ENVR Climate Scientist Blows The Lid Off The ‘Manufactured Consensus’

Rebel_Yell

Senior Member
Climate Scientist Blows The Lid Off The ‘Manufactured Consensus’

America Insider Story by David Rufful

It is often said that there is an “overwhelming scientific consensus” that human activity is causing global warming, which is regularly supported by fact-check articles.

However, this slogan has been challenged by a number of prominent scientists over the years. Esteemed physicist and 2022 Nobel Prize winner Dr. John Clauser recently stated he does not believe there is a man-made global warming crisis. Scientist and Weather Channel founder John Coleman also championed his belief that “there is no significant man-made global warming” before his death in 2018.

Most recently, American climatologist Judith Curry of the Georgia Institute of Technology says this so-called scientific consensus is “manufactured.” Published in over a hundred scientific papers, Curry’s decades-long research includes hurricanes, remote sensing, atmospheric modeling, polar climates, air-sea interactions, climate models, and the use of unmanned aerial vehicles for atmospheric research.

Curry argues this false slogan about an “overwhelming consensus” has been fueled by scientists who pursue “fame and fortune.” Scientists who study man-made global warming are more likely to be quoted in popular culture while receiving celebrity-like status and lucrative grants from the federal government.

This has created “climate hysteria” among the general public, but isn’t believed by scientists like Curry.

Curry explained, “I was adopted by the environmental advocacy groups and the alarmists and I was treated like a rock star. Flown all over the place to meet with politicians. Like a good scientist, I investigated.”

Curry said alarmist scientists have been willing to do “ugly things” to push their politically-motivated narrative about global warming. The infamous “Climategate scandal” revealed that some scientists were hiding data and privately admitting in leaked emails that the Earth isn’t in a climate crisis.

“Ugly things,” says Curry. “Avoiding Freedom of Information Act requests. Trying to get journal editors fired.” Curry says there is “climate change industry” that rewards alarmism.

“The origins go back to the U.N. environmental program,” says Curry. U.N. officials were motivated by “anti-capitalism. They hated the oil companies and seized on the climate change issue to move their policies along.”

“The IPCC (the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was created by the U.N.) wasn’t supposed to focus on any benefits of warming. The IPCC’s mandate was to look for dangerous human-caused climate change.”

“Then the national funding agencies directed all the funding … assuming there are dangerous impacts,” Curry said. “The editor of the journal Science wrote this political rant. The time for debate has ended.”

“What kind of message does that give?” adds Curry. “Promote the alarming papers! Don’t even send the other ones out for review. If you wanted to advance in your career, like be at a prestigious university and get a big salary, have big laboratory space, get lots of grant funding, be director of an institute, there was clearly one path to go.”


Here is a link for a video of John Stossel interviewing Ms Curry. R/T 7:27

View: https://youtu.be/vVi01vJ4nxM
 

Sandune

Veteran Member
Our current 'hot spell' matches the historic 1936 Dust Bowl. The difference between 1936 and 2023 is: 1) today we know how to farm dry land and, 2) we didn't know about 'Climate Change' then.

Could you imagine today's media and political hysteria if dust storms obscured the sun for weeks on end and millions of farmers were made homeless?
 

blueinterceptor

Veteran Member
Climate alarmism is nonsense designed to control peoples behavior, push an agenda and make money for those that invested in it. The money making part is the biggest part.

Notice how the biggest names live in the largest of houses, drive the biggest cars, fly in private planes and have the biggest investments in it.
None of them live the life they want others to live
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
After 25 years in government research, I have never seen a failed project that the government paid for a specific outcome! That should tell you something about the science being performed with government funds.

Which is why I changed my focus way back in the day, R&D is a crock and only those that tow the company line, which is bought and paid for by the gov't, get the good jobs. It doesn't matter if it's ethical or not, it's all in what the big boys want. If they want man made climate change then that's what they will get and they will buy the scientists that can make it happen, real or make believe it does not matter.
 
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Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Which is why I changed my focus way back in the day R&D is a crock and only those that tow the company line, which is bought and paid for by the gov't, get the good jobs. It doesn't matter if it's ethical or not, it's all in what the big boys want. If they want man made climate change then that's what they will get and they will buy the scientists that can make it happen, real or make believe it does not matter.

I couldn't be bought. I walked away from a degree I got honest, without belonging to a sorority and going to the file cabinet to "study" for a test. In other words I didn't cheat. I still have my integrity and they can keep being well paid parrots for a communist overthrow of this country. Feck 'em, one and all.

I loved Cartography (my major). And I loved Geology (my minor). I didn't love either used as a political cudgel.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
I couldn't be bought. I walked away from a degree I got honest, without belonging to a sorority and going to the file cabinet to "study" for a test. In other words I didn't cheat. I still have my integrity and they can keep being well paid parrots for a communist overthrow of this country. Feck 'em, one and all.

I loved Cartography (my major). And I loved Geology (my minor). I didn't love either used as a political cudgel.

Chemistry -> didn't realize how incredibly political the field was until I transferred here, I followed my research here and boom was quickly removed and replaced by a chinese national. So I decided to go into the fine arts, which can be political but not nearly as much as the sciences are.
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Chemistry -> didn't realize how incredibly political the field was until I transferred here, I followed my research here and boom was quickly removed and replaced by a chinese national. So I decided to go into the fine arts, which can be political but not nearly as much as the sciences are.

I did the same, Packy. I was already selling to the Galleries. Mom, DH, and I had a full time bead business going to pay for my degree. That and GI Bill. I spent many hours turning pages of every old book full of black and white photos of Beadwork I could get my hands on. I had a Cartography prof who snuck me into the lab and let me have two hours with a $10,000 dollar machine that could take a black and white photo and separate out actual colors from all those shades of gray. So, our recreations were as close to traditional as possible.

I looked for a job for three years after I graduated, but wisely, never stopped my relationship with my Galleries. And that is what I ended up doing. Full time Artist. I won the Nationals in 1999.
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
Condensed version....

Biden: we are all worthless **nts.
I thought it was **cks.

Man caused climate change was debunked the moment it was brought to the table...basically. Yet we see this article as if it's news........ that reality, is what's really scary. Destroying our economy is too I guess. That's the result of their lies. Extrapolate on that, as they unify the worlds other lying governments into a fighting force, to take our freedom away. Rant off.
 

jed turtle

a brother in the Lord
I thought it was **cks.

Man caused climate change was debunked the moment it was brought to the table...basically. Yet we see this article as if it's news........ that reality, is what's really scary. Destroying our economy is too I guess. That's the result of their lies. Extrapolate on that, as they unify the worlds other lying governments into a fighting force, to take our freedom away. Rant off.
Gotta have civilization collapse caused by - governMENTAL man- before you can “build back better”...
 

CapeCMom

Veteran Member
A scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic told me this same thing years ago. he kept his mouth shut about it of course because of possible blow back. He knew a lot of guys down there felt the same.
 

dstraito

TB Fanatic
The consensus is in

The world ending problem is

Covid Pandemic
climate change
Ukraine


Oh wait, those didn't work.

Time to roll out the Aliens and WWIII
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
Weather is not climate.
They have openly, now habitually, cite
Local weather as climate change.
 

Rebel_Yell

Senior Member
This stuff breeds insanity like this:

Cut Down Forests to Save the Planet
R/T about 23 minutes.

This is the first that I have heard of this. Made a quick search. Apparently agricultural biomass can also be used for carbon sequestration.

A Cost-Effective Solution to Climate Change: Burying Biomass in Dry Landfills By University of California - Berkeley April 14, 2023


Storing biomass in dry landfills by salting and burying it can economically preserve greenhouse gases for thousands of years.​

Lowering the worldwide greenhouse gas emissions is crucial to avoiding a climate disaster, but existing carbon removal techniques are proving to be inefficient and expensive. A team of researchers from the University of California, Berkeley, has come up with a scalable answer that utilizes basic, low-cost technologies to remove carbon from the atmosphere and safely store it for thousands of years.

In a report recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers propose a new unique approach to capturing carbon from the air, called agro-sequestration. This method involves growing biomass crops and then burying the harvested vegetation in specially designed dry biolandfills. The buried biomass is kept dry through the use of salt to inhibit microbial activity and prevent decomposition, allowing for the stable sequestration of all the carbon in the biomass.

The result is carbon-negative, making this approach a potential game changer, according to Eli Yablonovitch, lead author and Professor in the Graduate School in UC Berkeley’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences.

“We’re claiming that proper engineering can solve 100% of the climate crisis, at a manageable cost,” said Yablonovitch. “If implemented on a global scale, this carbon-negative sequestration method has the potential to remove current annual carbon dioxide emissions as well as prior years’ emissions from the atmosphere.”

Unlike prior efforts toward carbon neutrality, agro-sequestration seeks not net carbon neutrality, but net carbon negativity. According to the paper, for every metric ton (tonne) of dry biomass, it would be possible to sequester approximately 2 tonnes of carbon dioxide.

Agro-sequestration: A way to stably sequester carbon in buried biomass​

The idea of burying biomass in order to sequester carbon has been gaining popularity, with startup organizations burying everything from plants to wood. But ensuring the stability of the buried biomass is a challenge. While these storage environments are devoid of oxygen, anaerobic microorganisms can still survive and cause the biomass to decompose into carbon dioxide and methane, rendering these sequestration approaches carbon-neutral, at best.

But there is one thing that all life forms require — moisture, rather than oxygen. This is measured by “water activity,” a quantity similar to relative humidity. If internal water activity falls below 60%, all life comes to a halt — a concept underpinning the UC Berkeley researchers’ new agro-sequestration solution.

“There are significant questions concerning long-term sequestration for many of these recently popularized nature- and agriculturally-based technologies,” said Harry Deckman, co-author of the study and a researcher in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences. “The agro-sequestration approach we’re proposing can stably sequester the carbon in dried salted biomass for thousands of years, with less cost and higher carbon efficiency than these other air capture technologies.”


Hugh Helferty, co-founder and president of Producer Accountability for Carbon Emissions (PACE), a nonprofit committed to attaining global net zero emissions by 2050, sees great promise in this solution. “Agro-sequestration has the potential to transform temporary nature-based solutions into permanent CO2 storage,” said Helferty, who is not involved with the study. “By developing their approach, Deckman and Yablonovitch have created an invaluable new option for tackling climate change.”

Achieving the right level of dryness to prevent decomposition​

Living cells must be able to transfer water-solubilized nutrients and water-solubilized waste across their cell walls to survive. According to Deckman, decreasing the water activity below 60% has been shown to stop these metabolic processes.

To achieve the necessary level of dryness, Yablonovitch and Deckman took inspiration from a long-term food preservation technique dating back to Babylonian times: salt.

“Dryness, sometimes assisted by salt, effectively reduces the internal relative humidity of the sequestered biomass,” said Yablonovitch. “And that has been proven to prevent decomposition for thousands of years.”


Researchers point to a date palm named Methuselah as proof that biomass, if kept sufficiently dry, can be preserved well beyond the next millennium.

In the 1960s, Israeli archaeologist Yigal Yadin discovered date palm seeds among ancient ruins atop Masada, a mesa overlooking the Dead Sea — one of the most arid places in the world. The seeds remained in a drawer for more than 40 years, until Sarah Sallon, a doctor researching natural medicines, requested them in 2005. After having the seeds carbon-dated, she learned that they were 2,000 years old and then asked horticulturist Elaine Solowey to plant them. They germinated, and Methuselah, one of those date palms, continues to thrive today.

“This is proof that if you keep biomass dry, it will last for hundreds to thousands of years,” said Yablonovitch. “In other words, it is a natural experiment that proves you can preserve biomass for 2,000 years.”

A cost-effective, scalable approach​

In addition to offering long-term stability, Yablonovitch, and Deckman’s agro-sequestration approach is extremely cost-effective. Together, the agriculture and biolandfill cost a total of US$60 per tonne of captured and sequestered carbon dioxide. (By comparison, some direct air capture and carbon dioxide gas sequestration strategies cost US$600 per tonne.)

“Sixty dollars per tonne of captured and sequestered carbon dioxide corresponds to an added cost of $0.53 per gallon of gasoline,” said Yablonovitch. “At this price, offsetting the world’s carbon dioxide emissions would set back the world economy by 2.4%.”

The researchers have compiled a list of more than 50 high-productivity plants capable of being grown in diverse climates worldwide and with dry biomass yields in a range from 4 to more than 45 dry tonnes per hectare. All have been selected for their carbon-capturing abilities.

This solution also can scale without encroaching upon or competing with farmland used to grow food. Many of these biomass crops can be grown on marginal pasture and forest lands, or even on farmland that has remained fallow.

“To remove all the carbon that’s produced would require a lot of farmland, but it’s an amount of farmland that is actually available,” said Yablonovitch. “This would be a great boon to farmers, as there is farmland that is currently underutilized.”

Farmers harvesting these biomass crops would dry the plants, then entomb them in a dry engineered biolandfill located within the agricultural regions, tens of meters underground and safe from human activity and natural disasters.

The researchers based their design of these dry tomb structures on current municipal landfill best practices, but added enhancements to ensure dryness, such as two 2-millimeter-thick nested layers of polyethylene encasing the biomass, a practice already used in modern landfills.

The landfill area would cover only a tiny portion — 0.0001% — of the agricultural area. In other words, 10,000 hectares of biomass production could be buried in a 1-hectare biolandfill. In addition, the top surface of the landfill could be restored to agricultural production afterward.

Agro-sequestration: A way to stably sequester carbon in buried biomass​

The idea of burying biomass in order to sequester carbon has been gaining popularity, with startup organizations burying everything from plants to wood. But ensuring the stability of the buried biomass is a challenge. While these storage environments are devoid of oxygen, anaerobic microorganisms can still survive and cause the biomass to decompose into carbon dioxide and methane, rendering these sequestration approaches carbon-neutral, at best.

But there is one thing that all life forms require — moisture, rather than oxygen. This is measured by “water activity,” a quantity similar to relative humidity. If internal water activity falls below 60%, all life comes to a halt — a concept underpinning the UC Berkeley researchers’ new agro-sequestration solution.

“There are significant questions concerning long-term sequestration for many of these recently popularized nature- and agriculturally-based technologies,” said Harry Deckman, co-author of the study and a researcher in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences. “The agro-sequestration approach we’re proposing can stably sequester the carbon in dried salted biomass for thousands of years, with less cost and higher carbon efficiency than these other air capture technologies.”

Hugh Helferty, co-founder and president of Producer Accountability for Carbon Emissions (PACE), a nonprofit committed to attaining global net zero emissions by 2050, sees great promise in this solution. “Agro-sequestration has the potential to transform temporary nature-based solutions into permanent CO2 storage,” said Helferty, who is not involved with the study. “By developing their approach, Deckman and Yablonovitch have created an invaluable new option for tackling climate change.”

Achieving the right level of dryness to prevent decomposition​

Living cells must be able to transfer water-solubilized nutrients and water-solubilized waste across their cell walls to survive. According to Deckman, decreasing the water activity below 60% has been shown to stop these metabolic processes.

To achieve the necessary level of dryness, Yablonovitch and Deckman took inspiration from a long-term food preservation technique dating back to Babylonian times: salt.

“Dryness, sometimes assisted by salt, effectively reduces the internal relative humidity of the sequestered biomass,” said Yablonovitch. “And that has been proven to prevent decomposition for thousands of years.”

Researchers point to a date palm named Methuselah as proof that biomass, if kept sufficiently dry, can be preserved well beyond the next millennium.

In the 1960s, Israeli archaeologist Yigal Yadin discovered date palm seeds among ancient ruins atop Masada, a mesa overlooking the Dead Sea — one of the most arid places in the world. The seeds remained in a drawer for more than 40 years, until Sarah Sallon, a doctor researching natural medicines, requested them in 2005. After having the seeds carbon-dated, she learned that they were 2,000 years old and then asked horticulturist Elaine Solowey to plant them. They germinated, and Methuselah, one of those date palms, continues to thrive today.

“This is proof that if you keep biomass dry, it will last for hundreds to thousands of years,” said Yablonovitch. “In other words, it is a natural experiment that proves you can preserve biomass for 2,000 years.”

A cost-effective, scalable approach​

In addition to offering long-term stability, Yablonovitch, and Deckman’s agro-sequestration approach is extremely cost-effective. Together, the agriculture and biolandfill cost a total of US$60 per tonne of captured and sequestered carbon dioxide. (By comparison, some direct air capture and carbon dioxide gas sequestration strategies cost US$600 per tonne.)

“Sixty dollars per tonne of captured and sequestered carbon dioxide corresponds to an added cost of $0.53 per gallon of gasoline,” said Yablonovitch. “At this price, offsetting the world’s carbon dioxide emissions would set back the world economy by 2.4%.”

The researchers have compiled a list of more than 50 high-productivity plants capable of being grown in diverse climates worldwide and with dry biomass yields in a range from 4 to more than 45 dry tonnes per hectare. All have been selected for their carbon-capturing abilities.

This solution also can scale without encroaching upon or competing with farmland used to grow food. Many of these biomass crops can be grown on marginal pasture and forest lands, or even on farmland that has remained fallow.

“To remove all the carbon that’s produced would require a lot of farmland, but it’s an amount of farmland that is actually available,” said Yablonovitch. “This would be a great boon to farmers, as there is farmland that is currently underutilized.”

Farmers harvesting these biomass crops would dry the plants, then entomb them in a dry engineered biolandfill located within the agricultural regions, tens of meters underground and safe from human activity and natural disasters.

The researchers based their design of these dry tomb structures on current municipal landfill best practices, but added enhancements to ensure dryness, such as two 2-millimeter-thick nested layers of polyethylene encasing the biomass, a practice already used in modern landfills.

The landfill area would cover only a tiny portion — 0.0001% — of the agricultural area. In other words, 10,000 hectares of biomass production could be buried in a 1-hectare biolandfill. In addition, the top surface of the landfill could be restored to agricultural production afterward.

A fast path to adoption​

The timeline for the adoption of this carbon capture and sequestration method could be short, according to Deckman. “Agro-sequestration is technologically ready, and construction of the engineered biolandfills could begin after one growing season,” he said.

Yablonovitch and Deckman’s analysis shows that farmers could make the transition to biomass agriculture rather quickly. They estimate that it would take about one year to convert existing farmland to biomass agriculture, but longer for virgin land that lacks the infrastructure needed to support agriculture. The biomass crops would be ready for harvest and sequestration within a growing season.

Using this approach, the researchers calculated that sequestering approximately half of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions — about 20 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide per year — would require agricultural production from an area equal to one-fifth of the world’s row cropland or one-fifteenth of the land area for all croplands, pastures, and forests. According to their report, this amount of land is the same or less than the total area that many of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s models for greenhouse reduction are considering for biomass production.

“Our approach to agro-sequestration offers many benefits in terms of cost, scalability, and long-term stability,” said Yablonovitch. “In addition, it uses existing technologies with known costs to provide a practical path toward removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and solving the climate change problem. Nonetheless, society must continue its efforts toward de-carbonization; developing and installing solar and wind technologies; and revolutionizing energy storage.”

 

subnet

Boot
Climate alarmism is nonsense designed to control peoples behavior, push an agenda and make money for those that invested in it. The money making part is the biggest part.

Notice how the biggest names live in the largest of houses, drive the biggest cars, fly in private planes and have the biggest investments in it.
None of them live the life they want others to live
"Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of U.N.'s Framework Convention on Climate Change, admitted that the goal of environmental activists is not to save the world from ecological calamity but to destroy capitalism.

"This is the first time in the history of mankind that we are setting ourselves the task of intentionally, within a defined period of time, to change the economic development model that has been reigning for at least 150 years, since the Industrial Revolution," she said."


Its communism
 

Thinwater

Firearms Manufacturer
The sole object of the climate alarmists is power. Power is the ability to control. Everything is about the ability to control everything, the power.

Power is an end, not a means. The object of power is power. It has nothing to do with the environment, the economy or whatever, it is just the means to get absolute power.

It is all coming together, the environmental nut jobs, the digital dollar with full control of your ability to pay any bills, buy food, to stay alive. They are bringing in full control of social media, a nuclear war, the powers that be are making their end game moves.
 
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