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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
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But alas, contrary to Gary's imagination, heat is a perfrectly objective phenomenon caused by the motion of atoms and molecules.
I didn't work in an air conditioned library sorting books and so forth. I did service work in places like steel mills and hot boiler rooms amongst many other places. Places where you finished and walked out into the coolness of temperatures well above 90 degrees F.
So, big man. Put a number on the Polar Bears which have starved to death around Hudson's Bay. So far we're at Zero. The best way for a Polar Bear to preserve blubber is to follow the example of chess players. Sit in one spot for hours at a time with little movement.
Put a number on the Polar Bears which have starved to death around Hudson's Bay. So far we're at Zero.
We're well above that, actually, but I will leave it to Gary to reconsider his position never to do actual research on his own and find out for himself. I shall not, however, hold my breath while awaiting this event.
We're well above that, actually, but I will leave it to Gary to reconsider his position never to do actual research on his own and find out for himself. I shall not, however, hold my breath while awaiting this event.
You don't know or we would be looking at all sorts of references.
My favourite was the picture of that singer and his wife on the ice with a seal. Save the seals. You want the Polar Bears to eat them but that's another story. I particularly liked the part where the ungrateful seal bit his missus. Do you remember that one?
- Just as an example, but this is obviously well beyond the research skills of Gary. And anyway it can't be true because Gary doesn't believe mere scientists.
- Just as an example, but this is obviously well beyond the research skills of Gary. And anyway it can't be true because Gary doesn't believe mere scientists.
Ed seems to have problems with his reading and research skills. Doesn't beleive scientists. The link starts out quoting a Canadian sceintist like this:
"Polar bear numbers are increasing
'Dr. Mitch Taylor, biologist for the Department of Environment in Canada, says that Polar Bear populations are increasing. Dr. Taylor admits that in one region, western Hudson Bay, the population has decreased, while the rest of the regions have increased. In an interview with the Scotsman, Dr. Taylor explains "We’re seeing an increase in bears that’s really unprecedented and in places where we’re seeing a decrease in the population it’s from hunting, not from climate change."' (Mitchell Taylor)"
So the biologist sees an increase in the population which isn't surprising seeing as the Polar Bear migrates. The decrease in some areas is due to HUNTING, he says.
Regarding the rebuttal, it doesn't give the credentials for Blackburn. She could be anyone. Certainly there are no figures and the piece is general with percentages and pie graphs replacing what should be hard numbers.
You will fill us in on the credentials of the writer, because I'd hate to think you're hanging your hat on such a general article which so carefully omits numbers. Of course, if the writer has no idea of the numbers, and indeed gives the caveat:
"First of all, a few points need to be made about polar bear numbers:
Nobody really knows how many bears there were in the 1950s and 1960s. Estimates then were based on anecdotal evidence provided by hunters or explorers and not by scientific surveys.
Polar bears are affected by several factors, including hunting, pollution and oil extraction. Most notably, hunting, particularly following the introduction of snowmobiles, airplanes and ice breakers, led to a huge decline in certain subpopulations. The introduction of the International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears in 1973, which restricted or even banned hunting in some circumstances, consequently resulted in an increase in polar bear numbers.
Not all subpopulations are affected to the same degree by climate change, and while some subpopulations are well studied, for others there is insufficient data to make broad statements about current and past numbers."
So tell us, Ed Seedmore. Did you read your reference material, or did you simply hope we would not?
Oh great hunter and conservationsist. Have you travelled to Hudson Bay in search of the mighty Polar Bear and taken pictures of the bear in its natural habitat?
The blithering incompetents that have given us Ontario's green energy policy are at it again. They had to pay Quebec and the U.S. to take their surplus power from them in December and on January 1st, 2011. I guess it must have been windy that day.
"There was so much surplus electricity flooding the market, Ontario generators even had to pay users as much as 13 cents a kilowatt hour to take surplus power off their hands at times.
Typically, those negative prices only apply to a few isolated hours. But on New Year's Day, the hourly Ontario energy price for the whole day was negative, averaging -$20.29 per megawatt hour -- the lowest daily average since records began.
As a result, Ontario power generators paid $1.46 million to external markets to rid themselves of power on Jan. 1, according to the province's Independent Electricity System Operator. "
"There was so much surplus electricity flooding the market, Ontario generators even had to pay users as much as 13 cents a kilowatt hour to take surplus power off their hands at times.
Typically, those negative prices only apply to a few isolated hours. But on New Year's Day, the hourly Ontario energy price for the whole day was negative, averaging -$20.29 per megawatt hour -- the lowest daily average since records began.
As a result, Ontario power generators paid $1.46 million to external markets to rid themselves of power on Jan. 1, according to the province's Independent Electricity System Operator. "
It's too bad they don't stay with either kilowatt hour or megawatt hours. For anyone who doesn't notice it's kind of misleading. I guess using -20.29 per megawatt hour is more dramatic than staying with the same unit and calling it -0.02 cents a kilowatt hour.
Still, they do have a problem and we have to pay for their planning.
I don't know the costs. Is it cheaper to pay these amounts and have private enterprise supply the infrastructure and electricity in the long run OR is it cheaper for us to build our own infrastructure. I understand they are giving private interests incentives to build the infrastructure, such as solar. I haven't seen the contracts.
... all possible because of the extra heating in our atmosphere.
what about the volcanic ash that shut down airways for weeks this summer? you would have to think that short term events like flooding and extreme fires could be caused by something like that, couldn't they?
Forecast Details:
Snow showers. Dangerous wind chills approaching -45F. High -17F. Winds NNW at 15 to 25 mph. Chance of snow 40%.
Of course, It doesn't sound like global warming and I do hope the Polar Bears can find ice on Hudson Bay and the icebergs don't melt.
I didn't just pick Whale Cove out of thin air. A company I have shares in has a large mineral deposit at Ferguson Lake in Nanavut, about 150 km's away.
I see the paper companies in B.C. are starting to pick up a bit. One mill a company in which I have shares in has been shut down. Is that seen as being a good thing from and environmental point of view? It seems to be positive for the share price. I've already got a triple and have tens of thousands of shares.
Link between weather extremes and climate change...785 power point slides for your perusal...Forget about the weather you used to have; it is in the past...Canadian Arctic is >20 degrees Celcius warmer than normal... http://i.imwx.com/web/multimedia/ima...testupdate.pdf
I think the link is a lot of that is fun with figures.
Whale Cove is in Nanuvat and I don't think we have to worry about the Polar Bears finding ice.
Why don't you get hold of those politicians? I clearly tell the pollsters who phone I won't vote for a green platform. Mostly the green agenda is an attempt to part the voters from their money, freedom of choice and ability to do things they want to do.
Are you enjoying the weather in Southern Ontario? Did you get a sun burn today or was it wind burn?
Fun with figures. Gary, you are missing the point. The Arctic is 21 degrees Celcius warmer than normal, for the last entire MONTH. That is changing the jet streams and weather patterns around the world. Forget about "normal" weather moving forward; we live in a different world now (climate wise)...
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