[DHT]Osiris
Lifer
- Dec 15, 2015
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CO2 is amazingly good at holding in heat. But that's not the primary concern, the big concern is all the follow-on effects.One of the questions I tried to find an answer to a while back was how so little CO2 (in the atmosphere as a whole) could cause such a large increase in energy retention. I found a couple of articles that were well beyond my comprehension, but nothing simplified enough that a dumb old contractor could understand it.
Imagine you had a house with a wood stove with infinite fuel you could never turn off. Imagine you lived in it for 20y, temp was always good because you figured out over the course of a few years, what combination of windows to open when, in order to keep things balanced. Now imagine some asshole keeps adding an inch of cellulose insulation in the attic every month, wrecking your window combinations and making the house feel hot as fuck.
So, we're the asshole in this scenario, the house keeps getting hotter, all our plants are dying, the cat's about to be next, and the dog's looking hungry and irritable.
Now that's JUST the raw heat input. In actual earth, when you raise the temperature of the oceans 2 degrees, you wipe out like half the life there. Include in that is a massive amount of what creates oxygen (from co2) for our planet, which is a Bad Thing as now we have less capacity to remove the above insulation. There's about a thousand additional affects like that one, all of them really bad.