I live at 860 feet, should I be worried?

Dave



-----Original Message-----
From: MarkI-ZeroPoint <zeropo...@charter.net>
To: vortex-l <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Wed, Jan 30, 2013 4:09 pm
Subject: RE: [Vo]:NHK: ocean levels may rise 9 m by 2100



Ed said,
“People had better start thinking in these terms soon.  I thought ahead and now 
live at 8500 feet. :-)”
 
I’m at about 5500’… might be beachfront in a few decades!  J
-mark
 

From: Edmund Storms [mailto:stor...@ix.netcom.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2013 12:56 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Cc: Edmund Storms
Subject: Re: [Vo]:NHK: ocean levels may rise 9 m by 2100

 
Jed, it is too late because no practical way exists to stop burning fossil 
fuels. The demand for energy is rising too rapidly, especially in China. It is 
impossible to satisfy this demand without burning coal, natural gas, and oil. 
The other sources of power are being developed as fast as possible, but they 
are not keeping up, even in the US. As you can see, the political will does not 
exist to do anything heroic. The will is not even present to develop cold 
fusion, which in any case would require years before it had any impact at all. 
Meanwhile, the effects of the present warming are creating positive feedback to 
the warming process, as Terry points out. The release of CH4 is the main 
problem.  We can wish for a different reality, but I suggest we need to work 
with the one we have. 

 

People need to stop wasting political and emotional energy fighting the wrong 
war.  We need to focus on solving the consequences of warming. For example, 
billions of dollars are now being spent to rebuild homes on the East coast that 
will be washed away again in our life time.  When and how do people decide to 
move their homes to a safer location?  People had better start thinking in 
these terms soon.  I thought ahead and now live at 8500 feet. :-)

 

Ed

 

 

On Jan 30, 2013, at 1:33 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote:




Edmund Storms <stor...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:

 


I believe, like many other people, that if the main caused is CO2 production, 
we are too late to stop the process or even to slow it down.


 

What makes you think that? We could stop using fossil fuel in 20 years. If we 
had started serious efforts in 1980 we would not be using any now. Furthermore, 
as I pointed out in my book, we could use reforestation and cold fusion to 
remove CO2 from the atmosphere. We could do this at the same rate we are now 
adding it, or at a greater rate. This might call for a gigantic effort on the 
scale of WWII armament production, but it would be cheaper than abandoning our 
cities.

 

Once the CO2 is gone, the problem should reverse itself.

 

I think there are many ways to fix this problem. I do not see why you -- or 
anyone -- thinks it is "too late."

 

- Jed

 


 

 

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