@RobinBHM thanks for posting, your views are always insightful, helpful and courteous and really add to the debate and discussion.
I’m never sure how much to post, too much and we lose people as it really is boring apart from those enthusiastic about the subject, too little and it’s open correctly to suggestions that it’s a superficial and none objective observation.
1. I was responding to the comment that the higher up the CO2 in the atmosphere, the worse it is. When CO2 reaches the stratosphere it causes the stratosphere to lose temoerature more efficiently and causes it to cool. The atmosphere has layers, and what happens in one layer doesn’t necessarily affect it the lower layer, so although CO2 in the stratosphere causes it to cool, below that it causes the lower layers to warm.
2. I fully agree that human activity has caused the temperature to increase far more rapidly 1.5 degrees or there abouts since the Industrial Revolution, I think everyone (well at least anyone who has read around the subject) agrees. However, very simplistically and using an analogy when you pop a blanket over something it causes a certain amount of heat to be trapped, it raises the temperature until a new equilibrium is reached. My point is that up to around circa 30% CO2 will raise the equilibrium temperature by around 1.6 degrees; which is roughly where we are today; so any further warming is being driven by something else. If we fail to act on what that is, we fail to stop the rise and the unknown consequences it brings. We can’t stop the world exiting the present ice age, and although it will take normally a time span we don’t need to worry too much about it is going to happen.
3. I agree, however deforestation has lowered water vapour concentrations, which has occurred say in the UK since around the 1400’s. We were really busy at it when the Spanish got a bit irritable with Elizabeth. So, some of our actions have caused the global temperature to cool, we have seen periods of unusual and extremely low temperatures since the Industrial Revolution, but this gets no air time. Ie we are seeing large swings in annual average temperature.
4. I have, if memory serves in previous threads on this subject, which were ridiculed as quackery. It’s only a matter of time before the divergence in temperature increase and CO2 levels becomes so apparent that it can no longer be ignored.