Dnarever wrote on Aug 6
th, 2023 at 9:47pm:
You understand that you have been arguing that greenhouse gasses have had no impact for a number of years.
Nope. What I did question was the amount of the effect CO2, a trace gas, has.
Dnarever wrote on Aug 6
th, 2023 at 9:47pm:
The difference is that the water vapor will dissipate over a few years where the Co2 won't.
Nope. Experiments show CO2 lasts about 5 years. Models show longer.
"It doesn't help, though, that past reports from the UN panel of climate experts have made misleading statements about the lifetime of CO2, argue Archer, Caldeira and colleagues. The first assessment report, in 1990, said that CO2's lifetime is 50 to 200 years. The reports in 1995 and 2001 revised this down to 5 to 200 years. Because the oceans suck up huge amounts of the gas each year, the average CO2 molecule does spend about 5 years in the atmosphere. But the oceans also release much of that CO2 back to the air, such that man-made emissions keep the atmosphere's CO2 levels elevated for millennia. Even as CO2 levels drop, temperatures take longer to fall, according to recent studies."
https://www.nature.com/articles/climate.2008.122Natural CO2 and Fossil Fuel CO2 have the same characteristics.
Dnarever wrote on Aug 6
th, 2023 at 9:47pm:
Arguing that this greenhouse gas will have an impact in no way undermines all the times you argued the exact opposite.
I have never argued the exact opposite, else you would be able to find it.