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imnotreallynew | 2 years ago
I’m not saying that’s NOT the method of action, it totally could be, but I would think there would be more evidence nowadays compared to 20 years ago but there doesn’t seem to be. Everyone just parrots everyone else.
I’m just thinking of Occam’s razor. Perhaps the planet is getting hotter because were just producing a fuckload of heat. It doesn’t need to be anywhere near the energy the planet captures from the sun. But day after day, over decades, surely the minuscule amount of heat being generated by activity on the surface has SOME cumulative effect. Or maybe not, i dont know.
djleni|2 years ago
some napkin math suggests the additional heat can’t solely be from those sources.
According to https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/...
The ocean gained heat at a rate of 0.83 watts per square meter from 1993-2022.
The same article also says there are more than 360 million square kilometers.
This gives us 0.83 * 1e6 * 360e6 = 2.988e+14 watts heating in the ocean in that time period.
A watt of electricity ends up becoming a watt of heat, and according to https://www.iea.org/reports/electricity-information-overview... the world used 22,000 TWh in 2022. Converted to power, thats 22e3 * 1e12 / 24 / 365 = 2.5e12 watts.
It’s not right to use power here and energy should be used instead because that wattage will be lower each previous year, but, even at that peak, it’s not enough (by two orders of magnitude) to account for even just the ocean warming, let alone land or atmospheric heating.
The mechanism for CO2 trapping heat is well understood: https://youtu.be/sTvqIijqvTg?si=M_5uZwjNCThm3swH
rolldat777|2 years ago
allturtles|2 years ago
What if you apply the same logic to the sun? Shouldn't we be getting hotter and hotter every day from the cumulative heat from the sun until we all cook? The reason we don't is that the earth is constantly radiating heat out into space. [1]
This is connected to why carbon dioxide is the primary driver of the current warming trend: it absorbs some of the infrared that would go back into space and sends it back down again. We know that this happens, we know that carbon dioxide concentrations are increasing due to fossil fuels, we know that temperatures are increasing.
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth%27s_energy_budget#/media...
superluserdo|2 years ago
No it doesn't, because the heat escapes out into space, so the minuscule effect is only an immediate one, not a cumulative one. That's why the greenhouse effect, being cumulative, is much stronger. If I put on an extra coat every day, it's not the heat output from my muscles in putting the coats on that is making me feel hot, it's the increasing number of coats that I'm wearing. Likewise, if I burn a tonne of coal, then that heat will have essentially disappeared overnight, but the global warming-causing CO2 will stick around in the atmosphere for another [very big number] years.
unknown|2 years ago
[deleted]
rolldat777|2 years ago