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Proactive Interventions 6

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zdas04

Mechanical
Jun 25, 2002
10,274
Is Anthropogenic Climate Change (ACC) a real phenomena? I don't think so, but others do. If AGC is real, is human-generated CO[sub]2[/sub] the driving force? I don't think so, but others do. If human-generated CO[sub]2[/sub] is the driving force in ACC, can it be mitigated? I don't think so, but others do. If human-generated CO[sub]2[/sub] can be mitigated, what are the potential unintended consequences?

My basic question is: Can anyone name a grand-scale human intervention in nature that did not lead to unintended consequences that were on a par with the thing we were trying to "fix"?
[ul]
[li]Soil erosion? bring in Kudzu, Russian Olive, and Salt Cedar[/li]
[li]Wildfires? Fight them and allow a fuel inventory to build up so large that when the forests catch fire today they burn so hot that they sterilize the soil and spread so fast that they can't be contained.[/li]
[li]Hole in the ozone layer? Ban the most effective refrigerant ever developed, ban effective propellants in spray cans, then find that the ozone layer is patchy and has always been patchy and the R-12 and spray cans had nothing to do with the hole (and the original data was fabricated in the first place).[/li]
[li]Floods? Install dams and find that the Grand Canyon is filling in with silt because it needs floods. So do farmlands. I'm not saying that flood control is bad (but many environmentalists are saying exactly that), but we have to accept the unintended consequences.[/li]
[li]Eliminate predators? The prey animals lose their fear and congregate closer to rivers, eating the plants that stabilize the banks, turning rivers into swamps.[/li]
[/ul]

The list goes on and on. Is there a single case where we "fixed" something in nature and find that decades later there isn't something we created that is worse than what we were trying to fix? Before someone points to the Clean Air Act or cleaning up the smog in LA or the fact that the East River hasn't caught fire in decades--all of those things are about people fixing the mistakes that people made, not about "fixing" a natural thing. CO[sub]2[/sub] is less than 2% of the so-called greenhouse gases, the human-generated CO[sub]2[/sub] is less than 1% of that number (virtually all of the CO[sub]2[/sub] in the atmosphere comes from insects on land and krill and smaller sea life), so people are putting 0.02% of the CO[sub]2[/sub] into the air. What are the benefits and consequences of reducing that number unilaterally? Now if we could get the termites and krill to sign on, not to mention reduce ocean evaporation, then you could possibly lower the CO[sub]2[/sub] in the air to the extreme detriment of the plant life on earth.

People frequently say "what if you are wrong and ACC is real? We have to do something" My answer is always "engineers can deal with conditions that develop, our track record with proactive interventions is so bad that that is really the best we can do."


[bold]David Simpson, PE[/bold]
MuleShoe Engineering

In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. Galileo Galilei, Italian Physicist
 
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The precautionary principle is not the same as "just standard engineering practice".
 
The "Greenhouse Gas" hypotheses absolutely says that the temperature in the troposphere must be warmer than surface temperatures. Every weather balloon data set and every satellite data set shows that the temperature in the troposphere is measurably lower than the surface temperature. Not "slightly warmer" or "about the same", but "the surface temperature is always warmer". While I think that the "precautionary principle" is absolute nonsense, this data set seems to say "there is nothing here to be cautious about". It quite thoroughly satisfies the "reasonable doubt" test.

[bold]David Simpson, PE[/bold]
MuleShoe Engineering

In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. Galileo Galilei, Italian Physicist
 
That's only if you look at the raw tropospheric data without accounting for the cooling bias from the stratosphere that is predicted by ACC.




TTFN (ta ta for now)
I can do absolutely anything. I'm an expert! faq731-376 forum1529 Entire Forum list
 
The precautionary principle is not the same as "just standard engineering practice".

True. The precautionary principle is only part of standard engineering practice, or at least it should be.

If you disagree, please explain why.

Doug Jenkins
Interactive Design Services
 
While I think that the "precautionary principle" is absolute nonsense, this data set seems to say "there is nothing here to be cautious about". It quite thoroughly satisfies the "reasonable doubt" test.

Why do you think the precautionary principle is absolute nonsense?

Doug Jenkins
Interactive Design Services
 
IDS,
According to Wikipedia, two ideas lie at the core of the "precautionary principle"
Wikipedia said:
[ol 1]
[li]an expression of a need by decision-makers to anticipate harm before it occurs. Within this element lies an implicit reversal of the onus of proof: under the precautionary principle it is the responsibility of an activity-proponent to establish that the proposed activity will not (or is very unlikely to) result in significant harm.[/li]
[li]the concept of proportionality of the risk and the cost and feasibility of a proposed action[/li]
[/ol]

It is the second element that I have trouble with. If you've read my other posts in this forum you will have seen that I have great disdain for man's ability to effectively "manage nature" and I have provided several examples where we have failed miserably. So with this track record of "doing something" that ultimately resulted in more harm than the thing we were trying to "fix", the idea of "doing something" on a global scale to "fix" global warming or ACC keeps me up nights. There is no scenario where the potential "good" of intervening on the climate can possibly outweigh the even greater potential for harm.

There have been warm periods before that always resulted in step-change improvements in the lives of humans. Balance that against the potential for Kudzu on a global scale and this subject is actually a no-brainer--stop the madness and never spend another penny on ACC research or mitigation.

[bold]David Simpson, PE[/bold]
MuleShoe Engineering

In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. Galileo Galilei, Italian Physicist
 
David Simpson - I didn't ask why you think proposed action to reduce climate change is a bad thing, I asked why you think the precautionary principle is absolute nonsense.

Doug Jenkins
Interactive Design Services
 
IDS,
Sorry if you cannot see that I did answer your question.

[bold]David Simpson, PE[/bold]
MuleShoe Engineering

In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. Galileo Galilei, Italian Physicist
 
reminds me of (I think) Lewis Caroll's ...
"who's coming down the road?"
(Alice?) "I can see no-one on the road"
"gosh you have wonderful eyesight (to see no-one on the road)"

another day in paradise, or is paradise one day closer ?
 
I do think zdas04 believes in the precautionary principle, and I strongly suspect he makes use of it in his engineering practice whether he believes in its validity or not.

Paraphrasing the many, many words he's written on this subject over the past decade or so that I've been reading them, I believe he just denies that the precautionary principle has any applicability to the global warming situation because he is absolutely convinced that, based on his analysis of the problem, the precautions being proposed are not necessary because there is no problem to solve. As further support of this argument, he argues that many other interventions we've taken to solve environmental problems in past were either solving a problem that wasn't there in the first place, or made things worse etc.

Of course by making this argument, in my opinion, he's practicing outside his competence. I am in no way holding out my own competence in this matter as superior to his by the way. But, it seems to me, zdas04 is holding out his expertise in a subject in which he has no formal training that I'm aware of, as equivalent to that of those who actually study the subject for a living.

In past, he has retorted to this argument on my part by calling it an "appeal to authority fallacy". I argue that we have another name when the appeal made is to the authority of the scientific literature on a particular topic- we call that the current state of human knowledge on a subject. That knowledge is subject to change upon presentation of new data or better theories which better fit all the data, but for the moment, that's the best we've got. An appeal to that knowledge is not a logical fallacy. A true appeal to authority fallacy is an appeal to an authority which either cannot be questioned (i.e. your favorite deity), or an authority which in fact isn't an authority. That is the crux of his argument as far as I can see it: he's arguing that the authorities on a particular subject are wrong and hence cannot be relied on as authorities.
 
Worse than that, they're not authorities because they're wrong AND they've faked or manipulated the data, and anyone else associated with the data is guilty by association. This requires a conspiracy of epic proportions; not sure we don't just blame it on the Illuminati or those responsible for faking the Moon landings.

TTFN (ta ta for now)
I can do absolutely anything. I'm an expert! faq731-376 forum1529 Entire Forum list
 
Good post moltenmetal.

Still, it would be good to see from at least one of those who absolutely rejects the precautionary principle a reasoned explanation of why they do.

Doug Jenkins
Interactive Design Services
 
I assume you accept that engineering judgment is an important concept. But not all of us exercise engineering judgment equally. I think the precautionary principle is an unnecessary impediment to my engineering judgment, so I choose to not accept that principle. Now, there is no need to interpret what I really mean, as some want to do for zdas04.
 
The precautionary principle is most often used by people to explain their belief in God without having to think too deeply about the subject. It is used in political and religious arguments. In engineering we use a cost/benefit analysis.
 
Hokie66 - In what way is it true that "the precautionary principle is an unnecessary impediment to (your) engineering judgment"? At the moment I have no idea what you "really mean".

CompositePro - We are talking about the precautionary principle as applied in engineering; why bring God or politics into it? A cost/benefit analysis that ignores the possibility of some possible adverse consequences is valueless.

Doug Jenkins
Interactive Design Services
 
IDS you seem to have just reinforced my point. What is the difference between the precautionary principle and a cost benefit analysis? What are these "possibilities" that are left out of a cost/benefit analysis that are in your precautionary principle, other than beliefs?
 
Compositepro - The Precautionary Principle (which is certainly not mine, and I didn't even introduce the term in this discussion, but I'm happy to use it) is (or should be) simply a part of cost/benefit analysis, or engineering judgement, or standard engineering practice, or whatever you want to call it.

If by "beliefs" you mean things that are accepted because they are held to be self-evident, or because some authority has said that they must be accepted without question, then "beliefs" have nothing to do with the precautionary principle.

Doug Jenkins
Interactive Design Services
 
IDS,
You didn't call it that, but you did introduce it in your post of 24 Oct, 0750. Some of us don't subscribe to this principle, probably mostly because it is one of the doctrines of the AGW crowd.
 
You didn't call it that, but you did introduce it in your post of 24 Oct, 0750. Some of us don't subscribe to this principle, probably mostly because it is one of the doctrines of the AGW crowd.

And I have invited those who do accept the principle, which I consider to be a part of standard engineering practice, to explain why they do not accept it.

So far with zero meaningful response.

Doug Jenkins
Interactive Design Services
 
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