Warsaw COP19 report– there’s something in the water

Water Vapor Transport, June through November 2005
Water Vapor Transport, June through November 2005 (Photo credit: Atmospheric Infrared Sounder)

Andy Pattullo reports, November 14, 2013, Warsaw

This week UN delegates opened the current Warsaw Climate change Conference with hopes of engineering a renewed agreement to curb human-driven global warming just as effective as the last, however a new and catastrophic issue is emerging which threatens to derail the impressive progress made to date. Having reviewed the models of CO2 driven global warming from the First Assessment Report (FAR) IPCC scientists have discovered that General Circulation Models attribute most of the warming not to CO2 but to water vapor in the atmosphere. While it was initially understood that any rise in water vapor was directly attributable to a rise in CO2 it now appears there are many other human activities driving a rise in atmospheric water vapor, by far the most important greenhouse gas. IPCC Scientists expressed significantly increased certainty that their 95% confidence intervals include the plausibility that natural processes play no role.

A Mannian statistical analysis of growth rings harvested from wooden hockey sticks in the Sports Hall of Fame confirms the role of rising water vapor as it clearly demonstrates a strong correlation between the rise of professional ice sports and the attendant increased use of artificial ice with the rise in global temperatures. The changes are described as unprecedented since the keeping of official hockey statistics began. The presumed mechanism appears related in part to the high humidity emissions of Zamboni ice conditioning equipment and an excess of spilled beer. The new information substantially changes some of the FAR conclusions such that an amended document, the First Assessment Report Two, is expected within months. (The summary for policy makers was published last May.)

Thus efforts to curb human CO2 emissions may fail to impact the worrying trend in global temperatures of the past 17 years and we can expect much of the same in coming decades unless new actions are taken. It now appears necessary to develop initiatives aimed directly at human induced atmospheric humidity and many believe there will be related announcements in the coming week.

During a recent Suzuki Foundation event raising funds for the Clooney and Hannah Antarctic Polar Bear Relocation Project, 36 out of 37 randomly selected scientists stated in the affirmative that they had no knowledge of evidence refuting unfounded speculation that the EPA would be tabling regulations in the coming months to restrict the emissions of water vapor from transportation, electrical generation, agriculture and bipedal mammals. This 97% scientific consensus confirms the likelihood of near term climate protection regulations with wide ranging impacts that may include but are not limited to:

– A ban of power plant cooling towers not equipped with yet to be designed humidity extraction equipment.

– A comprehensive framework of regulations to govern agricultural irrigation. (An exemption for bio fuel ethanol crops is expected).

– A gradual decommissioning of all outdoor swimming pools, water parks, bird baths, drinking fountains and surfing beaches.

– A tax on exhaled air directly proportional to body mass and the inverse of ambient relative humidity. (Water credits will be earnable for periods of breath holding up to 3 hours in each 24 hour period and will be combined with parallel credits for reduced personal CO2 emissions assuming breath holding can be sustained without corporal decomposition.)

– An international humidity trading market. (This will likely be protested as unfair by less developed nations due to the higher atmospheric water content of tropical zones, however the proposal has strong support from a coalition of Arab and North African states and Texas which collectively feel those other nations should be forced to pay for their disproportionate contribution to the climate crisis.)

– A ban of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.

– Mandated installation of mechanical wipers and water traps on any solar panel installations subject to precipitation.

– A multinational initiative to spread liquid hydrocarbons over large bodies of water to inhibit evaporation.

More effective solutions may also be on the way. A broad coalition of energy resource companies, in a move designed to partially atone for past climate degradation, has worked for years on geo-engineering solutions to the rapidly expanding hydro pollution crisis. This reporter now has exclusive insight into the most promising near term solution. The industry partners will be seeking a multi-billion dollar federal stimulus bill in support of exploratory work on a water-as-vapor extraction and storage system (WAVES). While many aspects of the technology remain under covers the central discovery is a novel patented mechanism to convert heat-trapping water vapor to a stable liquid which can be pumped underground at high pressure for long term storage.

Analysts speculate that heavily drilled shale formations are the most likely storage locations given available technology. The stabilization of the liquefied water vapor will be assisted by the addition of sand and proprietary chemicals which will also serve to fissure the shale formations creating enhanced storage capacity. Additionally the simultaneous extraction of “blocking” liquid and gaseous hydrocarbons from these formations will further grow capacity while providing a saleable byproduct to help fund future expansion of the process thus diminishing reliance on federal subsidies. Industry insiders predict the technology may ultimately be profitable with only modest government support within 15 years.

The head of the IPCC is rumored to have endorsed the technology, stating categorically that it was every bit as safe for the environment as windmills and bio fuels. Several environmental groups including the World Wildlife fund and Friends of the Earth have campaigned at the UN to have this technology move forward sooner in order to prevent the catastrophic submersion of the South Pacific island nation of Tuvalu which climate models reliably predict will occur 10:15 AM Saturday March 11, 2017.

Finally India and China in a rare show of international cooperation announced an agreement brokered by the IPCC chair to discuss an ambitious project that would see black carbon and spent nuclear fuel spread widely across Himalayan glaciers so as to dissolve this important potential future source of atmospheric humidity and return it safely to the oceans. The IPCC chair assured this reporter that “with any luck the glaciers will be gone by 2035.”

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Janice Moore
November 14, 2013 10:30 pm

Larry the Cable Guy on Global Warmin’
(smile and a wave to Kevin M from 10:28am, 11/14/13 on Curry comments… thread) #(:))

THIS is why there is hope. This is what the average “Joe” and “Maria” thinks — and they vote.
(Yes, Dr. Svalgaard, I noticed that he doesn’t articulate the science of the Sun with accuracy.)

Janice Moore
November 14, 2013 10:38 pm

Jorge K. says:…
Oh, yes, and so modest, too. 😉
Seriously, you SHOULD be proud!

November 14, 2013 10:45 pm

The trouble is the IPCC has been too successful! It has only been in existence for 25 years and it stopped the global warming after only 8 years. The IPCC really needs another mission in life. It might even have to become redundant if it doesn’t find a new mission soon. The problem with the suggested demonization of di-hydrogen monoxide is that it doesn’t really cut the ice. It is not scary enough. Surely the IPCC can find another big bad wolf out there somewhere. Perhaps it’s dressed in a sheepskin coat and ugg boots because it is getting too cold!

Berényi Péter
November 14, 2013 11:00 pm

It is entirely possible to sequester considerable quantities of solid state Dihydrogen Monoxide in a 2 miles thick layer over Northern continents. Additional benefits are decreasing sea level by some 400 feet, opening up large swaths of novel beachfront property this way and covering the globe into a beneficial layer of Aeolian (air-borne) Dust.

Gail Combs
November 14, 2013 11:05 pm

You had me going until I reached Mann. (YUCK, Now I have to go and use some of the precious dihydrogen monoxide to wash my hands.)

Ed Barbar
November 14, 2013 11:08 pm

I think these are very serious issues. Imagine, for instance, that we humans are humidifying farmlands during the summer, with all that H20, trapping in summer heat. And Windmills are definitely evil. They slow down the wind, and we all know that wind cools things off. And if we ever were to implement real solar. We would reduce the temperatures of natural heat shedding regions like deserts, to push that heat into cooler areas, which can not shed heat as readily.
We MUST stop farming.

J Martin
November 14, 2013 11:46 pm

April the 1st already ! Winter was over quickly, must have missed Christmas as well.

November 15, 2013 12:00 am

Very droll, but be careful – you might give them ideas.

JJM Gommers
November 15, 2013 12:39 am

Heavy water was not excluded?

High Treason
November 15, 2013 1:19 am

Still have the issue that the IPCC is full of BS with the 95% claim even with the 2 curves diverging severely. I dare say if there is an AR6 report with even more CO2(and healthier plants) and a dip in temperatures, which I will bet will occur, they will claim the magic 97% certainty and jump up and down that the tipping point is just around the corner. The little wings will flap and the nappies will be soiled in the grand tantrum.Crocodile tears and emotional blackmail will flow like beer at a buck’s night.
The entire modus operandi is exactly as would be expected from an habitual liar- more and more absurd claims to support the platform of lies from day one, all trading on the respectability created in the groundwork. The more respectable the liar makes themselves out to be(UN goes to extraordinary lengths) the longer it takes for that trust to be shattered and the jig to be up. The stakes of the scam are also considerably greater, like all Ponzi schemes.

Tim Churchill
November 15, 2013 1:50 am

“A multinational initiative to spread liquid hydrocarbons over large bodies of water to inhibit evaporation.”
That should please all those ships out there that like ditching their waste in the oceans.

pochas
November 15, 2013 1:57 am

The only thing that can change is the weather. Everything else, mass of the atmosphere, radiating temperatures, moisture content of the atmosphere overall, global precipitation, is approximately constant. But outside factors can influence the configuration of the convection cells, where its sunny, where its cloudy, when and where it rains and how much, and these things are important to us. It is useless to think that the atmospheric constants can be changed; the physical parameters of our atmosphere are fixed. All we can do is learn to predict the weather farther into the future, and learn to adapt. The present article advocates an unending age of foolishness, promulgated by ignorant individuals interested in political power and personal wealth.

wayne
November 15, 2013 2:05 am

“Warsaw COP19 report – there’s something in the water … ”
Fish?
Good parady there Andy! I though, oh cr.p!, what now, had me on that first paragraph.

November 15, 2013 2:10 am

And me not to laugh, because the Warsaw Conference Climate change COP19 reminds me this publication about Groupthink in Academia – the humanities and social sciences (http://www.independent.org/publications/tir/article.asp?a=731) and especially these quotes are suitable – for me, “the fact” of what happens there:
“When a group of people who respect each other’s opinions arrive at a unanimous view, each member is likely to feel that the belief must be true. This reliance on consensual validation tends to replace individual critical thinking and reality-testing”
“Academic professions develop elaborate scholastic dogmas to justify the omission of challenging or intractable ideas.”
“Closed-Mindedness.”
“Symptoms of Defective Decision Making:
– Incomplete Survey of Alternatives,
– Incomplete Survey of Objectives,
– Failure to Reappraise Initially Rejected Alternatives.”
“Poor Information Search, Selective Bias in Processing Information at Hand Classical-liberal and conservative ideas are often ignored, dismissed by way of elaborate dogmas, or treated only in false caricature.”

clovis marcus
November 15, 2013 2:36 am

If anyone wants to invest I have a plan for H2O sequestration. I plan to bury it in the sea.

November 15, 2013 2:39 am

Bad news for the Warsaw gathering, Japan has drastically scaled back its target for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The earlier goal of a 25 percent reduction from the 1990 level has been revised to a 3 percent increase over 1990 emissions.
http://news.yahoo.com/japan-dials-back-climate-change-emissions-target-072147653–finance.html

Mr Green Genes
November 15, 2013 3:06 am

” … the Clooney and Hannah Antarctic Polar Bear Relocation Project …”
====================================================
They’re good, those celebs. It’s worked already!!! 😀

November 15, 2013 3:08 am

^^…by 2020

AndyG55
November 15, 2013 3:14 am

Ha… you all laugh now ………………………………
But you wait until Al Gore gets a hold of this idea !!
Or, even worse….. Obama !!!!

November 15, 2013 3:45 am

The first para is pure Greenie – The Guardian would be proud of it. I almost gave up at the end of the first para but the second was much more reassuring. A magnificent satire from someone with a profound understanding of the issues. Next stop, google Andy Patullo and see what else he’s wrought.

david
November 15, 2013 4:14 am

Betchya got half the Green readers getting-off over these imaginations…..
but….
its all just tinkering still.
The cause of excess heat is the Sun so lets just snuff it and use our huge store of geothermal energy to generate just what we need and where….
there should be more than enough core heat to see us through to around Red Giant time anyway…
Next!

Scottish Sceptic
November 15, 2013 4:17 am
Hilary Ostrov (aka hro001)
November 15, 2013 4:21 am

J Martin says: November 14, 2013 at 11:46 pm

[…] must have missed Christmas as well.

A sad note, indeed! But never fear … in remembrance of brighter COPs past (and future), I invite you to sing along to <shameless plug alert>
‘Tis the season to be gloomy … an annotated climate carol

November 15, 2013 5:05 am

April 1st is it?
Great stuff!
A parody that sure puts an early spike into the ‘world is short of fresh water’ mantra the greenbrains are starting to parrot.