the problem. The people of the Maldives will probably end up having to all migrate to India or Sri Lanka. They're just the prelude to what's going to happen to millions of people around the world eventually.
You mean "Superstorm" Sandy? The largest (by diameter) Atlantic hurricane on record? I think you might be downplaying that a bit.
It was "only" a category 2 storm. The reason it caused so much damage up north is because they don't usually get those types of storms and had almost no defenses in place to mitigate the effects of the rising water.
So, what is the correlation? Does temp lead CO2 or vice versa?
Regardless of one's political beliefs, and whether humanity's contribution to climate change is overstated or understated, there actually are people losing their homes, their land, and their lives thanks to rising water levels.
The Maldives will be non existent in the near future at this pace, and there are probably over a hundred cities around the world only a few feet of sea level above them with populations of a million plus. Venice is flooded most of the year. New York City is one of them. Sandy wasn't a massive storm by any means but we all saw how flooded NY city became from the swells.
You can only build up defenses against mother nature for so long, and regardless of what is the root cause in rising sea levels, there will be consequences either way. I think we should spend less time bickering over the politics of it and start accounting for the logistics of how we are going to deal with the problem. The people of the Maldives will probably end up having to all migrate to India or Sri Lanka. They're just the prelude to what's going to happen to millions of people around the world eventually.
So when will the Maldives be non-existent? Is the ocean higher there than say the Florida Keys?
Scientists think around 2100, the entire country would probably be abandoned. But the smaller and lower islands are already being abandoned these days. Their highest point I believe is like 7 feet above sea level.
They are closer to sea level than the keys, but not by much.
2100, eh? You guys keep pushing these disaster dates back. I guess when the Great Blizzard of 2100 rolls around the entire Northern Hemisphere is covered in snow and ice, we'll have to wait until 2200 before all of the earth's coastlines are under water.
Scientists think around 2100, the entire country would probably be abandoned. But the smaller and lower islands are already being abandoned these days. Their highest point I believe is like 7 feet above sea level.
They are closer to sea level than the keys, but not by much.
