Apr 19th 2014
...Between 2000 and 2010, (click here) it says, greenhouse-gas emissions grew at 2.2% a year—almost twice as fast as in the previous 30 years—as more and more fossil fuels were burned (especially coal, see article). Indeed, for the first time since the early 1970s, the amount of carbon dioxide released per unit of energy consumed actually rose. At this rate, the report says, the world will pass a 2°C temperature rise by 2030 and the increase will reach 3.7-4.8°C by 2100, a level at which damage, in the form of inundated coastal cities, lost species and crop failures, becomes catastrophic....
Catastrophic requires definition?
Let's redefine catastrophic to say, "Everyone with air conditions will survive the lack of global ice fields and structures." What you say? Sound good?
Everyone else simply didn't live right and capitalists know what that means, don't they?
Ostriches have never been so important.
...Between 2000 and 2010, (click here) it says, greenhouse-gas emissions grew at 2.2% a year—almost twice as fast as in the previous 30 years—as more and more fossil fuels were burned (especially coal, see article). Indeed, for the first time since the early 1970s, the amount of carbon dioxide released per unit of energy consumed actually rose. At this rate, the report says, the world will pass a 2°C temperature rise by 2030 and the increase will reach 3.7-4.8°C by 2100, a level at which damage, in the form of inundated coastal cities, lost species and crop failures, becomes catastrophic....
Catastrophic requires definition?
Let's redefine catastrophic to say, "Everyone with air conditions will survive the lack of global ice fields and structures." What you say? Sound good?
Everyone else simply didn't live right and capitalists know what that means, don't they?
Ostriches have never been so important.