Lots of hand-wringing here from our fellow scientists (below), but no mention 
of 
Plan B's - 
"Scientists say that unless far greater efforts are made soon, the goal of 
limiting the warming will become impossible without severe economic disruption."
“If you’re looking to stave off climate perturbations that I don’t believe our 
culture is ready to adapt to, then significant reductions in CO2 emissions have 
to occur right away...”
“It feels like the inevitable march toward disaster”

If mainstream scientists don't even raise the possibility of climate 
intervention, then the public and the decisionmakers surely won't.  Together 
with the PCAST weighin: 
http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2013/03/22/pcast-releases-new-climate-report
guess it's official - adapt to >400 ppm and/or suffer the consequences. Hope 
those chemtrailers and some GE ethicists are pleased - party while you still 
can.
-Greg


Heat-Trapping Gas Passes Milestone, Raising FearsBy JUSTIN GILLIS  NYTimesThe 
level of the most important heat-trapping gas in the atmosphere, carbon 
dioxide, 
has passed a long-feared milestone, scientists reported Friday, reaching a 
concentration not seen on the earth for millions of years.
Scientific instruments showed that the gas had reached an average daily level 
above 400 parts per million — just an odometer moment in one sense, but also a 
sobering reminder that decades of efforts to bring human-produced emissions 
under control are faltering.
The best available evidence suggests the amount of the gas in the air has not 
been this high for at least three million years, before humans evolved, and 
scientists believe the rise portends large changes in the climate and the level 
of the sea.
“It symbolizes that so far we have failed miserably in tackling this problem,” 
said Pieter P. Tans, who runs the monitoring program at the National Oceanic 
and 
Atmospheric Administration that reported the new reading.
Ralph Keeling, who runs another monitoring program at the Scripps Institution 
of 
Oceanography in San Diego, said a continuing rise could be catastrophic. “It 
means we are quickly losing the possibility of keeping the climate below what 
people thought were possibly tolerable thresholds,” he said.
Virtually every automobile ride, every plane trip and, in most places, every 
flip of a light switch adds carbon dioxide to the air, and relatively little 
money is being spent to find and deploy alternative technologies.
China is now the largest emitter, but Americans have been consuming fossil 
fuels 
extensively for far longer, and experts say the United States is more 
responsible than any other nation for the high level.
The new measurement came from analyzers atop Mauna Loa, the volcano on the big 
island of Hawaii that has long been ground zero for monitoring the worldwide 
trend on carbon dioxide, or CO2. Devices there sample clean, crisp air that has 
blown thousands of miles across the Pacific Ocean, producing a record of rising 
carbon dioxide levels that has been closely tracked for half a century.
Carbon dioxide above 400 parts per million was first seen in the Arctic last 
year, and had also spiked above that level in hourly readings at Mauna Loa.
But the average reading for an entire day surpassed that level at Mauna Loa for 
the first time in the 24 hours that ended at 8 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time on 
Thursday. The two monitoring programs use slightly different protocols; NOAA 
reported an average for the period of 400.03 parts per million, while Scripps 
reported 400.08.
Carbon dioxide rises and falls on a seasonal cycle, and the level will dip 
below 
400 this summer as leaf growth in the Northern Hemisphere pulls about 10 
billion 
tons of carbon out of the air. But experts say that will be a brief reprieve — 
the moment is approaching when no measurement of the ambient air anywhere on 
earth, in any season, will produce a reading below 400.
“It feels like the inevitable march toward disaster,” said Maureen E. Raymo, a 
scientist at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, a unit of Columbia 
University.
>From studying air bubbles trapped in Antarctic ice, scientists know that going 
back 800,000 years, the carbon dioxide level oscillated in a tight band, from 
about 180 parts per million in the depths of ice ages to about 280 during the 
warm periods between. The evidence shows that global temperatures and CO2 
levels 
are tightly linked.
For the entire period of human civilization, roughly 8,000 years, the carbon 
dioxide level was relatively stable near that upper bound. But the burning of 
fossil fuels has caused a 41 percent increase in the heat-trapping gas since 
the 
Industrial Revolution, a mere geological instant, and scientists say the 
climate 
is beginning to react, though they expect far larger changes in the future.
Indirect measurements suggest that the last time the carbon dioxide level was 
this high was at least three million years ago, during an epoch called the 
Pliocene. Geological research shows that the climate then was far warmer than 
today, the world’s ice caps were smaller, and the sea level might have been as 
much as 60 or 80 feet higher.
Experts fear that humanity may be precipitating a return to such conditions — 
except this time, billions of people are in harm’s way.
“It takes a long time to melt ice, but we’re doing it,” Dr. Keeling said. “It’s 
scary.”
Dr. Keeling’s father, Charles David Keeling, began carbon dioxide measurements 
on Mauna Loa and at other locations in the late 1950s. The elder Dr. Keeling 
found a level in the air then of about 315 parts per million — meaning that if 
a 
person had filled a million quart jars with air, about 315 quart jars of carbon 
dioxide would have been mixed in.
His analysis revealed a relentless, long-term increase superimposed on the 
seasonal cycle, a trend that was dubbed the Keeling Curve.
Countries have adopted an official target to limit the damage from global 
warming, with 450 parts per million seen as the maximum level compatible with 
that goal. “Unless things slow down, we’ll probably get there in well under 25 
years,” Ralph Keeling said.
Yet many countries, including China and the United States, have refused to 
adopt 
binding national targets. Scientists say that unless far greater efforts are 
made soon, the goal of limiting the warming will become impossible without 
severe economic disruption.
“If you start turning the Titanic long before you hit the iceberg, you can go 
clear without even spilling a drink of a passenger on deck,” said Richard B. 
Alley, a climate scientist at Pennsylvania State University. “If you wait until 
you’re really close, spilling a lot of drinks is the best you can hope for.”
Climate-change contrarians, who have little scientific credibility but are 
politically influential in Washington, point out that carbon dioxide represents 
only a tiny fraction of the air — as of Thursday’s reading, exactly 0.04 
percent. “The CO2 levels in the atmosphere are rather undramatic,” a Republican 
congressman from California, Dana Rohrabacher, said in a Congressional hearing 
several years ago.
But climate scientists reject that argument, saying it is like claiming that a 
tiny bit of arsenic or cobra venom cannot have much effect. Research shows that 
even at such low levels, carbon dioxide is potent at trapping heat near the 
surface of the earth.
“If you’re looking to stave off climate perturbations that I don’t believe our 
culture is ready to adapt to, then significant reductions in CO2 emissions have 
to occur right away,” said Mark Pagani, a Yale geochemist who studies climates 
of the past. “I feel like the time to do something was yesterday.”

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